Based on this analysis, what strategic options would you recommend for both music publishers and music retailers in the current marketing environment
Based on this analysis, what strategic options would you recommend for both music publishers and music retailers in the current marketing environment
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Solve any 4 Cases Study’s
CASE:
I Playing to a new beat: marketing in
the music industry
Good old fashioned rock ‘n’ roll could be dead. If a mobile
phone ringtone in the shape of the vocalizations of the animated Crazy Frog
dominates the billboard charts for months on end, then it could well signal the
death knell for the industry, and how it operates. If this ubiquitous
amphibian’s aurally annoying song, converted from a mobile phone ringtone,
outsold even mainstay acts such as Oasis and Coldplay, why should music
companies invest millions in cultivating fresh musical talent, hoping for them
to be the next big thing, when their efforts can be beaten by basic synthesizer
music? The industry is facing a number of challenges that it has to address, such
as strong competition, piracy, changing delivery formats, increasing cost
pressures, demanding pri-madonnas and changing customer needs. Gone are the
days when music moguls were reliant on sales from albums alone, now the
industry trawls for revenue from a variety of sources, such as ringtones,
merchandising, concerts, and music DVDs, leveraging extensive back catalogues,
and music rights from advertising, movies and TV programming.
The music industry is in a state of flux at the moment. The
cornerstone of the industry—the singles chart—has been facing terminal decline
since the mid-1990s. Some retailers are now not even stocking singles due to
this marked freefall. Some industry commentators blame the Internet as the sole
cause, while others point to value differences between the price of an album
and the price of a single as too much. Likewise, some commentators criticize
the heavy pre-release promotion of new songs, the targeting of ever-younger
markets by pop acts, and the explosion of digital television music channels as
root causes of the single’s demise. The day when the typical record buyer
browses through rows of shelves for a much sought-after band or song on a
Saturday afternoon may be thing of the past.
Long-term success stories for the music industry are
increasingly difficult to develop. The old tradition of A&R (which stands
for ‘Artists & Repertoire’) was to sign, nurture and develop musical talent
over a period of years. The industry relied on continually feeding the system
with fresh talent that could prove to be the next big thing and capture the
public imagination. Now corporate short-term thinking has enveloped business
strategies. If an act fails to be an immediate hit, the record label drops
them. The industry is now characterized by an endless succession of one-hit
wonders and videogenic artist churning out classic cover songs, before
vanishing off the celebrity radar. Four large music labels now dominate the
industry (see Table 1), and have emerged through years of consolidation.
Table 1 The ‘big
four’ music labels
Universal Music
|
Sony BMG
|
The largest music label, with 26 per cent of global music market share; artists on its
roster include U2, Limp Bizkit, Mariah Carey and No Doubt
|
Merger consolidated its position; artists on its roster
include Michael Jackson, Lauryn Hill, Westlife, Dido, Outkast and Christina
Aguilera
|
Warner Music
|
EMI
|
Third biggest music group; artists on its roster include
Madonna, Red Hot Chili Peppers and REM
|
Artists on its roster include the Rolling Stones,
Coldplay, Norah Jones, Radiohead, and Robbie Williams
|
The ‘big four’ labels have the marketing clout and resources
to invest heavily in their acts, providing them with expensive videos,
publicity tours and PR coverage. This clout allows their acts to get vital
airplay and video rotation on dedicated TV music channels. Major record labels
have been accused of offering cash inducements of gifts to radio stations and
DJs in an effort to get their songs on playlists. This activity is known in the
industry as ‘radio payola’.
Consumer have flocked to the Internet, to download, to
stream, to ‘rip and burn’ copyrighted music material. The digital music
revolution has changed the way people listen, use and obtain their favourite
music. The very business model that has worked for decades, buying a single or
album from a high-street store, may not survive. Music executives are left
questioning whether the Internet will kill the music business model has been
fundamentally altered. According to the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), it
estimated that 8 million people in the UK are downloading music from the
Internet—92 per cent of them doing so illegally. In 2005 alone, sales of CD
singles fell by a colossal 23 per cent. To put the change into context, the
sales of digital singles increased by 746.6 per cent in 2005. Consumers are
buying their music through different channels and also listening to their
favourate songs through digital media rather than through standard CD, cassette
or vinyl. The emergence of MP3 players, particularly the immensely popular
Apple iPod, has transformed the music landscape even further. Consumers are now
downloading songs electronically from the Internet, and storing them on these
digital devices or burning them onto rewritable CDs.
