Assess The Pros And Cons Of Amazon’s Different Market Entry Approaches. Limit Your Answer To 250

( For the exclusive use of M. Tripathy, 2018. )

 

 

 

 

 

case W94C01 August 1, 2014

 

 

Amazon in Emerging Markets

 

 

 

 

 

In the spring of 2014, Amazon.com, Inc. (“Amazon”), saw its chief competitor in China, Alibaba Group, file documents with the SEC for an initial public offering that could be one of the largest in history, its main competitor in Brazil, MercadoLibre, sustained an approximate 40% loss in stock price despite several years of profitability, and its two chief competitors in India, Flipkart and Snapdeal, formed separate mergers with other related firms. The intense battle for control of a country’s e-wallet was nothing new to Diego Piacentini, senior vice president of International Consumer Business, and Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO (see Appendix A for Amazon’s executive leadership). Their decision to launch Amazon.in in June 2013 marked Amazon’s eleventh country-specific portal after nineteen years of operation. China was Amazon’s first emerging market website, and India only its third. Compared to its experience in China and Brazil, Amazon followed a different business model and strategy in India. What led to the differing approaches and which, if any, of Amazon’s emerging markets’ strategies and investments would succeed? The case starts by examining Amazon’s entry into India and then turns to Amazon’s experience in China and Brazil.

 

Amazon’s International Expansion

Incorporated in 1994, Amazon had evolved from a small online vendor of books and other information- based products in 1997 into a global “customer-centric” company serving consumers, sellers, and developers with operations in twenty-two countries. Amazon’s international expansion started in 1998 when it acquired Bookseller, Ltd. (bookseller.co.uk) in the United Kingdom and Telebook, Inc. (telebuch.de) in Germany. These two sites gave rise to what became Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.de, respectively. It was early in 2000, during this initial European expansion, that Amazon hired Piacentini, who had been Apple’s general manager for Europe. Since his hiring, Amazon launched nine other country-specific websites, in Italy, France, Spain, Japan, China, Mexico, Brazil, Canada, and Australia. In other countries such as Costa Rica and South Africa, Amazon located customer service, software development, fulfillment or back office operations. (See Appendices B1 and B2 for Amazon’s global websites and operations).

 

In 2013, Amazon’s Germany, UK, and Japan sites accounted for 85% of total international revenues of $30.0 billion. Overall, Amazon’s international markets (excluding its Canadian site) made up 40% of

Published by WDI Publishing, a division of the William Davidson Institute (WDI) at the University of Michigan.

©2014 Amy Nguyen-Chyung and Elliot Faulk. This case was written by Elliot Faulk and Amy Nguyen-Chyung (Assistant Professor of Strategy) of the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan. It was created as a basis for class discussion, not to illustrate either the effective or ineffective handling of a business situation. Secondary research was performed to accurately portray information about the featured organization and to extrapolate the decision points presented in the case; however, company representatives were not involved in the creation of this case.

 

( For the exclusive use of M. Tripathy, 2018. )

 

( This document is authorized for use only by Manmath Tripathy in Global Strategy – Winter 2018 taught by Gregory Theyel, California State University – East Bay from January 2018 to March 2018. )

 

 

Amazon’s total revenues of $74.4 billion (see Appendix C for consolidated financial results). However, despite a growth of 14% in net sales between 2012 and 2013, Amazon’s international business had seen a period of declining rate of growth since 2011 (see Appendices D1 and D2 for a geographic break-out). Would this declining growth rate foreshadow what was to come for Amazon’s international markets, or be merely water under the bridge according to Bezos and Amazon’s “marathon” mind-set of emphasizing customer service and long-term gains in sacrifice of short-term profits?

 

The Indian E-Commerce Market

On June 5, 2013, Amazon officially entered the Indian market with its launch of Amazon.in. Although the Indian government had liberalized its strict foreign direct investment laws in September 2012, the resulting regulations still forbid foreign multi-brand retailers from having over 51% ownership.1 As a result, Amazon could not replicate its U.S. business of selling its own products in addition to serving as a selling platform for third-party vendors. In India, Amazon would only be able to function as a pure marketplace that would connect domestic sellers to buyers in the market. For Amazon, these FDI considerations would be only the first hurdle encountered in the nascent but fast-growing Indian e-commerce market.

 

According to World Bank data, as of 2013 India had approximately 189.1 million Internet users (15.1% of the 1.25 billion population) compared with only 60.7 million (5% of the population) just four years earlier (see Appendix E for a list of Internet users per 100 population for select countries; see Appendix F for mobile cellular subscriptions). The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India estimated the Indian e-commerce industry at $16 billion in 2013, a large increase from estimates of $8.5 billion in 2012 and $2.5 billion in 2009.2 On the other hand, Forrester Research reported that Indian e-commerce was worth only $1.6 billion in 2012 after online travel sales were factored out of the estimates.3 Fast growth was less debated; analysts from the Indian retail consultancy Technopak believed that the country’s e-commerce industry could grow 61 times over the next decade.4

 

Overall, mom-and-pop stores dominated India’s half-trillion-dollar retail market. According to Deloitte’s India group, organized retail in India comprised only 17% of the market versus over 85% of the market in the U.S.5 Moreover, in addition to stringent laws on FDI, India still had considerable import duties on certain foreign products. According to the International Chamber of Commerce, India ranked 64th out of 75 countries for overall trade and FDI openness in 2013.6

 

In terms of transportation infrastructure, many of India’s roads were in poor condition and overly congested. Even on the better roads, such as between New Delhi in the north and Mumbai on the western coast, driving took almost twice the amount of time it took to drive the same distance in the U.S., according to Google Maps. In addition, nearly 70% of India’s population lived in remote rural areas, which in some cases had limited access to major highways. Thirty-three percent of villages in India, primarily in the northern states, lacked all-weather roads, making them almost inaccessible during the monsoon season.7 Furthermore, addresses in India were notoriously difficult to find due to non-sequential numberings, lack of street signs, and narrow, winding streets. It was instead commonplace in India to describe locations with directions via landmarks.8 Retailers had tended to prefer commercial airfreight for delivery, but this option had led to increased delivery costs and a high risk of merchandise being offloaded to accommodate passengers.9

 

Over the past few years, India had experienced a series of major power failures allegedly due to a shoddily constructed electricity infrastructure. For example, in soaring temperatures on June 10, 2014, in New Delhi 16 million people were subject to power blackouts due to unmanageable demand.10 This power

 

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( For the exclusive use of M. Tripathy, 2018. W94C01 ) ( Amazon in Emerging Markets )

 

 

 

failure came only two years after a record-breaking electricity crisis in 2012 in which 600 million people were left without power for two days.11

 

India also still had a highly impoverished population. In 2013, OECD researchers estimated that 42% of India’s 1.24 billion people lived on less than $1.25 a day, reflective of its $4,000 GDP per capita.12,13 Much of India’s growth in computing and consumer spending, however, came from a growing middle class of over 160 million people.14 The Brookings Institution predicted that India’s middle class consumption would surpass that of the U.S. by the year 2030.15 However, despite a growing population heavily involved in spending, cash payments remained dominant over credit or debit card payments in day-to-day commerce in India. Business Today cited that people in India averaged only six non-cash payments each year. As a result, a “cash on delivery” system had become widely accepted in the e-tailing space and accounted for roughly 50% to 80% of all e-commerce payments.16

 

Competition in India

The Indian e-commerce market’s promise of rapid growth had already attracted several players, domestic and international, to the Indian e-tailing scene. Some of the largest in terms of revenue and market share included Flipkart, Snapdeal, and eBay.

 

Flipkart

In 2007, two ex-Amazon employees, Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal (no relation), launched Flipkart, which became the leading domestic e-tailing company in India (see Appendices G1 and G2 for Flipkart’s website and executive leadership). Having copied some of Amazon’s business model throughout the country, Flipkart’s founders had been able to capture 4.9% of the very fragmented Indian e-commerce market by 2013 (Amazon held 1.6% and eBay 1.2%).17 Flipkart found quick success by developing its own logistics network and by adopting the “cash on delivery” payment option in 2010 in order to adjust to the cash-centric payment habits of Indian consumers. Since its launch in 2007, Flipkart had been dependent primarily on funding from venture capital firms.

 

Flipkart used the VC investments to expand its product offerings through a string of acquisitions in the Indian online retail space. Its acquisitions included weRead (2010), a book review and recommendation site; Mime360 (2011), an Indian site for digital music, e-books, and online games; Chakpak.com’s catalogue of movies and film ratings (2011); and Letsbuy.com (2012), an Indian online electronics retailer.18 At the end of 2013, Flipkart was valued at approximately $1.6 billion and was selling 100,000 products daily to its 13.22 million unique visitors.19

 

In May 2014, Flipkart acquired a 100% stake in online fashion retailer Myntra.com for an estimated

$370 million, its largest acquisition. Following the acquisition, Flipkart raised $210 million from Russian venture capitalist Yuri Milner and his firm DST Global.20 This investment added to the nearly $550 million it had previously received from groups such as Dragoneer Investment Group, Accel Partners, Vulcan, Morgan Stanley, Tiger Global, Iconiq Capital, Naspers, and Sofina Capital.21,22 Similar to Flipkart, Myntra heavily relied on funding from private investors including Accel Partners, Tiger Global, Sofina Capital, and Premji Invest. With the acquisition, Flipkart became the largest online fashion retailer in India.23

 

Snapdeal

Although they founded Snapdeal.com as an e-coupon website in 2010 (similar to Groupon in the U.S.), Kunal Bahl and Rohit Bansal decided to revamp their site after a trip to China in 2011 during which they witnessed the dynamic growth of the Chinese e-tailing giant Alibaba. Using Alibaba for inspiration, Bahl

 

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( This document is authorized for use only by Manmath Tripathy in Global Strategy – Winter 2018 taught by Gregory Theyel, California State University – East Bay from January 2018 to March 2018. )

 

 

and Bansal re-created Snapdeal.com in 2011 as an e-commerce marketplace (see Appendices H1 and H2 for Snapdeal’s website and executive leadership). Valued at $1 billion in June 2014, Snapdeal had relied heavily on funding from its investors.24 The largest of these was American e-commerce firm eBay, which invested $50 million in 2013 and was the largest investor in Snapdeal’s approximately $134 million round of funding in the first quarter of 2014.25 Other investors in this round included Intel Capital, Saama Capital, Nexus Venture Partners, Bessemer Venture Partners, and Kalaari Capital.26

 

Attempting to replicate Alibaba’s business model in India, Snapdeal offered 5 million products from over 30,000 sellers—much more than Flipkart’s network of 3,000 sellers as of May 2014. Similar to Alibaba’s logistics strategy, Snapdeal opened 40 fulfillment centers in 15 cities across India with which it stored and shipped sellers’ products for a fee.27 Snapdeal planned to open 35 more within the next year.28

 

Snapdeal had also expanded its reach through several acquisitions. In 2012 it acquired Esportbuy.com, an online sporting goods retailer, and in 2013 it bought Shopo.in, an online handicraft marketplace. In order to stake its position in the high-margin online fashion retailing space, in May 2014 Snapdeal acquired Doozton.com, a site that helped users discover popular fashion trends and lifestyle products.29

 

eBay

The American e-commerce giant entered the Indian market in 2005 after it acquired Baazee.com, India’s largest online marketplace at the time, for $50 million plus acquisition costs.30 Initially, eBay took a cautious approach in India while other e-commerce startups were aggressively investing to grab market share early on. In its infancy, eBay.in concentrated only in selling gift items such as chocolates and flowers from third- party traders.31 However, eBay since invested heavily to ensure its place as a leader in the Indian e-commerce market. By 2014, eBay India listed over 2,000 specific product categories from 45,000 traders.32,33 Similar to its model in the U.S., eBay was functioning solely as a marketplace in India, and offered products for auction as well as for a set price.

 

Much of its investment had gone into logistics options for its traders as well as into other companies. In 2012, eBay.in launched its PowerShip program option, in which eBay coordinated shipping for its member traders among its logistics partners in India—FedEx, BlueDart, DTDC, and Aramex. For set PowerShip rates, eBay’s logistics partners would pick up products packaged in eBay packing material directly from sellers and ship them to the buyers. With PowerShip, sellers could offer prepayment or cash-on-delivery options to be handled by their eBay Paisapay account, an escrow account that transfered money from buyer to seller after receipt of the purchased goods.

 

As mentioned above, EBay’s investments included funding Indian e-commerce retailer Snapdeal. In return for its investment, eBay acquired permission to access Snapdeal’s 20-million-person user database as well as its logistics network.34

 

Moving forward, eBay looked to more partnerships with Indian sellers and incorporating them into its global trading network. In April 2014, eBay partnered with the Confederation of All Indian Traders (CAIT) to be the recommended platform for small Indian sellers looking to market their products on the national and international stages. EBay planned to add more traders to its membership list and offer them the option of international export for their products.35 By partnering with eBay, member traders could sell their merchandise through any of eBay’s 39 global sites to over 145 million active eBay users worldwide.36

 

Amazon’s India Approach

Prior to Amazon.in, Amazon already had thousands of employees in India performing customer service,

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software development and back office functions.37 In addition, in February 2012, Diego Piacentini and Amazon’s VP for International Expansion, Amit Agarwal, led Amazon’s investment in Junglee.com, an online product review site that listed over 10 million products, toward the Indian market in 2012. Through the site, customers could compare reviews, pricing, and shipping details for each product listed.38 Piacentini and Agarwal were determined to formulate a strategy that would best leverage their learnings from nearly a decade of operations in China. Rather than making piecemeal investments over their first few years of operation, Piacentini and Agarwal decided to invest big from the start. They recognized that their competitors had a head start of five to nine years to adapt their businesses to the Indian market, and so Amazon needed to develop a competitive strategy.

