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понедельник, 20 февраля 2023 г.

How to Differentiate Your Product

 Fighting the forces of product inertia

Overcoming the fear of thinking differently

Suggesting different ideas or challenging conventional wisdom requires a certain level of tenacity. It also requires you to bulldoze through the fears that often beset the management mindset.

In many organisations, managers don’t want to be seen to rock the boat. Managers want Q2’s bonus and to please their superiors. Pursuing unconventional differentiation strategies risks making them look like fools to their superiors and so it’s often decided that to stay safe is a much better course of action.

This is all completely understandable. Who on earth wants to pursue some wacky idea, only for it to fall flat with their name written all over it? Nobody.

Why product differentiation matters


Product strategy is underpinned by the increasingly rare skill of making clear choices. Choices are difficult, because they inherently mean saying yes to one thing and no to another. No to customer requests, no to stakeholders and no to the niggling monster in your head suggesting you add just 1 more feature.

Perhaps one of the most important choices you make at the strategic level is to decide on what basis your business or product will compete. The classical choice is to decide whether to compete on price – and the subsequent race to the bottom – or whether to differentiate your product enough so as to carve out a unique space in which to operate.

Competing on price is made easier if you have the scale and resources to take on – and defeat – competitors since you can, in some cases, absorb losses and drive your competitors out of business. Few companies are in this position which makes differentiation a more attractive, powerful path to success for many products.

The benefits of differentiation

  • Perceived value – battling on price lumps you into the same categories as your competitors. Differentiation elevates you to a new level of originality. It gives you leverage to potentially increase your pricing because you’re different and cannot be compared easily to alternatives.
  • Competition – operate in the same space as competitors with no distinct differentiation and you are forced to compete on price. Carve out your own space and customers will see you differently – and assess you differently.
  • Mindspace – being different means you occupy a different mindspace with your customers. You are seen as original – and are categorised alongside other original brands. Differentiation can help you shift the perception of your product from within the boundaries set by existing market players and into uncharted, alternative territories.

How do you differentiate your product?

Differentiation is difficult. And it often becomes more difficult the longer you operate within your industry.

If you’ve ever moved from one industry to another, you’ll come to the table with a fresh perspective, completely unblemished by years of ‘relevant’ experience. You’ll question why certain things are done in specific ways, you’ll wonder what would happen if you applied some of the principles from your previous industry into this new industry and you’ll think some aspects of this new industry are insane. After a few months, this beginner’s mind starts to fade until eventually you too get up to speed and become part of the industry in which you now operate. Things are as they are and that’s the way it is.

Differentiation challenges you to not succumb to these forces of inertia. Here’s a few ways you can do it:

1. Distort your industry factors

Ask yourself what factors and characteristics the key players in your industry compete on and what factors influence the products in your industry. For example, if you operate in the banking space, you might list the following as industry competing factors and characteristics which influence products in your market:

  1. Price of fees for transactions overseas
  2. Communication methods – by letter, email
  3. The services available e.g. Banking mobile app, overdrafts

To create a differentiated product in this market, your challenge is to distort these factors in unique, creative ways so that you create a new form of value.

To distort industry factors, ask yourself the following questions:

  • Eliminate – which of the factors that the industry takes for granted could be eliminated?
  • Reduce – which factors could be reduced well below the industry’s standard?
  • Raise – which factors could be raised well above the industry’s standard?
  • Create – which factors could be created that the industry has never offered?

An example of a company that has done just that in the banking space is Monzo.

How Monzo distorts traditional banking industry factors


You may or may not have heard of Monzo. Monzo is a breakout banking startup based in London and it’s making a bit of a name for itself. The London tech scene is full of folks who proudly carry the Monzo card and at least some of Monzo’s success so far is driven by a very clear distortion of traditional banking factors.

Here’s some of the choices they’ve made which distort the traditional banking industry factors to create a new product category:

  • Eliminated – all fees for using bank cards overseas, paper communications
  • Reduced – bureaucracy and 20th century clutter associated with banking – having to write a letter to change accounts, for example
  • Raised – focus on technology / engineering community by building open APIs for the development community
  • Created – positive emotional relationship with your bank through branding – colorful cards / branding / sense of style and desire in banking. Banks had traditionally been seen as dull, boring, functional products. Monzo is transforming the emotional state associated with banking to create a powerful brand.

