MKT 450 CH 15
Reasons for prioritizing & trimming the brand portfolio
1) provides impetus to prioritizing the business portfolio 2) corrects confusion of "over-branding" among customers and employees 3) addresses "strategic paralysis"
What to evaluate in order to compete
1) organization 2) growth 3) share by segment 4) customer loyalty 5) margins 6) distribution 7) technology skills 8) marketing 9) flexibility
Drivers of the exit decision
1) market demand 2) competitive intensity 3) change in strategic thrust (drain or distraction)
4 biases inhibiting the exit decision
1) emotional attachment 2) reluctance to admit defeat 3) confirmation bias 4) escalation of commitment
Conditions favoring a milking strategy
1) investments unlikely to improve negative environment 2) competitor aggressiveness 3) consumer tastes 4) new entrants
Milking strategy implementation problems
1) managers of cash-generating businesses want to hold on to cash for investment 2) businesses with low current sales but big potential get starved of cash 3) need a business portfolio analysis to determine who gets the investment 4) difficulty in placing and motivating managers 5) market risks 6) making it inconspicuous
Steps to measure brands on BCG Growth-share matrix
1) draw circles on a matrix 2) after calculating all the measures, you should be able to plot your brands on the matrix 3) Draw a circle for each brand 4) size of the circle should correspond to the proportion of business revenue generated by the brand
What to look at when evaluating market attractivness
1) size 2) growth 3) customer satisfaction levels 4) competition: quantity, types, effectiveness, and commitment 5) price levels 6) profitability 7) technology 8) governmental regulations 9) sensitivity to economic trends
5 steps of the strategic brand consolidation process
1) starts with identifying the relevant brand sets or subsets in the portfolio 2) brand assessment 3) prioritize the brands 4) develop the revised brand portfolio strategy 5) design & implement the migration strategy
4 groups to prioritizing & trimming the brand portfolio
1) strong strategic brands 2) brands playing a worthwhile role 3) brands that should receive no investments 4) brands that should be deleted
When an exit strategy should be considered
1) the business position is weak 2) demand within the category is declining 3) the firm's strategic fit has changed
How exit can be healthy and invigorating
1) visible costs 2) doesn't represent future 3) other potential growth platforms 4) generate cash 5) liberate management talent 6) reposition the firm
brand
A __________________ strategy is often the business strategy
loyalty; central; stable
A business uses the milk strategy when there is enough ________________________ to support a business, the business is not ________________________ to the current strategy, and demand & price structure/profits are ________________________
market; milking
Exit barriers can delay the exit process if the _______________________ may change. If so, the company should change to the ____________________________ strategy
sales
For milking to be feasible, ___________________ must decline in an orderly way
divestiture; external
Many firms avoid ______________________________ decisions until they are obvious by _____________________ forces, which has an impact on prices and profitability
brand portfolio
Prioritizing and trimming the _____________________________ provides another perspective on prioritizing businesses, even clarify brand offerings, and can remove the paralysis of not being able to brand new offerings
market share; money
The business position is weak when the business is losing ______________________________ and _______________________
strategic fit
The firm's ___________________________ has changed when firm's resources coulld be better employed elsewhere
disruptive; cash cow
The holding strategy also has issues with ______________________ technologies and can lead to a premature demise of a _________________________ business
reversed
The milking strategy can be ____________________________ if there is a resurgence of product classes
portfolio
View business units as a _____________________
transparent; spectrum
When going through the exit process, the business needs to be _________________________ and discourage gut reactions. Furthermore, the business needs to look at the entire ___________________________ before they make the decision
reinvest
With the holding strategy, the business can lose market share if they are too slow to __________________________
hold
enough investment to hold a market position; adequate level of investment is employed to maintain product quality, production facilities, and customer loyalty; picture is not as grim; interim strategy to determine the uncertainties
exit decision
even though this is psychologically and professionally painful, it can be healthy for both the firm because it releases resources to be used elsewhere and the divested business, which might thrive in a different context
milking/harvesting strategy
generating cash flow by reducing investment and operating expenses; works when the involved business is not crucial to the firm financially or synergistically; better use of funds; "cash cow" business; sales will decline in an orderly way; 3 types: fast, slow, and hold
brand equity
includes awareness, reputation, differentiation, relevance and loyalty to a brand
brand assessment
includes brand equity, business strength, strategic fit, and branding options; evaluation criteria & judgements
market risks
includes customers losing confidence in a brand, employee morale suffering, and attacks from competitors
strategic fit (def)
includes extendibility & business fit
business prospects
includes sales, share, profit, and growth
prioritize the brands
includes strategic brands, brands with specialized roles, cash cow role, eliminate, on-notice, and merge
exit barriers
includes termination costs, support for other businesses, use of excess capacity, long-term contracts with suppliers & unions, spare parts and service back-up, and impact on reputation
five-step priorization process
involves: 1) identifying the relevant brand set, 2) assessing the brands, 3) prioritizing brands, 4) creating a revised brand portfolio strategy, and 5) designing a transition strategy
BCG Growth-Share Matrix
makes visible the issue of allocation across business units; experience-based advantage of market share; includes 1) stars, 2) cash cows 3) problem children, and 4) dogs
fast milking
maxmize short-term cash flow
stars
part of BCG Growth-Share matrix; important; deserving of investment; has a high market growth rate and a high competitive position
dogs
part of BCG growth-share matrix; cash traps/candidates for liquidation; low market growth rate and low competitive position
problem children
part of BCG growth-share matrix; heavy cash/potential; high market growth rate but low competitive position
cash cows
part of BCG growth-share matrix; high share/low growth; low market growth rate but high competitive position
invest/grow
part of the market attractiveness-business position matrix; has a high business position and high market attractiveness; use growth tools here
selective investment
part of the market attractiveness-business position matrix; has ambiguous business positions and market attractiveness; more study is required
harvest/divest
part of the market attractiveness-business position matrix; low business position and low market attractiveness; consider harvest/divest options
competitive position
ratios of share-to-share of largest competitors
slow milking
reduce long-term investment
brand (def)
represents the face of the business, including assets & competencies, value proposition, and talent
The Market-business position matrix
richer, more robust analysis; in favorable areas, use growth tools; in unfavorable areas, consider harvest or divest options; in ambiguous areas, more study is required
confirmation bias
seek out optimistic information and discount disconfirming information
The strategic brand consolidation process
the process will help define what brands to keep; disciplined introduction of new offerings & brands; phase out or redeploy of marginal or redundant brands
"strategic paralysis"
what brands will be strategic going forward, so many options that branding new products is difficult
"last survivor"
when a company is in the holding strategy; encourages competitors to exit