 

Agarwal brought local knowledge and deep company experience to this endeavor. The Mumbai-born new Vice President and Country Manager for Amazon India had joined Amazon in 1999 after earning his computer science degrees at the Indian Institute of Technology-Kanpur and Stanford University. He rose through the ranks from software development at Amazon headquarters to Managing Director of Amazon’s Development Center in Bangalore and then “Shadow and Technical Advisor” to Bezos.39

 

After the launch of Amazon.in in June 2013, much of Amazon’s initial Indian investments went to its core strength in logistics, as the company learned to adjust to the difficulties of distribution in India. Just prior to the launch, Amazon had completed the construction of a 150,000-square-foot fulfillment center just outside Mumbai. It later built one of similar size in Bangalore to serve southern India. With so much of India’s retail space dominated by local mom and pop shops, Agarwal and Piacentini decided to offer a “Fulfillment by Amazon” program in which Amazon enabled sellers to store their products at Amazon distribution center and have Amazon handle the delivery for a fee. Eventually three out of every four orders on Amazon.in were fulfilled by Amazon.40

 

Agarwal and Piacentini decided to further differentiate Amazon from its Indian competitors by being the first e-tailer to offer next-day shipping for the orders it fulfilled. In order to compensate for the difficulty of locating addresses and to ensure timely delivery of its sellers’ products, Agarwal also added PIN code (postal codes similar to ZIP codes in the U.S.) and landmark fields on the delivery information page, reaching 21,000 PIN codes versus other retailers’ 12,000.41

 

Since Amazon would function solely as a marketplace in India, seller acquisition was a major priority for establishing market share. To attract domestic sellers across India, Piacentini and Agarwal offered sellers a promotion for a two-year membership agreement with the first year free of cost. After the first year, members were only required to pay Rs 499 ($8.27) per month in addition to Amazon’s commission charge of 4%-8% (4% for most electronics, 8% for watches and jewelry) and a Rs 10 ($0.17) “closing fee” for each transaction. Piacentini and Agarwal also stressed educating Indian sellers on Amazon’s platform and services. For small retailers with little to no online selling experience, Amazon offered a pilot service called “Mainstreaming Sellers/SMEs” to teach them how to transact online, catalogue their products, and accept online payments. In addition, sellers could utilize the “Fulfillment by Amazon” option to give responsibility for delivery to Amazon.42

 

In order to attract buyers from India’s growing number of Internet users, Piacentini and Agarwal offered multiple incentives for those who referred customers to or bought products from Amazon.in. In the beginning stages of operation in India, Amazon offered free shipping for the orders it fulfilled. It also offered permanent free shipping on all orders fulfilled by Amazon over Rs 499.43 Piacentini and Agarwal also introduced the Amazon Associates Program, which offered a commission to all online publishers (e.g. bloggers, businesses, authors, nonprofits, and personal websites) who directed their viewers to Amazon.in via a link to a “contextually relevant product.” If a purchase was made, the commission for referrals would

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range between 5% for consumer electronics and 10% for most other product categories, such as books and movies, and would cover all purchases made by the referred customer.44 Piacentini and Agarwal also attracted buyers by replicating the cash-on-delivery option it had offered in China. In addition to online payment options such as credit cards, debit cards, and bank transfers, cash-on-delivery would allow Amazon customers to pay for their merchandise at the time of delivery. However, this option had tended to delay payments to Amazon up to one week.45

 

E-retailers in India appeared to be fighting to offer the largest selection of products at the lowest cost and with the fastest delivery times. Just after Amazon introduced next day delivery, Flipkart announced that it would be offering “In-a-Day Guarantee” delivery. Soon after, both companies began to offer same day delivery in a number of cities if ordered before a certain time.46

 

Amazon and its competitors had further attempted to differentiate themselves through unique mobile features and by entering exclusive distribution agreements with producers. For example, in February 2014, Flipkart signed an agreement with Motorola to sell its new phone, Moto G, only online through Flipkart’s site. In addition, Snapdeal agreed to be the sole Indian seller of Oplus Technology’s (Taiwanese) newest tablet in January 2014. Snapdeal co-founder and CEO Bahl stated that 90% of its product offerings were unique to Snapdeal, concentrating the most on the “unorganized segment in categories like apparel.”47 Snapdeal further differentiated itself by being the first to launch its site in both Hindi and Tamil.48

 

Amazon was also competing for market share among mobile users. According to Avendus Capital, India had 67 million smartphone users in 2013, a figure that could reach 382 million by 2016.49 As of 2014, Snapdeal claimed that 30% of its business came from smartphone users; eBay claimed 31%.50,51 To cater to this demand, most e-tailers had developed comprehensive mobile apps for their sites, even offering exclusive deals to those who made purchases on their phone. Moving into India’s fiscal year 2015 (April 1-March 31), some of Amazon’s competitors had expressed interest in acquiring a mobile technology enterprise in order to exploit this market opportunity.52

 

While Amazon waited for its rivals to take the lead on the e-tailing side for many years in India, the firm had entered China a decade earlier in 2004.

 

The World’s Largest Market: China

In 2002, China had an estimated 27 million online consumers,53 rising to over 80 million in 2004.54 By 2014, the country was expected to reach 650 million online consumers.55 In 2002, China’s e-commerce market was valued at an estimated $1.3 billion, growing to over $16 billion by 2005-2006.56 At the start of 2014, China’s e-commerce market was valued at over $300 billion, expected to reach $540 billion by 2015. Growing at a compound annual rate of nearly 70%, China’s e-commerce market was scheduled to surpass the

U.S. as the largest e-commerce market in the world.57 According to World Bank data, China recorded 621.7 million Internet users in 2013, approximately 46% of China’s 1.4 billion population and more than double the amount of Internet users in the U.S. at 266.2 million.

 

At an investor conference in 2013, Jack Ma, founder and chairman of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group, remarked, “In other countries, e-commerce is a way to shop, in China it is a lifestyle.”58 Chinese consumers were known to use social media extensively. According to McKinsey & Co., China’s 300 million users of social media spent more than 40% of their time on the Internet browsing blogs and social networking sites.59 Using popular social media sites such as WeChat and Weibo, Chinese users often accessed and posted product reviews, got buy/don’t buy product advice from “key opinion leaders” and friends, and

 

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saw advertisements of featured products from retailers.60

 

Chinese consumers were also becoming very active shoppers on mobile devices. With the largest volume of mobile e-commerce transactions in the world, China expected purchases via mobile device to reach $41.4 billion by 2015 from only $7.8 billion in 2012. This volume of mobile transactions attested to the Chinese consumer’s craving for fast shopping at any time of the day.61

 

China, however, did not represent a consistent market from region to region. KPMG International highlighted that customers in “tier-1” cities such as Beijing and Shanghai varied drastically in their shopping preferences and purchasing decisions from other consumers in smaller markets, such as Xi’an and Fuzhou. Sales volume for higher-end goods, such as cars, jewelry, and handbags, was much greater in Shanghai than in smaller coastal and inland cities. This trend was also true for brand loyalty, as consumers in China’s smaller markets favored differed products and tended to stress current fashion styles less than those in larger cities.62

 

By operating in a communist-led country, Amazon faced limitations on its operations that it had not encountered in its prior international experience. Chinese law regulated and restricted Amazon’s Internet content, as well as its sale of any media-related products or services. In addition, Chinese law demanded that Amazon’s website, www.amazon.cn, be operated by a Chinese-owned corporation in order to comply with local ownership laws.63

 

Competition in China, 2004-2014

While the Chinese online commerce market had consolidated significantly by 2014, the competitive landscape in the nascent market of 2004 was far more fragmented. All the players started with somewhat different business models that would continue to evolve. Central competitors in the early battle for Chinese market share included EachNet, Alibaba, Joyo.com, and Jingdong.

 

EachNet

EachNet was founded in Shanghai in 1999 by two Chinese entrepreneurs who had studied in the U.S.: Bo Shao and Haiyin Tan.64 As of 2002, EachNet had 3.5 million registered users and was the leading person- to-person online trading site in the nascent Chinese e-commerce market when eBay announced its intent to acquire a 33% stake of the company for $30 million.65 Under CEO Meg Whitman, eBay completed the transaction in 2003 and brought in a German country manager and a technology executive from the U.S. Neither understood the language or the local market. EBay invested an additional $100 million into the entity which was soon renamed eBay EachNet.66

 

Alibaba

Founded in 1999 by Chinese entrepreneur Jack Ma, Alibaba.com was launched in Hangzhou as an online forum for Chinese manufacturers to sell their products to domestic and overseas buyers. In 2002, Alibaba made its first profit, only $1. It “badly trailed” EachNet, according to the Wall Street Journal.67 By 2014, Alibaba Group with Jack Ma as chairman operated several web services including two of China’s largest e-commerce sites, Taobao.com and Tmall.com. However, faced by competition from eBay EachNet, little- known Alibaba’s quest for market share in the early 2000s was not easy.

 

In response to the eBay-Eachnet acquisition, Alibaba launched Taobao.com in 2003 as a way of preventing eBay from taking away its customer base.68 Taobao.com began as a marketplace and auction site that would later serve as a pure marketplace which connected merchants of all sizes to a network of millions of consumers. According to Helen Wang, author of The Chinese Dream, given that Chinese users at the time

 

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were unfamiliar with Internet auctions, only 10% of Taobao’s product listings were available for auction, as opposed to 40% for eBay EachNet. Alibaba also offered longer and more flexible listing periods for its auction products. Furthermore, to cater to China’s three hundred million cell phone users (compared with only 90 million Internet users at the time), Taobao offered its buyers and sellers the option of communicating via instant messaging and voice mail.69

 

The marketing strategies of the two companies also reflected their different knowledge and experience. EBay purchased exclusive rights to Internet ads on major Chinese portals Sina, Sohu, and Netease whereas Ma blitzed the major TV channels with Taobao ads. At the time, many more Chinese were in front of their TVs than on the Internet. Most importantly, Taobao charged no commission fees to its sellers. Signing-up was very easy – even five minutes was enough to register on the site.70 Many of these differences appealed to the Chinese and helped Taobao to quickly overtake eBay Eachnet. In 2013, Taobao recorded 7 million sellers and over 800 million product offerings.71

 

Tmall, was Alibaba’s next offering. It was a business-to-consumer marketplace designed for bigger merchants and major labels, such as Nike and Gap. Each business selling products on Tmall was required to pay a deposit to set up its business, and was then charged a fee on each transaction. Created in 2008 as part of Taobao.com, Tmall.com officially became its own website in June 2011.72 By the end of 2012, Tmall had attained a 51.5% share of the Chinese business-to-consumer marketplace (see Appendices I1 and I2 for Alibaba’s Tmall and Taobao web pages and for Alibaba Group’s executive leadership).73

 

In 2013, combined transaction volume for the two sites equaled $240 billion, more than the transactions for Amazon and eBay combined (approximately $100 billion and $75 billion, respectively); (see Appendices J1 and J2 to compare Alibaba with major western Internet companies). According to The Wall Street Journal, Alibaba controlled nearly 80% of all Chinese e-commerce in 2013.74

 

Alibaba Group filed for an initial public offering in the U.S. on May 6, 2014, with analysts valuing the company at over $150 billion. Alibaba sought to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) with the ticker, BABA. As of the time of the case, Alibaba had since filed various amendments throughout the summer in response to requests for additional information from SEC approval. The expected IPO date had been pushed back to September 2014.

 

Joyo.com

Founded in 2000, Joyo.com was the largest online retailers of books, music and videos in China as of 2004, according to Amazon.75 Joyo also sold software, toys and gifts, among other products.

 

Jingdong Mall / JD.com

Other major competition came from Jingdong Mall (JD.com), formerly known as 360buy.com. Reportedly founded in 1998, its marketplace went online in 2004. In 2012, Jingdong Mall had a market share of 22.7%, making it China’s third largest Internet retailer.76 Total merchandise sales reached $16.39 billion in 2013.77,i In March 2014, TenCent Holdings, a leader in online games and mobile messaging (through WeChat) agreed to acquire at 15% stake in JD.com for $215 million, in a move to enter the rapidly growing mobile commerce market.78

 

Amazon’s China Experience

Amazon first entered China in 2004 by acquiring Joyo.com for $75 million. Amazon’s entry came at

i Gross merchandise volume for retailers is different from net sales. Based on Jingdong’s 2014 20-f filing with the SEC, the firm reported approximately 6.6 billion USD in net sales based on the 6.31 official average annual exchange rate of RMB per USD.

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a time when China’s GDP was growing at a rate near 10% each year, accompanied by a small but growing Internet user base of 94.6 million people (7.3% of the 1.3 billion person population) and an e-commerce market estimated to be worth $8.6 billion. In 2004, Joyo.com had 5.2 million registered users as well as projected revenues of $15 million.79 Within six months of the acquisition, a little earlier than expected from the time of due diligence, the management team had departed.80

 

For its first year in China, Amazon operated under Joyo.com’s domain name, mainly offering books, DVDs, and CDs to its customers in China’s largest cities of Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou. Despite the departure of Joyo’s management team, the transition was seamless to the Chinese consumer.81 By 2007, Amazon had increased its product offerings thirty-two fold, offering electronics, baby products, beauty care products, and watches. With $26.1 million in sales in the last quarter of 2006, Joyo.com’s market share had reached 12%.82 In 2007 Amazon changed the domain name from joyo.com to amazon.cn, with Joyo Amazon as its name in Chinese. Amazon was renamed Amazon China in 2011, pronounced in Mandarin as “Yamashi.”83 Amazon finally launched its Kindle e-reader in China in June 2013.