Monzo is transforming the emotional relationship it has with its customers by creating a community of brand ambassadors who flaunt their bright coral cards as a status symbol; not necessarily in the wealth-flaunting Amex way but as a symbol of being at the forefront of technology. Much like someone would do back when Macbooks were cool.

Suddenly brightly colored bank cards are all the rage. And I want one.

Monzo is transforming the relationship customers have with their banks from being a relationship akin to a colleague at work to a trusted relationship you might have with a long time university friend. The tone feels friendly, trustworthy and honest and not stuffy, forced and functional.

A series of bold strategic choices to differentiate its product has enabled Monzo to do this; the bright colored cards, the real-time updates on the mobile app, the emphasis on transparency with customers and the tone of voice is all very different to what’s traditionally expected in banking. The distortion of industry factors creates this feeling of originality.

Whether this is sustainable as it continues to grow remains to be seen but its bold, creative choices at the start of its life should be applauded.

The Remarkable tablet


The Remarkable tablet is a new tablet focused exclusively on 1 thing: recreating the experience of drawing and writing on paper for the digital era. To achieve this, it makes a very clear series of strategic choices which distort the traditional industry factors and characteristics of the tablet industry:

  • Eliminated – distraction. The problem with tablets and other mobile devices is that they put you in a constant state of distraction. Focus requires eliminating the sources of distraction.
  • Created – a drawing slate for pencils, replaceable styluses and nibs. The Remarkable tablet comes with a series of replaceable nibs which fit onto the end of the digital stylus. This is a new concept and it evokes an emotional response similar to replacing the pens you might use with a notepad.
  • Reduced – functionality. You can only do 1 thing on a Remarkable tablet; make notes and annotations. You cannot watch Netflix – and that’s a good thing.
  • Raised – sex appeal of writing. The Remarkable creates the sense that drawing and writing is sexy again. For a while, writing on traditional paper was seen as old fashioned but the act of writing is now enjoying a renaissance, much of which is driven by products like the Remarkable.

2. Assess your value chain


The value chain is the set of activities required to deliver the value of your business. If you’re a startup, it’s likely your value chain will be sparse in the early days which will mean you’ll need to rely on factors such as networks, reputations and humans to try and gain a foothold in your industry.

For more established corporates, your value chain will include everything from your HR departments, to operations, technology and customer service. Carefully examining your value chain will help you to identify unique, sustainable advantages over your competitors.

For example, Ikea’s strongest differentiator is its ability to sell flat pack furniture at rock bottom prices. The flat pack furniture designs, the infrastructure and the brand all come directly from the value chain.

Differentiators which are derived from sources of strength in your value chain are often more difficult to replicate by your competitors since they reflect the unique characteristics of your organisation which means they can sometimes be stronger long term sources of differentiation.

If you’re putting together an upcoming product strategy, look across your business as a whole to identify sources of strength that might act as levers to create product differentiators. Speak to members of other departments, get to understand what tools other parts of the business are using and how value is delivered in different ways.

3. Lateral applications


Creativity is the process of combining 2 seemingly unrelated concepts or ideas together. Differentiating your product can often work by taking unrelated concepts and applying them laterally to your industry or product.

Lateral application can sometimes work by stealing features and applying them to your product vertical. This doesn’t work if you steal features from within your vertical. Instead, look outside of your industry for ideas and apply them to yours. For example if you work in the fashion ecommerce space, you might look to the SAAS analytics sector for ideas on how to create new, differentiated features for your product. You might find that SAAS analytics products have APIs which allow reporting tools to extract data and that in your sector ecommerce fulfillment centers might benefit from something similar.

The process of lateral application is about forcing connections between completely unrelated concepts and is difficult to do at first but gets easier with a little practice.

The dynamism of differentiation over time

You’ve put together a truly differentiated product, your customers love it, your competitors are dumbfounded as to how to compete with you and so you sit back for the next five years and pour yourself a stiff drink to celebrate. Right?

