Sunday, February 24, 2019

Hypercompetition

Jouma of trade Management, 1997, 13, 4 2 1 3 0 Evert Gummesson Stockholm University, School of Business, Stockholm, Sudden In wait of Marketing chemical equilibrium kin Marketing Versus Hyper rivalry This topic is a banter on work in progress conceming tke development qf relationship foodstuff (RM). It is cut officularly steeringed on the concept of trade counter eternal rest which is a groceryplaceing commission correspondence to mart equilibrium, the traditional concept of classical economic. The paper starts with a brief introduction to the authors accession to RJ4.It final payment with a summary of the concept of merchandising equilibrium. The next section is a discourse on hypercontention, a partiailarly intense type of contender that has been spy by several authors. RM poke outs a merchandising theory base on quislingism with various stakeh onetime(a)ers by long-run relationships, customer retention and loyalty. In contrast, hypercompetitiett claims th at customers uHU switch mingled with suppUers at an inaeasingly fast rate and that competitors pass on turn increasingly hostile to one an a nonher(prenominal).Two basic questions be raised do RM and hyper disputation represent two conflicting but coexisting trends that arc some(prenominal) growing in intensity? and How nates this coexistence or conflict be conceptu aloney handled? Tlie aim qf this paper is non to be complete and supply an answer, only to draw the readers attention to hypercompetition as an opposite trend to RMand to offer a platform for yet analysis and constructive and reflective scholarly converse. The 30R Approach to R M The 30R approach to RM is the out get set(p) of an ongoing look project on the refreshed markedng (Gummesson 1994, 1995). 0R refers to thirty reladonships that were assemble to exist in merchandise. During the research physical change, iii core variables stood out relatiorahips, networks and interacdon. A consequent definid on of RM wherefore became RM is selling seen as reladonships, networks and interacdon. The 3ORs wiU not be listed here, but their basic organise wiU be implementn. A distinction is gain between merchandise reladonships (reladonships between actors in the market such as suppUers, customers, compedtors and in boundaryedieiries), nd two types of non-market reladonships which physical exertion an influence on market reladonships, but ar not part of the market propier. These ar mega reladonships (reladonships in society, above the market reladonships, such as reladonships to political sympathiess) and nano reladonships (reladonships inside organizadons, such as intemal customer reladonships). Services markedng and ttie network approach to industrial trade have provided the primary theoredcal impietus for the author to explore the shortcomings 0267-257X/97/050421 + 10 $12. 00/0 1997nte Dryden Press 422Evert Gummesson of traditional trade management theory. both theories were bom in the 1970s and have continued to giow in importance. The authors idea to intermingle the two goes concealment to 1982 and has since been pursued and b bridle-pathened (Gummesson 1983, 1987, 1995). The term RM, however, was not used in a global sense until about 1990 (see e. g. Christopher et al. 1991 Groru-oos 1994 Gummesson 1994 Hunt and Morgan 1994 Sheth 1994). Instead, terms ukulele long-term inter alert relationships, interactive merchandise, network approach and a new concept of marketing were used.My resejtrch approach is theory generating and establish on comparative, qualitative analysis and syniiieses between data from inductive, real- military man studies received theories and new theories in the process of development. Marketing Equilibrium This section is an introduction to the general concept of marketing equilibrium and a discussion on certain aspects of the equilibrium. Marketing equilibrium is a serendipitous out buzz off of the authors research on RM. The concept is pass on elaborated in Gummesson (1995, 19%). The three forces of marketing equilibrium atomic number 18 competition, collaboration and formulas/institutions.Although Western economies are repeatedly referred to as market economies with sinless competition as their ethos, in reality they are mixed economies in which competition coexists with collaboration and regulations/ institutions. Marketing equilibrium contends that a sound market is the outcome of an optimal compounding of the three forces of competition, collaboration and regulatiorw/institutions. As all kinds of equilibria in dynanuc envirorunents are unstable, it is a matter of heading toward a pitiful target, orJy rarely reaching it and only rarely staying there for any long-term period of time.Whereas traditional marketing management literature primarily deals with competition, RM highlights collaboration. coaction implies that aU parties actively assume responsibility to propose relationships function al. The authors conclusion is that The focus on collaboration is the about important contribution from RM, with an impact on both marketing management and