Wednesday, September 19, 2012

5 Marketing Strategies to Attract High-Paying Clients



By Robert Middleton

Why is it that more exclusive and expensive the restaurant, the longer the waiting list - sometimes months-long! .The same is true of high-end professional services. High-end professional services firms demand higher fees, but they also deliver a higher-end experience. They package their services to produce superior results, and they provide extra value every step of the way. As a result, they generate very favorable word-of-mouth business, just like the quality restaurants. What most don't realize is those that offer high-end services approach their marketing very differently as well. It goes way beyond, "Do a great job and the clients will come." In working with hundreds of clients for more than 28 years, I've noticed five things high-end professionals do consistently in their marketing. Each of them starts with a mindset and then follows through with actions consistent with that mindset.

Information-Rich

Everyone's heard of Tempur-Pedic mattresses. They are one of the top-selling mattresses in the U.S., and it's hard to avoid their television commercials. But 10 years ago, they were relatively small. What made them stand out were their one-page text-heavy, information-rich advertisements in magazines.

Tempur-Pedic mattresses were different. They were made from "memory foam," approved by NASA, and guaranteed to give you a better night's sleep that was easier on your back. Since I woke up every morning with an aching back, I decided I couldn't lose to try one, as the company also gave a 30-day money-back guarantee.

I ordered one (it was expensive—$1,500), and I was sold after one night's sleep. No more aching back. Their advertising promised what they delivered. And their advertising worked because it featured information-rich facts and figures that answered all my questions and justified the high price tag.

High-end professional services firms do exactly the same. On their websites you'll see a lot of information-rich content, service descriptions, case studies, blog articles, free reports, assessments, and more. These high-end service providers understand that they need to build trust over time by answering the questions and concerns of their prospects.

Relationship-Based

When I bought my house in the Santa Cruz Mountains, I worked with a real estate agent who was referred to me with these words: "She'll make you feel like you're her only client."
What a great way to recommend a professional service! And when we worked with Claire, that was our experience. She felt like a friend from the very first meeting. She didn't have to work too hard, as we bought the first house she showed us, but once she sold the house she didn't disappear. She helped us get integrated into the community, invited us out to restaurants, and even invited us to Thanksgiving dinner.

Now, how could we possibly recommend another real estate agent other than Claire? And throughout the housing crisis and to the present day, she has kept busy and is successful. That’s because her reputation keeps bringing her new business.

Are you treating your clients as "just another client" or do you consider each one a friend, someone whose company you enjoy and want to sincerely make a difference with?

Experience-Oriented

Ice cream parlors have understood this principle for ages: they'll happily give you a taste of any flavor of ice cream before you buy. It's only common sense. But how good are you at giving your prospective clients a taste of your services before they buy?

Please note that this doesn't mean "giving away your services" before they buy. The ice cream man doesn't give away a full cup, just a small taster spoon. And that's enough.
What you have to figure out is your equivalent of that taster spoon. The way Tempur-Pedic accomplishes this is by sending a small sample of their memory foam in the mail so prospective customers can feel how this foam is different. They also include an educational video that explains all the benefits of this foam.

I've found that the material on my website and in my weekly e-zine provides the content-rich information prospects need. But when a prospect gets closer to a buying decision, I've found nothing works better than a presentation of some kind that gives a solid sample of my best material.

I accomplish this through talks, tele-classes, and webinars. This way, they don't just get the information, but they get to hear me deliver it, answer questions, and go into the more "arcane details" of the programs I offer. This experience is enough to persuade qualified prospects to take the next step.

Exclusivity

If you offer high-end services, like a high-end restaurant, there are only so many seats you can fill. Exclusivity means a limited number of people will have the opportunity to be a paying client.

In my one-year Marketing Mastery Program, I make it very clear that I can take on only 15 new clients a year. I also emphasize that this one-year program is the only opportunity they'll have to work with me one on one.

Not only that, but if someone wants to participate in my program, they need to apply first. You can't beg people to be in an exclusive program. You need to make it somewhat hard to get into. If you do that, you'll also attract better clients, those committed to doing the work necessary to succeed, as well as willing to pay a premium fee.

Value, Responsiveness, Follow-Up

Everyone talks about great customer service, but very few quantify that service. What does it really mean? I like to use words such as value, responsiveness, and follow-up. The very best high-end services firms deliver all of those consistently.

To me, value means giving more than you promised; responsiveness is getting you what you need when you need it; and follow-up is keeping your promises every single time. As easy as it is to say those are important, none of them is easy to deliver on.

A couple years back, wary of the stock market, we decided to invest in rental properties. But there was no way I wanted to take on the duties of a property manager. We were lucky enough to find a company, "Memphis Invest" in Memphis, Tennessee, that delivers magnificently on all three of these service areas.