The problem with differentiation is that it doesn’t always last forever. It’s a dynamic force which changes over time thanks to industry trends, responses from your competitors and advancements in technology. What’s different and potent today might be ordinary and impotent tomorrow.

Differentiators derived from your unique value chain can make replicating your product’s successes more difficult for your competitors but feature-based differentiation is far less resilient.

Today, Ebay is still generating billions in profits decades after it launched and much of this can be attributed to its solid value chain; replicating the powerful marketplace of buyers and sellers, logistical operations and international brand value is extremely difficult for competitors. It takes a monstrous juggernaut like Amazon to even come close to dislodging it as the defacto marketplace for connecting buyers and sellers. Feature-based differentiation, with weaker value chain foundations on the other hand, are much easier to destroy.

How Snapchat lost its differentiators


Just a few years ago, Snapchat was the darling of the tech world thanks in part to its seemingly powerful differentiators: the disappearing photographs and the hilarious face filters. Fast forward just a few years and the strength of these differentiators have been tested to their limits. And broken.

Today, these are no longer differentiators and the company is now seeking alternative ways to differentiate itself, with little luck so far. Product features alone cannot withstand the pressure of sustained competition. Instagram has proved this all too ruthlessly as it continues to bludgeon Snapchat to death, one feature at a time.

There’s often a misplaced sense of trust that consumers will buy into a company just because you’re still that company. That’s partly true for a few brands but for many companies customers are increasingly more fickle and will happily switch between products, depending on which brand offers the best, easiest or most original form of value. Many users switched from Snapchat to Instagram without giving it much thought.

Does everything need to be differentiated?

Differentiating everything is not a good idea, particularly when it comes to elements of UX. Often, it’s useful to stick to conventional design trends and design patterns to avoid confusion. That’s not to say you shouldn’t try experimental design approaches but that sometimes you can differentiate to the point where nobody has a clue what they’re meant to do with your product because it’s utterly confusing to use.

The responsibility of differentiation

Differentiators should ideally be decided at the strategic level, with product decisions flowing from these. Strategy is about making clear decisions. Differentiation is one way in which this decision making might manifest itself. Decide on a few key differentiators when you’re working on your product strategy. Depending on your organisation this might be quarterly or annually.

Then, with your differentiation choices made, specific product features can flow from these decisions. Cohesion is important throughout the business and a strategic decision to be different in 1 area should be reflected in the product decisions you make. For example, if you’re a banking company which has decided to be different by having an open, honest, transparent relationship with customers, this can permeate throughout your organisation and manifest itself in various different ways. Your CS team might have 24 / 7 mobile live chat tools, you might build a transparent roadmap and you might have a forum for members of your community to chat to both your company and each other.

As a product person, you can shape the ways in which your products reflect your overall business and product strategy by making feature decisions which align clearly with the overall strategy.

How to get your organisation to embrace differentiation

Embracing differentiation, especially within larger organisations is often difficult. There’s a number of reasons for this. Here’s some of the hurdles that you’ll need to overcome if you want your organisation to embrace thinking differently:

  1. The repeaters
  2. HiPPO influence
  3. Embarrassment

The repeaters

Who are the repeaters? Repeaters rarely think for themselves and instead look to others for answers so that they can repeat them to colleagues and other team members. Often, if you’re tackling a problem, a repeater will look to how others do it in your vertical and suggest you copy your competitor. To be clear, this is not always a negative; in UX in particular, using well-established design patterns can be a great thing. We all think like repeaters sometimes, but if you’re explicitly ideating ways to differentiate your product, the repeater mindset is not one to emulate.

HiPPO influence

The HiPPO (highest paid person’s opinion) will sometimes rule the roost in larger corporates. If business’ differentiators are decided at the strategic level this can often mean that it’s HiPPOs who are making these decisions. It’s important therefore for HiPPOs to gather input from all parts of the business so that strategic decisions that are made at a higher level take into consideration feedback from non-HiPPOs too too. VC billionaire Marc Andreessen actively encourages his members of staff to challenge every idea he has. We can all learn a lot from this approach.

