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DEVELOPING MARKETING STRATEGIES AND PLANS | CHAPTER 2 51<br />

PORTER’S GENERIC STRATEGIES Michael Porter has proposed<br />

three generic strategies that provide a good starting point for<br />

strategic thinking: overall cost leadership, differentiation, and focus. 34<br />

• Overall cost leadership. Firms work to achieve the lowest production<br />

and distribution costs so they can underprice competitors<br />

and win market share. They need less skill in marketing. The<br />

problem is that other firms will usually compete with still-lower<br />

costs and hurt the firm that rested its whole future on cost.<br />

• Differentiation. The business concentrates on achieving superior<br />

performance in an important customer benefit area valued<br />

by a large part of the market. The firm seeking quality leadership,<br />

for example, must make products with the best<br />

components, put them together expertly, inspect them carefully,<br />

and effectively communicate their quality.<br />

• Focus. The business focuses on one or more narrow market segments,<br />

gets to know them intimately, and pursues either cost<br />

leadership or differentiation within the target segment.<br />

The online air travel industry provides a good example of these three strategies: Travelocity is<br />

pursuing a differentiation strategy by offering the most comprehensive range of services to the<br />

traveler; Lowestfare is pursuing a lowest-cost strategy; and Last Minute is pursuing a niche strategy<br />

by focusing on travelers who have the flexibility to travel on very short notice. Some<br />

companies use a hybrid approach.<br />

According to Porter, firms directing the same strategy to the same target market constitute a<br />

strategic group. 35 The firm that carries out that strategy best will make the most profits. Circuit<br />

City went out of business because it did not stand out in the consumer electronics industry as lowest<br />

in cost, highest in perceived value, or best in serving some market segment.<br />

Porter draws a distinction between operational effectiveness and strategy. Competitors can quickly<br />

copy the operationally effective company using benchmarking and other tools, thus di<strong>min</strong>ishing the<br />

advantage of operational effectiveness. Porter defines strategy as “the creation of a unique and valuable<br />

position involving a different set of activities.” A company can claim it has a strategy when it<br />

“performs different activities from rivals or performs similar activities in different ways.”<br />

Customers can travel virtually<br />

anywhere in the world via flights<br />

on Star Alliance airlines.<br />

STRATEGIC ALLIANCES Even giant companies—AT&T, Philips, and Nokia—often cannot<br />

achieve leadership, either nationally or globally, without for<strong>min</strong>g alliances with domestic or multinational<br />

companies that complement or leverage their capabilities and resources.<br />

Just doing business in another country may require the firm to license its product, form a<br />

joint venture with a local firm, or buy from local suppliers to meet “domestic content” requirements.<br />

Many firms have developed global strategic networks, and victory is going to those who<br />

build the better global network. The Star Alliance brings together 21 airlines, including<br />

Lufthansa, United Airlines, Singapore Airlines, Air New Zealand, and South Africa Airways, in a<br />

huge global partnership that allows travelers to make nearly seamless connections to hundreds of<br />

destinations.<br />

Many strategic alliances take the form of marketing alliances. These fall into four major categories.<br />

1. Product or service alliances—One company licenses another to produce its product, or two<br />

companies jointly market their complementary products or a new product. The credit card<br />

industry is a complicated combination of cards jointly marketed by banks such as Bank of<br />

America, credit card companies such as Visa, and affinity companies such as Alaska Airlines.<br />

2. Promotional alliances—One company agrees to carry a promotion for another company’s<br />

product or service. McDonald’s teamed up with Disney for 10 years to offer products related<br />

to current Disney films as part of its meals for children.<br />

3. Logistics alliances—One company offers logistical services for another company’s product.<br />

Warner Music Group and Sub Pop Records created the Alternative Distribution Alliance<br />

(ADA) in 1993 as a joint venture to distribute and manufacture records owned by independent<br />

labels. ADA is the leading “indie” distribution company in the United States for both<br />

physical and digital product.<br />

4. Pricing collaborations—One or more companies join in a special pricing collaboration. Hotel<br />

and rental car companies often offer mutual price discounts.

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