First, they helped us to find properties at a very good price. Where else could you buy completely renovated houses in a good neighborhood for less than $60,000 to $80,000? Not only did they sell us the rental properties, but they helped us with the paperwork to put our houses into IRA trusts. Whenever we had a question, they'd get back to us immediately.
Now that we've been renting out our houses for a few years, they keep us up to date on repairs, tax reporting, and everything else we need. What I still find amazing is that the property management arm of the company calls me regularly to ask if there's anything they can do to help.

Needless to say, Memphis Invest is extraordinarily successful, not just because they developed a business model that works but because of their amazing level of service.
I've learned the secrets of great high-end marketing from businesses such as exclusive restaurants, Tempur-Pedic, my real estate agent, ice cream parlors, and Memphis Invest. They all know how to do it right.
 
How can you use the examples of these businesses to take your business to the high-end?

Friday, September 14, 2012

The Three Phases of Value Capture



Edited version of original from strategy+business
 
Creating value is just the beginning but to make money from the innovation, you must drive your industry's evolution — even before the industry exists.

In 1878, Thomas Edison invented audio recording and gave birth to an industry. He profited greatly from this innovation. But Shawn Fanning was not so lucky in 1999. He invented Napster, a  program that allowed individual computers to search for and download music from myriad other computers around the world. Napster made it possible for consumers to record music on their own drives without paying anything! No wonder it attracted 38 million users worldwide. YET, unlike Edison, he could find no way to capture any of that value for his company.

Netscape shaped and popularized the World Wide Web but could not "monetize" the value it created. It was left to Google to focus on search as the primary application and its ad based model. The payback on the net - either from subscriptions or from advertising - has been t limited and it's becoming clear that for every Dell, Schwab, or Cisco, there are dozens of companies that have been unable to capitalize on their innovations. How to bridge the widening gap between value creation and value capture.

People have developed e-commerce sites to  sell their goods and services, built infrastructures for sales and service and spent millions on marketing and yet profits have not materialized for them. Why? Because many focused primarily on value creation (something which customers will be willing to pay for) and not (soon enough) on value capture. Many have chased the "eyeballs" model and run into bankruptcy.

Companies can still capture value from their own and others' innovations by finding and exploiting new "choke points" — places on a value chain where potential profits reside — that will create competitive advantage. This concept is useful when used with a three-phase sequence that defines how the marketplace absorbs innovations.
1.      Proof of  feasibility and value of an innovation
2.      Define rules of the new game
3.      Maximize the value created by the innovation

Bridging the Value Gap
Even before the industrial revolution, craftsmen and financiers such as Leonardo da Vinci and the Rothschilds could capture the value of their own handiwork and inventiveness. Industrialization complicated the ability of inventors to gain personally from their innovations. Henry Ford may have created the modern automotive industry through his system of factory organization, but the Ford Motor Company depended on earlier tinkerers who perfected the internal combustion engine. Modern telephony originated with the work of Samuel F.B. Morse, Alexander Graham Bell, and others, but a profitable business model did not emerge until Theodore N. Vail, backed by J.P. Morgan's money, consolidated the fragmented U.S. telephone industry into the Bell System.

The dirty little secret of innovation is that its potential remains dormant unless it is coupled with a business system that unleashes its disruptive energy — either by unsettling an existing industry or by creating a new one — and channels that energy into a value-capturing enterprise.

Innovations that at appear revolutionary prima facie do not actually stimulate a new business system. Compact discs didn't scramble the music business Edison had created. CDs fit well into the existing business system, lowering production costs without altering the distribution infrastructure already in place for vinyl records. Such innovations are merely evolutionary.

Frequently, several evolutionary innovations must come together before a new business system develops and an industry is revolutionized. The Wright Brothers' 1903 flight led to a military market for aircraft by World War I but commercial air travel didn't become viable until 32 years after the first flight, when McDonnell Douglas drew together five separate innovations in the DC-3: the variable-pitch propeller, retractable landing gear, a type of lightweight molded unibody construction called monocoque, radial air-cooled engines, and wing flaps.

The ability to sense the revolutionary potential of a technology innovation is central to a firm's prosperity and it depends on how a company defines its industry and its place within it. Historically, large companies, and even whole industries, have been well positioned to absorb or adapt to potentially revolutionary technology or business-model innovations. Consider the example of Westinghouse Electric Company, General Electric Company, and the AT&T Corporation, which together established Radio Corporation of America in 1919.

They initially believed they would profit from the sale of radio sets. That view changed once the federal government sanctioned commercial broadcasting. The partners' control of the land lines and technologies needed to link stations into a national network enabled RCA to launch the National Broadcasting Company, and to replace the manufacturing-based business model with a far more profitable one premised on advertising sales.