 

Amazon strived to replicate the acclaimed customer experience it delivered to consumers in developed markets. For instance, Piacentini liked to tell an anecdote about the delivery of a new Harry Potter book in Chinese on its publication date in 2005. Amazon China delivered 5,000 books on schedule. However, when a competitor undercut Amazon’s price by 5 RNB (less than $1), Amazon issued a refund for the difference to the customers, who were not expecting a refund. This gained Amazon much positive publicity, and Piancentini hailed it to be the firm’s best public relations and marketing move in China for the year84.

 

Amazon had to drastically adjust its logistics operation in China. To start, Amazon used Joyo.com’s three existing fulfillment centers located in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou. From there, Amazon distributed orders to its other thirty delivery centers across the country.85 Piacentini and his team eventually expanded Amazon’s distribution network by creating fifteen fulfillment centers across China, its largest logistics operation outside the U.S. Differently from its U.S. model at the time, Amazon played a large role in the last leg of the delivery process. Amazon started to handle deliveries in-house by hiring employees to transport the merchandise the “last mile” to the customer. Instead of vans or trucks, however, intra-city deliveries in China were commonly carried out on bicycles or scooters due to China’s tendency for traffic-filled roads.86 When Amazon entered China in 2004, overnight deliveries had only recently been made possible due to new developments in truck, rail, and aerial transport.87

 

Amazon initially faced payment challenges similar to those it encountered later on in India. In the early 2000s, many Chinese customers were reluctant to pay in advance for their purchases with credit card. As a result, Amazon’s China team adopted Joyo.com’s cash on delivery option. Furthermore, Amazon began to offer free shipping on all purchases through its site. Joyo.com also offered product recommendations to customers based on their past purchase history, something that had proved successful in other Amazon markets.88

 

Despite its early investment and efforts, Amazon’s share of the Chinese business-to-consumer e-commerce market stood at a mere 3.5% at the end of 2012.89 However, as noted by Piacentini, Amazon had at least made its way into the top five e-commerce websites by January 2014.90 On the one hand, Piacentini knew there had been mistakes in China, but on the other hand, the glass was half full.

 

Another Emerging Market: Brazil

Amazon launched Amazon Brazil (home to Amazon’s namesake) in December 2012, just six months

 

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before launching its India site. Brazil joined China and India as one of the world’s largest emerging markets, ranked 7th in the world by GDP at $2.2 trillion. In 2013, 51.6% of Brazilians used the Internet, or 103.4 million people out of a population of 200.4 million. According to McKinsey & Company, 85% of Brazil’s population would have access to mobile broadband by 2015, a population that had increasingly used mobile applications to purchase products and follow retailers.91

 

Despite a record 7.5% GDP growth rate in 2010, however, Brazil experienced an economic downturn from the end of 2013 through the first half of 2014. Brazil’s GDP growth rate reached a mere 2.3% in 2013, and was expected to grow by only 1.5% through 2014. Low retail sales, declining commodity exports, and reduced production levels served as evidence of the downturn.92 At the start of 2014, Brazil’s e-commerce market was valued at over $11 billion.93

 

In 2014, Brazil ranked 116th in the World Bank’s “Ease of Doing Business” measure, ranking as low as 159th out of 189 countries in ease of paying taxes (see Appendix K for select “Ease of Doing Business” rankings). According to the professional services firm PricewaterhouseCoopers, it took approximately 2,600 hours for a firm to comply with Brazil’s complex tax code, mainly due to its complicated consumption tax system. In 2014, Brazil had a total tax rate of 68.3%.94 Labor laws and regulations in Brazil were also very costly due to requirements for employers to pay for meals, transportation, health insurance, 30 days of vacation, and mandatory bonuses for their employees.95

 

Parts of Brazil also varied drastically in terms of transportation infrastructure. Many major rail, road, and port construction projects that were started in the 1970s during the “Economic Miracle” period in Brazil had been left unfinished across the country. For example, over half of the Trans-Amazonian Highway, intended to connect the eastern and western regions of Brazil in 1972, remained unpaved as well as impassable during rainy seasons. According to Brazil’s National Confederation of Transportation, 69% of Brazil’s roads remained in poor condition, often narrow and dotted with potholes.96 Brazil’s poor roadways, inefficient railways, and crowded airspace had led the World Economic Forum to rank Brazil 104th out of 142 countries measured in terms of “quality of overall infrastructure.” Brazil ranked behind both China (69th) and India (86th).97

 

Competition in Latin America

MercadoLibre

Launched in 1999 by Stanford MBA student Marcos Galperin, MercadoLibre (MercadoLivre in Portuguese and “free market” in English) served as Brazil’s largest e-commerce marketplace for buyers and sellers (see Appendices L1 and L2 for MercadoLibre’s Brazilian homepage and executive leadership). With headquarters in Buenos Aires, Argentina, MercadoLibre offered country-specific sites in thirteen countries throughout Latin America and in Brazil and Portugal. Benefitting from first-mover advantage in Brazil in October 1999, MercadoLibre’s marketplace had 20.2 million unique buyers and 5.1 million unique sellers by 2013. MercadoLibre’s Brazil site accounted for 43.7% of its total revenues of $472.6 million, reaching $206.4 million in 2013, 14.9% higher from the year before (see Appendices M1 and M2 for MercadoLibre financial results).98

 

In addition to its marketplace, MercadoLibre offered MercadoPago, an escrow-based payment service that was one of the firm’s most important revenue streams—enabling payments for transactions in an environment where credit card penetration was limited. Other business lines include MercadoEnvios, a shipping solution for sellers, Advertising Services, Classified, and Online Stores Service, which gave sellers the ability to create their own web stores integrated with the MercadoLibre marketplace.99

 

From its infancy, MercadoLibre had primarily relied on investors for funding its business initiatives. In

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addition to its start-up investments, MercadoLibre obtained two rounds of funding, one totaling $7.6 million in November 1999 and another totaling $46.7 million in May 2000, before raising $290 million in its IPO (NASDAQ: MELI) in 2007. With the IPO funds, MercadoLibre bought out the remaining operations of its rival DeRemate.

 

Although MercadoLibre reached an all-time high in its stock price on October 18, 2013, trading at

$141.77 after a period of triple-digit return on invested capital (ROIC), its stock dropped about 40% by May 2014 partly due to political economic instability in its Argentine and Venezuelan markets (see Appendix N for MELI stock information). As of June 2014, MercadoLibre’s ROIC was still high at 73% (compared with 17% for eBay and 4% for Amazon); however, increased competition resulting from the expired non-compete arrangement with eBay and the recent entry of Amazon could challenge MercadoLibre’s growth and market share in Brazil.100

 

Saraiva

Saraiva, Brazil’s largest bookstore chain and leading book publisher, was another competitor for Amazon. Selling books, CDs, and DVDs from its Internet site (www.livrariasaraiva.com.br), Saraiva offered 15,000 Portuguese e-book titles in 2013 as opposed to Amazon’s 13,000.101 Perhaps in response, Amazon added 15,000 more e-books at the start of 2014. Amazon was rumored to have been in talks to buy Saraiva’s Internet business in October 2012, just months before starting its Kindle Store in December. As of 2012, Saraiva refused to sell any of its own published 2,500 e-books to its competition, including Amazon.102

 

Amazon’s Approach in Brazil

Faced with webs of tax codes, labor laws, logistics challenges, and strong competition from established Latin American e-commerce player MercadoLibre, Amazon ultimately launched in Brazil by only introducing its Kindle (e-book) Store. Estimates suggested that Brazilians purchased 435 million books in 2012 valued at

$2 billion.103 However, e-books accounted for only 3% of these sales.104 Upon its launch, Amazon listed 1.4 million e-book titles on its site, 13,000 of which were offered in Portuguese.105 Amazon’s launch of its Kindle Store, however, came only after lengthy negotiations with Brazilian book publishers who wanted control over pricing in fear of Amazon’s aggressive discounting strategies. To date, Amazon had formalized contracts with over thirty book publishers, prominently including the Distribuidora de Livros Digitais (DLD) group whose seven publishers controlled close to 35% of the market and whose demands caused Amazon to delay its entry into the country.106,107 As of February 2014, Amazon had increased its e-book selection to 28,000 titles in Portuguese, Brazil’s national language.108

 

In addition to its Kindle Store, Amazon introduced its Kindle e-reader in Brazil in February 2014. As of then, Amazon planned to leave logistics to its external partners in Brazil.109 In June 2014, Amazon’s Kindle Paperwhite retailed for R$479 (USD 215.62) on Amazon.com.br, nearly twice its price in the U.S. of $119.110 This significant price difference could most likely be attributed to Brazil’s high duties on electronics imports. Amazon offered customers the option to pay for the Kindle in up to 12 installments, given the predilection for Brazilian consumers to use payment plans for expensive products.111,112 Amazon also offered free shipping on its Kindle products.113 The Kindle may not be the only physical product Amazon would choose to sell moving forward.

 

Other Markets: Diversity in Geography, Products, and Customers

Most recently, similar to its approach in Brazil, Amazon launched its Kindle Store in Mexico in August 2013 (www.amazon.com.mx), its twelfth international expansion as of July 2014.114 On the other side of the globe, Amazon was also making a move. According to Forbes’ Russian language site, Amazon established

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Case Study Discussion (Wendy’s)

  • Please read the case and analyze it by answering these case analysis questions.
  • You may answer each case discussion question in each paragraph and separate different paragraphs for different questions. You don’t have to copy the discussion questions in your answer.
  • Although quantity is not quality, however I do not accept 1-2 sentence answers to each question. Please make a thorough case analysis, post 300 to 500 words’ case analysis (roughly 1.5-3 pages double spaced with12-font), and post it in the text entry format online.

 

Synopsis:

The Wendy’s Company (Wendy’s) is one of America’s most iconic fast food chains. Founded by Dave Thomas in Columbus, Ohio, in 1969, it is currently the third-largest hamburger chain in the United States.

Wendy’s has a strong presence in the United States, but not in foreign markets, despite a long history of international expansion. Wendy’s first foray into global markets occurred in 1976, when the company opened a restaurant in Canada. Since then, Wendy’s has opened restaurants in many foreign countries including Germany, Mexico, New Zealand, Indonesia, Greece, Turkey, Guatemala, and Italy. Wendy’s has at times struggled in the global arena, with failed ventures in Argentina, South Korea, Hong Kong, Russia, and Singapore. While Wendy’s is operating in 32 countries, it has only 637 restaurants operating outside of the United States.

This case deals with the international expansion plans of a fast food giant. Wendy’s international presence is poor, and growth in domestic markets is difficult to achieve as fast food is no longer growing in the United States. Further, the company faces fierce competition from competitors in both the fast food industry and the fast-casual dinning industry. However, there is high growth potential in a number of international markets. In May 2018, the company’s chief executive officer, Todd A. Penegor, needs to determine which foreign market(s) to target as well as

 

Case Discussion Questions:

  1. What impact (if any) could Wendy’s prior failures in international markets have on its current expansion effort?
  2. What challenges or issues might Wendy’s face in making a significant expansion into Africa?
  3. Using the marketing mix (i.e., product, price, place, promotion), determine what changes Wendy’s might have to make to its operations if it opens restaurants in the foreign markets highlighted in the case.
  4. Imagine that Wendy’s will open 1000 restaurants in a foreign market(s). Which foreign market(s) would you suggest it enter, and how many restaurants would you suggest it open in each market?

    W18477

    WENDY’S: A PLAN FOR INTERNATIONAL EXPANSION1

    Fabrizio Di Muro wrote this case solely to provide material for class discussion. The author does not intend to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a managerial situation. The author may have disguised certain names and other identifying information to protect confidentiality.

    This publication may not be transmitted, photocopied, digitized, or otherwise reproduced in any form or by any means without the permission of the copyright holder. Reproduction of this material is not covered under authorization by any reproduction rights organization. To order copies or request permission to reproduce materials, contact Ivey Publishing, Ivey Business School, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada, N6G 0N1; (t) 519.661.3208; (e) [email protected]; www.iveycases.com.

    Copyright © 2018, Ivey Business School Foundation Version: 2018-08-13

    In May 2018 in the United States, Wendy’s faced an important decision related to its international markets. The company had a small international presence: of its more than 6,500 restaurants worldwide, only 637 were located in international markets. The company was faced with a saturated and stagnating U.S. market as well as fierce competition from a number of fast food rivals including McDonald’s Corporation (McDonald’s), Burger King Corporation (Burger King), and Carl’s Jr. Restaurants LLC (Carl’s Jr.), and the surest path to growth seemed to be expansion into foreign markets, where fast food was still growing.2 Todd A. Penegor, Wendy’s chief executive officer, needed to determine which international market(s) to target and how many restaurants to open in each market.

