During earlier stages of the strategic planning, you will find the handful of major issues that
the strategic plan must address. Usually at least one of them will be to do with marketing.
At the strategic option generation and short listing stages of the planning process,
corporate marketing strategies could well be on the agenda.
This is not to understate the importance of marketing. It is just that sometimes other
elephant sized issues outside the marketing arena need attention in the strategic plan. For
some companies corporate marketing strategy is the central issue for the corporate
strategic plan, in other cases it is not.
For an overview of the definitions in the strategic marketing area, see the paper Strategic
Marketing. A literature review on definitions, concepts and boundaries, by Jorge Mongay,
Autonomous University of Barcelona, SBS Swiss Business School, 2006.
It is vital that top managers consider corporate marketing issues in the context of the
SWOT analysis. They do not just delegating corporate marketing strategies to the
marketing manager. All managers need to keep a clear distinction between marketing as
methods and marketing as mindset.
Some firms confuse corporate marketing with the practice of advertizing. Advertizing is just
one part of the practice of marketing, often called the marketing mix.
Marketing mindset means designing the whole business around the needs of the
customer. The company will be aware of these needs from top to bottom. The chief
executive will personally know all their opposite numbers in all the key customer
hierarchies. The shop-floor workers and delivery people will know exactly how each
customer likes their product delivered, when and where. Everyone in the company takes
responsibility for satisfying the customer. Corporate marketing strategy needs to take
account of key issues to do with marketing practices. It also should attend to anything likely
to alter the arenas in which a firm will compete.
Two lower risk strategies and one higher risk strategy are possible.
Product market growth options
Four possible directions of development -
1. Market penetration, i.e. sell more of the same to the same market
2. Product development, i.e. sell new products to existing customers
3. Market development, seek out new markets for existing products
4. Diversification, i.e. sell new products to new groups of customers
For corporate marketing strategy, first consider using on current strengths. The advantage
in using these is highest for a market penetration strategy and lowest for an unrelated
diversification strategy.
If the diversification opportunity looks worthwhile, then you might choose a strategy to
build the required competencies. Thinking this through may raise other strategic options.
These could include human resources strategies around recruitment or development of
the needed capacity. Another option might be to acquire another business that already has
the required corporate marketing capacity.
When such choices have been clarified, then the more specific corporate marketing
strategies related to the use of marketing methods may be employed.
Marketing mix
The following factors influence the market and affect the business profits.
The "product" component includes the product design, which in turn can affect the
name, packaging, and whether or not it includes associated services like after sales
support, and so on. These in turn may affect the price.
Price should take into account the costs of producing and delivering the goods or
services and if any kind of discounts will be offered. Approaches to pricing also include
targeting a price point in the market place, and managing costs to achieve desired
profitability at this price level.
Place decisions shape where the product will be sold and how it will be distributed
to the customers.
Promotion raises customer product awareness, and how they are encouraged to
take purchase action. This includes strategies for advertising and public relations.
Marketing mess
Final approval on your approach to corporate marketing strategies rests not with top
managers, or even the governing board of directors. The result depends on the customers.
Even successful businesses run risks of marketing failure -