3 Phase Model

Phase I: Proving the Feasibility and Value of Innovation.
Innovation enters the market, is tested, and embraced by early adopters and other risk-taking innovators. Applications during this phase are scattered and unfocused. Industry value chains and commercialization methods have yet to form, and intellectual property (IP) law needs time to catch up. Any profits to be made are in the future. When GE developed plastic compounds that could be made into lighter-weight auto doors and bumpers, the industry's molding machines were not big enough to make such components. So GE had to work with downstream suppliers to produce the infrastructure that would allow the four major players — resin producers, "Tier 2" component makers, auto manufacturers, and car buyers — to realize and share the value of the initial invention. In this stage, which might take decades, advance scouts survey the new lands and establish base camps in the wilderness. Early applications of the technology gain attention. Feedback from early adopters helps innovators understand technology-selection mechanisms, hone their capabilities, develop sourcing and distribution channels, and revise their value proposition. Innovators know they are creating value when other players in the nascent value chain begin to see demand, support the innovation, and collect real — if meager — revenues.

In this period, where the new innovation is not yet economically disruptive, laws and regulations intended to create a stable environment don't exist or are ignored, and the innovators tend to share freely with one another. In the early days of the PC industry, an unknown hobbyist stole and distributed to his friends the BASIC computer language that young Bill Gates and Paul Allen had written at their fledgling company, then known as Micro-Soft. The hobbyists, fans of the Altair, the first proto-PC, were annoyed that Messrs. Gates and Allen were trying to sell this vital enabling device. But if innovations are to live beyond this stage, somebody has to have the vision to imagine an end game (as Gates and Allen did) and the discipline to fashion a business system innovative enough to grab a winner's share of the profits.

Phase II: Defining the Rules of the Game.
In the next stage, firms come together and break apart. In the process, they work out where, exactly, value will be created and realized along the value chain, where choke points might be found, and what mechanisms would let them trap profits in those choke points. The nature of choke points themselves is changing. In the past, many choke points — control of a patent, or customer access, for example — were premised on information asymmetries that, in a manufacturing-era economy, could give a firm competitive advantage for decades. Today, in an economy suffused with information, those asymmetries and related choke points still arise, but may last for just a few years, perhaps only months.

The desire for a return and the need to protect intellectual property initiate this stage of planting and cultivation. Alliances spring up to nurture mutual interests and erect barriers to market entry. The triple partnership that created RCA was a Phase II hallmark, as was the consolidation of small auto manufacturers into the General Motors Corporation in the early 1900s. Phase II is also marked by growing clarity regarding standardization, IP law, and public policy. (Broadcasters forged an IP framework when they negotiated royalty deals with musicians' unions, enabling the fledgling radio industry to flourish alongside the existing recording industry.)

As technology selection shrinks the ranks of competitors and their platforms, it clears the field for sharper competition among the survivors. They must balance the need to grow the overall industry with the imperative to secure their own position in it. Striking the right balance can be tricky. Should a company aim for high volume or high price realization? To decide, a firm must have a deep grasp of supply and demand — not easy in a still-forming industry. Cash pressures or, more likely, shortsightedness has caused companies to do deals that give away too much value. IBM bet that the largest share of value capture in the PC industry would accrue to the branded integrator of hardware and software components. In ceding the operating system rights to Microsoft, IBM lost its bet and helped turn a supplier into one of the world's largest companies by market capitalization.

In Phase II (and even as early as Phase I), a company must develop a long view about how an industry might evolve, and what the new rules of that industry will be. Although it's difficult to do conventional strategic planning in the face of such acute uncertainty, executives should keep reminding themselves that there willbe operating principles and procedures that will determine who makes money and how. By focusing on building a dynamic, adaptable strategic plan, companies can better navigate — and even shape — the emerging rules.

This is the stage at which canny players are able to position themselves to occupy the choke points where they can harvest the ripest value-capture opportunities. These choke points in the value chain are defined by the sets of operating principles and procedures that will apply to the mature industry. The traditional choke points include: ownership of an essential pipeline, control of the customer interface, control of advantaged infrastructure, and control of supporting services. These and other choke points create five types of barriers to market entry:
1.      Innovation-based. Whoever has the neatest thing today wins. The rules of the game frequently revolve around product performance — does it work and what does it do? The value of new technologies is high, but switching barriers are low: In some innovation-based industries, frequent changes in technology depress entry barriers and let new entrants leapfrog established market leaders. For example, over the past two decades, customers have granted leadership in the disk drive industry to IBM, Connor, and Seagate, among others. In other industries, the leader is able to maintain its position over time, but does so only by innovating constantly to offer products that lead the market in performance. The microprocessor industry, which Intel leads, is one such example.
2.      Value-added-based. Whoever can deliver a "can't-do-without" system wins. Speed to market with a good, but not necessarily perfect, product is critical. Here, new technologies are valuable, but network effects can create substantial switching barriers as the innovators swiftly grab dominant market share. The switching barriers give winners a strong position because customers are reluctant to migrate to competitors (even if they offer attractive features or a lower price). Microsoft Word added enough value to the office PC that it became the word processing standard, and, thanks to Microsoft's broad distribution power and leadership, became hard to dislodge.
3.      Alignment-based. Whoever can deliver the best price-service combination for a well-defined target market wins. Perfect does matter here. Winners align their total business system against the target market's needs, get the offering to the highest possible quality in test markets, then roll it out. For example, Southwest Airlines Company built a business system that serves — and dominates — the market for short-haul, budget-conscious travelers.
4.      Infrastructure-based. Whoever owns the tangible asset or distribution network wins. An airline's landing slots, a cable television company's head ends and wires, and an oil company's retail gasoline outlets can make switching barriers almost insurmountable. As a result, innovation is usually less of a threat than is regulation — although relying on regulatory protections can induce harmful laziness.
5.      Cost-based. When all of the above strategies fail, then whoever can maintain the lowest prices for customers wins. Here again, new technologies can give a player a valuable efficiency edge. But for the customer, the switching barriers are the lowest. This is the race so many commodity chemicals companies are running, seemingly without end.