Embarrassment

What are you afraid of saying? At the heart of many poor differentiation strategies is the fear of looking or sounding like an idiot. It’s much easier to point to a competitor and copy what they’re doing since the fact that they’re doing it means you feel safer. This deep sense of embarrassment affects staff members at all levels.

The only way to combat the fear of thinking differently is to create an environment where ideas are exchanged, criticised and praised openly. It’s difficult at first but after a while you’ll genuinely stop caring what people think and celebrate good ideas and bad.


by 

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Differentiation – Are Product, Brand and Service Still Enough



Marketers are constantly searching for differentiation. Unless a company has a genuine scientific or technological advantage, preferably one that can be protected by a patent, competitors can more often than not match any incremental change in an ever-shortening time-scale. Taking cost out of an operation, maybe through new tools and techniques in operational management, relocating production to areas of lower labour cost, or a combination of both, likewise creates advantage that can be sustained only over a relatively short time. This is true of manufacturing and service industries alike. It is why so much manufacturing has migrated into China and so much software development and IT-based services have migrated into India.

These moves would have happened on cost grounds alone; however there is another dimension. The general raising of educational standards and the speed with which knowledge is disseminated nowadays mean that socio-economic development is being accelerated and that certain industrialising economies are achieving rates of change that were unheard of even as recently as 20 years ago. The internet is just one tool for disseminating knowledge that is open to competing organisations worldwide. Where this tool is used to enhance an existing robust business, the effect on the established competitive structure can be very significant. This is a phenomenon that is becoming known as time compression. Companies are now in a race to bring a stream of incremental changes to product and service faster than before and this is becoming the real differentiator: the difference between the financial performance of first-in-class and third-in-class is widening and the famous bell-shaped curve applied to profitability distribution between players in a given market is becoming flatter. According to recent research across many sectors done by Stanford University, the number of companies and the percentage of sector revenue generating twice the average industry sector profit have been declining steadily over the past 20 years. The winner may not take all, but does take an increasing share of available value.

Twenty years ago one of the mainstream channels of thought in marketing strategy (indeed in business strategy more broadly) was the need to choose between price leadership and differentiation and to avoid being “stuck in the middle”. This particular distinction is now less valid. Given the wider and more even diffusion of technology and dissemination of knowledge, price is becoming much more of a differentiator. To take a simple example, the phrase “made in China” no longer signifies a lower standard of quality: the fact that well-educated and well-trained Chinese workers do not have minimum two televisions per home, do not think of a car as a necessity and do not regard two foreign holidays per year as a right means that they can use cost/price as a very effective differentiator. This argument does not (yet) apply to all products: the important issue here is that it is gradually and inexorably applying to an increasing number. It applies also in the service sector. Ryanair differentiates itself as “The Low-Fares Airline”, making price the biggest element in its marketing strategy. The success of Ryanair compared with British Airways, in parallel with its earlier counterparts in the USA and their established competitors, illustrates the power of price as a differentiator when no amount of promotional hype and advertiser’s candy-floss prose can disguise the fact that (a) economy class airline seats are not significantly differentiated and (b) everyone’s service standards have more-or-less converged.

Achieving and sustaining a competitive cost/price balance has always been required: the problem now is that it is more difficult to do, and the characteristics of the end product cannot be guaranteed to do it all for you.

“What is differentiation?” – The Question Revisited

This question looks fairly simple. Differentiation exists when consumers under conditions of competitive supply and faced with a range of choices (a) perceive that product offerings do not have the same value and (b) are prepared to dispose of unequal levels of resource (usually money) in acquiring as many of the available offerings as they wish. It is, however, a little more complicated; and it is the concept of value itself that complicates it.

What Determines Value?

