Disruptive CMO Marketing

Thought provoking marketing ideas focused on Leadership, Strategy, Creativity, Innovation and Digital marketing. I am a Vice President of Marketing with experience in CPG (eg Heineken) and technology (Microsoft). This is a personal blog.

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Filip Wouters
Filip Wouters

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To Centralized or Decentralized marketing? Here are the answers.

There are in principle 7 main criteria to centralize or decentralize. The basic draw of centralization or standardization is scale, cost savings, time savings, efficiencies and leverage.The benefits of decentralization are around tailoring products or approaches to local cultural insights, sales channels, local competition, local laws and languages.

Here is a framework for those 7 criteria.

  Criteria centralized

1. Geographical centralization or decentralization

Centralization or Decentralization is often the question when companies are expanding their geographical scope and coverage. Often the company starts with a local approach as this covers the few markets best, but once more and more international markets are added certain scale advantage will start to appear. The mistake often made is lumping everything under marketing. The level of benefit will depend on what part of the marketing function we talk about and the level of scale benefits that can be achieved.

Sponsorship-strategyOne of the elements that can be implemented early on is the area of Creating insights and best practices. This is often claimed but not really well executed. It takes time for the local teams to write up all the learnings (including the local insights and also what did not work well) and it is an interference with their day-to-day job. On the other hand, the person at central finds it often not that rewarding as their job consists of chasing local teams and collecting and structuring the learnings. Of course this can be organized via award programs, incentives, learning web-communities etc,....

Next is the area of creating Brand Consistency for multi-country brands. This area is usually well developed by setting up an international brand team that guards the brands strategy, brand design, global positioning and cross-country marketing initiatives. Local compliance needs to be achieved by giving the global team enough authority to challenge the local teams. Formal structures will usually be in place to facilitate the working relationship between the centralized brand team and the local brand teams.

Of particular interest are the Factors Affecting Advertising Standardization. The contextual, organizational and market segmentation variables affect the advertising process in various ways. The contextual variables include media availability and costs, advertising regulations, advertising agency and the number of competitors in the foreign market. Multinationals have to pay attention to local advertising regulations as some global ideas may violate the rules of a particular market. Having an advertising agency that understands the essence of globalization of advertising and the importance of local adaptation is essential. That is, the advertising agency is required to think regionally but to act locally. When dealing with different cultures it is also important to understand how local culture decodes the advertising.
In my experience, there are certain clusters of countries that have a similar cultural background that tap into the same type of humor. For example, England, New Zealand, South Africa and Australia have a shared cultural background that can be tapped in.

In general, you can go from product centric advertising to consumer insight based advertising. Many studies have found that advertising leveraging specific cultural insights provide a strong connection with the consumer and makes the consumer feel that the brand "gets me". These tend to be culture specific and are expressed in humor, choice of characters, casting, wardrobe, music selection, location, words, mannerisms, etc.... There are universal human truths and product stories that appeal to everyone. They tap into core human need states. So it is possible to create stories with global appeal but not always that easy and this will depend on the type of product that is being advertised. To achieve this, advertising concepts are often tested in multi-countries to indeed test if it resonates across different cultures.

With regards to setting the Investment Levels, it is often that the local opco has full P&L responsibility but requires central approval of the budget. It could also be that central optimizes the allocation of budgets across markets to funnel funds to the highest growth markets. For this to work smoothly roles of countries need to clearly agreed upon so that the different teams understand the cross-country allocation better.

There are significant marketing decentralisation drawbacks. Most have to do with duplication of efforts, lack of consistency, diverging goals and if no quality check from the center inconsistency in the quality of the work produced. In addition, individual markets often fail to see the bigger picture or create synergies to approaches that work in multiple markets. In very decentralized organizations it would be difficult to share best practices and to have a healthy culture of building on each others contributions.

However, some companies have gone back and forth between a centralized or decentralized marketing approach. Yahoo is one of those for example. An advantage of a decentralized approach is that marketing decisions, marketing talent and marketing budgets are brought closer to the customer — and into the regions that depend on these critical plans. It takes linguistic, cultural and legal aspects into account and leverage those that a global approach can't. In addition it links marketing strategies to revenue growth, sales objectives and overall accountability.

 
Centralization and decentralization
 
 

There is a happy medium where the global team collaborates with the local teams and each contributes to the right balance. Global teams can produce breakthrough advertising with talent, music rights and production values that an individual opco can not afford. Local teams can produce emotional relevant advertising that connects deep with a local culture. An integrated joint effort could be quite powerful and provide a competitive advantage.

There might be several tension points between the local and the global marketing leaders. One source of tension could be when people in Group or Head Office functions don't look at things from a truly global perspective and look at things from the country and operating environment where their headquarters is located. Another one is when the added value of the center is not very clear and local opcos feel they are the ones that actually generate revenue and a headquarter environment is seen as being an overhead.

2. Portfolio centralization or decentralization

There is another reason to centralize certain marketing functions. This is often related to ensure both individual brand and multi-brand or portfolio needs are being managed. Here is an overview.

Centralized multi brand department

Filip Wouters in centralization or decentralization, Global marketing, Management, Managing the marketing department, Marketing Strategy, Marketing structure | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (1)

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Trends in Global Marketing

Here are some trends that I see within the companies I interact with or have contacts at.