In Phase II, industry value chains may cluster around one type of choke point, only to crumble and coalesce around another as new technologies, alliances, and customer expectations rapidly alter the operating conventions. So it's essential for a company to see clearly how the barriers and rules are developing. Thus informed, executives can build real value-capture mechanisms — and know when to change them when an innovation threatens to disrupt the system.

Finally, one of the biggest challenges for leaders in Phase II is walking the fine line between actions that expand the emerging industry and those that protect established or future positions. Lean too far toward the former and you risk value loss; too far toward the latter and you stifle development of the nascent industry.

Phase III: Value Maximization.
In the last stage, the survivors of the harsh competition remain while the less hardy players have left (or have been carried off) the field. The technology kinks have been worked out and the industry structure is somewhat stable. Value propositions are in place, and business and economic models have been tested. Phase III is entirely focused on getting the most value for the enterprise.

With standards established, this is the period when true value capture, based on the actions taken in Phase II, has traditionally occurred. But it's not a period of rest. In the personal computer sphere, the past 20 years have seen wave after wave of Phase III value-capture upheavals. Early on, IBM deployed its open architecture strategy to overcome Apple Computer Inc. for PC leadership. However, the Compaq Computer Corporation soon capitalized on operating speed to win share from IBM and claim the industry crown — for a while. Then the Dell Computer Corporation upended the market with an innovative business system based on deep knowledge of each customer's needs and direct delivery of customized PCs.

Phase III never really ends. Winners must continue innovating, responding to shifting customer needs, and, thus, growing their businesses — and occasionally recognizing when it's time to circle back to Phase II again!

Value Constellations
 
The drive to innovate is even more important in the New Economy, where the rapid sharing of information forces players to adapt constantly. In addition, ruptures in traditional boundaries in the value chains are requiring companies rethink how they go to market, what they need to own, and how they deal with suppliers and customers.

The speed of technological change has had great impact on the three-phase sequence from value creation to value capture. Innovations such as greater micro processing power, Internet protocol networking, hyper-storage, and genomics are transforming value chains in almost every industry. The reason: Many of these value chains, and the very structure of industry in the old economy, were held together by information. Today, these technology innovations are rendering information abundant, ubiquitous, fast, and free.

The availability of information is perhaps the single most significant contributor to corporate change. The boundaries of the firm are defined by its transaction costs. "A firm will tend to expand until the costs of organizing an extra transaction within the firm become equal to the costs of carrying out the same transaction on the open market," In the past, those costs were determined largely by information. Who could supply the needed goods? At what quality? For what price? Were better prices available? Better quality? Could delivery be guaranteed more quickly?

Hard to acquire and imperfect, information contributed to high transaction costs, which in turn led firms in many industries to vertically integrate. It cost GM far less to source its own parts internally than to search the globe for suppliers. By keeping information inside its boundaries, an integrated company could create value in one division (e.g., drug discovery) and capture it in another (e.g., drug sales and marketing).

Today, as the costs of sharing and using information fall, companies and their industries have an impetus to "de-integrate,". Think of GM's spin-off of its parts division, now the Delphi Automotive Systems Corporation. The trend is accelerating as the Internet and other services give companies access to even more information. The impact: The threshold of cost set by the availability of information can no longer define the firm's or the industry's boundaries.

The result is industry value chains that are undergoing almost continuous evolution. The morphing value chain — you might call its new form a value web, an extended enterprise, or (our favorite) a value constellation — challenges firms that thrived with an integrated approach. The best value-capture mechanisms may now lie outside the individual firm's boundaries. Yet the value created by a firm may be necessary to the viability of the entire constellation. The nature and definition of the firm are also undergoing profound changes, thanks to the ubiquity of information. The firm is shifting from a self-contained value-creation and -capture apparatus into one part of an interdependent community whose members continually negotiate responsibility for value creation and the right to value capture.