    HISTORY OF WENDY’S

    Basic Information and Product Menu

    Wendy’s was founded by Dave Thomas on November 15, 1969, in Columbus, Ohio. As of May 2018, Wendy’s was headquartered in Dublin, Ohio, and was the third-largest hamburger chain (behind McDonald’s and Burger King), with over 6,500 restaurants, most of which were located in North America. By 2017, the majority of the company’s restaurants were franchised locations—only 637 of the company’s restaurants were company owned and operated. Further, Wendy’s franchise agreements were such that Wendy’s controlled the exterior store appearance, food quality, and menu, while franchisees determined the hours of operation, interior décor, pricing, uniforms, and wages.3

    Wendy’s menu centred on hamburgers, French fries, chicken sandwiches, and its signature Frosty dessert, arguably Wendy’s most famous and well-known offering.4 The Frosty, a soft-serve ice cream dessert offered in vanilla and chocolate flavours, had also been sold as an ice cream float. Recently, the company had introduced Frosty Shakes—a Frosty blended with either vanilla bean, strawberry, or chocolate fudge syrup.

    For years, Wendy’s signature hamburgers had been its single, double, and triple burgers, which featured a square patty (as opposed to a round one). However, in 2011, the company replaced its iconic hamburgers with the release of the Dave’s Hot ’N Juicy line—thicker patties were introduced and the classic square edges were eliminated. A number of other changes were introduced: the cheese was stored at a warmer temperature, which meant that it melted over the patty. Changes were made to the bun as well as to the

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    produce and condiments—white onions replaced red onions, and mustard was eliminated as a condiment. While the new line of burgers was re-named as Dave’s, the words single, double, and triple were retained.5

    In 2012, Wendy’s decided to reintroduce breakfast offerings in its North American outlets. The company had unsuccessfully attempted to roll out a breakfast menu in both 1985 and 2007. In May 2018, Wendy’s typical breakfast offerings included breakfast sandwiches and breakfast burritos. In January 2014, the company introduced its Ciabatta Bacon Cheeseburger, which featured a quarter-pound beef patty, aged Asiago cheese, applewood-smoked bacon, rosemary garlic aioli, and oven-roasted tomatoes. This item was originally intended to be offered for only a limited time, but due to its success, Wendy’s decided to feature it permanently. Recently, the company introduced a black bean burger, containing (as of May 2018) black beans, wild rice, farro, onions, brown rice, carrots, quinoa, corn, and green and red bell peppers. Sauces and seasonings for the black bean burger typically included red wine vinegar, chili peppers, cumin, cilantro, oregano, and sea salt.6

    Wendy’s had also introduced the Baconator. In May 2018, this burger was available in three different varieties: the Single Baconator, the Double Baconator, and the Triple Baconator. The Single was composed of a quarter-pound patty accompanied by mayonnaise, ketchup, three slices of bacon, and two slices of cheese, while the Double consisted of a half-pound patty, mayonnaise, ketchup, six slices of bacon, and three slices of cheese. The Triple featured a three-quarter-pound patty, mayonnaise, ketchup, nine slices of bacon, and four slices of cheese.7

    International Locations

    Wendy’s first foray into an international market occurred when it opened an outlet in Hamilton, Canada, in 1976. The first European outlet soon followed, when Wendy’s opened a restaurant in Munich, Germany, in 1979.8 In the early 1980s, the company entered the Asian market. Restaurants were opened in Japan in 1980, in Hong Kong in 1982, in the Philippines and Singapore in 1983, and in South Korea in 1984.9 However, the company closed all restaurants in Hong Kong in 1986 and in Singapore in 1987 in response to an economic slowdown. From 1988 to 1990, Wendy’s opened outlets in a number of international markets: Mexico, New Zealand, Indonesia, Greece, Turkey, Guatemala, and Italy.10

    In 1996, Wendy’s opened 18 restaurants in Argentina, but by 2000 all of these had been closed. By that time, Wendy’s had also exited the South Korean market, as well as the United Kingdom and Hong Kong markets.11 Wendy’s re-entered Singapore in 2009; however, by April 2015, it had closed all restaurants and exited that market. In 2011, Wendy’s re-entered Japan and Argentina by opening 50 restaurants in each country. The company also expanded to Russia; but by 2014, Wendy’s had closed all of its restaurants in that country. In 2013, Wendy’s entered the country of Georgia, and in 2015 it entered India (see Exhibit 1).12

    POTENTIAL INTERNATIONAL MARKETS FOR A WENDY’S EXPANSION

    The following markets were identified by industry experts as having high growth potential:

    Africa

    In May 2018, the fast food industry was in the nascent stages in Africa. However, some industry experts predicted that the African fast food market would experience significant growth in coming years. These experts pointed to a changing lifestyle as the key reason for the growth of fast food in Africa. In May 2018,

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    this changing lifestyle was being driven by a rising middle class and rising incomes in many African countries. As a result, people had greater disposable income and were likely to need food on the go. 13

    “As incomes rise and all of the usual emerging market dynamics are in play, such as urbanization, [and] more hectic lifestyles, many people in Africa are also gaining access to chained/branded restaurants for the first time,” commented Elizabeth Friend, a strategy analyst with Euromonitor International. Friend also pointed to curiosity as another factor in the potential growth of fast food in Africa (especially since people were posting their culinary experiences online, through various social media): “They’re curious about the foods their peers are eating and the restaurants they are going to, and they’re eager for a chance to try them out for themselves.”14

    Other analysts agreed that the African fast food market could see significant growth: “In Africa as a whole, and particularly sub-Saharan Africa, we’re starting to see real growth in terms of the number of households with the kind of disposable income that can support eating out,” commented Michael Schaefer, head of Consumer Foodservice at Euromonitor International. “If we look at just South Africa, Nigeria, Cameroon, and Kenya, you’re now seeing about 16 million households with disposable incomes of [US]$5,000 a year or more, which is not a great deal, but is often considered the level when people might start to eat out on a regular basis,” indicated Schaefer.15

    Although Africa was considered to be a relatively new market in May 2018, some North American fast food companies had already established operations in Africa by that time. In May 2018, KFC Corporation (KFC)(formerly Kentucky Fried Chicken) was the market leader in Africa, with 840 restaurants across various countries—South Africa, Angola, Namibia, Botswana, Malawi, Ghana, Kenya, Zambia, Tanzania, and Uganda—while McDonald’s was second with 387 restaurants across six countries—South Africa, Egypt, Morocco, Kenya, Mauritius, and Tunisia. By May 2018, Burger King had also established a presence in Africa, with 120 restaurants in Egypt, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Morocco, and South Africa.16

    Within Africa, a few markets were identified as having potential for growth:

    Egypt

    Egypt, a country with a population of approximately 92 million, was expected to experience continued population growth. Most experts forecasted that the country’s population would grow by 2.2 per cent annually for the foreseeable future. Most of Egypt’s population was located along a narrow strip of the Nile River, and in May 2018, its population was young, with a median age of 25.3 years. The main language spoken in Egypt was Arabic, and the most practised religion in the country was Islam; Christianity was the second most practiced religion (see Exhibits 2 and 3). Traditionally, Egypt’s economy had relied on agriculture, tourism, and cash remittances from Egyptians working abroad. By May 2018, a booming economy, increased tourism, and a greater number of people in the workforce contributed to rising incomes among the country’s consumers. With additional disposable income, Egyptian consumers had become much more interested in eating out at restaurants. As a result, significant growth of the Egyptian fast food market had already occurred; for instance, in 2016 alone, the casual dining segment grew by 24 per cent, and substantial future growth was expected. In particular, significant growth was expected to occur in Cairo (the country’s capital city), not only because of its large population (22 million people), but also because of its status as the centre for tourism and commerce in Egypt.17

    McDonald’s and Burger King had entered Egypt earlier, and by May 2018, McDonald’s had 78 restaurants in Egypt, and Burger King had 68 restaurants in the country.18 In May 2018, there were also two major Egyptian fast food chains, Cook Door and Mo’men. Both chains were established in 1988 and based in Cairo. Cook Door mainly focused on sandwiches and meals, while Mo’men mainly featured sandwiches.

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    The former had had one location until 2013 but had recently expanded to feature multiple locations, while the latter boasted approximately 30 locations in May 2018.19

    South Africa

    In early 2018, South Africa’s population totalled approximately 50.7 million. Since the fall of apartheid in 1994, the country had peacefully transitioned to a multi-party democracy. A total of 11 different languages were spoken in South Africa in early 2018. The language spoken by the greatest number of citizens was Zulu, followed by Xhosa, Afrikaans, and English. The country’s dominant religion was Christianity, but Islam and indigenous beliefs were also practised. By May 2018, South Africa was fuelled by mining and agriculture, and its economy had become one of Africa’s largest and most stable.20 In recent years, South Africa had seen rising incomes and a growing number of women in its workforce. These factors led to greater disposable incomes for the country’s consumers, which, coupled with increasingly busy lifestyles, led to more people eating out. This buoyed fast food consumption in the country. In addition, an expansion of the country’s middle class had also helped the fast food industry to grow substantially in recent years.21

    By May 2018, the South African fast food market had become somewhat established, as the top 10 fast food companies had opened over 3,600 locations in the country. Yet signs of future growth were still present. A large number (over 80 per cent) of South African consumers purchased fast food at least once a month, and this number was expected to grow, as approximately 42 million people were expected to have purchased at least one fast food meal by May 2018. Further, growth in the fast food sector was expected to increase by 9 per cent in both 2018 and 2019, while the number of takeout restaurants was expected to increase by 4 per cent each year during this time span. In addition, the country’s retail growth rate was expected to grow by 3–5 per cent in 2019.22

    American fast food companies had established operations in South Africa. McDonald’s first restaurant in South Africa opened in 1995, and by the start of 2018 the company had over 200 restaurants across nine provinces. Burger King first opened its doors in South Africa in May 2013, and by May 2018 it had 70 outlets in operation.23 In May 2018, a number of local South African fast food competitors existed, such as Steers, Wimpy, and Nando’s. Steers offered flame-broiled hamburgers and homemade chips (fries). Wimpy, a South African chain with American roots, featured classic fast food fare such as hamburgers, chips, and breakfast items. Nando’s featured Portuguese-style peri peri chicken—chicken served with peri peri, a Portuguese chili sauce—as well as a number of other Mozambique–Portuguese chicken dishes. While Nando’s operated in South Africa, it had also expanded to Botswana, Mauritius, Namibia, Swaziland, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.24

 
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Market Segmentation, Targeting, And Positioning *Samsung Cell Phones*

Market Segmentation, Targeting, and Positioning

Learning Outcomes

  1. Segmentation.  Students can use the segmentation characteristics to identify and describe market segments
  2. Target Market. Students can identify a usable market segment to be a target market
  3. Target-market strategy. Students can determine an appropriate target-market strategy.
  4. Positioning.  Students can develop and interpret a perceptual map.

Directions

  • Thus far you have only been considering the customers of your product or service as one big group, or a mass market.  More astute marketing breaks down this large group into smaller market segments of consumers who have like characteristics.  For any given product or service there could be numerous market segments.  However, company resources may only allow a company to pursue one or two or these market segments, which then become target market(s).  Your job here is to break down the mass market for your product or service into at least two market segments and then pick one target market you think would have the most potential for future growth.  This target market does not have to be the one the company would have actually picked, or is currently pursuing, there is no way for you or your faculty to know based on public information.  So, once again the literature will not give you the ‘right’ answer.  Your brain will help you reason your way through.
  • Think outside your own box.  Chances are good you picked a product with which you are familiar.  That is a good starting point, and you may represent one target market.  But you may represent a target market that is saturated and therefore not the best target market to pick for the remainder of the semester.  So be sure your second target market is different enough and represents growth potential.
  • If you did not do a thorough analysis of the competition in the prior writing assignments, you may need to go back and figure out the nature of the product or service’s competition.  This will be important when you address the positioning of your product for your newly identified target market inasmuch as positioning is a competition-based concept.
  • We understand you are not an employee of the company and do not have access to the data that you feel will allow you to discuss the questions to the degree you would like.  Take your best educated and reasoned guesses whenever you need to do so.
  • Otherwise, you do not need to do any external research for this writing assignment. Your job will be to critically examine all of the segmentation bases and arrive at your own description of potential market segments for your product or service.
  • Remember, you have a two-page limit so be judicious in your responses, do not report anything the company is or has done. You are now in charge at your company. We (your boss) are only interested in your thoughts at this point.
  • Prepare your assignment by answering the following four areas of inquiry related to the learning outcomes noted above.
    1. Segmentation.  Using the various criteria of the segmentation bases described in the week’s readings and in Table 4.1, identify at least two distinct market segments for your product or service.  Each market segment description must include at least three (more if needed) of the characteristics from amongst any of the four bases categories, e.g. one from demographic variables, one or two from psychographic variables, and one from behavioral variables, or a similar scheme.  Be sure to explain your choices based on what customer need the product or service offering can fill for each segment.
    2. Target market.  Select one of the market segments you described in (1) above as the one you believe is or can be the most profitable for your product or service offering and explain why you feel they can represent growth for the company.  Refer to the six criteria for an attractive market segment as described in course content under â€Selecting Target Markets’.  Name your target market so you can use this name throughout all of your remaining writing assignments.  Your name should be descriptive of the segments characteristics like ‘savvy young shoppers’ or ‘educated baby boomers’, or ‘urban hipsters’, or the like.  The goal is for your faculty member to get a mental image of your target market for the remainder of the semester.
    3. Target market strategy.  Should the company focus all their resources on this new target market (concentrated marketing) or should they continue to pursue both the new and the existing target market as well as other market segments (multi-segment marketing)?  Alternatively, is the market so saturated might they be more successful by focusing solely on an even more narrow market segment, perhaps an even narrower version (niche marketing) of your selected target market, as their best chance for growth?  What is your reasoning?
    4. Positioning.  Draw yourself a perceptual map as illustrated in the week’s readings or use the websites noted in the directions. Be sure to pick two criteria that are important to your new target market for your two axes, perhaps two of the criteria you used in Week 1 in your competitive analysis.  Map at least the two major competitors you noted in Week 1 and add any others that you may have discovered since then.  Describe what the perceptual map is telling you regarding how each product is perceived in the minds of the new target market you described above.  You may have to make a series of educated guesses for some of the data points.  Ideally, you want to find uncontested space. If your product overlaps with a competing offering discuss whether or not your product or service should try for an â€uncontested’ space on the map and â€reposition’ itself; or if it should keep the same position and compete head on with the other product.   (You will have a chance to make changes to the product, the pricing and the distribution to change the product’s positioning and find uncontested space in the coming weeks).