Glossary of online music jargon
Streaming: Allows the user to listen to or watch a file as
it is being simultaneously downloaded. Radio channels utilize this technology
to transmit their programming on the Internet.
‘Rip n burn’: Means downloading a song or audio file from
the Internet and then burning them onto rewritable CDs or DVD.
MP3 format: MP3 is a popular digital music file format. The
sound quality is similar to that of a CD. The format reduces the size of a song
to one-tenth of its original size allowing for it to be transmitted quickly
over computer networks.
Apple iPod: The
‘digital jukebox’ that has transformed the fortunes of the pioneer PC maker. By
the end of 2004 Apple is expected to have sold 5 million units of this
ultra-hip gadget. It was the ‘must-have item’ for 2003. The standard 20 GB iPod
player can hold around 5000 songs. Other hardware companies, such as Dell &
Creative Labs, have launched competing devices. These competing brands can retail
for less than £75.
Peer-to-peer networks (P2P): These networks allow users to
share their music libraries with other net users. There is no central server,
rather individual computers on the Internet communicating with one another. A
P2P program allows users to search for material, such as music files, on other
computers. The program lets users find their desired music files through the
use of a central computer server. The system works lime this; a user sends in a
request for a song; the system checks where on the Internet that song is
located; that song is downloaded directly onto the computer of the user who
made the request. The P2P server never actually holds the physical music
files—it just facilitates the process.
The Internet offers a number of benefits to music shoppers,
such as instant delivery, access to huge music catalogues and provision of
other rich multi-media material like concerts or videos, access to samples of
tracks, cheaper pricing (buying songs for 99p rather than an expensive single)
and, above all, convenience. On the positive side, labels now have access to a
wider global audience, possibilities of new revenue streams and leveraging
their vast back catalogues. It has diminished the bargaining power of large
retailers, it is a cheaper distribution medium than traditional forms and
labels can now create value-laden multimedia material for consumers. However,
the biggest problem is that of piracy and copyright theft. Millions of songs
are being downloaded from the Internet illegally with no payment to the
copyright holder. The Internet allows surfers to download songs using a format
called ‘MP3’, which doesn’t have inbuilt copyright protection, thus allowing
the user to copy and share with other surfers with ease. Peer to peer (P2P)
networks such as Kazaa and Grokster have emerged and pose an even deadlier
threat to the music industry—they are enemies that are even harder to track and
contain. Consumers can easily source and download illegal copyrighted material
with considerable ease using P2P networks (see accompanying box).
P2P Networks used for file sharing
Kazaa
|
Gnutella
|
Grokster
|
Morpheus
|
eDonkey
|
Imesh
|
Bearshare
|
WinMX
|
A large number of legal download sites have now been
launched, where surfers can either stream their favourite music or download it
for future use in their digital libraries. This has been due to the rapid
success of small digital medial players such the Apple iPod. The legal
downloading of songs has grown exponentially. A la carte download services and
subscription-based services are the two main business models. Independent
research reveals that the Apple’s iTunes service has over 70 per cent of the
market. Highlighting this growing phenomenon of the Internet as an official
channel of distribution, new music charts are now being created, such as the
‘Official Download Chart’. Industry sources suggest that out of a typical 99p
download, the music label get 65p, while credit card companies get 4p, leaving
the online music store with 30p per song download. These services may
fundamentally eradicate the concept of an album, with customers selecting only
a handful of their favourite songs rather than entire standard 12 tracks. These
prices are having knock-on consequences for the pricing of physical formats.
Consumers are now looking for a more value-laden music product rather than
simply 12 songs with an album cover. Now they are expecting behind the scenes
access to their favourite group, live concert footage and other content-rich
material.