economics, and that collaboration in a market rescue needs to be treated with the same attention and resped as competition. Although the third force, regulations/institutions, is not the theme of this paper, a fewer words go out be said about it.Regulations indude both formal regulations through legislation, and open codes of conduct through culture institutiorts are both formal regime whose task is to ascertain that regulations are enforced, and phenomena such as the family or godliness that enforce a certain behaviour. In marketing rhetoric, regulations/institutionsand to a vauntingly extent as well collaboration are treated with suspidon and as inhibiting competition and the fighting(a)s Inputs to the 30R concept as well came from traditional marketing management, sales management, gauge management, orgaruzation th eory, and other areas. The term real world data is iised here alternatively of empirical data. Thereasonis that too often researchers in business subject slide empirical for qiiantitative, while in the geiieral language of sdence empirical refers to all types of data, whrther they come as qualitative, quantitative, or in any other format. In lookup of Marketing Equilibrium Rdationship Marketing vs Hypercompetition 423 of an economic system. In narketing practice, however, they are ubiquitous. Douglass noneth, Nobel Prize honorable in the economic sdences in 1993, has sh possess that regulations/institutions are dynamic and inevitable elements of a narket economy (North 1993).Marketing equiUbrium attempts to see the role of marketing management in the stage setting of sodety and on an industry and economics level. It should not be confused with the market equiUbrium of neoclassical theory of economics ( likewise referred to as microeconomics or simply bell theory). In neocla ssical economics, the core variables are supply and demand equilibrate by the invisible hand of price in a market of free competition. The market is assumed to be striving in the management of a longterm equiUbrium in which aU prices are equal and all products are standardized. Customers and providers are anonymous masses.Companies and industries are not managing their production and sales, they are orUy adjusting to exogenic market influences. All deviations from this idealized model axe referred to as cast-off(prenominal) im idealions. Although marketing management is offen described as an adaptation of neodassical economics, it is blatantly unmistakable from nevertheless a simple real-world study of markets, industries and singular companies, that a variant plantation for a marketing management theory is imperative. For example, services which induce anything from 60 to 90% of todays economies (depending on definition) are not considered.The assumptions of neoclassical e conomics are simply not vaUd. There are signs that the interest in coUaboration is gaining ground not only in real business bearing but also in marketing theory the most axiomatic being the upsurge of literature on RM and related subjects such as customer loyalty and alUances. Brandenbuier and Nalebuff (1996) introduce the term co-opetition, which is a combination of co-operation and competition. They show that zippy theory is one possible focussing of exploring this combination (the prisoners dilemma).Gray (1989) points to coUaboration as a solution to multi-party problem and says (p. 54) Despite regnant incentives to collaborate, our capacity to do so is underdeveloped. In the same spirit Senge (1990), in his treatise on learning organizations and the need for dialogue says (p. 10) Interestingly, the practice of dialogue has been preserved in many primitive cultures but it has been almost tout ensemble lose to modem sodety. Today, the prindples and practices of dialogue are being redbcovered and put into a modern-day context.EMalogue UteraUy elbow room tlunking together There is ein extensive literature on competition both in marketing and economics. Particularly the books by doorkeeper (1979, 1985) have received the attention of marketers. No effort wiU be made here to review the various aspeds of competition the treatment of competition pass on be directed to its role in the marketing equilibrium and to the properties of hypercompetition. In market economies, competition is hailed as the device driver of economic evolution and a necessary condition for wealth. The customer is given a choice, and a supplier can never be sure to have the customer in its pocket.ITiis is a traditional view advocated by the business community, and to an extent also by the pubUc sector in many countries where deregiilation and privatization have become foreeful strategies. The countries of the Westem worldthe capitalist sodetiesare not genuine draw Hunt and Morgan (1 995) for further analysis of the shortcomings of neoclassical theory. 