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What Market Are You Really In?

February 10th, 2010 @ 1:41 am

Categories: Strategy, Sustainability, innovation

Tags: Word-processing, Apple Inc., Mobile Device, Market, Stuart Cross

During Apple’s recent iPad launch, the comment that made me really stop and listen was when Steve Jobs said that Apple were now the world’s largest player in the mobile devices market.

It struck me that Apple’s perception of its market has changed significantly over time. No longer is the company in the personal computer business; it is in a far more dynamic, amorphous and wide-ranging market called mobile devices, covering laptops, phones, cameras, music and entertainment systems and more.

To my mind, this is part of Steve Jobs’s genius. He recognises that companies shouldn’t define themselves by a narrow view of the products they have historically made, but by a broader view of the customer experiences they help create.

Kodak is struggling because, for too long, it continued to believe it was in the film processing market, not the mobile devices or picture sharing market. Olivetti made the mistake of believing it was in the typewriter market, not the word processing or document sharing market.

If Kodak’s and Olivetti’s executives had made this perceptual leap much earlier they would have been much better able to deal with the rapid changes that have plagued their companies.

Understanding what your real markets are, requires you to answer these three questions:

  1. How do your customers benefit from your products and services, and how is this likely to change in the future? For Olivetti, the purpose was to prepare and share written documentation, and the introduction of digital technology was likely to affect both these activities.
  2. What alternative or substitute products and services could and do they use, and how is this likely to change in the future? Olivetti was up against the pen and pad and manual typewriters, but even by the 1970s word processing applications were being developed.
  3. What complimentary products and services are available to your customers when they purchase from you, and how is this likely to change in the future? By the 1980s the complimentary products and services were rapidly changing from paper and ink, to personal computers, floppy disks and memory cards.

Once you have answered these questions you are likely to have a very different view of your market. To begin with, it’s likely to be much larger than you think, with more competitors to consider. It will also make your market more difficult to predict, messier and more uncertain.

At the same time, however, it will give you new, bigger and more interesting possibilities and opportunities.

So, what markets is your business really in?

(Pic: SanFranAnnie cc2.0)

Stuart Cross is a founder of Morgan Cross Consulting.
 
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  •  
    1

    Kieran Levis

    02/10/10 | Report as spam

    RE: What Market Are You Really In?

    The fundamental reason that Apple has been able to
    reinvent itself and to create entirely new market categories
    is that it has extraordinary capabilities. Basing your strategy
    on where you would like to be, without regard for what
    you're good at, is a recipe for disaster, as Apple itself
    discovered in the 1980s. Kodak does not have the
    capabilities to enter mobile devices market, nor did Olivetti
    have those to succeed in word processing.

    www.kieranlevis.com

  •  
    2

    GAM07

    02/10/10 | Report as spam

    RE: What Market Are You Really In?

    Stuart good article -
    Theodore Levitt, Harvard once said "Customers just need to get things done. When people find themselves needing to get a job done, they essentially hire products to do that job for them". For this reason, businesses need to understand the difference between - Industry definition and Market definition, for example:

    Harley Davidson - Motor Cycles - Big boys toys
    A Busch - Beer - Friendship
    Revlon - Cosmetics - Hope
    Starbucks - Coffee Shops - The third place

    Interesting stuff, and yes, it does become more uncertain once you understand this and try to build your strategy around it...

    Graham

  •  
    3

    Stuart Cross

    02/10/10 | Report as spam

    RE: What Market Are You Really In?

    Dan, Graham, thanks for the feedback.

    Keiran, I agree that companies need to ensure that they
    have the capabilities to deliver their aims, otherwise their
    strategy is just wishful thinking. However, I do believe that
    companies can, over time, develop and/or acquire the
    capabilities they need to succeed. For five years or so
    Ryanair was a loss-making, full-service, also-ran on UK-
    Ireland routes. It was only when it redefined its market to
    the whole of Europe, and changed its ambition to being the
    #1 low fare airline, that it developed the capabilities that
    have enabled it to succeed.

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  • Blogger Thumbnail Stuart Cross Stuart Cross is a founder of Morgan Cross Consulting, which helps companies find new ways to drive substantial, profitable growth. His clients include Alliance Boots, Avon and PricewaterhouseCoopers. more »

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