This shift breaks decisively with the old economy, in which information scarcity encouraged value capture through knowledge hoarding. Information asymmetries still exist, of course; a company can create a choke point with advantaged pricing and customer information, for example. But in an information-suffused environment, asymmetries alone are more fleeting, less reliable sources of value capture than they were previously. Winners will have to transform information into value-creating knowledge and aggressively use this knowledge to capture additional profit. Knowledge asymmetries may be the best choke point in the New Economy, and when used to create further new asymmetries, also the most enduring.
That means the game of value capture is no longer won by finding and protecting a defensible position: It's won by developing a business system that's quicker and better at using information, and adapting the system as the industry evolves. This change can be felt throughout the innovation-adoption cycle. Moreover, it implies that value capture can be planned and executed in all three stages, and not left for the last phase.

Consider these shifts
 
Phase I now revolves around business definition. Companies have to figure out much earlier than in the past what end games they might pursue. What are their likely value propositions? What frameworks and scenarios will they use to envision the nascent industry's growth path? With early business-system thinking, a company can make smart choices about the technologies, product mixes, and markets to pursue. New tools, such as real-options analysis and corporate venturing systems, help innovators inject business-system thinking into new ideas and decide how to take them forward. A well-stocked tool kit is vital because, even in Phase I, innovators should be thinking hard about how their industry will evolve. What might drive conflicting scenarios in Phase II and Phase III — where are the tar pits, where are the gold mines? Having defined the potential scenarios, innovators can plot their route through Phases II and III, watching for milestones and making course corrections. Having the right tools allows innovators to quickly understand and assimilate new information along the way.

In Phase II, executives need the flexibility to discover many value-capture choke points — and the ability to coalesce an industry around these points as they shift. Although information technology is creating new value-capture opportunities (e.g., clearinghouses and exchanges, ownership of technology backbones), these choke points are no longer necessarily natural, or enduring. Even a winning bet on the best choke point can prove fleeting. Yahoo bet on control of the customer interface, and soared to a market cap that at one time exceeded that of GM and Ford combined. But as investors have realized that Yahoo's Web traffic did not translate into ad and transaction revenues, its share price has dropped by more than two-thirds. (Tacking in another direction, Yahoo could migrate its profit source from ad sales to other streams such as referrals to e-tailers and financial services providers.)
What Phase II really requires is a new focus on alliance development and management: playing the role of "constellation manager" can help a firm capture value even as its industry undergoes a roiling evolution. Moreover, Phase II requires the ability to move smoothly from one value-capture mechanism to the next, constantly adapting and evolving the business. The more the firm is able to move the ownership of non-fungible fixed assets out among its constellation, the easier it becomes for the firm to adapt and change quickly. Also, the better and more far-reaching the constellation, the greater the ability of the firm to quickly sense, identify, and respond to key changes in its environment.

Dell, to cite one prominent example, uses its sourcing systems and customer knowledge to manage networks of suppliers in order to fill customized orders. Dell's network-intensive and resource-efficient model is also helping it change its value-capture mechanisms. As the growth of profits from selling PCs slows, Dell is migrating to other sources of revenue and profit, such as consulting services. Dell's continued success will depend on how quickly it drives this transformation, and whether the change happens fast enough to offset the slower growth in earnings from PC sales.

Players in technology-intensive industries manage their constellations by gathering technologies around open platforms. Pharmaceutical companies, for example, have realized they cannot profit from new technologies without external alliances that give them access to those technologies — technology is changing too fast to develop most things in-house. New technologies such as "wet science" capabilities, computer tools, bioinformatics, assay chips, combinatorial chemistry libraries, and animal models are largely sourced from outside the pharmaceutical company. Eli Lilly and Company, for one, has allied with a significant number of technology partners to get the needed tools. If an innovation extends its current knowledge and capabilities, Lilly can then decide to develop a new business around it. In other words, the multiple alliances are an early-sensing network, helping Lilly decide which businesses to pursue and giving it an advantage during the Phase II stage of development.
Finally, companies that manage successfully through Phase II will earn the opportunity to play in Phase III of their industry. Moving to the next phase requires a new mind-set: new tools, a more rapid planning process, and the ability to keep the organization aligned with the strategic direction.

Phase III is now about continuous business model innovation, centered on customer needs. In an information-scarce economy, Phase III consisted largely of execution — keeping costs low and efficiencies high, exploiting pricing opportunities, and extending offerings to new market segments. But today, a company must continue innovating, grabbing any slight advantage created by temporary knowledge asymmetries. Much of the innovation will be in business systems, as companies use their knowledge of customer needs to develop portfolios of businesses, each with different risk-to-reward ratios.