Be sure to follow all of the submission requirements outlined in the syllabus and provided below again for your easy reference:

• Prepare as a word processed document (such as Microsoft Word).

• Your assignment should be the equivalent of two pages of double spaced text, approximately 1/2 page for each of the four questions.

• Be sure your name, writing assignment number, and the name of your product or service are on the first page of your writing assignment.

• Use a simple 12-point font such as Times New Roman.  Use black ink for majority of your work and only use colors if it enhances your ability to communicate your thoughts.

• If the writing assignment requires external research, be sure to use footnotes and include a bibliography.  You may use MLA or APA style, or any other college-level style guide. More information about using a style guide can be found in the UMUC’s virtual library accessible from your LEO classroom or at umuc.edu/library.

Week 4, “Market Segmenting, Targeting, and Positioning” was derived from Principles of Marketing, which was adapted by the Saylor Foundation under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license without attribution as requested by the work’s original creator or licensee. © 2015, The

Saylor Foundation.

1

Week 4 Market Segmenting, Targeting, and Positioning

Suppose you’ve created a great new offering you hope will become a hot seller. Before you quit

your day job to market it, you’ll need to ask yourself, “Who’s going to buy my product?” and “Will

there be enough of these people to make it worth my while?”

 

Certain people will be more interested in what you have to offer than others. Not everyone needs

homeowners’ insurance, not everyone needs physical therapy services, and not everyone needs

the latest and greatest cell phone. Among those that do, some will buy a few, and a few will buy

many. In other words, in terms of your potential buyers, not all of them are “created equal.” Some

customers are more equal than others, however. A number of people might be interested in your

product if it’s priced right. Other people might be interested if they simply are aware of the fact

that your product exists.

 

Your goal is to figure out who these people are. To do this, you will need to divide them into

different categories. The process of breaking down all consumers into groups of potential buyers

with similar characteristics is called market segmentation. The key question to ask yourself

when segmenting markets: What groups of buyers are similar enough that the same product or

service will appeal to all of them? (Barringer & Ireland, 2010). After all, your marketing budget is

likely to be limited. You need to focus on those people you truly have a shot at selling to and

tailoring your offering toward them.

 

Once market segments are identified, the next step is to identify which of those segments, if any,

the company wants to pursue with its limited resources and consistency with its mission. This is

called target marketing. A company may decide not to target market, in which case it is mass

marketing. But mass marketing is rare.

4.1 Targeted Marketing vs. Mass Marketing

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

1. Distinguish between targeted marketing and mass marketing and explain what led to the rise of each. 2. Describe how targeted marketing can benefit firms. 3. Explain why companies differentiate among their customers.

 

 

2

Choosing select groups of people and organizations to sell to is called targeted marketing,

or differentiated marketing. It is a relatively new phenomenon. Mass marketing,

or undifferentiated marketing, came first. It evolved along with mass production and involves

selling the same product to everybody. You didn’t need to conduct any market research to know

that a household could use an electric washing machine. Build it and they will come. You can

think of mass marketing as a shotgun approach: you blast out as many marketing messages as

possible on every medium available as often as you can afford (Spellings Jr., 2009). (By contrast,

targeted marketing is more like shooting a rifle; you take careful aim at one type of customer with

your message.)

 

Automaker Henry Ford was very successful at both mass production and mass marketing. Ford

pioneered the modern-day assembly line early in the twentieth century, which helped him cost-

effectively pump out huge numbers of identical Model T automobiles. They came in only one

color: black. “Any customer can have a car painted any color he wants, so long as it is black,” Ford

used to joke. He also advertised in every major newspaper and persuaded all kinds of publications

to carry stories about the new, inexpensive cars. By 1918, half of all cars on America’s roads were

Model Ts (Ford, 1922).

Figure 4.1

You could forget about buying a custom Model T from Ford in the early 1900s. The good news?

The price was right.

Source: Unknown. Wikimedia Commons. In the public domain.

 

 

 

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Then Alfred P. Sloan, the head of General Motors (GM), appeared on the scene. Sloan began to

segment consumers in the automobile market—to divide them by the prices they wanted to pay

and the different cars they wanted to buy. His efforts were successful, and in the 1950s, GM

overtook Ford in the as the nation’s top automaker (Manzanedo, 2005). (You might be interested

to know that before GM declared bankruptcy in 2009, it was widely believed the automaker

actually had too many car models. Apparently, “old habits die hard,” as the saying goes.)

Benefits of Segmenting and Targeting Markets The story of General Motors raises an important point, which is that segmenting and targeting

markets doesn’t necessarily mean “skinnying down” the number of your customers. In fact, it can

help you enlarge your customer base by giving you information with which to successfully adjust

some component of your offering—the offering itself, its price, the way you service and market it,

and so on. More specifically, the process can help you do the following:

 

• Avoid head-on competition with other firms trying to capture the same customers

• Develop new offerings and expand profitable brands and product lines

• Remarket older, less-profitable products and brands

• Identify early adopters

• Redistribute money and sales efforts to focus on your most profitable customers

• Retain “at-risk” customers in danger of defecting to your competitors

 

The trend today is toward more precise, targeted marketing. Figuring out “who’s who” in terms of

your customers involves some detective work, though—often market research. A variety of tools

and research techniques can be used to segment markets. Government agencies, such as the US

Census Bureau, collect and report vast amounts of population information and economic data

that can reveal changing consumption trends.

 

Technology is also making it easier for even small companies and entrepreneurs to gather

information about potential customers. For example, the online game company GamePUMA.com

originally believed its target market consisted of US customers. But when the firm looked more

closely at who was downloading games from its website, they were people from all over the globe.

The great product idea you had? As we explained in Week 3, “Consumer Behavior: How People

Make Buying Decisions,” companies are now using the Internet to track people’s web browsing

patterns and segment them into groups that can be marketed to. Even small businesses are able

to do this cost-effectively now because they don’t need their own software and programs. They

 

 

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can simply sign up online for products like Google’s AdSense and AdWords programs. You can

locate potential customers by looking at blog sites and discussion forums on the web. Big-

boards.com has thousands of discussion forums you can mine to find potential customers. Do you

have a blog? Go to BlogPoll.com, and you can embed a survey in your blog to see what people

think of your idea. If you have a website, you can download an application onto your iPhone that

will give you up-to-the-minute information and statistics on your site’s visitors.

Getting a read on potential target markets doesn’t have to involve technology, though. Your own

experience and talking to would-be buyers is an important part of the puzzle. Go where you think

would-be buyers go—restaurants, malls, gyms, subways, grocery stores, day care centers, and

offices. Ask questions: What do buyers do during the day? What do they talk about? What

products or services do you see them using? Are they having an enjoyable experience when using

those products, or are they frustrated?

 

Figure 4.2

 

The Healthy Choice line of frozen dinners was launched by a heart attack victim.

Source: Photo by Ken. (2008). Flickr. Used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.

 

Healthy Choice frozen dinners were conceived as a result of questioning potential customers. The

food-maker ConAgra launched the dinners in the late 1980s after its CEO, Charlie Harper,

suffered a heart attack. One day a colleague complimented Harper on his wife’s tasty low-fat

turkey stew. That’s when Harper realized there were people like him who wanted healthy

convenience foods, so he began talking to them about what they wanted. Two years after the

Healthy Choice line was launched, it controlled 10 percent of the frozen-dinner market (Birchall

[b.], 2009).

 

 

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Segmenting and Targeting a Firm’s Current Customers Finding and attracting new customers is generally more difficult than retaining your current

customers. People are creatures of habit. Think about how much time and energy you spend when

you switch your business from one firm to another—even when you’re buying something as

simple as a haircut. If you aren’t happy with your hair and want to find a new hairdresser, you

first have to talk to people with haircuts you like or read reviews of salons. Once you decide to go

to a particular salon, you have to look it up on the Internet or your GPS device and hope you don’t

get lost. When you get to the salon, you explain to the new hairdresser how you want your hair cut

and hope he or she gets it right. You might also have to navigate different methods of payment.

Perhaps the new salon won’t accept your American Express card or won’t let you put the tip on

your card. However, once you have learned how the new salon operates, doing business with it

gets much easier.

The same is true for firms when it comes to finding new customers. Finding customers, getting to

know them, and figuring out what they really want is a difficult process—one that’s fraught with

trial and error. That’s why it’s so important to get to know and form relationships with your

current customers. Broadly speaking, your goal is to do as much business with each one of them

as possible.

The economic downturn of the first decade in the 2000s drove home the point of making the most

of one’s current customers. During the downturn, new customers were hard to find, and firms’

advertising and marketing budgets were cut. Expensive, untargeted, shotgun-like marketing

campaigns that would probably produce spotty results were out of the question. Consequently,

many organizations chose to focus their selling efforts on current customers in hopes of retaining

their loyalty once the downturn was over (Birchall [a.], 2009).

This is the situation in which the adventure-based travel firm Backroads found itself in 2009. The

California-based company increased its revenues by creating a personalized marketing campaign

for people who had done business with Backroads in the past. The firm looked at information

such as customers’ past purchases, the seasons in which they took their trips, the levels of activity

associated with them, and whether or not the customers tended to vacation with children. The

company then created three relevant trip suggestions for each customer based on the information.

The information was sent to customers via postcards and e-mails with links to customized web

pages reminding them of the trips they had previously booked with Backroads and suggesting

new ones. “In terms of past customers, it was like off-the-charts better [than past campaigns],”

says Massimo Prioreschi, the vice president of Backroads’ sales and marketing group

(MarketingSherpa, 2009).

 

 

 

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In addition to studying buying patterns, firms also try to know their customers by surveying them

or hiring marketing research firms to do so. Firms also use loyalty programs to find out about

their customers. For example, if you sign up to become a frequent flier with a certain airline, the

airline will likely ask to you a number of questions about your likes and dislikes. This information

will then be entered into a customer relationship management (CRM) system, and you might be

e-mailed special deals based on the routes you tend to fly. British Airways goes so far as to track

the magazines its most elite fliers like to read so the publications are available on its planes.

 

Many firms—even small ones—are using Facebook to develop closer relationships with their

customers. At Hansen Cakes, a Beverly Hills (California) bakery, employee Suzi Finer posts “cake

updates” and photos of the goodies she’s working on to the company’s Facebook page. Along with

information about the cakes, Finer extends special offers to customers and mixes in any gossip

about Hollywood celebrities she’s spotted in the area. After Hansen Cakes launched its Facebook

page, the bakery’s sales shot up 15–20 percent. “And that’s during the recession,” noted Finer

(Graham, 2009). Twitter is another way companies are keeping in touch with their customers and

boosting their revenues. For example, when the homemaking maven Martha Stewart schedules a

book signing, she tweets her followers, and voilà—many of them show up at the bookstore she’s

appearing at to buy copies. Finding ways to interact with customers that they enjoy—whether it’s

meeting or “tweeting” them, or putting on events and tradeshows they want to attend—is the key

to forming relationships with them.

Remember what you learned in Week 2, “Customer Satisfaction, Loyalty, Empowerment , and

Management”: not all customers are created equal, including your current customers. Some

customers are highly profitable, and others aren’t. Still others will actually end up costing your

company money to serve. Consequently, you will want to interact with some more than others.

 

Believe it or not, some firms deliberately “untarget” unprofitable customers. That’s what Best Buy

did. In 2004, Best Buy got a lot of attention (not all good) when it was discovered the company

had categorized its buyers into “personas,” or types of buyers, and created customized sales

approaches for each. For example, an upper-middle-class woman was referred to as a “Jill.” A

young urban man was referred to as a “Buzz.” And pesky, bargain-hunting customers that Best

Buy couldn’t make much of a profit from? They were referred to as “devils” and taken off the

company’s mailing lists (Marco, 2009).

 

The knife cuts both ways, though. Not all firms are equal in the minds of consumers, who will

choose to do business with some companies rather than others. To consumers, market

segmentation means: meet my needs—give me what I want (Market Segmentation, 2009).

 

 

 

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“Steps in One-to-One Marketing” outlines the steps companies can take to target their best

customers, form close, personal relationships with them, and give them what they want—a

process called one-to-one marketing. In terms of our shotgun vs. rifle approach, you can think

of one-to-one marketing as a rifle approach, but with an added advantage: now you have a scope

on your rifle.

 

One-to-one marketing is an idea proposed by Don Peppers and Martha Rogers in their 1994

book The One to One Future. The book described what life would be like after mass marketing.

We would all be able to get exactly what we want from sellers, and our relationships with them

would be collaborative, rather than adversarial. Are we there yet? Not quite. But it does seem to

be the direction the trend toward highly targeted marketing is leading.

