E-marketing strategy.ppt

kamvishnu 223 views 34 slides Jul 28, 2023
Slide 1
Slide 1 of 34
Slide 1
1
Slide 2
2
Slide 3
3
Slide 4
4
Slide 5
5
Slide 6
6
Slide 7
7
Slide 8
8
Slide 9
9
Slide 10
10
Slide 11
11
Slide 12
12
Slide 13
13
Slide 14
14
Slide 15
15
Slide 16
16
Slide 17
17
Slide 18
18
Slide 19
19
Slide 20
20
Slide 21
21
Slide 22
22
Slide 23
23
Slide 24
24
Slide 25
25
Slide 26
26
Slide 27
27
Slide 28
28
Slide 29
29
Slide 30
30
Slide 31
31
Slide 32
32
Slide 33
33
Slide 34
34

About This Presentation

e marketing


Slide Content

“Market-oriented strategic planningis the
managerial processof developing and
maintaining a practicalfit between the
organisation’s objectives, skills and resources
and its changing market opportunities”.
“The aim of strategic planning is to shape and
reshapethe company’s businesses and products
so that they yield target profits and growth”.
Kotler, P. (1997) Marketing management, (9th ed), Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice
Hall International, p.63

Competition-competitive forces, analysing competitors
Monitoring environmental change-managing strategic
environmental issues
Opportunities-market and sales opportunity analysis
Competitive advantage-distinctive capabilities, cost and
differentiation strategies, product differentiation strategies
Resource reviews
Strategic fit -fitting both market opportunities and internal
capabilities

There are five types of company:
1.those who make things happen
2.those who think they make things happen
3.those who watch things happen
4.those who wonder what happened, and
5.those that did not know that anything had
happened

Planning is essential
It gives a sense of purpose and direction
Stops constant fire-fighting
Stops panicking
Put managers in control

marketing strategy is a cycle of integrated actions leading
to a sustainable competitive advantage
strategic marketing seeks to secure and maintain
competitive advantage in order to meet the goals of the
organisation
it involves consideration of the interaction of three key
variables: external environment, organisation goalsand
strategies

E-Marketing Planning and Strategies
vision
corporate objectives
marketing audit
SWOT analysis
formulate strategies
forecasts
budgets
Implementation programme
control
Performance review and evaluation
1 objectives
2 situation
review
3 strategies
and plans
4 action
Strategic Focus
what business are we in?
what business should we be
in?
what business should we
not be in?
identify opportunities
target markets
product, price, promotion
and
distribution strategies
action: products, prices,
promotion, distribution

An e-marketing strategyneeds to be fully
integrated into an organisation’s business and
marketing strategies and plans
Rather than have a separate e-marketing
strategyit is important to have an integrated
marketingplan with an e-marketing plan as a
sub-set of that marketing plan

E-marketing strategy as a detailed sub-set
of overall marketing planning
But also part of the investment for a new
web site
And part of the investment in upgrading
and extendinga website

E
S
P
Legal-ethical
Technology
Competition
Other factors
marketsinternet
SWOT
E-business
strategy
Performance metrics
E-marketing plan
E-marketing strategy
E-marketing mix
CRM
Environment-strategy-performance model
Source: Strauss, El-Ansary & Frost (2006:23)

Environmental Influences
1.broad environmental variables: economy,
technology, society
2.Industry variables: industry structure, lifecycle,
specific technology, structure of competition,
strategies and performance
3.market variables: lifecycle, segment structure,
demand influences, purchase size and frequency

Goals (Objectives)
sustainable competitive advantage as a means
to sales, market share, profit and other
objectives to satisfy stakeholders

PURPOSE
why the company
exists
VALUES
what the company
believes in
STRATEGY
competitive
position and
distinctive
competence
STANDARDS AND BEHAVIOURS
policies and behaviour patterns
underpinning the distinctive
competence and value system
The Ashridge Mission Model

Target
customer
s
suppliers
Marketing and sales
intermediaries
publicscompetitors
promotion
product
place price
Demographic/
economic
environment
Political/
legal
environment
Technical/
physical
environment
Social/
cultural
environment
Marketing and sales
information system
Marketing
organisation and
implementation
system
Marketing
planning system
Marketing & sales
organisation
system
Factors influencing company marketing strategies
publics

Environmental factors
e.g. rate of technological change
nature of competition
intensity of competition
Strategic factors
e.g. long-term objectives
strategic time horizon
product-market strategy
Managerial factors
e.g. communication
attitudes
leadership style
Organisational factors
e.g. size
structure
culture
innovation capability
Marketing factors
e.g. use of market research
customer service
product quality
Business Performance
Source: after Baker & Hart
(1989)
Factors influencing
competitive
success

Strategies
bedrock strategy -to build and sustain
capabilities of reputation, know-how,
relationships, physical resources
then determine strategies to transform these
into positional advantage visa vis
competitors
must derive strategies for market positioning
in the chosen target segments
have strategies to deliver continuing
customer satisfaction

Organisation
capabilities
Used to create
value for
customers
Provide
customers with
desired benefits
Careful assessment
of these capabilities
what capabilities to
build
analysis of
opportunities
choice of opportunities
to address
Value creation for customers
Internet
website and e-
commerce