Filling customer needs requires a company to bring its customers inside the firm, making their input part of the knowledge enriching a value chain. With the boundaries of the firm now porous, customers no longer sit outside — or at the end of — a value chain, passively waiting to receive goods and services. "The market," C.K. Prahalad and Venkatram Ramaswamy wrote last year in the Harvard Business Review, "has become a forum in which consumers play an active role in creating and competing for value." Customers are "a new source of competence for the corporation."

RealNetworks Inc., for example, created a market for "streaming media" on the Web by giving away its media player, galvanizing developers to create applications based on its streaming format. Its original business model sought to capture value through the sale of streaming media servers to Webcasters who wanted to reach the consumers using those free players. Although some 85 percent of multimedia content on the Internet today is streamed in RealNetworks' format, server sales have not proved a robust source of income; the company earned $7 million on $131 million in sales in 1999. RealNetworks' follow-up strategy has been to create other products and services — some free, others for a price — that center not on streaming per se, but on the customers and end-users who create and consume streamed content.

The Endless Victory
The race from value creation to value capture requires not just vision, but intense concentration and commitment. Even Thomas Edison based his phonograph on concepts that had been around for decades — innovations whose creators are now lost to time, even as Edison's machines and name endure.

Vision and stamina are now mere points of entry in the New Economy's value-capture marathon. Today, executives also need a politician's ability to build coalitions, a diplomat's sense of when a partial victory is a complete win, and a general's understanding of maneuver warfare, in battles that will be won by brains as well as attrition.
As you manage innovation through its three phases, for short-term gain and long-term success, remember four lessons above all:
  1. Rigorously and explicitly think through the evolution of the value creation/value capture trade-off, developing strategies for securing gains even in the earliest stages of conception.
  2. Exploit a continuous chain of often fleeting opportunities driven by knowledge asymmetries. Use proprietary knowledge to generate profits and the next generation of proprietary knowledge as quickly as possible.
  3. Do strategic planning for your entire constellation of partners, not just for your individual company. And remember that strategic planning is an ongoing process — not an annual event focused on the budget cycle.
  4. Explicitly include the customer — and the customer's economics — in your constellation planning.
After a year of controversy and expensive lawsuits, these are the conclusions reached by Shawn Fanning — now a battle-scarred 20-year-old — and his backers at Napster. In late October 2000, Napster decided to work with the record industry, not against it, selling a stake to the German media giant Bertelsmann AG. Napster's founders said they would begin to charge for access to their peer-to-peer distribution system. The recording industry, in turn, acknowledged that it couldn't, wouldn't, and shouldn't battle the inevitability of change.
"This is a call for the industry to wake up," Bertelsmann chairman and CEO Thomas Middelhoff said, as he announced his agreement with Napster. He was smiling broadly as he spoke.

Seven Guidelines for Phase II Value-Capture
  1. Is your industry subject to increasing returns? If so, what's the value-added component that will give your firm the lion's share of the profits? JVC won the VCR format wars by combining open standards, lower costs, and longer playing times (making movie-watching more convenient), while Sony bet on its higher-quality proprietary Betamax technology.
  2. Conversely, does your industry lack real first-mover advantages, so that a new high-value innovation can usually displace the dominant incumbent? Apple thought it owned the PC market, and saw no reason to open its operating system to other "clone" manufacturers and developers. IBM defined an open architecture, thus creating cost efficiencies and rendering Apple's first-mover advantage almost worthless.
  3. Does your industry have a large but underdeveloped market segment that can be served better by a new business system more closely aligned to its needs? If so, you may be able to perfect your innovation in an unnoticed trial market, then rapidly roll it out to achieve growth, the way Wal-Mart and the Home Depot did.
  4. If your market is price sensitive, can you build a customer base loyal enough to follow you up the demand curve as you innovate? That's what GM did when it pitted the low-priced Chevrolet against Ford's Model T, then carried its audience up to Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick, and Cadillac. Toyota turned the strategy on GM a half-century later.
  5. Conversely, is the right strategy to dominate a high-price niche market, reduce your costs over time, and move down the demand curve to capture larger but more price-sensitive markets? Ralph Lauren has employed this strategy.
  6. Do mass customization and configuration management create value in your industry? Dell mass-customizes PCs by combining made-to-order PC sourcing with customer-friendly telephone and Internet ordering. The approach helped Dell outmaneuver Compaq, a company that couldn't customize its machines or modify its retail relationships.
  7. Or, should you focus on the one "killer app"? The dormant handheld computer market exploded when Palm introduced the Pilot series with limited — but superbly executed — functionality.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

How you too can fight big competitors (CavinKare Story)


(The Economic Times Mumbai, Aug 31, 2012, Corporate Dossier)                       
I have lightly edited the article

This is the story of how CavinKare grew right under the nose of Hindustan Levers and Procter & Gambles. It continues to be a thorn in their side even now; in spite of being a fraction of their size. According to C K Ranganathan (CK), the founder, it is the “ideas” that have enabled this. He transformed “Beauty Cosmetics”, a company he founded in 1983 when he was 19 with a shampoo called Chik - into a Rs 1100 crore CavinKare of today.  