Big Noise Music is an example of one of the legitimate
downloading sites running the OD2 system. The site is different in that for
every £1 download, 10p of the revenue goes to the charity Oxfam.
The music industry is ferociously fighting back by issuing
lawsuits for breach of copyright to people who are illegally downloading songs
from the Internet using P2P software. The recording industry has started to sue
thousands of people who illegally share music using P2P. They are issuing
warnings to net surfers who are P2P software that their activities are being
watched and monitored. Instant Internet messages are being sent to those who
are suspected of offering songs illegally. In addition, they have been awarded
court orders so that Internet providers must identify people who are heavily
involved in such activity. The music industry is also involved heavily in issue
advertising campaigns, by promoting anti-piracy websites such as
www.pro-music.org to educate people on the industry and the impact of piracy on
artists. These types of public awareness campaigns are designed to illustrate
the implications of illegal downloading.
Small independent
music labels view P2P networks differently, seeing them as vital in achieving
publicity and distribution for their acts. These firms simply do not have the
promotional resources or distribution clout of the ‘big four’ record labels.
They see P2P networks as an excellent viral marketing tool, creating buzz about
a song or artist that will ultimately lead to wider mainstream and commercial
appeal. The Internet is used to create
communities of fans who are interested in their music, providing them access to
free videos and other material. It allows independent acts the opportunity to
distribute their music to a wider audience, building up their fan base through
word of mouth. Savvy unsigned bands have sophisticated websites showcasing
their work, and offering free downloads as well as opportunities for
audio-philes to purchase their tunes. Alternatively major labels still see that
to gain success one has to get a video on rotation on MTV and that this in turn
encourages greater airplay on radio stations, ultimately leading to increased
purchases.
Table 2 The major legitimate online music provider
Name
|
Details
|
Pricing
|
Apple iTunes
|
Huge catalogue of over 750,000 songs; compatible with
Apple’s very hip iPod system; offers free single of the week and other exclusive material
|
79p per track, £7.99 per album
|
Napster
|
The now-legitimate website offers over 1,000,000 songs;
offers several streaming radio stations too
|
Subscription based—subscribers pay £9.99 a month to stream
any of the catalogue, plus another 99p to download on to a CD
|
Sony Connect
|
over 300,000 songs from the major labels; excellent sound
quality but compatible only with Sony products due to proprietary file
formats
|
From 80p- £1.20 per track, and £8- £10 per album
|
Bleep.com
|
Small catalogue of 15,000 songs with a focus on
independent music labels; high-quality downloads due to media files used
|
99p per track, £6.99 per album
|
Wippit
|
UK-based service; 175,000 songs to download; gives a
selection of free tracks every month
|
From 30p to £1 to download; alternatively, users can
subscribe to the service for £50 a year to gain access to 60,000 songs
|
OD2 System, used by: Mycokemusic.com HMV.com
MSN.com
TowerRecord.co.uk
Big Noise Music
|
These online sites use the OD2 system for music downloads;
they look after encryption, hosting, royalty management and the entire
e-commerce system; provides access to nearly 350,000 tracks from 12,000
recording artists
|
Varying product bundles, typically 99p for track download,
and 1p for streaming
|
For traditional music retailers the retailing landscape is
getting more competitive, with multiple channels of distribution emerging due
to the Internet and large supermarket chains now selling music CDs. Supermarkets
are becoming one of the main channels of distribution through which consumers
buy music. These supermarkets are stocking only a limited number of the
best-selling music titles, limiting the number of distribution outlets for new
and independent music. Only charts hits and greatest hits collections will make
it on to the shelves of such outlets.
Now consumers can buy albums from traditional Internet
retailers such as Amazon.com, and also on websites that utilize access to grey
markets such as cdwow.co.uk, as well as through legitimate download retailers.
This has left traditional music retail operations with a severe conundrum: how
can they entice more shoppers into their stores? The accompanying box
highlights where typical shoppers source their music at present.
Where do people buy their music?