There are two dimensions to this answer. The first is what can be termed “techno-economic logic”, the second “emotional logic”. What is clear, however, is that these two logics have one thing in common – they are defined by the customer, not by the supplier. Understanding the relative significance of each and communicating this to a consumer faced with increasingly wide choice are the essential requirements in achieving differentiation. Since this is getting more difficult to achieve in the first place and to sustain over time for the reasons I have set out, we need to understand two broader concepts of business. These emerging determinants of value, and the potential source of renewable differentiation, are twofold: (a) the supply chain and (b) the product experience. I believe that these two concepts are beginning to move our focus away from the three traditional elements of product, brand and service. Though I acknowledge that these three elements remain a part of marketing, my argument is that their significance has changed from being “order winners” to “order qualifiers”.

Evidence

In a witty and painstakingly researched book the American marketing specialist Jack Trout points out the extent of product and brand proliferation that has taken place over the past 20 years. The following is an abridged version of a particularly revealing analysis (figures relate to the USA market).

The Explosion of Choice

ItemEarly 1970sLate 1990s
KFC menu items714
S.U.V. styles838
Breakfast cereals160340
Airports11,26118,202
New book titles40,35077,446
Levi’s jeans styles4170
Running shoe styles5285
Contact lens types136
TV channels in Houston Texas5185
Websites04,757,894

Source: Trout (2000), page 6

The point is that demand has not grown by anywhere near the rate of growth in choice. It is this clear trend to product/brand proliferation and increasing fragmentation of markets and market segments that poses the challenge in differentiation.

There is simply not enough product differentiation to go around. Product packages/extensions used to work: they no longer always do (at least not for very long) because they can more often be copied and improved by competitors at an increasing speed. Let us take an example of a service product with which we are all familiar – air travel.

Frequent flyer miles constitute a vivid example of just how short an innovative idea can be effective. In the mid-1980s American Airlines introduced AAdvantage. This differentiating concept was a great success for a while, until most other competitors realised that they could do likewise. Along with this many of American’s customers eventually amassed so many flyer miles that they could not redeem them within the period of time-to-expiry. American was engulfed in a sea of complaints from their prime segment (the frequent flyer). Goodwill was destroyed: badwill was created. Fortunately for American this problem quickly hit all competitors and thus was to some extent neutralised fairly quickly. American’s remedy was simple, namely to abolish the time-to-expiry feature of the product. The point is this: as a differentiator the effective life-cycle of frequent flyer miles/points and their differentiating power were much shorter than the airlines originally anticipated. Not surprisingly, like exchangeable currencies this “quasi-currency” has gradually been subject to inflation and value reduction.

From the early 1990s onwards the world’s major airlines joined together to form marketing alliances to offer “seamless” travel worldwide. Just about every major airline now belongs to an alliance: this mechanism was open to being copied and improved in a relatively short time, and therefore any marketing advantage was short-lived. Does this matter? Not critically, since the true benefit is found in cost-reduction. The airlines have been able to reduce their facilities worldwide and share each other’s, thereby gaining greater asset utilisation and containing investment and overhead costs. The problem now is that the benefits from this have all been realised and the airlines remain under financial pressure.

In an industry that has been protected by regulation for almost the whole of its existence (and to a great extent still is), the shake-out as markets have become freer has been severe. The profit problems of the industry have not been entirely due to the recent volume effect following 9/11 and the period of international insecurity: the airline industry was already facing declining profitability over many years despite a rising market, because a small number of truly differentiated players took advantage of several factors to enter and develop the business on the basis of a new approach. They were differentiated: their differentiation was based on the following.

  1. A superior understanding of the potential of the industry’s supply chain
  2. A superior understanding of the changing motivations, value concepts and decision-frames of a variety of existing and potential customers

To consider the supply chain dimension, let us return to Ryanair. This airline bucks the trend in the business. It makes price the big differentiator and this compensates for the openly-acknowledged fact that it flies from secondary airports to secondary airports that may be slightly further from main centres than the scheduled airlines and major airports. It supports its price differential by leasing rather than owning its whole fleet; by having a standard fleet of Boeing 737 aircraft; by outsourcing many operational services; and by being 100% upfront as to what the customer gets and does not get for (not much) money spent. It is a fundamentally different approach to this business and it makes money at a time when just about every other airline is reporting losses. It illustrates the significance of understanding the supply chain and the potential that can be unlocked by looking at the supply chain in a different way.

