Skip to content
 

a value chain approach for marketing strategy excellence

 

Value Chain4a7 a value chain approach for marketing strategy excellence

generic value chain for marketing

by Kenneth Rudich         

Part 1 of this article discussed the background to proposing a generic value chain for marketing.  If you read it, you may recall that the chain above is an adaptation of a concept originally introduced by Harvard Business School professor Michael Porter.         

a generic value chain for marketing

The task of effectively implementing a marketing strategy hinges on being able to identify – and link together – the various activities required to deliver value fulfillment.  For our purposes, a linkage exists if the performance or cost of one activity affects that of another.  The intent of the generic value chain is to have a tool that helps to isolate the value-creating activities within a marketing strategy, then map them, link them, and track them with time.         

The generic activities or components shown in this value chain are common to the marketing function in general, though the specific implementation of them will vary as marketing strategies differ.
 
Bear in mind that value might be improved from within an individual activity, or it might be enhanced by strengthening the relationships between activities.  As such, each separate activity becomes a lever for fine-tuning the value proposition.
 
Take, for example, the transactions component.  What if customers are extended an optional payment plan rather than having to pay for something in full upon receipt?  Will it make the product or service more affordable or appealing to some segment of potential customers?
 
If so, then successfully promoting this value-added benefit depends on making sure there is a strong link between it, the communications component, and the market characteristics component.  Getting these three to work in concert with one another – communicating the right message to the right people – is necessary for optimizing the overall value of the optional payment plan.  This is known as synergy or a synergistic effect, and it will benefit both the consumers and the business.
   
In future posts, I’ll flesh out more ways to use the value chain approach in far greater detail.  For now, let me briefly introduce the construct of this chain.  It is comprised of five generic components, whereby each is but one piece of an integrated strategy for delivering value:         

  • Market Characteristics: This entails understanding the unique needs and motives that exist within your actual and potential customer base, and then targeting the product benefits accordingly.  A market analysis can yield the vital information that is required to do this well.
  • Distribution Channels: A distribution channel is the primary delivery path from the provider to the customer.  There can be more than one distribution channel in play (indeed, modern technology makes it virtually impossible to ignore the potential value of new delivery applications).  Each dissimilar pathway from the provider to the consumer indicates the presence of a separate channel.  For example, something might be downloaded from the web, or it might be purchased at a store – which could be either a retail or wholesale outlet.  Thus, there are three different distribution channels in this example, and each will possess its own distinct set of resource demands and value fulfillment potential.
  • Communications:  The activities generally associated with conveying information, managing understanding and expectations, and creating dialogue.  It comes with internal and external responsibilities.  For example, the internal know-how for effectively handling customer care, versus the external responsibility of conveying the product benefits over appropriate channels or media.
  • Transactions/Operations: The activities that support the business aspects of the marketing function (they keep it running) – measured by cost, productivity, and efficiency.  It includes the core competencies, inputs, and internal design the organization needs to carry out its marketing mission from a business perspective.  One key design aspect is the customer interface for initiating or completing the business transaction.
  • Product/Service Attributes: The characteristics that are required to uniquely fill a need, and/or deliver optimum value. 

external forces

The external forces are the contextual conditions that impact this process.  These forces can significantly influence an organization’s marketing strategy – sometimes favorably, other times not.  It is important to identify the external forces that are germane to your product or service, and then closely monitor them over time.         

three reasons for adopting a value chain approach

At least three reasons favor the adoption of a value chain approach:         

  1. It asks strategic decision-makers to identify all the critical links and alignments associated with the marketing function, including the external factors that bear upon it;
  2. It conditions people to think in the broader context of how all the pieces and parts of a marketing strategy fit together;
  3. It encourages a systematic strategy analysis process – what’s working, what’s not working, what can be fixed, what are we unable to do.      

As stated in the “About M-S-M” page, these three reasons coincide with the reasons for incorporating the hyphens in the name of this blog.  I chose to include them so as to emphasize each word’s stand-alone importance within the larger context of having them work well together.             

  • Marketing entails the entire universe of concepts that can be tapped.
  • Strategy involves choosing the right ones for your particular concern or endeavor.
  • Management speaks to the need for constantly tweaking the strategy in response to market dynamics.

Related posts:

  1. a big picture perspective for marketing strategy excellence
  2. a value chain approach – part 1
  3. evaluating business strategy with a value chain approach
  4. value chain marketing-market characteristics analysis pt1
  5. value chain marketing-the market opportunity scan

117 Comments

  1. [...] that its real value derives from the cumulative effect it can have as it crisscrosses the value chain.  By identifying products, services, facilities, technologies, applications and processes (or [...]

  2. Chatwin Cruz says:

    Hi i am new on here, I discovered this board quite useful & its helped me loads. i should be able to give something back & help other people like its helped me.

  3. Vaughn Obleness says:

    You wouldn¡¯t believe it but I¡¯ve wasted all day digging for some articles about this. You¡¯re a lifesaver, it was an excellent read and has helped me out to no end. Cheers,

  4. get student loans says:

    I want to thank you for the endeavors you have made in publishing this article. I am trusting the same best work from you in the future as wellget the best student loans

  5. Elinore Kenealy says:

    You are a very smart person!

  6. Mimi Hembree says:

    Hey, very nice website. I actually came across this on Bing, and I am stoked I did. I will definately be revisiting here more often. Wish I could add to the post and bring a bit more to the table, but am just taking in as much info as I can at the moment.