Music stores (like HMV, Virgin Megastore)
|
16 per cent
|
Chains (like Woolworth, WHSmith)
|
16 per cent
|
Supermarkets (like Tesco, Asda)
|
21.6 per cent
|
Mail order
|
3.9 per cent
|
Internet sales (like Amazon.com)
|
7 per cent
|
Downloads
|
Not
yet measured
|
The issue of online music retailers using parallel
importing, such as CDWOW (www.cdwow.co.uk) is a concern. These retailers are
taking advantage of worldwide price discrepancies for legitimate music CDs,
sourcing them in low-cost countries like Hong Kong and exporting them into
European countries. Prices for music in these markets are considerably lower
than the market that they are exporting to, and they don’t even charge for
international delivery. Yet technological improvements have led to revenue opportunities
for the industry. Development such as online radio, digital rights management,
Internet streaming, tethered downloads (locked to PC), downloads (burnable,
portable), in-store kiosks, ring-tones, mobile message clips and games
soundtracks are great potential revenue sources. In an effort to unlock this
potential the major labels have digitized their entire back catalogues. In the
wake of these dramatic environmental changes the industry has had to radically
adapt. The ‘big four’ music labels are consolidating even further, developing a
digital music strategy, and re-evaluating their entire traditional business
model. Mobile phones are seen as the next primary channel of distribution for
digital music. High penetration levels in the market for mobile phones and the
inherent mobility advantages make this the next crucial battlefield for the
music industry.
The Internet may emerge as the primary channel of
distribution for music, and the music industry is going to have to adapt to
these changes. The move towards the online distribution of entertainment is
still in its infancy, with more investment into the telecommunications
infrastructure, such as greater Internet access, increased access to broadband
technology, 3G technology and changing the way people shop for music will
undoubtedly take time. The digital revolution will fundamentally change the way
people purchase and consume their musical preferences. In forthcoming years the
digital format will become more mainstream, leading to a proliferation of
channels of distribution for music. However, as with most new channels of
technology, catalogue shopping, Internet shopping likewise, and ‘video never
really killed the radio star’… but will the Internet kill the record store?
Questions:
Discuss the micro and macro forces that are affecting the
music industry.
Based on this analysis, what strategic options would you
recommend for both music publishers and music retailers in the current
marketing environment?
Discuss the advantages and disadvantages associated with
online distribution from a music label’s perspective.
CASE:
II The Sudkurier
The Sudkurier
is a regional daily newspaper in south-western Germany. On average 310,000
people in the area read the newspaper regularly. The great majority of those
readers subscribe to its home delivery service, which puts the paper on their
doorsteps early in the morning. On the market for the last 35 years, the Sudkurier contains editorial sections on
politics, the economy, sports, local news, entertainment and features, as well
as advertising. The newspaper is financially independent and its staff is free
of any political affiliation. Management at the Sudkurier
would like to bring the paper into line with the current needs of its readers.
For this purpose, the management team is considering the use of market
research.
Management would like to have information about the
following.
What newspaper or other media are the Sudkurier’s main competitors?
Do most readers read the Sudkurier
for the local news, sports and classified ads, and should these sections
therefore be expanded at the expense of the sections on politics and the
economy?
Should the Sudkurier’s
layout be modernized?
Do mostly lower levels of society read the Sudkurier?
Into what political category do readers and non-readers the Sudkurier?
Which suppliers of products and services consider the Sudkurier especially appropriate for
their advertising?
What advertising or information dot the readers think is
missing from the Sudkurier?