Let’s stick with Ryanair to illustrate the changing decision-frames of the customer. Consumers realise that there is now virtually no differentiation between airlines in terms of product, even in the upper travel classes. The product is becoming commoditised and there is little opportunity for sustainable differentiation (for example, the much-publicised “flat bed” in British Airways’ business class was copied in a matter of months). Ryanair, modelling itself on the American carrier Southwest, understood that there is a point at which travellers will trade off benefits for price. For example, it required simple but effective marketing to point out that the customer was paying a very high price for an assigned seat and “free” meals. Given Ryanair’s seat price, the lack of an assigned seat became a non-issue for the customer and the availability of reasonably-priced food and beverages dealt with that aspect of customer expectations. On my most recent Ryanair flight, about one-third of the flyers were obviously business people like myself. Ryanair’s supply chain is both focused (cost) and also differentiated (outsource-versus-own).

Think about others in various businesses that were first to re-define the supply chain in ways that customers value – Dell with Dell Direct (late industry entrant but displaced large established competitors); Amazon.com (ultimate range of choice, fast supply); E-bay (ease of access, rapid transaction).

Food For Thought

There are two key tasks that are now emerging in the quest for differentiation.

  1. Configuring the supply chain
  2. Building the customer’s experience

Concerning differentiation of the supply chain, I find that the following perspective (Wilding 2002) sums up the emerging issues and the changing marketing potential.

“In order to compete, the effective management of the (total) supply chain is critical…..the management of upstream and downstream relationships with suppliers, distributors and customers to achieve greater customer value-added at less total cost.”

At a time when most companies, whether in manufacturing or services, are experiencing price deflation, the need to concentrate on customer-determined value is rising. When there is clearly less differentiation at the level of final output, the route to final output becomes the focus of this effort. What I mean by this is simply that the switching costs for customers in most product and service categories (especially in consumer goods/services, but increasingly in business-to-business transactions) are declining. The familiar phrase “..only a click away” may be something of a cliché, but it has a basis of truth in it.

A few years ago, when I was a visiting academic in a leading UK university, two of my doctoral students authored a book on rapid product development. (Gregory and Rawling 1997) What they perhaps did not realise at the time is that in addition to their specialist analysis of logistics management they had contributed something very significant to marketing in its wider sense.

Part of the essence of “Profit from Time” is that implementing an idea first can be the difference between making money and merely earning around or below the average profitability by imitating a prior model whose successful operators have already worked out how to move forward. The focus here is on efficiency in operational management. However, the implications of time-based competition are far-reaching and reach straight into marketing, possibly leading us to a re-think or extension of the concept itself.

The contributors to the customer’s assessment of what constitutes value can be derived from any of several component activities in the supply chain. Therefore the effective 21st-century marketer competes increasingly on the basis of supply chain versus supply chain. It adds another dimension to marketing, namely that, even if the product has become commoditised, there may be something of value somewhere in the supply chain that can be leveraged to constitute valued differentiation in the view of the customer. Take the time dimension. Faster delivery to a customer with near 100% predictability reduces a customer’s inventory and hence a customer’s costs. This is often more effective than a price cut, because it is much more difficult for a competitor to emulate quickly whereas anyone can cut prices to maintain volume. Also, because this takes cost out of a supplier’s operation as well as a customer’s, there is a double gain and therefore it may be worth significant investment to (a) establish this position and (b) make retaliation more difficult for competition. Time becomes the differentiator, and it can be the part-basis of a powerful marketing platform.

Other elements of supply chain management can have a significant differentiating impact. For example, one can leverage the technique of vendor-managed inventory – where the supplier takes responsibility for maintaining the operating stock at a customer’s operation. This is not only an approach to reducing inventory cost and locking-in a customer, but also an emerging marketing competence that constitutes a potentially powerful differentiator.

Further recent work on supply chain management points to the increased potential for differentiation based on more than the traditional 4Ps of marketing in the following way. “The advent of a new set of capabilities (my emphasis), based on the convergence of computing and communications technologies, is forcing companies to fundamentally review their business practices. Companies are devising new ways of doing business, deploying different business models”. (Hewitt 2002)
But a focus on the supply chain structure may not be enough – and it can sometimes be difficult to market this as a customer benefit, especially in consumer goods and services where the supply chain can be almost invisible to the customer in contrast to business-to-business (especially industrial) marketing, where the supply chain gets more significant as it becomes more interactive. The extra marketing element is communicating the experience of the offering.