 

Steps in One-to-One Marketing 1. Establish short-term measures to evaluate your efforts. Determine how you will

measure your effort. For example, will you use higher customer satisfaction ratings, increased

revenues earned per customer, number of products sold to customers, transaction costs, or

another measure?

2. Identify your customers. Gather all the information you can about your current customers,

including their buying patterns, likes, and dislikes. When conducting business with them,

include an “opt in” question that allows you to legally gather and use their phone numbers and

e-mail addresses so you can remain in contact with them.

3. Differentiate among your customers. Determine who your best customers are in terms of

what they spend and will spend in the future (their customer lifetime value), and how easy or

difficult they are to serve. Identify and target customers that spend only small amounts with

you but large amounts with your competitors.

4. Interact with your customers, targeting your best ones. Find ways and mediums in

which to talk to customers about topics they’re interested in and enjoy. Spend the bulk of your

resources interacting with your best (high-value) customers. Minimize the time and money you

spend on low-value customers with low growth potential.

5. Customize your products and marketing messages to meet their needs. Try to

customize your marketing messages and products in order to give your customers exactly what

they want—whether it’s the product itself, its packaging, delivery, or the services associated

with it (Harler, 2008; Peppers & Rogers, 1999; Peppers, Rogers, & Dorf, 1999).

 

 

 

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4 . 1 K E Y T A K E A W A Y

Choosing select groups of people to sell to is called targeted marketing, or differentiated marketing. Mass marketing, or undifferentiated marketing, involves selling the same product to everyone. The trend today is toward more precise, targeted marketing. Finding and attracting new customers is generally far more difficult than retaining one’s current customers, which is why organizations try to interact with and form relationships with their current customers. The goal of firms is to do as much business with their best customers as possible. Forming close, personal relationships with customers and giving them exactly what they want is a process called one-to-one marketing. It is the opposite of mass marketing.

4.2 How Markets Are Segmented

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

1. Understand and outline the ways in which markets are segmented. 2. Explain why marketers use some segmentation bases vs. others.

We will learn more about business markets and how they are segmented in Week 8. Now, we will

focus on consumer markets and how they can be segmented. In Week 3, “Consumer Behavior:

How People Make Buying Decisions,” we mentioned that certain factors drive consumers to buy

certain things. Many of the same factors can also be used to segment customers. A firm will often

use multiple segmentation bases, or criteria to classify buyers, to get a fuller picture of its

customers and create real value for them. Each variable adds a layer of information about those

buyers until you have a profile of a market segment.

 

There are all kinds of characteristics you can use to segment a market. You might not immediately

think of some of them. What about the physical sizes of people? “Big-and-tall” stores cater to the

segment of population that’s larger-sized. What about people with wide or narrow feet, or people

with medical conditions, certain hobbies, or different sexual orientations? Next, we’ll look at some

of the more common characteristics market researchers look at when segmenting buyers.

Types of Segmentation Bases Table 4.1, “Common Ways of Segmenting Buyers,” shows some of the different types of buyer

characteristics used to segment markets. Notice that the characteristics fall into one of four

segmentation categories: behavioral, demographic, geographic, or psychographic. We’ll discuss

each of these categories in a moment. For now, you can get a rough idea of what the categories

 

 

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consist of by looking at them in terms of how marketing professionals might answer the following

questions:

 

• Behavioral segmentation. What benefits do customers want, and how do they use our

product?

• Demographic segmentation. How do the ages, races, and ethnic backgrounds of our

customers affect what they buy?

• Geographic segmentation. Where are our customers located, and how can we reach

them? What products do they buy based on their locations?

• Psychographic segmentation. What do our customers think about and value? How

do they live their lives?

 

Table 4.1 Common Ways of Segmenting Buyers

By Behavior By Demographics By Geography By Psychographics

• Benefits sought from the product • How often the product is used

(usage rate) • Usage situation (daily use,

holiday use, etc.) • Buyer’s status and loyalty to

product (nonuser, potential user, first-time users, regular user)

• Age/generation • Income • Gender • Family life cycle • Ethnicity • Family size • Occupation • Education • Nationality • Religion • Social class

• Region (continent, country, state, neighborhood)

• Size of city or town • Population density • Climate

• Activities • Interests • Opinions • Values • Attitudes • Lifestyles

Segmenting by Behavior Behavioral segmentation divides people into groups according to how they behave with or act

toward products. Benefits segmentation—segmenting buyers by the benefits they want from

products—is very common. Take toothpaste, for example. Which benefit is most important to you

when you buy toothpaste: the toothpaste’s price, ability to whiten your teeth, fight tooth decay,

freshen your breath, or something else? Perhaps it’s a combination of two or more benefits. If

marketing professionals know what those benefits are, they can then tailor different toothpaste

offerings to you (and other people like you). For example, Colgate 2-in-1 Toothpaste &

Mouthwash, Whitening Icy Blast is aimed at people who want the benefits of both fresher breath

and whiter teeth.

Another way in which businesses segment buyers is by their usage rates—that is, how often, if

ever, they use certain products. For example, the entertainment and gaming company Harrah’s

 

 

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gathers information about the people who gamble at its casinos. High rollers, or people who

spend a lot of money, are considered “VIPs.” VIPs get special treatment, including a personal

“host” who looks after their needs during their casino visits. Companies are interested in frequent

users because they want to reach others like them. They are also keenly interested in nonusers

and how they can be persuaded to use products.

 

The way in which people use products is also a basis for segmentation. Avon Skin So Soft was

originally a beauty product. But after Avon discovered that some people were using it as a

mosquito repellant, the company began marketing it for that purpose. Eventually, Avon created a

separate product called Skin So Soft Bug Guard, which competes with repellents like Off!

 

Similarly, Glad, the company that makes plastic wrap and bags, found out customers were using

its Press ‘n Seal wrap in ways the company could never have imagined. The personnel in Glad’s

marketing department subsequently launched a website called 1000uses.com that contained both

the company and consumers’ use tips. Some of the ways in which people use the product are

pretty unusual, as evidenced by the following comment posted on the site: “I have a hedgehog

who likes to run on his wheel a lot. After quite a while of cleaning a gross wheel every morning, I

got the tip to use ‘Press ‘n Seal wrap’ on his wheel, making clean up much easier! My hedgie can

run all he wants, and I don’t have to think about the cleanup. Now we’re both GLAD!” (Glad,

2009).

Although we doubt Glad will ever go to great lengths to segment the Press ‘n Seal market by

hedgehog owners, the firm has certainly gathered a lot of good consumer insight about the

product and publicity from its 1000uses.com website.

Segmenting by Demographics Segmenting buyers by tangible, personal characteristics such as their ages, incomes, ethnicity,

family sizes, and so forth is called demographic segmentation. This section will discuss some

prominent demographic characteristics used to segment buyers, including age, income, gender,

and family life cycles. Other demographic characteristics include occupation, education,

nationality, religion, and social class.

 

Demographics are commonly used to segment markets because a mountain of demographic

information is publicly available in databases around the world. You can obtain a great deal of

demographic information on the US Census Bureau’s website (http://www.census.gov). Other

government websites you can tap include FedStats (http://fedstats.sites.usa.gov/) and The World

Factbook (https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/index.html), which

 

 

11

contains statistics about countries around the world. In addition to current statistics, the sites

contain forecasts of demographic trends, such as whether some segments of the population are

expected to grow or decline.

Age

At some point in your life, you are more likely to buy your first home than a funeral plot.

Marketing professionals know this. That’s why they try to segment consumers by their ages.

You’re probably familiar with some of the age groups most commonly segmented in the United

States. They are shown in Table 5.2, “US Generations and Characteristics.” Into which category do

you fall?

Table 5.2 US Generations and Characteristics

Generation Also Known As Birth Years Characteristics

Seniors “The Silent Generation,” “Matures,” “Veterans,” and “Traditionalists”

1945 and prior

• Experienced very limited credit growing up

• Tend to live within their means • Spend more on health care than

any other age group • Internet usage rates increasing

faster than any other group

Baby Boomers 1946– 1964

• Second-largest generation in the United States

• Grew up in prosperous times before the widespread use of credit

• Account for 50 percent of US consumer spending

• Willing to use new technologies as they see fit

Generation X 1965– 1979

• Comfortable but cautious about borrowing

• Buying habits characterized by their life stages

• Embrace technology and multitasking

Generation Y “Millennials,” “Echo Boomers,” includes “Tweens” (preteens)

1980– 2000

• Largest US generation • Grew up with credit cards • Adept at multitasking; technology

use is innate • Ignore irrelevant media

Note: Not all demographers agree on the cutoff dates between the generations. Sources: U.S. Census Bureau, http://www.census.gov/population/www/popdata.html; Richard K. Miller and Kelli Washington, The 2009 Entertainment, Media & Advertising Market Research Handbook, 10th ed. Loganville, GA: Richard K. Miller & Associates, 2009, 157–66; Sydney Jones and Susannah Fox, “Generations Online in 2009,” Pew Research Center,http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2009/Generations-Online-in-2009.aspx; Maria Paniritas, “Generation Gap: Boomers, Xers Are Reining in Spending,” Philadelphia Inquirer, August 2, 2009, http://articles.philly.com/2009-08-02/business/25275378_1_spending-habits-boomers-consumer-economy.

 

 

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Today, Generation Y is the largest generation. The baby boomer generation is the second largest,

and over the course of the last 30 years, it has been a very attractive market for sellers.

Retro brands—old brands or products that companies “bring back” for a period of time—were

aimed at baby boomers during the economic downturn in the early 2000s. Pepsi Throwback and

Mountain Dew Throwback, which are made with cane sugar—like they were “back in the good old

days”—instead of corn syrup, are examples (Schlacter, 2009). Take a look at Figure 4.3

illustrating Coke’s retro look bottle. This was the original Coca-Cola bottle from Coke’s early

history through the mid-twentieth century when technology allowed for cans and simpler bottle

designs. Marketing professionals believe they appealed to baby boomers because they reminded

them of better times—times when they didn’t have to worry about being laid off, about losing their

homes, or about their retirement funds and pensions drying up.

 

Figure 4.3 Coca-Cola’s Retro Look Bottle

If you are old enough to remember this bottle, you are

probably a baby boomer, and the bottle design may

appeal to you when buying soft drinks.

Source: Photo by Kansir. (2012). Flickr. Used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.

But baby boomers are aging, and the size of the group will eventually decline. By contrast, the

members of Generation Y have a lifetime of buying still ahead of them, which translates to a lot of

potential customer lifetime value (CLV) for marketers if they can capture this group of buyers.

However, a survey found that the latest recession had forced teens to change their spending

 

 

13

habits and college plans, and that roughly half of older Generation Yers reported they had no

savings (Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 2009).

 

So which group or groups should your firm target? Although it’s hard to be all things to all people,

many companies try to broaden their customer bases by appealing to multiple generations so they

don’t lose market share when demographics change. Several companies have introduced lower-

cost brands targeting Generation Xers, who have less spending power than boomers. For

example, kitchenware and home-furnishings company Williams-Sonoma opened the Elm Street

chain, a less-pricey version of the Pottery Barn franchise. The Starwood hotel chain’s W hotels,

which feature contemporary designs and hip bars, are aimed at Generation Xers (Miller &

Washington, 2009).

 

The video game market is very proud of the fact that along with Generation X and Generation Y,

many older Americans still play video games. (You probably know some baby boomers who own a

Nintendo Wii.) The spa market is another example. Products and services in this market used to

be aimed squarely at adults. Not anymore. Parents are now paying for their tweens to get facials,

pedicures, and other pampering in numbers no one in years past could have imagined.

Staying abreast of changing demographics can be a matter of life or death for many companies. As

early as the 1970s, US automakers found themselves in trouble because of demographic reasons.

Many of the companies’ buyers were older Americans inclined to “buy American.” These people

hadn’t forgotten that Japan bombed Pearl Harbor during World War II and weren’t about to buy

Japanese vehicles. But younger Americans were. Plus, Japanese cars had developed a better

reputation. Despite the challenges US automakers face today, they have taken great pains to cater

to the “younger” generation—today’s baby boomers who don’t think of themselves as being old. If

you are a car buff, you perhaps have noticed that the once-stodgy Cadillac now has a sportier look

and stiffer suspension.

And what about Generations X and Y? Automakers have begun reaching out to them, too. General

Motors (GM) has sought to revamp the century-old company by hiring a new younger group of

managers—managers who understand how Generation X and Y consumers are wired and what

they want. “If you’re going to appeal to my daughter, you’re going to have to be in the digital

world,” explained one GM vice president (Cox, 2009).

Companies have to not only develop new products designed to appeal to Generations X and Y but

also find new ways to reach them. People in these generations not only tend to ignore traditional

advertising but also are downright annoyed by it. To market to Scion drivers, who are generally

 

 

14

younger, Toyota created Scion Speak, a social networking site where they can communicate,

socialize, and view cool new models of the car. Online events such as the fashion shows broadcast

over the web are also getting the attention of younger consumers, as are text, e-mail, and Twitter

messages they can sign up to receive so as to get coupons, cash, and free merchandise.

Income

Tweens might appear to be a very attractive market when you consider they will be buying

products for years to come. But would you change your mind if you knew that baby boomers

account for 50 percent of all consumer spending in the United States? Americans over 65 now

control nearly three-quarters of the net worth of US households; this group spends $200 billion a

year on major “discretionary” (optional) purchases such as luxury cars, alcohol, vacations, and

financial products (Reisenwitz, Iyer, Kuhlmeier, & Eastman, 2007).