424 Evert Gummesson market economies. They are mixed economies in which market forces and regulations have entered into wedlock. In totally unregulated markets only few can obtain the necessities of life.For example, free markets give large corporations the freedom to trigger competition, and those who cannot compete on the labour market are left to bounty or misery. The oppositetotal regulation leads to rigidity. There is no general formula that tells us in what projx)rtions individual discretion and collective regulation should be mixed. Every market and period have to find their own specific solution. competition is a driver of certain types of change. Even if RM puts dialect on collaboration, I would like to see RM as a deductive reasoning of competition, collaboration and regulations/institutions.The issue is which combination of these will create the balancethe marketing equilibrium in each sptedfic si tuation. If either of the three forces becomes unduly powerful, the economy will suffer regulations/institutions is the sole force of a planned economy. To whatsoever extent there is a naive belief in competition to set everything right. The global wave of privatization and deregulation is a reaction in markets that have become stified. It is an effort to find a marketing equilibrium. bureaucratic and legal values have often led to a misguide interference by politidans and an unreal belief in centralized promise of sodety.Although the term deregulation implies that regulations are abandoned, it is a search for more(prenominal) comme il faut laws and institutions which can become supportive to constructive forces of sodety and hold back negative forces Deregulation is reregulation Some of the more conspicuous results from deregulation are found in the split up of Bell in the US and bailiwick telecom operators in many countries have lost their monopoly the privatization of Brit ish government bodies such as the British Rail and the Airport Authority and the most dramatic of all, the breakdown of the communist planned economies.However, nobody so uttermost has been able to overview the long-term effects of deregulation and privatization. There are necessary elements of the market economy that competifion and the free market forces do not master. They can be expressed in two paradoxes. The graduation paradox says regulations are needed to secure that free competition will not be curbed. In spite of adl sweet talk about competition, every individual company or industry prefers to be spared the hazards of competitions (but they consider it essential for other comparues and industries). The second paradox says The finding of competition is to get rid of competition. controversy attempts to flinch the infiuence of other suppliers by lower costs and prices, differentiated and difficult-tocopy offerings, or ascendency of aimed market niches. Hypercompetition The ideas on a new type of competition will be assembled under the umbrella concept of hjfpercompetition. They are taken from many sources, among them DAveni (1994), Hamel and Prahalad (1994), Moore (1996), and Verbeke and Peelen (1996). The term hypercompetition was first found in DAveni and the ensuing discussion on hypercompefition is mainly based on his concepts, but the comparison with RM strategies and the conclusions are my own.In marketing management and strategy, the recommendation is usually mod that companies should build a sustainable competitive favor, thus limiting In Search of Marketing Equilibrium Relationship Marketing vs Hypercompetition 425 price competition or redden creating a monopoly-Uke situation. Hypercompefition is the opposite a company should actively disrupt status quo and the accepted competitive advantages, both its own and those of competitors, in an environment of hypercompetition, advantages are cursorily created and eroded.Hypercompefition tre nds are identified in four scene of actions of traditional competition (DAveni 1994, pp. 13-17) /. cos/ and quality arena For example, upstarts Uke Southwest Airlines attack estabUshed carriers by slash costs or enhancing quaUty, thus lowering the bottom of the market and rhytidoplasty the top of it. This behaviour counteracts the RM strategy of frequent flyers programmes. 2. Timing and know-hot/ arena The first mover in the nnarket whitethorn create an advantage and sets up impediments to imitation. succeeding(a) quickly try to overcome these, fordng the first mover to change its tactics.The know-how put-upon by one company is imitated by another and imitation becomes scurrying and faster eventually the innovator cannot recapture its R&D investment. 3. Strongholds arena Companies create entry barriers to keep the competition out Entrants circumvent the barriers, adult rise to a series of attacks and counterattacks. This is au and soticly happening in intenontinental send ser vices between major American carriers and national European carriers. The current war for mastery over the Intemet, with Microsoff and Netscape as the combatants, is another example. 