    Thank You

    watch free movie online

  7. Trent Feder says:

    A SUPPORTED BY THE DEVELOPER TOOLS? It was interesting. You seem very knowledgeable in ypour field.

  8. [...] Kenneth Rudich   The generic value chain for marketing provides a tool for conceptualizing the value-creating activities within a marketing strategy, for [...]

  9. Patria Karstensen says:

    Hello Guru, what entice you to post an article. This article was extremely interesting, especially since I was searching for thoughts on this subject last Thursday.

  10. I REALLY liked your post and blog! It took me a minute bit to find your site…but I bookmarked it. Would you mind if I posted a link back to your post?

  11. Kenneth Rudich says:

    Hi Mildred:

    Thanks for the kind words. Please feel free to link back.

    Best Regards,
    Ken

  12. I love your website! did you create this yourself or did you outsource it? Im looking for a blog design thats similar so thats the only reason I’m asking. Either way keep up the nice work I was impressed with your content really..

  13. [...] The intent is to improve the level and quality of interaction with each group by targeting the value chain components to match up with customer motives and needs as best as possible.  This can increase both the [...]

  14. Edyth Rivard says:

    Hay adminstrator , i love w/ Your idea.

  15. pell grants says:

    Great site. A lot of useful information here. I’m sending it to some friends!

  16. student scholarship says:

    Great information! I’ve been looking for something like this for a while now. Thanks!

  17. Nova Radio says:

    Very good information keep up your good work!

  18. Im glad to see this informative article. Thanks for such helpful and useful post.

  19. wholesale handbag says:

    I impressed reading your article. Keep the good job but Ill be in touch. Lookin’ forward

  20. So helpful and so useful post. Thanks for such informative post. Good job.

  21. Awesome informative post. Thanks for helpful article.

  22. I enjoyed to find this article. I like your point of view. Thanks a lot. Cheers

  23. Henry Dodrill says:

    I’ve been just reading through your website it is very well crafted! Just discovered this web site thru Bing, what a way to brighten up my day! This really solved my problem, thank you!

  24. ms project says:

    Good blog post. I like your point of view and i want to thank you for interesting and helpful information. Thank you!

  25. microsoft visio upgrade says:

    Im glad to see this informative article. Thanks for such helpful and useful post.

  26. web hosting says:

    which may be quite interesting. It presented me a couple of ideas and I’ll get writing them on my website online soon. I’m bookmarking your blog and I’ll be back again. Thank you again!

  27. I would like to say “wow” what a inspiring post. This is really great. Keep doing what you’re doing!!

  28. The guidelines you shared here are definitely beneficial. Rrt had been such a fun surprise to have that waiting for me after i woke up this really day. They are constantly to the point and straightforward to discover. Thanks a ton for the valuable ideas you might have shared appropriate here.

  29. Very clear and useful for a newbie like me. Absolutely great post with valuable tips. I enjoyed reading your blogs. Thanks for sharing such points. I am impressed

  30. I would like to say “wow” what a inspiring post. This is really great. Keep doing what you’re doing!!

  31. camion says:

    I really love to read this post and I am glad to find your distinguished way of writing the post. Thanks and Regards

  32. you may have a fantastic weblog right here! would you like to make some invite posts on my weblog?

  33. I like the helpful info you provide in your articles. I’ll bookmark your weblog and check again here regularly. I’m quite sure I’ll learn a lot of new stuff right here! Good luck for the next!

  34. Thanks for posting. Good to see that not everyone is using RSS feeds to build their blogs ;)

  35. Organic Agriculture says:

    You seem to have a talent for expressing your ideas consisely and an effective manner.This ability to communicate well will surely serve you and your readers well.

  36. Otha Gebhard says:

    You’re proper: key terms without having amazing written content welcoming design, implies practically nothing. I’m at the starting in Inbound Marketing and find your report quite short and concise. Thank you!

  37. ecorfeibe says:

    — Страшный?

    — Да нет. Вроде ничё так

    — Вроде ничё Вроде ничё — это борщ бывает. А он
    мужик.

  38. Good writing here I really really like the way you write your blogs.

  39. Amazingg skills! Keep it up man, you rock!

  40. Hai Goring says:

    I’ve been checking your blog for a while now, seems like everyday I learn something new :-) Thanks

  41. This post makes a lot of sense !

  42. Good! Thank you! I always wanted to write in my site something like that. Can I take part of your post to my blog?

  43. Shery Fraize says:

    I’ve just started off a blog, the knowledge you give on this site has aided me extremely. Thank you for all your time & work.

  44. Gary Lamprey says:

    Thanks for posting. Good to see that not everyone is using RSS feeds to build their blogs ;)

  45. I REALLY liked your post and blog! It took me a minute bit to find your site…but I bookmarked it. Would you mind if I posted a link back to your post?

  46. Hello, this is my first time i visit here. I found so many interesting in your blog especially on how to determine the topic. keep up the good work.

  47. Adrian Falvo says:

    Intriguing post. I have been searching for some good resources for solar panels and discovered your blog. Planning to bookmark this one!

  48. Marcos Victory says:

    Interesting read, perhaps the best article iv’e browse today. We learn everyday cheers to you!

  49. Great read. Thanks for the info!

  50. Lara Ordones says:

    Awesome post. I so good to see someone taking the time to share this information

Leave a Reply