You are an employee of the Sudkurier
who has been instructed to obtain the requested information and to prepare your
findings for the decision-makers. You are in the fortunate position of
receiving regular reports about the people’s media use from the
Arbeitsgemeinschaft Media-Analyse e.V. Relevant excerpts from the most recent
survey are shown here as Tables 3 and Table 4
Table 3 Media
analysis of readership structure
Range
in Circulation Area (1)
|
Readers
per edition of SUDKURIER
|
National
average
in
%
|
|||
|
RANGE
|
Total
in %
|
|||
|
in
%
|
Absolute
|
|||
Total
|
|
53.5
|
310,000
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
Gender
|
Men
|
55.5
|
150,000
|
49.0
|
47.2
|
|
Women
|
51.6
|
160,000
|
51.0
|
52.8
|
Age
Groups
|
14-19
years
|
51.8
|
20,000
|
8.0
|
7.2
|
|
20-29 years
|
41.0
|
50,000
|
15.0
|
19.1
|
|
30-39 years
|
52.1
|
50,000
|
16.0
|
16.4
|
|
40-49 years
|
61.8
|
50,000
|
16.0
|
15.2
|
|
50-59 years
|
61.1
|
60,000
|
19.0
|
16.5
|
|
60-69 years
|
53.6
|
40,000
|
13.0
|
13.5
|
|
70 years and older
|
57.4
|
40,000
|
13.0
|
12.2
|
Educational
Level
|
Secondary
school without apprenticeship
|
49.4
|
60,000
|
18.0
|
17.6
|
|
Secondary
school with apprenticeship
|
50.8
|
100,000
|
31.0
|
39.6
|
|
Continuing
education without Abitur
|
60.8
|
110,000
|
36.0
|
27.0
|
|
Abitur,
university preparation, university/college
|
49.7
|
50,000
|
15.0
|
15.8
|
Occupation
|
Trainee,
pupil, student
|
44.7
|
40,000
|
11.0
|
11.0
|
|
Full-time
employee
|
54.6
|
160,000
|
50.0
|
51.7
|
|
Retire,
pensioner
|
57.3
|
70,000
|
23.0
|
21.8
|
|
Unemployed
|
52.4
|
50,000
|
16.0
|
15.5
|
Occupation
of main wage earner
|
Self-employed,
mid- to large business/Freelancer
|
63.8
|
20,000
|
5.0
|
3.1
|
|
Self-employed,
small business,/Farmer
|
59.9
|
30,000
|
10.0
|
7.1
|
|
Managers
and civil servants
|
58.6
|
30,000
|
9.0
|
8.7
|
|
Other
employees and civil servants
|
49.3
|
120,000
|
40.0
|
42.9
|
|
Skilled
staff
|
57.6
|
100,000
|
32.0
|
32.5
|
|
Unskilled
staff
|
38.7
|
10,000
|
4.0
|
5.6
|
Net
Household Income/month
|
4500
and more
|
62.7
|
100,000
|
31.0
|
23.9
|
|
3500-4500
|
52.7
|
60,000
|
19.0
|
20.8
|
|
2500-3500
|
54.9
|
80,000
|
26.0
|
25.9
|
|
to
2500
|
44.1
|
70,000
|
23.0
|
29.3
|
Number
of wage earners
|
1
earner
|
45.4
|
100,000
|
33.0
|
40.4
|
|
2 earner
|
56.5
|
130,000
|
41.0
|
42.6
|
|
3 earner
|
62.7
|
80,000
|
25.0
|
16.9
|
Household
Size
|
1
Person
|
41.8
|
50,000
|
14.0
|
17.9
|
|
2
Persons
|
55.5
|
90,000
|
29.0
|
31.8
|
|
3
Persons
|
59.5
|
70,000
|
22.0
|
22.4
|
|
4
Persons and more
|
54.8
|
110,000
|
35.0
|
27.9
|
Children
in Household
|
Children
less than 2 years of age
|
52.7
|
10,000
|
4.0
|
3.8
|
|
2
to less than 4 years
|
38.4
|
10,000
|
4.0
|
5.4
|
|
4
to less than 6 years
|
45.8
|
10,000
|
5.0
|
5.2
|
|
6
to less than 10 years
|
43.8
|
20,000
|
8.0
|
8.5
|
|
10
to less than 14 years
|
54.1
|
30,000
|
10.0
|
9.2
|
|
14
to less than 18 years
|
57.7
|
50,000
|
16.0
|
13.7
|
|
No
children under 14
|
54.9
|
250,000
|
79.0
|
77.4
|
|
No
children under 18
|
53.6
|
210,000
|
67.0
|
68.1
|
Driving
Licence
|
yes
|
55.2
|
250,000
|
80.0
|
73.0
|
|
no
|
47.3
|
60,000
|
20.0
|
27.0
|
Private
Automobile
|
|
55.5
|
270,000
|
86.0
|
80.0
|
Garden
|
own
garden
|
60.4
|
240,000
|
76.0
|
57.0
|
|
without
garden
|
39.8
|
70,000
|
23.0
|
43.0
|
Housing
|
own
house
|
62.1
|
180,000
|
58.0
|
46.0
|
|
own
apartment
|
45.9
|
10,000
|
3.0
|
3.0
|
|
rent
house or apartment
|
44.7
|
120,000
|
38.0
|
49.0
|
Electrical
Appliances
|
Freezer/Deep
freeze
|
59.6
|
200,000
|
62.0
|
51.0
|
Last
Holiday Journey
|
Within
the last 12 months
|
55.1
|
190,000
|
62.0
|
n.a.