Choosing a target market different 
from the target markets of the competitors 
Chik went after low priced sachet market. Big companies like Hindustan Lever and Procter & Gamble thought it didn’t suit their and their brand's image. The competitors did not seem to bothered by the market CavinKare was creating. At least in the beginning.


A differentiated value proposition
CK was accustomed to the “Velvet” shampoo business and hence went into the same business on his own under the “Chik” name and began creating a me-too product. “Velvet had a flavour called ‘Lime’, so he called his  ‘Lemon’. Similarly,  Velvet has ‘Henna’ so he called his ‘Heena’, Velvet had ‘Doctor’ so he called his ‘Tonic’. But retailers called him copycat.

He says, “I then realised I didn’t understand the true meaning of differentiation. It took me some time to learn it from retailers and distributors. And that was the starting point of our growth.”

Ranganathan then ‘invested disproportionately’ in imported fragrances that helped him shake the ‘me-too’ tag. The idea to launch a 50p Chik sachet, in a market full of Re.1 sachets, was pure gut feel. The early adoption was driven not just by the sheer affordability, but the fact that many Indian women washed their hair once a week — and a single-dose low cost product was perfect for it. Not only did the 50p shampoo do well, the 1 Re. shampoo did even better. Today the Chik brand is worth Rs 250 crore.

Former Hindustan Levers executive director Dalip Sehgal, who worked for the FMCG giant between 1982 and 2007, acknowledges that Ranganathan possessed strong insights into the mind of the consumer. “The Fairever fairness cream used saffron and milk, considered by South Indian consumers as skin whitening products.” He adds, “But it didn’t work in the North because those consumers didn’t feel the same way.”

In recent times, analysts have commented on the company’s inability to focus on its core brands and innovate. Ranganathan admits that CK was ‘caught in the sachet game for a long time’. But CavinKare has changed tack again and is now looking at market gaps where it can achieve easier growth with higher margins. It is also investing about 2.5% of its revenues in research and product development.

Staying within its 
Value-chain paradigm
HULs and P&Gs had big pockets and big muscle. CavinKare did everything in small doses.  The company outsourced  its manufacturing  until 2006 to keep its costs low. It also entered no-credit deals with distributors and this automatically precluded large distributors like ITC’s (who demanded 45 days of credit) from being attracted by Beauty Cosmetics. His team then “created distributors” .

He identified people who gave bicycles on hire and asked them, “why are you struggling like this? Open a distribution business for us” and the deal was they would give a demand draft for Rs. 2000, get trained by Beauty Cosmetics’ staff and then go to the market on cycles, taking and filling orders. This gave Beauty Cosmetics a steady supply of working capital. “We kept rotating the wheel without investing; it was cash all the way,” he says.

The humble cycle continues to be a potent weapon for CK. Earlier this year, CK created a rural distribution organisation with specialised rural stockists responsible for covering smaller villages in the vicinity and setting up sub-stockists there. The idea is that you need a whole different mindset to serve the rural market. “Unlike a rural guy, an urban stockist won’t wait an hour for a bus in a village. In a specialised rural system, everything is geared towards low cost, from distributors to salesmen and logistics.”

Converting problem into an opportunity :
Go to market
Making a dent in Velvet’s dominance was no easy task because it had become the generic name for ‘sachet shampoo’.  He then thought of a scheme — buyers could exchange 5 empty shampoo sachets and get one Chik sachet free because “Chik had barely half a percent of the shampoo market. And sales had started to dwindle. We needed a radical idea to get people to try our product.”   The great surprise wasn’t that the idea worked; the reason was the shocker. A sales representative who met a retailer reported back to Ranganathan saying that collecting empty sachets and exchanging them for Chik was getting so profitable, he actually started feeling guilty! So he bought more Chik sachets and would hand them to buyers who asked for Velvet. As this picked up — and also, as people began appreciating the new fragrances — the market exploded. “From being present in one out of 10 outlets, we were now present in nine. That’s when I knew we were in business,” says Ranganathan.

People Oriented
CKR was ‘ruthless’ about selecting the right people and  was clear he wanted people who always remained updated and performed on any assignment handed to them.  But he was never unreasonable or insensitive. In 1984,  when the company faced a major financial setback they had no money to pay the 15 sales representatives. CK set up a temporary rose-flavoured shampoo manufacturing unit. This kept the turnover rolling and CKR was able to make enough to pay its sales staff.