Creating value for customers
surest way of gaining and keeping
competitive advantage is to create better
value for customers
customer come back for more and a long-
term customer relationship develops
The internet and development of e-
commerce offers great opportunities for
creating value for customers

value-defining processes [influenced by e-marketing]
◦market sensing to understand what customers value (what
benefits buying)
◦assess what the organisation creates from a customer perspective

value-developing processes [influenced by e-marketing]
◦what creates customer value in the value chain?
◦how can customer value be enhanced through product and service
development?
◦what facilitates and inhibits better product or service delivery

Value-delivering processes [influenced by e-marketing]
◦can the product or service be better delivered?
◦can it be made available at better times in better locations?
Value-maintaining processes [influenced by e-marketing
◦customer linking, channel bonding, managing brand equity

But customer expectations change
what customers consider excellent value today will probably be
average value tomorrow
customers are increasingly demanding
this is exacerbated by competitors who see advantage in meeting
these higher demands
other companies develop product and service enhancements which
set new expectation standards
change is endemic and built-in to most markets
therefore, there is a need to continuously monitor and adapt

Potential benefits of an Internet site:
Improvement in corporate identity and image
Improved customer service
Increased visibility among targeted segments
Market expansion
Online transactions
Lower communication costs
Source: Sterne (1999)

Website generations:
1.First generation:static electronic brochures,
supplier broadcasting to many potential and
existing customers
2.Second generation:interactive website, with
product stock availability, FAQs and pricing
information; still supplier driven
3.Third generation:fully interactive website,
personalisation and market research
information collection

Realised strategy
Deliberate strategy
Emergent strategy
Unrealised
strategy
Deliberate and emergent strategies
Source: Baker, M.J. (2000)
Marketing strategy and management,
(3rd Ed), Basingstoke: Macmillan

Desired objective
Unpredictable
factors
Predictable
factors
Course
plotted
Source: Baker, M.J. (2000)
Marketing strategy and management,
(3rd ed), Basingstoke: Macmillan

Strategic planning calls for action on:
managing the company’s businesses as an
investment portfolio(each business has a
different profit potential so should allocate
resources accordingly)
assessing each business by considering the
market’s growth rate, the company’s position
and fit in that market
strategy-each business needs to develop a
game plan for achieving its long-run
objectives

Demand
price elasticity
substitutes
rate of growth
cyclical, seasonal
Market structure
number of buyers and sellers
product differentiation
barriers to entry
cost structures
vertical integration
diversification
Conduct
pricing behaviour
product strategy and advertising
research and innovation
plant investment
legal tactics
Performance
production and allocative efficiency
progress, full employment
equity
Public Policy
taxes and subsidies
regulation
price controls
antitrust
information
Supply
raw material
technology
product durability
value/weight
Basic Conditions
The structure-conduct-
performance paradigm

Threat of
new entrants
Bargaining power
of customers
Threat of substitute
products or services
Bargaining power
of suppliers
The industry
jockeying for
position among
current
competitors
Porter’s five
forces

corporate planning
division planning
business planning
product planning
E-marketing
planning
organising
implementing
action
Measuring results
diagnosing results
taking corrective action
Planning Implementing Controlling

Business
mission
External
environment
(opportunities and
threats)
Internal
environment
(strength and
weaknesses
analysis)
Goal
formulation
Strategy
formulation
Programme
formulation
implementation
Feedback
and control
Business strategic planning
process
SWOT Analysis

1.Objectives:what business do we want to
be in? (where do we want to be?)
2.Situation Review:where are we now?
3.Strategies, Tactics and Plans:how do we
get there?, how do we exactly get there?
4.Action and Control:doing it and asking
did we get there?

Business
definition
Environmental
situation
Competitive
situation
Resources and
capabilities
Analysis of past
performance
Preliminary
objectives
Opportunities
and threats
Strengths and
weaknesses
Specification
of present
strategy
Strategic
thinking
•identify key
issues
•develop
strategy
options
Analysis
•resolve issues
•evaluate
options
Decisions
•strategy
•performance
objectives

Corporate business planning
Internet marketing plan
(sub-set of marketing plan)
Design website
Implement website
Monitor website
Control,
review, modify
Source: adapted from Chaffey et al (2000: 124)

Baker, M.J. (2000) Marketing strategy and management, (3
rd
ed), Basingstoke:
Macmillan
Chaffey, D. (2002) E-business and e-commerce management, Harlow: Financial
Times Prentice Hall, Chapter 5: E-Business Strategy and Chapter 8: E-
Marketing
Chaffey, D., Mayer, R., Johnston, K. & Ellis-Chadwick, F. (2003). Internet
marketing. (second edition). London: Pearson Education. Chapter 4: Internet
Marketing Strategy (third edition 2006)
Chaston, I. (2001) E-marketing strategy, London: McGraw-Hill
Kotler, P. (1997) Marketing management, (9th edition), Upper Saddle River, NJ:
Prentice Hall International
Sterne, J. (1999) World wide web marketing(2
nd
ed), New York: John Wiley
Strauss, J. and R. Frost (2001) E-marketing, Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice
Hall, Chapter 8: The E-Marketing Plan
Strauss, J., El-Ansary, A. and R. Frost (2006) E-marketing, (4
th
ed), Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Prentice Hall, Chapter 3: The E-Marketing Plan
Tags