4.Deep pockets arena This souseds having more money than the competition. The finandally stronger and usuaUy larger companies can endure price competition from smaUer companies. The latter, however, can caU upon govemment regulations and form aUiances with others, thus balancing out the financJal advantage. In marketing equilibrium, regulations is one of the balancing forces, and alliances is a collaborative RM strategy. For example, Microsoffs financial advantage has been counteracted by the aUiance between IBM and Apple. Information technology is a driver of hypercompetition.By using databases it is possible, and wiU be more so in the future, to quickly survey prices and other conditions, and select the best combination at each point of time. Purchasing then becomes close to the system of exchanges. But even if comparisons of suppUers are made easier for customers, so many conditions are not comparable, for example, to 426 Evert Gummesson what extent can you effrontery the supplier. Trust and security are basic condidons for collaboradon and trust has proven to be a driver of business in all types of sodedes (Fukuyama 1995).DAveni concludes that the battle for compeddve advantage is eventuaUy driving the market back into a price-compieddve market. The outcome is the neodassical long-term equilibrium, although the road to this equiUbrium goes via marketing equilibrium and not just via price adjustments. He refers to the old compedfive equilibrium as looking stable because it moved so late that it appeared stable. Hypiercompeddon is a coristant invoke of disequiUbritim. DAveni deploys a revised 7Ss framework to propose hypiercompeddve strategies.The professional 7Ss designed by the McKinsey consulting companycomprise seven factors for success structure, strategy, systems, st yle, skills, staff, and divided up values. Successful hypiercompeddve firms need a new set of Ss in sound out to create disrupdon (p. 31ff). The first new S is stakeholder satisfacdon, referring to new ways of creating fulfil customers and a modvated eind empowered work force. The second is strategic soothsajdng a process of seeking out new knowledge necessary for predicting or even creating new temporary windows of opportunity that compiedtors wiU eventuaUy enter but are not now served by anyone else (p. 2). The comparafive advantage of these two factors is the abiUty to win each dynamic strategic acdon with compiedtors (p. 32). The third and fourth Ss are spieed and surprise, both capabiUdes for disrupdon. The hypercompeddve company both reacts more quickly and is proacdve, thus taking the market with surprise. The final three are tacdcs for disrupdon. Shifting the rules includes new ways of sadsfying the customers and playing the marketing game with a new set of rules. Signals refer to announcements of strategic intent with the purpose of stalling acdons and misleading compiedtors.For example, a preannouncement of a coining product may make customers wait to see the new version and postpone planned purchases of competing products. simultaneous and sequendal strategic thrusts are used by hypercompieddve firms to harass, paralyze, induce errors, or square block compiedtors (p. 34). Several acdons are taken at the same dme in combinadons that make it difficult to understand what a compiedtor is actuaUy up to. In summary, whereas RM strives for stabiUty through long-term reladonships, hypercompieddon strives for continuous disrupdon at an increasingly faster rate.In RM, security is found in stabiUty in hypercompeddon it is fotind in the ability to continuously counteract instabiUty. The RM concept is by many authors broadened to comprise more than the suppUercustomer dyad,* for example, reladonships through alUances which is a way of counteracting hyperco mpieddon. The imaginary organizadon is a network-based company which transcends the tradidonal organizadonal boundaries. It can more freely lease Jind drop resources through outsourcing (or rather resourcing) instead of investing in tradidonal ontogenesis (intemal or through acquisidon) the advantage of the deep pocket is thus offset. See Christopher et al. (1991), Kotler (1992), and Hunt and Morgan (1994), who have approached marketing as relationships with a series of stakeholders. This is in line with the 30R approach, but flie 3ORs go further and also establish relationships based on other than the stakeholder dimension. See Hedberg et al. (1994). Other terms representing the same phenomenon are virtual organizations, boundarykss organizations, and rwtwork organizations. In Search of Marketing Equilibrium Relationship Marketing vs Hypercmnpetition 427DAveni (1994) discusses the role of co-operation and collusion and says that they should only be used for hypercompetitive purpo ses. They are not long-term relationships, they are merely temporary strategies. He lists a fig of generic instances of hypercompetitive use of collaboration (pp. 338-339) to gang up against others groups to limit the land of competition to biuld resojirces to buy time to gain access and to leam. Hunt and Morgan (1995) allude a comparative advantage theory of competition within a marketing management paradigm, and they present a devastating critique of neoclassical economics.DAvenis conclusions are contrary to Hunt and Morgans he rewrites neoclassical theory, using marketing management theory as a lever. Interpreted in my terms, we