1. Greater Movement Towards the Center: control over marketing strategy has become more centralized in the last three years. The strategic power might still rest in both global and local.

2. Global marketing budget is more based on strategic opportunities such as growth and less on revenue generated by the region.

3. Top priorities for global marketing are global best practice sharing, talent development, and consistent global strategy. 

- Branding is the marketing responsibility most apt to be placed exclusively under Central Marketing’s control, while pricing is most likely to be left to the regions.

- Public Relations and Digital/Social were the marketing services most likely to be housed at Central Marketing and shared/scaled across multiple business units or regions

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How to use marketing for start-ups?

What is the role of marketing when you have 1 million in funding for your start-up? Well of course you need to spend money on your product developement, people hiring, selling, general admin costs and marketing.

My recommendation is to go at it in phases and remember the following guideline:

- There is nothing that destroys your product quicker than great marketing before your product is finished. The initial goal of marketing is to create trial. Your product experience should be such that it generates repeat purchase or usage. That means that if you market too soon, you get the trial but the usage will be disappointing and not generate the repeat you need.

- Once you have a product with potential repeat usage, go first after non paid media, namely public relationship. When you are new you have a lot of things to say that might be interested for the general public. Make use of this. Hire a PR agency and let them help you. They will help you build a pr-plan, develop the press materials, organize a press tour, select and deliver targeted messages to the right media people.

- I think if your funding is below 1 million, you should stay with efficient marketing forms. So next to Pr you can consider word-of-mouth marketing, internet marketing or just focusing on sales efforts. What do you think?

Filip Wouters in Marketing Strategy | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

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Case studies where a local approach succeeded above a centralized approach

Coca Cola and Thums Up in India

In the 1990s Coke's HQ in the US had worked out a strategy to reenter the Indian market, having officially withdrawn in the 60s after refusal to dilute their equity. Their strategic approach was simple but ineffective: Just buy the Indian Cola brand leader “Thums Up” with a market share of 60 per cent for $100 million only, replace the local concentrate and brand name by “Coca-Cola”, centralize the highly decentralized bottling plants and wait for nice profits. Coke completely neglected that the Indians loved not only their customary brand name but also the slightly different taste of their wonderful “Thums Up: I want my thunder”. The Indian consumers rejected Coca-Cola. As a result Pepsi Cola benefitted from increased sales and managed to raise its market share.
The whole aftermath of reintroducing the popular brand “Thums Up” by means of a huge TV and advertising campaigns, and re-optimizing the bottling plant network in India cost Coca-Cola a total sum of $ 800 million. After this Hindustani reincarnation, “Thums Up” turned out to be the most powerful brand of Coca-Cola in South Asia.

Nestlé S.A. is the world's largest most diversified and decentralized food company. Only 2.0 per cent of its sales turnover is made in its home country. For many decades Nestlé has been adapting the tastes and the composition of its products to requirements of local consumers. If you travel around the world and drink Nescafé in different countries, you will taste the difference. Nestlé also adapts its brand name to suit local expectations:
The popular brand name in Europe of “Nescafé Gold” was changed in the US into “Taster's Choice” and was successful. Also Nestlé never impose their brand on acquired companies; why should they? Since decades Nestlé always maintained and cultivated good brand names of firms they had acquired such as Maggi, Buitoni and San Pellegrino.

Nokia The Nokia Group in March 2004 launched the Nokia 1100 “Made for India”, an entry level product specially designed for the Indian market. It has several features that were incorporated, based on extensive consumer research conducted in India: It has a built-in torch light that is useful, given the uncertain power supply situation in India. It has a dust resistant keypad, adapted to certain environmental conditions in India, as well as an anti-slip grip that is designed for hot and humid weather. The Nokia 1100 is compact, reliable, easy to use, and suitable to everyday lifestyle in India, giving it an edge over its rival products. Surprisingly the Nokia 1100 was not the least expensive phone in the Nokia range. It was even priced at a significant premium over entry level phones of the competition. However, it quickly became by far the best selling phone in the country and Nokia gained five market share points within nine months. At the same time Nokia's brand preference shot up from 66 per cent to 77 per cent, refuting the myth that India is a “price sensitive” market and reinforcing Nokia's belief that the Indian consumer is a “value conscious” buyer. Localization of Nokia's products to create value in the Indian market has long been a cornerstone of their strategy.

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It's all about gaining share

If you want to create an environment of measurable results, you can use the following concept. The integrated view of shares. So do you measure all the relevant share parameters? Are your sales and marketing teams bonused on these? Do you know which of the share measures are correlating the best with your profit contribution? I will explain each of these buckets and you will see how the concepts integrate marketing and sales.

How_to_increase_share_and_value

Share of segment

- The percentage of total industry sales that is made up by a particular company's individual sales

Share of consumption

- The percentage of total CATEGORY industry sales that is made up by a particular company's individual sales

The difference is that the definition of the denumerator is wider. Eg if you sell MP3 players, the share of consumption is defined as volume of company MP3 players dividied by the total sales of music producing instruments

Wholesaler share of business

- can be measured based on volume or on profit delivered versus other suppliers or brands

Retailer share of shelf

- Can be measured as linear feet in shelf versus other brands in category. This can be compared to the $ share to answer the question: Is your product receiving its fair share of shelf? Are you trying to work with the retailer to improve the space allocated to your items while at the same time improve the performance of the category?

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