Strategic Planning in the Small Business

(Ron) #1
Unit 3

HO 3-1 (continued)

service
attribute could result
in the ignoring

of others which
would reduce
performance

level.
It does little good
to produce a

standardiz-.d
hamburger with
little taste,

Second,
the evaluation
process could be-

come too narrow
by responding
only to in-

formation about
the distinctive competence.

If the only performance
criterion
is iiumber

of sales generated
during the month,
then

Low
the sale is made
may become unimpor-

tant. This
could result in
few repcat

customers
and no referrals.

Four Steps Toward
Differentiation

A
small firm can follow
four basic steps
in

order to identify
and develop
a distinctive

competence.
The first
step involves
con-

ducting
three "nalyses.
The first analysis

focuses on the
firm-its financial
condition,

physical assets,
technological expertise,
and

human
assets. The human
assets may be
the

most important,
especially
if there is a high

degree
of one-to-one
service, as in real

estate.

The
second analysis
looks at conditions
in

the firm's desired
market area.
Service

demand
is determined by
three elements:

level, or the number
of potential
customers;

trend, indicated
by a declining,
stable,

fluctuating,
or growing
market; and
loca­

tion, i.e.,
identification
of customer

concentration.

The
third analysis involves
a careful study

of the competition,
those at the front
of the

pack. t does little
good to analyze
other

"middle-of-the-packers."

The focus
must
be

on how the
leaders got to be
leaders, keep-

ing
three elements in
mind: how the leaders

respond
to demand, how
they create demand

for their services,
and how consumers
per­

ceive
the leaders.

a distinctive
competence that
the firm could

develop. The distinctive
competence
could

be one of
the following: introducing
a new

service that appeals
to a specific
consumer

group; redesigning
an existing
service that

had been allowed
to deteriorate;
Lnd or

eliminating
services
that no longer
satisfy

needs. It ih important
to make the
distinc­

five
service as ta'gible
as possible to
aid in

recognition.

The third
step involves designing
and imple­

menting
an action
plan for positioning
the

firm's
distinctive coinpetence.
Beyond
spec­

ifying who should
do what and when,
three

other
elements must be
considered. First,

the communication
strategies to
be used to

convey
the distinctive
trait must be idern­

tified. What
message does
the firm want to

transmit? What
media channels are
the most

efficient and effective?
Determining
cost

and price
is extremely difficult
for service

businesses.
Careful attention
must be paid

to identifying
all of the costs
of the service,

especially
time, including
both transaction
of

the service
and waiting for
consumer inquir­

ies.
The price should
reflect an understand­

ing of what the consumer
believes to
be fair.

Since it is
often difficult for
the consumer to

comparison shop for
a service, the more
tan­

gible the service,
the easier the comparison.

The fourth and
final step is to develop
distn­

bution
strategies which
are efficient for
dif­

ferent
customers. In
real estate, customers

are either
sellers or buyers.
For sellers, the

service
is typically
delivered at their
pro­

perty.
For buyers,
se-vice delivcry
can

occur at
three sites:
in the
firm's office,
in

a licensee's car,
and at the seller's
property.

Each
of these distribution
points can influ­

ence service
delivery.

CONCLUSION

These three analyses
provide the information
Although
the demise
of the small service


required
to take the second
step: to identify
firm ha,;
been predicted
in many sources,

278
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