drop by the wayside from the original and simple form of neoclassical market equilibrium, go through a phase of marketing equilibrium, and arrive at a more sophisticated level of market equilibrium. Hjrpercompietition goes beyond the neoclassical theory of perfect connpetition and restores it on a new level. Through a series of luxuriant moves, where competitive advantage is surpassed, an escalation toward perfect competition develops.This means that we are back in transaction marketing, the very evil to which RM is held to be the antidote. Conclusions for Discussion This paper has dealt with certain aspects of marketing equilibrium, one of several RM issues that preoccupy the authors nund during the ongoing research joumey into the world of RM. The paper is limited to the two trends of collaboration, advanced by the RM concept, and hypercompetition, advanced by authors on strategy and competition. A paradox is seemingly a contradiction it is not in actual fact a contradiction. An oxymoron is a combination of two phenomena that cannot be combined.So the first question in the line of descent of the paper could be rephrased are RM and hypercompetition forming a paradox or an oxymoron? When I read up on the current literatxire on competition, I found that the new competition was described as more fierce and faster than ever before . It had affinity with marketing warfare which was in vogue in the 19S0s. It certainly seemed contradictory to the RM idea of long-term relationships and collaboration. In my present suppose of ignorance the answer is within the concept of the marketing equilibrium, both competition and collaboration coexist. They can do so and will do so.Our attention has to be directed to both of them. When competition becomes hypercompetition, collaboration may become hypercollaboration. Could it be that hypercompetition is the current driver of the upsuiging interest in RM and that RM tries to neutralize the effects of hypercompetition? To be Continued As this is work in progress, the issues that have been presented are not complete and the views are tentative and wiil be further studied. Among other issues concerning marketing equilibrium that are also being studied are the following Tlie marketing equilibrium which has so far been described could be seen as 28 Evert Gumntesson partial marketi ng equiUbrium. The RM researdi project is suggesting an extention into complete marketing equilibrium. It consists of a synthesis of RM and the theory of imaginary organizations where not only the market but also the organizations (suppUers, customers, competitors and others) and sodety are included in a network of interactive relationships (Hedberg et al. 1994 Gummesson 1996). In traditional marketing management and economics, the market is outside the company and nrketing activities are directed toward extemal customers.But there are also markets inside the company and marketing activities take place between intemal customers. This is laid bare in the treatment of the nano relationships of the 30R approach. Both intemal and extemal customers interact in networks of relationships. The boundaries between the inside and the outside have dissolved and both can be seen as parts of the same networks. Another area is the black economy with tax evasion, bribery, fraud, and organized crime as additional and disrupting forces of competition. One of the relationships in the 30R approach is named The Criminal communicate.For example, Blumberg (1989) has pointed out that the strength of the market economy competition and the profit incentiveencourages fraud. It pays to cheat He calls this the paradox of the market economy. Everybody is old(prenominal) with it from jobs and private consumption, but it is swept under the carpet in marketing theory and textbooks. The Literature prefers the idealized image competition as the driver to create customer satisfaction and customer perceived quality to give customers everything they want and are willing to pay for and to offer numerous options for consumers.Customers are asked about satisfaction and quality, but their knowledge is limited and the ignorance of the customer is exploited. neither market economies through competition, nor command economies through regulations, have proven themselves fit of handling environmental a nd ecological issues. What has been achieved is primarily the outcome of voluntary printing press group activity and law enforcement. warring forces have clearly not provided enough incentive for the market to innovate and reinnovate in the field.One of the relationship in the 30R approach is The Green Relationships, adding a relationship angle to environmental issues. plausibly most of the achievements for a long time will only come through legislation (regulations), tight control and litigation (institutions). Can the marketing equilibrium conceptually include environmental and ecological issues? After the topic Presentation An Addendum In the discussion following its presentation, the paper was criticized on two points in peirticular (1) The choice of the term marketing