|
|
1-2
years ago
|
51.0
|
40
,000
|
14.0
|
n.a.
|
|
More
than two years ago
|
48.6
|
50
,000
|
16.0
|
n.a.
|
|
Never
|
55.4
|
30
,000
|
9.0
|
n.a.
|
Last
Holiday Destination
|
Germany
|
57.4
|
70
,000
|
23.0
|
n.a.
|
|
Austria,
Switzerland, South Tyrol
|
48.7
|
60
,000
|
20.0
|
n.a.
|
|
Elsewhere
in Europe
|
53.4
|
130,000
|
42.0
|
n.a.
|
|
Country
outside Europe
|
51.4
|
20
,000
|
5.0
|
n.a.
|
|
Did
not travel
|
56.4
|
30
,000
|
9.0
|
n.a.
|
1)
Entire circulation area 310 ,000 readers per edition
Example:
53.5%
of people older than 14 years in the circulation of the Sudkurier daily
55.5%
of all men older than 14 years and 51.6% of women older than 14 read the Sudkurier daily; that is 150 ,000 men and
160 ,000 women.
|
Table 4 Reader
behaviour
What purchasing information is used?
Media purchasing information
for medium and long-term acquisition
(11 product areas; Basis: total population)
Daily newspaper 61%
Posters on the street 9 %
Leaflets 36 %
Television
24%
Radio 13%
Magazines 27 %
Free newspapers 49%
|
Credibility of advertising in the media
Advertising in… is generally believable and reliable
(Basis: broadest user group in each case)
Regional newspaper 49%
Television 30%
Public radio 20%
Privately-owned radio 14 %
Magazines 15%
Free newspaper 23%
|
Advertising in… is most informative
(Basis: broadest reading group)
Regional newspapers (subscription) 62
%
Television 47%
Public Radio 29%
Privately-owned radio 26%
Magazines 27
%
Free newspapers 36
%
|
Time spent reading daily newspaper
(Basis: broadest user group)
less than 15 minutes 7 %
15-24 minutes 21 %
25-34 minutes 28 %
35-65 minutes 34 %
more than 65 minutes 10 %
|
I often consult/depend on advertising in…
(Basis: broadest user group in each case)
Regional newspapers (subscription) 27 %
Television 11%
Public Radio 89%
Privately-owned radio 6%
Magazines 7 %
Free newspapers 18
%
|
|
Source: Regional Press Study, Gfk-Medienforschung
Contest-Census
Questions:
- Explain how you will methodically go about compiling the requested information covered in the seven questions for management. Include in your explanation an estimate of the expense involved in obtaining the information.
- Develop a 10-question questionnaire for the purpose of making a survey.
CASE:
III Unilever in Brazil: marketing
strategies for low-income customers
After three successful years in the Personal Care division
of Unilever in Pakistan, Laercio Cardoso was contemplating attractive
leadership positioning China when he received a phone call from Robert
Davidson, head of Unilever’s Home Care division in Brazil, his home country.
Robert was looking for someone to explore growth opportunities in the marketing
of detergents to low-income consumers living in the north-east of Brazil and
felt that Laercio had the seniority and skills necessary for the project.