 

Income is used as a segmentation variable because it indicates a group’s buying power. People’s

incomes also tend to reflect their education levels, occupation, and social classes. Higher

education levels usually result in higher-paying jobs and greater social status.

 

The makers of upscale products such as Rolexes and Lamborghinis aim their products at high-

income groups. However, a growing number of firms are aiming their products at lower-income

consumers. The fastest-growing product in the financial services sector is prepaid debit cards,

most of which are being bought and used by people who don’t have bank accounts. Firms are

finding that this group is a large, untapped pool of customers who tend to be more brand-loyal

than most. If you capture enough of them, you can earn a profit (von Hoffman, 2006).

Sometimes income isn’t always indicative of who will buy your product, however. Companies are

aware that many consumers want to be in higher-income groups and behave like they are already

part of them (recall the reference groups discussed in Week 3, “Consumer Behavior: How People

Make Buying Decisions”). Mercedes Benz’s cheaper line of “C” class vehicles is designed to appeal

to these consumers.

 

 

 

 

15

Gender

Gender is another way to segment consumers. As we explained in Week 3, “Consumer Behavior:

How People Make Buying Decisions,” men and women have different physiological and other

needs. They also shop differently. Consequently, the two groups are often, but not always,

segmented and targeted differently. Marketing professionals don’t stop there, though. For

example, because women make many of the purchases for their households, market researchers

sometimes try to further divide them into subsegments. (Men are also often subsegmented.) For

women, those segments might include stay-at-home housewives, plan-to-work housewives, just-

a-job working women, and career-oriented working women. Women who are solely homemakers

tend to spend more money, research has found—perhaps because they have more time.

In addition to segmenting by gender, market researchers might couple people’s genders along

with their marital statuses and other demographic characteristics. For, example, did you know

that more women in America than ever before (51 percent) now live without spouses? Can you

think of any marketing opportunities this might present? (Barry, Gilly, & Doran, 1985).

Family Life Cycle

Family life cycle refers to the stages families go through over time and how the stages affect

people’s buying behavior. The primary life cycle stages used by marketers are illustrated in Figure

4.4. For example, if you have no children, your demand for pediatric services (medical care for

children) is likely to be slim to none. But if you have children or adopt them, your demand might

be very high because children frequently get sick. You will be part of the target market not only for

pediatric services but also for a host of other products, such as children’s clothing, entertainment

services, and educational products.

 

A secondary segment of interested consumers might be grandparents who are likely to spend less

on day-to-day child care items but more on special-occasion gifts for children. In fact, many

markets are segmented based on the special events in people’s lives. Think about brides (and

wannabe brides) and all the products targeted at them, including websites and television shows

such as Platinum Weddings, Married Away, Whose Wedding Is It Anyway, and Bridezilla.

 

 

 

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Figure 4.4 Family Life Cycle Stages

One main concern of marketing research firms is how to identify the

similarities and differences between various life-stage segments.

Source: Mediamark Research, Inc. (1990), Lifestage Marketing. Mediamark Research: New York.

Resorts also segment vacationers depending on where they are in their family life cycles. When

you think of family vacations, you probably think of Disney resorts. Some vacation properties,

such as Sandals, exclude children from some of their resorts. Perhaps they do so because some

studies show that the market segment with greatest financial potential is married couples without

children (Barry, Gilly, & Doran, 1985).

 

Keep in mind that although you might be able to isolate a segment in the marketplace, including

one based on the family life cycle, you can’t make necessarily make assumptions about what the

people in it will want. Just like people’s demographics change, so do their tastes. For example,

over the past few decades, US families have been getting smaller. Households with a single

occupant are more common than ever. But that hasn’t stopped people from demanding bigger

cars (and more of them) as well as larger houses, or what some people jokingly refer to as

“McMansions.”

But like the trend toward larger cars, the trend toward larger houses appears to be reversing. High

energy costs, the credit crunch, and concern for the environment are leading people to demand

smaller houses. To attract people such as these, D. R. Horton, a leading national homebuilder,

and other construction firms are now building smaller homes.

 

 

 

17

Ethnicity

People’s ethnic backgrounds have a big impact on what they buy. If you’ve visited a grocery store

that caters to a different ethnic group than your own, you were probably surprised to see the types

of products sold there.

It’s no secret that the United States is becoming—and will continue to become—more diverse.

Hispanic Americans are the largest and the fastest-growing minority in the United States.

Companies are courting this once-overlooked group. In California, the health care provider Kaiser

Permanente runs television ads letting members of this segment know that they can request

Spanish-speaking physicians, and that Spanish-speaking nurses, telephone operators, and

translators are available at all of its clinics (Berkowitz, 2006).

 

African Americans are the second-largest ethnic group in America. Collectively, they have the

most buying power of any ethnic group in America. Many people of Asian descent are known to be

early adapters of new technology and have above-average incomes. As a result, companies that

sell electronic products, such as AT&T, spend more money segmenting and targeting the Asian

community (Insight Research Corporation, 2003). Table 4.3, “Major US Ethnic Segments and

Their Spending,” contains information about the number of people in these groups and their

buying power.

 

Table 4.3 Major US Ethnic Segments and Their Spending

Group Percentage of US Population Annual Spending Power (Billions of Dollars)

Hispanic 13.7 736

African American 13.0 761

Asian 5.0 397

Source: New American Dimensions, LLC.

As you can guess, even within ethnic groups, there are many differences in terms of the goods and

services buyers choose. Consequently, looking broadly at each group would leave an incomplete

picture of your buyers. For example, although the common ancestral language among the

Hispanic segment is Spanish, Hispanics trace their lineages to different countries. Nearly 70

percent of Hispanics in the United States trace their lineage to Mexico; others trace theirs to

Central America, South America, and the Caribbean.

 

 

 

18

The Asian ethnic group has distinct divisions. Chinese, Japanese, and Korean immigrants do not

share the same language (Insight Research Corporation, 2003). Moreover, both the Asian and

Hispanic market segments include new immigrants, people who immigrated to the United States

years ago, and native-born Americans. So what language will you use to communicate your

offerings to these people, and where?

 

Subsegmenting the markets could potentially help you. New American Dimensions, a

multicultural research firm, has further divided the Hispanic market into the following

subsegments (HispanicAd.com, 2008):

 

• Just moved in’rs. Recent arrivals, Spanish-dependent, struggling but optimistic.

• FOBrs (fashionistas on a budget). Spanish-dominant, traditional, but striving for

trendy.

• Accidental explorers. Spanish-preferred, not in a rush to embrace US culture.

• The englightened. Bilingual, technology-savvy, driven, educated, modern.

• Doubting Tomáses. Bilingual, independent, skeptical, inactive, shopping uninvolved.

• Latin flavored. English-preferred, reconnecting with Hispanic traditions.

• SYLrs (single, young Latinos). English-dominant, free thinkers, multicultural.

You could go so far as to break down segments to the individual level (which is the goal behind

one-to-one marketing). However, doing so would be expensive, notes Juan Guillermo Tornoe, a

marketing expert who specializes in Hispanic issues. After all, are you really going to develop

different products for each of the groups? Different marketing campaigns and communications?

Perhaps not. However, “you need to perform your due diligence and understand where the

majority of the people you are trying to reach land on this matrix, modifying your message

according to this insight,” Tornoe (2008) explains.

Segmenting by Geography Where will your customers come from? Suppose your new product or service idea involves

opening a local store. Before you open the store, you will probably want to do some research to

determine which geographical areas have the best potential. For instance, if your business is a

high-end restaurant, should it be located near the local college or country club? If you sell ski

equipment, you probably will want to locate your shop in the vicinity of a mountain range where

there is skiing. You might see a snowboard shop in the same area but probably not a surfboard

shop. By contrast, a surfboard shop is likely to be located along the coast, but you probably would

not find a snowboard shop on the beach.

 

 

 

19

Geographic segmentation explains why the checkout clerks at stores sometimes ask you what

your zip code is. It’s also why businesses print codes on coupons that correspond to zip codes.

When the coupons are redeemed, the store can then find out where its customers are located—or

not located. Geocoding is a process that takes data such as this and plots it on a map. Geocoding

can help businesses see where prospective customers might be clustered and target them with

various ad campaigns, including direct mail, for example.

 

One of the most popular geocoding software programs is PRIZM NE, which is produced by a

company called Claritas. PRIZM NE uses zip codes and demographic information to classify the

American population into segments. The idea behind PRIZM is that “you are where you live.”

Combining both demographic and geographic information is referred to as geodemographics.

To see how geodemographics works, visit the following page on Claritas’

website: http://www.claritas.com/MyBestSegments/Default.jsp?ID=20.

Type in your zip code, and you will see customer profiles of the types of buyers who live in your

area. Table 4.4, “An Example of Geodemographic Segmentation for 76137 (Fort Worth,

TX),” shows the profiles of buyers who can be found in the zip code 76137—the “Brite Lites, Li’l

City” bunch, Home Sweet Home” set, and so on. Click on the profiles on the Claritas site to see

which one most resembles you.

Table 4.4 An Example of Geodemographic Segmentation for 76137 (Fort Worth, TX)

Number Profile Name

12 Brite Lites, Li’l City

19 Home Sweet Home

24 Up-and-Comers

13 Upward Bound

34 White Picket Fences

The tourism bureau for the state of Michigan was able to identify different customer profiles and

target them using PRIZM. Michigan’s biggest travel segment are Chicagoans in certain zip codes

consisting of upper-middle-class households with children—or the “kids in cul-de-sacs” group, as

Claritas puts it. The bureau was also able to identify segments significantly different from the

Chicago segment, including blue-collar adults in the Cleveland area who vacation without their

children. The organization then created significantly different marketing campaigns to appeal to

each group.

 

 

 

20

City size and population density (the number of people per square mile) are also used for

segmentation purposes. Have you ever noticed that in rural towns, McDonald’s restaurants are

hard to find? But Dairy Queens are usually easy to locate. McDonald’s generally won’t put a store

in a town of fewer than 5,000 people. However, this is prime turf for the “DQ”—for one, because it

doesn’t have to compete with bigger franchises like McDonald’s.

Proximity marketing is an interesting new technology firms are using to segment buyers

geographically and target them within a few hundred feet of their businesses using wireless

technology. In some areas, you can switch your mobile phone to a “discoverable mode” while

you’re shopping and, if you want, get ads and deals from stores as you pass by them. And it’s often

less expensive than hiring people to hand you a flier as you walk by (Bluetomorrow.com, 2007).

In addition to figuring out where to locate stores and advertise to customers in that area,

geographic segmentation helps firms tailor their products. Chances are you won’t be able to find

the same heavy winter coat you see at a Walmart in Montana at a Walmart in Florida because of

the climate differences. Market researchers also look at migration patterns to evaluate

opportunities. TexMex restaurants are commonly found in the southwestern United States.

However, northern states are now seeing more of them as more people of Hispanic descent move

 
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Smart Refrigerator Market Plan

Please read over the group attachment first and then refer to the attachment of the section i am responsible for

All needed information is attached

its suppose to be a made up product so there is no information needed to research it is mostly made up information so feel free to be creative.

I also included addition information to base the information off of that is very useful.

The product is a smart refrigerator that is used to make life easier and that is all explain it my group members section of the project.

my section is also highlighted in red to avoid confusion

My section is highlighted in red please refer to other document for guidelines and needed information also attached is a powerpoint that could be helpful.

 

 

Table of Contents

1. Executive Summary………………………………………………………………………………

a. Synopsis…………………………………………………………………………………….

b. Major aspects of the marketing plan……………………………………………………….

2. Situation Analysis……………………………………………………………………………….

a. Analysis of internal environment…………………………………………………………..

b. Analysis of the customer environment……………………………………………………..

c. Analysis of the external environment……………………………………………………….

3. SWOT……………………………………………………………………………………………

a. Strength………………………………………………………………………………………

b. Weakness……………………………………………………………………………………

c. Opportunity………………………………………………………………………………….

d. Threat……………………………………………………………………………………….

e. Developing competitive advantages………………………………………………………..

f. Developing a strategic focus……………………………………………………………….

4. Marketing goals and objectives………………………………………………………………….

a. Marketing goals…………………………………………………………………………….

b. Marketing objectives……………………………………………………………………….

5. Marketing strategy……………………………………………………………………………….

a. Primary and secondary target market………………………………………………………

b. Overall branding strategy……………………………………………………………………

c. Product strategy…………………………………………………………………………….

d. Pricing strategy……………………………………………………………………………..

e. Distribution /supply chain strategy……………………………………………………….

f. Integrated marketing communication promotion strategy………………………………….

6. Marketing Implementation……………………………………………………………………….

a. Structural issues…………………………………………………………………………….

b. Tactical marketing activities………………………………………………………………..