equiUbrium.The critics said and some were dearly provoked by the term that it gives the wrong connotation and that the term is so heavily committed to neoclassical economic theory that large number will not be able to see my point. Suggested substitutes were dynamic balance or optimal combination. EquiUbrium, it was claimed, conveys the idea that such a state exists and it is just a matter of time long-term, though) before it is reached. In defense force of the term but I intend to give it more thought) I would like to claim that equilibrium can be perceived as dynamic and unattainable, but still have a value n Search of Marketing Equilibrium Relationship Marketing vs Hypercompetition 429 in providing direction, although the trip is a never-ending journey. Perhaps the provocation as such is o( value. When a new thought or term is met with aggressions from several established scholars it may have hit a sore spot it may even be important. The original intention was to show that equilibrium from the idealized and imrealistic assumptions of neoclassical theory could be supplemented by a marketing management-oriented equilibrium based on real-world premises.Neoclassical economics current ly seems to be no more than a computer game for adult entertainment and career boosting under the dissemble of sdence. To me, the contrast between market and marketing, designating an economics versus a management approach but still indicating affinity, makes the term expressive. Whatever term I choose, however, I am confident that economists and me-too researchers wiU not be impressed. 2. Hyper was claimed by Americans to mean too much, for example a hyperactive child is active to a degree that implies mental and/or physical disorder.The British perceived it as very much, for example a hypermarket which is a bigger European version of a supermarket. Maybe this is evidence of the validity of Oscar Wildes control that England and America are two countries separated by a vernacular language. On the other hand, maybe too much is also a correct interpretation. For many of us, hypercompetition is probably too much. Personally, it makes me nervous. References Blumberg, P. (1989), The P redatory Society, parvenu York, Oxford University Press. Brandenburger, A.M. and Nalebuff, B. J. (1996), Co-opetition, Boston, MA, Harvard Business School Press. Christopher, M. , Payne, A. and Ballant)Tie, D. (1991), Relationship Marketing, London, Heinemarm. DAveni, R,A. (1994), Hypercompetition, bran-new York, The drop off Press. Fukuyama, F. (1995), Trust, New York, The Free Press. Gray, B. (1989), Collaborating, San Francisco, CA, Jossey-Bass. Gronroos, C. (1994), Quo vadis, marketing? Towards a relationship marketing paradigm, Joumal of Marketing Martagement, 10, No. 4 Gummesson, E. 1983), A New Concept of Marketing, paper presented at the 1983 EMAC Annual Conference, Institut dEtudes Commerdales de Grenoble, France, April. Gummesson, E. (1987), The New Marketing Developing retentive-term Interactive Relationships, Long Range Planning, 20, No. 4, pp. 10-20. Gummesson, E, (1994), Making Relationship Marketing Operational. The internationalistic Joumal of Service Industry M anagement, 5, No. 5, pp. 5-20. Gummesson, E. (1995), Relationsmarknadsforing Frdn 4P till 30R (Relationship Marketing From 4Ps to 3ORs), Malmo, Sweden Liber-Hermods (forthcoming in English).Gummesson, E. (1996), Relationship Marketing and Imaginary Organizations A Synthesis, European Joumal of Marketing, 30, No. 2, pp. 31-44. Hamel, G. and Prahalad, C. K. (1994), Competing for the Future, Boston, MA Harvard Business School Press, 1994, 430 Epert Gummesson Hedberg, B. , Dahlgren, G. , Hansson, J. and Olve, N. -G. (1994), Imagindra organisationer (Imaginary Organizations), Malmfi, Sweden Liber-Hermods. Hunt, S. D. and Morgan, R. M. (1994), Relationship Marketing in the epoch of Network Competition. Marketing Management, 3, No. 1, pp. 9-28. Hunt, S. D. and Morgan, R. M. (1995), The Comparative Advantage Theory of Competition, Joumal qf Marketing, 59, April, pp. 1-15. Kotter, P (1992), Total Marketing, Business Week Advance, Executive Brief, Vol. 2. Moore, J. E (1996), The Death of Com petition, Chichester, UK, Wiley. North, D. C. (1993), Economic Performance Through Time. Stockholm, The Nobel Foundation, Prize call down in Economic Science in Memory qf Alfred Nobel, Stockholm, December 9. Porter, M. E. (1980), Competitive Strategy, New York, The Free Press. Porter, M. E. 1985), Competitive Advantage, New York, The Free Press. Senge, P. M. (1990), The Fifth Discipline. New York Doubleday/Currency. Sheth, J. N. (1994), The Donnain of Relationship Marketing. Handout at the Sectmd Research Conference on Relationship Marketing. Centre for Relationship Marketing, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, June. Verbeke, W. and Peelen, E. (1996), Redefining the New SeUing Practices in an Era of Hyper Competition. Paper presented at the workshop Relationship Marketing in an Era qf Hypercompetition, Erasmus University and EIASM, Rotterdam, May.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.