Though he had not been involved in the traditional Unilever approach to
marketing detergents, his experience in Pakistan had made him acutely aware of
the threat posed by local detergent brands targeted at low-income consumers.
At the start of the project—dubbed ‘Everyman’—Laercio
assembled an interdisciplinary team and began by conducting extensive field
studies to understand the lifestyle, aspirations and shopping habits of
low-income consumers. Increasing detergent use by these consumers was crucial
for Unilever given that the company already had 81 per cent of the detergent
powder market. But some in the company felt that it should not fight in the
lower cost structures struggled to break even. How could Laercio justify
diverting money from a best-selling brand like Omo to invest in a lower-margin
segment?
Consumer behavior
The 48 million people living in the north-east (NE) of
Brazil lag behind their south-eastern (SE) counterparts on just about every
development indicator. In the NE, 53 per cent of the population live on less
than two minimum wages versus 21 per cent inn the SE. In the NE, only 28 per cent of households own a
washing machine versus 67 per cent in the SE. Women in the NE scrub clothes in
a washbasin or sink using bars of laundry soap, a process that requires intense
and sustained effort. They then add bleach to remove tough stains and only a
little detergent powder in the end, primarily to make the clothes smell good.
In the SE, the process is similar to European or North American standards.
Women mix powder detergent and softener
in a washing machine and use laundry soap and bleach only to remove the
toughest stains.
The penetration and usage of detergent powder and laundry
soap is the same in the NE and the SE (97 per cent). However, north-easterners
use a little less detergent (11.4 kg per years versus 12.9 kg) and a lot more
soap (20 kg versus 7 kg) than south-easterners. Many women in the NE view
washing clothes as one of the pleasurable routine activities of their week.
This is because they often do their washing in a public laundry, river or pond
where they meet and chat with their friends. In the SE, in contrast, most women
wash clothes alone at home. They perceive washing laundry as a chore and are
primarily interested in ways to improve the convenience of the process.
People in the NE and SE differ in the symbolic value they
attach to cleanliness. Many poor north-easterners are proud of the fact that
they keep themselves and their families clean despite their low income. Because
it is so labour intensive, many women see the cleanliness of clothes as an
indication of the dedication of the mother to her family, and personal and home
cleanliness is a main subject of gossip. In the SE, where most women own a
washing machine, it has much lower relevance for self-esteem and social status.
Along with price, the primarily low-income consumers of the NE evaluate
detergents on six key attributes (Figure 1 provides importance ratings, the
range of consumer expectations, and the perceived positioning of key detergent
brands on each attribute).
Competition
In 1996 Unilever was a clear leader in the detergent powder
category in Brazil, with an 81 per cent market share, achieved with three
brands: Omo (one of Brazil’s favourate brands across all categories) Minerva
(the only brand to be sold as both detergent powder and laundry soap with a
more hedonistic ‘care’ positioning) and Campeiro (Unilever’s cheapest brand).
Proctor & Gamble, which had recently entered the Brazilian market, had 15
per cent of the market with three brands (Ace, Bold and the low-price brand
Pop). Other competitors were smaller companies (see Figure 2).
The Brazilian fabric wash market consists of two categories:
detergent powder and laundry soap. In 1996 detergent was a US$106 million
(42,000 tons) market in the NE. In 1996 the NE market for laundry soap bars was
as large as the detergent powder market (US$102 million for 81,250 tons). The
NE market for laundry soap is much easier to produce than powdered laundry
detergent. Laundry soap is a multi-use product that has many home and personal
care uses. Table 5 provides key information on all powder and laundry soap
brands (packaging, positioning, key historical facts, and financial and market
data).