When erstwhile Finance Minister Manmohan Singh announced in 1993 that excise concessions for small shampoos and cosmetics manufacturers would be withdrawn, Ranganathan realised his staff would be worried about the impact it would have on CavinKare now that it would have to fight the big guys directly. “People were wondering if I had anything up my sleeve. That year, we have the highest increments (40%) to our staff across the board to give them confidence,” he says.

Street Smart and Nimble
 A senior industry veteran who requested anonymity has a different point of view on the excise duty issue. He says that Ranganathan ‘flew under the radar by taking advantage of the excise exemptions for small scale industries’. “He owned many manufacturing units that made shampoo. The moment one unit reached the permissible limit for exemption, it would pack up, move elsewhere and restart operations under a new name. We called them factories on wheels,” says the veteran, acknowledging that while this may not have been illegal per se, but it was ‘on the ethical borderline’.

One thing was clear: for Ranganathan, survival was key. He knew that moment he touched Rs five lakh worth of goods, he would lose his the advantages he was getting as an SSI (small scale industry). He says, “I scouted for people to outsource my manufacturing to. But no one was interested. So I came out with a very attractive scheme — invest Rs. 40,000 in the business and you will get Rs 40,000 as profit (plus capital) in 4 months. The scheme really worked. At one time I had 150 units running for us.”

Values Mean Money
In Long Term
 While Ranganathan may have taken advantage of the SSI status, the value system he tried to inculcate in the organisation stood him in good stead. In the mid-nineties, CK got into some trouble with the authorities over shortfall in sales tax dues. Ranganathan says that because they didn’t understand the nuances of taxation, they were paying tax at the old rate of 12%, as opposed to the new 18% rule. The shortfall was about 1.5 crore, but with penalties added, it came to Rs. 5 crore. “My accounts person met a corrupt tax official who said he would clear the whole thing for a Rs 10 lakh bribe. The accounts executive came back happily saying ‘I have saved the company so much money’,” recalls Ranganathan, who was infuriated with the executive. The company eventually went to court to pursue the dispute legally and eventually paid the Rs 1.5 crore rightfully owed by them to the government.

Ranganathan doesn’t feel like he did something heroic. “Though we were paying much more because of our honesty, there were advantages. We couldn’t compete with our taxevading peers on discounts, so we were forced to differentiate our products, which grew our market share. Secondly I could attract decent talent. Respectable people come to you when they know you’re not up to hanky-panky. And finally, our bank started increasing our overdraft limit and sanctioned large loans because the manager recommended us saying  ‘Unlike other companies, this firm pays income tax properly’.”

Fail Fast, Learn
And Move  Faster
Unlike the giants, it didn’t have the luxury of pouring money and resources into experiments indefinitely. So it did the next best thing: failed fast and got the heck out. In the early nineties, CavinKare introduced its own mineral water brand, Minerva. But they ran into an unexpected roadblock. The majority of the company’s distributors used tricycles for delivering products to the retail outlets. And each case of mineral water weighing 18 kg earned them Rs 100. However, a shampoo case of 10 kg got them Rs 1000. Even the simplest of minds can figure out what the distributor would prefer. “We got a rude shock,” laughs Ranganathan. There was no option but to exit and the company did so promptly.

There were other experiments gone wrong too, like the one in the soap category. CavinKare’s soap was priced at par with competitors and it was even doing decent sales, thanks to the company’s distribution network. But given the potential of the market, it wasn’t adequate. “We discarded the soap early because there was no point. It wasn’t worth investing in advertising and marketing to sustain the brand. And we didn’t want to stay in business just for the sake of it,” he says.

Something similar is happening with the restaurant business CK launched with much fanfare in July 2009. Three years on, Ranganathan confirms that he plans to dilute CK’s stake in United Agrocare, which owns its ‘CK's Foodstaurant’ and ‘Vegnation’ brands. “We have diversified (sic) the restaurant business and are getting out of it,” he affirms, adding that other brands may also be pruned.

An FMCG analyst who did not want to be named says, “Though CK’s success is a case study in itself, its portfolio expansion strategy was all over the place. While others like Ghadi detergent was able to grow by focusing on their core strengths, CK got into areas unrelated to its core businesses of haircare and skincare.”

Raise Capital At The Right Time,
For The Right Reason
For many years, CavinKare has had opportunities to raise funds from the markets, or through private equity. But the company was driven by a firm policy. “One strong belief we grew with, is that there are no money problems, only idea problems,” Ranganathan says. The brand’s strong performance, particularly in the personal care segment in South India, enabled it to roll funds internally. Ranganathan says that he was never in the business to make a profit and clear off. That is why, despite the opportunities to get Private Equity funds or go for market listing, CK bade its time. “We are sitting on powerful capabilities, and its taken time to build those. So there is no question of exiting in a hurry,” he says. Now, almost three decades after he started the company, CavinKare is looking to raise funds. “We want to raise around Rs. 500 crore and will begin discussions with Private Equity players in the next couple of months,” Ranganathan reveals.