Concerning differentiation of the customer’s experience, let us consider how to differentiate a simple commodity – coffee (see Pine and Gilmore 1999, pp 1-2). The price of a standard-sized cup of regular coffee can be as follows.

Run-of-the-mill dinerStarbucksCafé Florian, Piazza San Marco, Venice
US$ 0.50 – 1.00US$ 4.00 – 7.00US$ 15.00

The customer’s experience accounts for the cost/price/revenue difference. Back in the 1960s and 1970s we were required to intone the mantra “we sell benefits not product”. The customer now knows all about this. The requirement is for a differentiated experience that is valued. Hence we see a fifteen-fold price difference in the coffee mentioned above. The requirement is not for coffee; neither is it for benefits in the literal sense. It is for a valued experience. It is suggested (Pine and Gilmore 1999, p 76) that “customers do not always want choice; they want exactly what they want”. This occurs even when there are so many coffee types in final specification.

It is not enough to know that you are, in aggregate, above average in terms of customer satisfaction. Customer commitment depends on satisfaction not with the product or service but with the complete experience of dealing with the supplying organisation. Therefore it follows conceptually that there is a “satisfaction supply chain” that commences with first contact and proceeds right through to the post-sale consequences of consuming the product or service. Niketown and Legoland are examples of experience-based marketing that take the customer beyond the realm of purchasing footwear or construction sets. The level of customer retention and commitment is exceptionally high and this has easily overcome any possible negative connotations of shifting production of the actual products into low-labour cost countries. Indeed, it is doubtful if many customers have even realised that production relocation has taken place. In these cases the product quality levels and logistic systems are such that profit has been enhanced consistently over time.

The power of “experience marketing” is that it addresses the problem of retaining satisfaction and converting it into commitment. The book retailer Waterstones introduced a programme entitled “Browsers Welcome”. Waterstones made it easy and comfortable for customers to enter their stores, take a look at books on offer and sit on a couch to sample them. Initially it produced little in the way of identifiable additional sales, but after a relatively short time, very few browsers left the store without having made a purchase. The experience was valued as highly as the product, point-of-sale service and range of choice.

One can list many further instances of successful “experience marketing” comparable to the above. The big theme coming out of these is that quality no longer needs to be “assured”: it is “assumed”. Consistently high quality products and services are essential order qualifiers – they do not win any business, but without them you do not even get on to the field of play. The differentiated experience of engaging with the supplier company is the decisive factor securing customer preference.

Implications for marketers and marketing

Jingoistic assertion no longer works. “Persil Washes Whiter” is a guaranteed turn-off when it is believed to be no longer objectively demonstrable. The Western world is becoming over-communicated and the outcome is that customers select a lot of it out. It is unlikely in the future that financially- and logistically-inefficient supply chains can be outweighed by sales promotion.

Does brand still matter? Yes, but in a different way compared with the past. It provides a comfortable antidote to the tyranny of choice under conditions of market fragmentation and product proliferation. It provides reassurance. Purported differentiation is based on and supported by truly differentiated experiences for the consumer in engaging with the company offering the brand. Compare and contrast the late-1980s perspective of Peter Doyle (cited in Baker 2000) with that of Naomi Klein (Klein 2000).

Doyle: “A successful brand is a name, symbol, design or some combination, which identifies the ‘product’ of a particular organisation as having a sustainable differential advantage”

Klein: “The ostensible product has become a mere filler for the brand…..the sneaker pimps have designed ever more intricate and pseudo-scientific air pockets and driven up prices by signing star athletes to colossal sponsorship deals……..Absolut Vodka has developed a marketing strategy in which its product disappeared and its brand was nothing but a bottle-shaped space that could be filled with whatever experience content a particular audience wanted from its brands.”