7. Evaluation and control……………………………………………………………………………

a. Formal controls……………………………………………………………………………..

b. Informal controls……………………………………………………………………………

c. Implementation schedule and timeline …………………………………………………….

d. Marketing results……………………………………………………………………………

8. Appendix………………………………………………………………………………………….

 

Executive Summary

Synopsis

 

Major aspects of the marketing plan

 

Situation Analysis

Analysis of internal environment

 

Analysis of the customer environment

 

Analysis of the external environment

 

 

SWOT Analysis

Strength The Smart Fridge is the first smart fridge introduced to society which is why our product is very original and unique.  Our product provides a variety of recipes, gives the customer an estimated cooking time, and speaks as they cook.  The customer does not have to read the instructions because the fridge speaks and tells them step-by-step what needs to be completed.  Consumers  have never heard or seen a product quite this amazing.  Also, our company provides training to our employees that allows them to learn about the features and benefits of the Smart Fridge.  This allows them to train customers when the fridge is delivered which will further customer knowledge about our product.  We want our customers to enjoy every feature that we’ve put into this fridge because we know they will truly benefit from it.  Our product also helps to eliminate the amount of food wasted each year.  Instead of throwing away waste food, our customers are going to be shown how they can use it to cook great tasting meals.  Customers will stop wasting so much food when they realize they can use it to cook.  Food waste has become a major concern in American and our product can get rid of this issue.  The Smart Fridge is manufactured in the United States which allows managers to monitor the quality of the product.  This helps our company ensure that we are producing the best high quality product for our customers.

Weakness

Although the Smart Fridge is a unique and high quality product just like every other product we face a few weaknesses.  Our company is brand new and the Smart Fridge is our first product that has been created and introduced for the public to purchase.  Therefore, we have no brand reputation.  This can cause consumers to become hesitant to purchase such an expensive product from a brand they have never heard of before.  We believe the Smart Fridge will be very successful in the United States and will help us build the brand reputation we are aiming for.  Not only do we have no brand reputation, but the Smart Fridge is very expensive.  The Smart Fridge costs $40,500 and some consumers are not going to be willing or able to purchase such an expensive item.  We understand our product is expensive, however, we believe our customers will love it and it will become life changing for them.  The Smart Fridge is a very advanced fridge that has many features.  Although we do offer training to our customers, some customers may not be willing to learn all of the available features.  They may not want to take the time or they may not be in the market for a fridge this complex.

Opportunity

Our company faces a variety of external opportunities that will benefit our company and help us build the brand reputation we need as a new company coming into such a competitive market.  Our external opportunities include: expanding into international markets, building reputation, and lastly strengthening our marketing strategy.  Our product is very expensive which can potentially be a major downfall for our company.  However, if we expand into international markets this could potentially decrease the price because we would be using cheaper materials.  Outsourcing will allow us to increase efficiency and help us focus on our core business responsibilities.  In the future, we can also expand our product into international markets to increase sales and profits.  Although outsourcing takes some responsibility away from our company, it is still important that we maintain focus on the quality of our product to ensure that it will remain the high quality product we want it to be.  Also, since our company is brand new and the Smart Fridge is our first product we need to work on building our reputation.  In order to do this we can provide promotions, increase advertising, build customer relationships by providing excellent customer service.  Providing promotions will draw new customers to us, increasing advertising will make consumers more aware of what our company offers, and creating strong customer relationships will ensure positive reviews of our company.  However, if we ever have an upset customer we must handle it the best of our ability by being efficient and providing solutions to the problem.  If we do all these things I believe our brand will become very successful and we will increase our customer base quickly.  Our current marketing strategy has helped us begin as a company and launch our very first product.  However, marketing strategies can always be improved because we always want to make sure we are doing everything possible to be successful.  Constantly improving our strategy is only going to make us better and help increase our number of satisfied customers.

Threat

Although our company faces many opportunities, unfortunately we also face some threats.  One of our major threats is our competition.  The Smart Fridge is the first smart fridge available and we believe our competitors will soon be making similar products in order to compete.  Our major competitors are LG, Samsung, and Whirlpool.  It is important that we focus on the following factors in order to stay ahead of the competition.  These are: knowing our customers, expanding or changing our target market, and update our products as our company grows.  These will help us stay successful in our current market.  We also fear the threat of new entrants entering our market.  New competitors entering into the same marketing we are targeting can be a huge threat for us.  Consumers are going to have a variety of options to choose from instead of just our brand.  This means we must stay ahead and focused on making the Smart Fridge the best manufactured fridge available.  The last threat we face is the constant changes in technology.  Technology is always changing and there is always new products being created.  It is important that we are able to keep up with these constant changes and focus on updating our technology system.  If we do not allow updates on our system I do not think our company will be successful in the long run.

 

Developing a Competitive Advantage

Our company’s competitive advantage is that provide a high quality product that is manufactured in the United States and we also we provide excellent customer service.  The Smart Fridge is a very prestigious product that makes life easier for our customers.  We help customers discover new recipes and make cooking easier and more efficient.  We manufacture our product in the United States which allows us to focus a lot on the quality.  We also ensure excellent customer service by teaching our customers about their new product upon arrival and provide a customer service line with any issues they may face.  When our employees deliver the product to the customer’s house we offer to show the customer all the features of their new fridge.  We want them to fully understand their new product and be able to take advantage of all the amazing features.  Our company believes it is very important to build strong customer relationships and ensure customer satisfaction which is why it is one of our main competitive advantages.

Developing a Strategic Focus In order to ensure our company’s competitive advantages we must develop a strategic focus.  Our vision is to target consumers who want a high quality refrigerator that will tend to their current needs and make cooking fun, simple, and more convenient.  Our passion is to make our customers lives easier by providing them with a product that will do so.  Our current target market is wealthy homeowners who enjoy cooking, want to learn new recipes, or are lazy when it comes to cooking.  In the long run our company plans to expand our product line beyond the Smart Fridge.  Expanding into international markets is also a possibility so we can lower the cost of our product that will allow us to expand into new target markets.  This will also allow us to focus more on our business responsibly and less on the actual manufacturing of the product.  We also want to build our brand reputation to eventually become one of the most popular brands in the world.

 

Marketing goals and objectives

Marketing goals:

The Smart Fridge is distinctively designed for the lazy ones that used to cook everything in the microwave. Our goal is to aim for easy functionality, while maintaining prestige.  Being the first to introduce such a high tech refrigerator into the consumer’s hands, we want to keep a strong brand image from the ground up. Building brand  reputation will be key to be able to expand innovatively internationally and launch new products in the long run.

 

Marketing objectives:

First, differentiating our product from other competitors would be the easier step due to it providing a special service. Next, would be promoting our solution for convenience, prestige, luxury, and time efficiency, basically a product consumers would need in their busy lives.

Then, distinguishing specific target markets that would be able to afford the luxury of having prestige would be the first step to many more. Aiming our product at consumers that are able to afford this product would establish easy sales and profits. Another segment would be the consumers that value the food in their refrigerator and enjoy cooking quick meals at home. Furthermore this would lead to consumers with families with 2 or more members that also enjoy entertaining guests.  In addition increasing brand awareness would be a continuous objective because, in the long run this would be a similar intent when expanding in the future.

Marketing Strategy Primary Target Market

The primary target marketing for our product is people focused on the full utilization of resources they have and that want to limit the amount of food they waste each year. This could include things like daycares or households. These individuals will also have to be funded or wealthy and think it will be a good investment. The Smart Fridge will allow them to use all the foods they have in their refrigerator and never waste foods due to the fact that they didn’t know what they could use it for when cooking. This will allow them to reduce their impact on their environment and be a more efficient household.  More than $4 million dollars in food is thrown away in the US every year and this could help to reduce that number. We will focus on the individuals who would like to make that a reality.

Secondary Target Market The secondary target marketing for our product is wealthy 30-40 year old homeowners living in urban areas that have a hard time choosing what to eat for dinner each night. The Smart Fridge allows them to shop for the foods they like and never have to change their shopping habits to have meals that can be made each day. These individuals will most likely have children and be cooking for more than 2 people when they cook food. Due to the expected price of upwards of $40,000 they will need to have a lot of disposable income. Our Secondary market will be people who enjoy the prestige of owning things that not many people are able to afford.

Overall Branding Strategy Our branding strategy will be focused on the 3 main benefits of owning this product. The first is the uniqueness of a product that will allow you to see exactly what can be made within the contents of your refrigerator. This will be the first product of its kind and we hope that will generate a lot of buzz. The second aspect is the positive impact that it could have on the environment. The Average household wastes $640 a year in thrown away food. Our product could save countless amounts of resources in getting this food to households that end up throwing it away anyway. Our target market isn’t going to be too concerned about pinching pennies but they will have the opportunity to limit the amount of food waste each year while also saving some money. The final aspect is the prestige of owning a product that not many people will be able to own. When an individual has one of our Smart Fridges, people will want to come over to see it in action and that is something that makes people want our product.

 

Product Strategy The product we are selling is going to viewed as a prestigious luxury item that does a lot of good for the environment, while also being a one of a kind useful commodity. It will set us apart from any other competitor selling refrigerators because they will simply be unable to do what our fridge is able to do. We will be viewed as a company that takes pride in helping reduce individual’s impact on the environment and that will help our products image. We will provide superior quality, excellent customer service and will make sure that our customers feel they can call us with any issues or concerns that they may have. We will only sell in high quality stores and will be viewed as the centerpiece of any appliance section. By doing this our product will have a very highly regarded image that many people will want in their kitchen.

 

Pricing Strategy

The Smart Fridge is going to be a high price, high quality item that makes owning one make an individual feel prestigious. The estimated cost to make one of these smart fridges will be $25,000 with all the advanced technology that will be incorporated in it but as technological advancements continue to grow, the price will slowly fall. The price to an individual trying to purchase one of these Smart Fridges is $40,500. Which seems like a lot of money but when you are a well off individual that sees the benefit it could have for the environment and the amount of money you could save annually, it doesn’t seem as bad.  When an individual purchases a smart fridge, they purchase the prestige of owning a product that many people can’t afford. Like purchasing the Ferrari of refrigerators. That along with the environmental benefits and excellent support offered through our company, our customers will see where their money is going.

Supply Chain Strategy Our product will be made domestically to ensure we have complete control of the quality of our products and that it is done correctly. The risk of a load of Smart Fridges being made incorrectly will cost the company money when we have to recall them and it will tarnish our prestigious image. Once the product is made within our facility, we will use an in-house distribution system that uses our own trucks to deliver our products across the country. We will have large semi-trucks take truckloads of our product to terminals stationed across the country. Once the product is taken to these terminals they will be loaded in smaller box trucks that will take the product to stores across their delivery zones. Doing it this will reduce the miles that must be travelled in gas guzzling Semi trucks and make our supply chain more efficient. The plan will be to have our main warehouse in the middle of the country in Kansas. We will then have a terminal in Nevada that will take care of the West side of the country, one in South Carolina that will take care of the East side of the country and one in Kansas will take care of the middle of the country. Once it is at the stores, they will then use their trucks deliver to customers. This will reduce the amount of times the product must be loaded and unloaded, reducing the risk of damage and cutting cost.

Integrated Marketing Communications Strategy The most important part of our marketing strategy will be delivering a consistent, quality product and the same message no matter where you buy our product from. We will manage our company ethically and ensure we don’t have anything that could tarnish our company reputation. If anything negative happens, we will be proactive and ensure that we are doing everything we can to manage the situation and ensure it doesn’t happen again. Our sales team will deliver the same message no matter where they are attempting to sell our products which will solidify our company image. When a company shows inconsistent ideals and values it weakens the solidarity of a company image and we will ensure that does not happen. We will have excellent communication within our company. From the CEO to the truck drivers, everybody will have voice and everybody will be heard. By doing this our employees will feel important and want to deliver the best service they can possibly deliver. The message within the company will be to always work to better the business and that will show in our final product. Through advertising and delivering a consistent quality product and have excellent communication within our company, our marketing communication strategy will be strong and successful.

 

Marketing Implementation

Structural issues

The main issue with implementing The Smart Fridge is the fact that it would be a brand new development altogether. Getting it into the market with a positive reputation with the lack of solid consumer support will be an obstacle. Next, would be the high price for the high quality. Also, because it would be a new product with a possible lifespan of  15-20 years the warranty that would come with The Smart Fridge could cost the company money due to expensive parts within the fridge.

 

Tactical marketing activities

 

We will start with the development of the fridge’s design on Sunday 1/11/17, that should last for about 3 months. Next, finding the funding to create the product should last about one month from Friday 3/24/17 until 4/20/17. Then, locating facilities for manufacturing should take another month from 4/21/17 until 5/18/17. This would lead to having to order resources/parts to create the fridge which should take approximately 2 weeks from Friday 5/19/17 until 6/1/17. Eventually we would hire train manufacturing employees within a 2 month span from Friday 6/2/17 until 7/27/17. Third, we would test the product for a month from Friday 7/28/17 until 8/24/17. Fourth, conducting a meeting to evaluate and okay the continuation of manufacturing within 2 days from 8/25-8/28. Fifth step would include finding funding for the distribution, distribution facilities and trucks. This should take 2 months from Tuesday 8/29/17 until 10/23/17. Eventually, the need for hiring and training distribution employees would take 2 months from Tuesday 10/24-12/18/17. The last three activities would include creating a marketing strategy, developing an ad campaign and creating a company culture. These last three steps would take 5 months from Tuesday 12/19/17 until 5/7/18.

Evaluation and control

Formal controls

 

Informal controls

 

Implementation schedule and timeline

 

Marketing results…

 

Appendix

Figure 1: SWOT Table

Strengths

· Unique product

· Training available for customers

· Convenient

· Reduces food waste

· High quality

· Made in the U.S.

 

Weakness

· No brand reputation

· Expensive

· Too advanced for some customers

Opportunity

· Expanding into international markets

· Build reputation

· Strengthen strategy

Threat

· Competition

· Threat of new entry

· Changes in technology

 

Figure 2: Distribution Map

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