The activity that we term “marketing” is undergoing change. Much of the “intellectual capital” of marketing dates from the 1950s-1960s. At this time we were faced with conditions of year-on-year demand growth in markets that were still subject to considerable governmental and inter-governmental regulation and to the effect of tariffs and quotas. Priorities were sales growth, market share, brand preference, exporting. The Kotler 4Ps of marketing (product, price, promotion, place) constituted a complete framework. These remain valid.

However, seven major factors for change are bringing about a need for an overhaul in our thinking about the nature of marketing. These factors have proven to be increasingly significant from the beginning of the 1990s to the present and have been influenced to some degree by disciplines and management approaches originating outside the classically defined sphere of “marketing”. We see this most in business-to-business marketing, where there is an increased focus on “real” rather than “brand” value, but it also evident in business-to-consumer marketing with the emergence of “experience value” rather than “image value” as the basis of branding.

  1. Globalisation and the increased authority of GATT/WTO
  2. Structural shift in the world economy and greater mobility of resources
  3. Lower overall growth rates and major regional differences in growth performance
  4. Internet
  5. Computer-based systems design
  6. More fluid organisational structures
  7. Better-informed and hence more critical customers

These are, in summary, the points that influence the two additional and increasingly dominant driving forces in marketing in the early 21st century – designing the (national and/or international) supply chain structure, and engineering the experience that customers value. These are the spheres in which ideas for differentiation can be found and where the basis of a process of permanent revolution can be created.

Final thoughts

Product, brand and service remain significant and the marketing concept is here to stay, but its content is changing. The focus for performance improvement in the 1980s was on quality / reliability / consistency (the Total Quality Management – TQM – revolution) and in the 1990s on integrated cross-functional business processes (the Business Process Re-Engineering – BPR – revolution).  There are economic and technological limits to the effectiveness of techniques such as TQM and BPR, and their diffusion has been rapid and widespread – hence the law of diminishing returns from their application was experienced fairly quickly. Also in applying these tools and techniques there was little challenge to the product-brand-service basis of differentiation. The logistics dimension was considered internally, but not externally and holistically.  There has, however, been a more profound shift starting in the mid-1990s and it has been brought about by the information revolution and the processes of globalisation. We are moving gradually to a framework of competitiveness – and hence potential differentiation – that is based on supply chain management and product/brand experience. This move will be longer-lasting than TQM and BPR and will have a deeper impact on the way in which business is done.

In the 21st century we are facing more intense competition in virtually all businesses, influenced to a great extent by an increasingly global market-place, and this is inevitably leading to new concepts and techniques of differentiation. These are, however, additional not substitutional: the former order winners have simply become order qualifiers. Moreover the new differentiators increasingly challenge our assumptions about the nature, content, balance and potential impact of the activities we collectively term “marketing”.

In this we differentiate ourselves and our product/brand/service offerings on the basis of a new competence – the competence to define and rapidly re-define for customers a cost-effective offering of an experience within which the product/brand/service is the final link in a chain, all of whose links need to be equally strong. Quite simply, we are moving towards differentiation based on a complete “business architecture”. This will be a stimulating transition for all professional marketers.

References

Doyle, Peter “Branding”, originally published in 1989 and cited in Michael Baker “Marketing Strategy and Management” (3rd edition) London: Macmillan 2000. (Baker 2000)

Gregory, Ian C and Rawling, Simon B “Profit from Time” London: Macmillan 1997. (Gregory and Rawling 1997)

Hewitt, Fred “Fourth Stage Logistics – Research Drivers and Priorities in the 21st Century”, in Proceedings of the LRN Conference, Birmingham, 2002, pp 5-10. (Hewitt 2002)

Klein, Naomi “No Logo” London: Harper Collins 2000. (Klein 2000)

Pine, B Joseph and Gilmore, James H “The Experience Economy”. Boston: Harvard Business School Press 1999. (Pine and Gilmore 1999)

Trout, Jack “Differentiate or Die”. New York: John Wiley 2000. (Trout 2000)

Wilding, Richard “The 3Ts of Highly Effective Supply Chains”. Logistics Solutions, December 2002, pp17-20. (Wilding 2002)

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