Table 5
Brand
|
Packaging
|
Positioning
|
Key Data
|
OMO
|
Cardboard pack:
1 kg & 500g.
|
Removes stains with low quantity of product when used in
washing machines, thus reducing the need for soap or bleach.
|
S: 55.20
WP: 3.00
FC: 1.65
PKC: 0.35
PC: 0.35
|
Minerva
|
Cardboard pack:
1 kg & 500g.
|
|
S: 17.60
WP: 2.40
FC: 1.40
PKC: 0.35
PC: 0.30
|
Campeiro
|
Cardboard pack:
1 kg & 500g.
|
|
S: 6.05
WP: 1.70
FC: 0.90
PKC: 0.35
PC: 0.20
|
Ace
|
Cardboard pack:
1 kg & 500g
|
|
|
Bold
|
Cardboard pack:
1 kg & 500g.
|
|
|
Pop
|
Cardboard pack:
1 kg & 500g.
|
|
|
Invicto
|
Cardboard pack:
1 kg & 500g.
|
|
|
Minerva
|
Plastic pack with 5 bars of 200g.
|
|
|
Bem-te-vi
|
Plastic pack with 5 bars of 200g or single bar of 200g.
|
|
|
Figure 1 & 2
Market Share and wholesale Price of Major Brands in the Laundry Soap and
Detergent Powder Categories in the Northeast in 1996
Decisions
Robert Davidson, head of Unilever’s Home Care Division in
Brazil, and Laercio Cardoso, head of the ‘Everyman’ research project aided at
understanding the low-income consumer segment, must re-examine Unilever’s
strategy for low-income consumers in the NE region of Brazil and make three
important decisions.
Go/no go. Should
Unilever divert money from its premium brands to invest in a lower-margin
segment of the market? Does Unilever have the right skills and structure to be
profitable in a market in which even small local entrepreneurs struggle to
break even? In the long run, what would Unilever gain and what would it risk
losing?
Marketing and branding strategy. Unilever already has three
detergent brands with distinct positionings.
Does it need to develop a new brand with a new value proposition or can
it reposition its existing brands or use a brand extension?
Marketing mix. What
price, product, promotion and distribution strategy would allow Unilever to
deliver value to low-income consumers without cannibalizing its own premium
brands too heavily? Is it just a matter of price?
Product
Unilever could produce a product comparable to Campeiro, its
cheapest product, but would it deliver the benefits that low-income consumers
wanted? Alternatively, Unilever could use Minerva’s formula but it might be too
expensive for low-income consumers. If they could eliminate some ingredients,
Unilever’s scientists could develop a third formula that would cost about 10
per cent more than Campeiro’s formula. The difficulty would be in determining
which attributes to eliminate, which to retain and which, if any would actually
need to be improved relative to both existing brands.
Larger packages would reduce the cost per kilo but could
price the product out of the weekly budget range of the poorest consumers.
Unilever could use a plastic sachet, which would cost 30 per cent of the price
of traditional cardboard boxes, but market research data had shown that
low-income consumers were attached to boxes and regarded anything else as good
for only second-rate products. One solution might be to launch multiple types
and sizes.
Price
Priced significantly above Campeiro and Minerva soap, the
product would be out of reach for the target segment. Priced too low, it would
increase the cost of the inevitable cannibalization of existing Unilever brands.
Should Unilever use coupons or other means to reduce the cost of the product
for low-income consumers? Or should it change the price of Omo, Minerva
and Campeiro?
Promotion
In the low-income segment, lower margins meant that volume
had to be reached very quickly for the product to break even. It was therefore
crucial to find a radical ‘story’, one that would immediately put the new brand
on the map. What would be the objective of the communication? What should be
the key message? Low-income consumers might be reluctant to buy a product
advertised ‘for the low-income people’ especially as products with that kind of
message are typically of inferior quality. On the other hand, using the classic
aspirational communication of most Brazilian brands could confuse consumers and
lead to unwanted cannibalization.
In regular detergent markets Unilever had established that
the most effective allocation of communication expenditure was 70 cent
above-the-line (media advertising) and 30 per cent below-the-line (trade
promotions, events, point- of-purchase marketing). The advantages of using
primarily media advertising are its low cost per contact and high reach because
almost all Brazilians, irrespective of income, are avid television watchers.
One alternative would be to use 70 per cent below-the-line communication. At
US$0.05 per kg, this plan would require only one-third of the cost of a
traditional Unilever communication plan. On the other hand, it would lower the
reach of communication, increase the cost of per contact, and make a
simultaneous launch in all north-eastern cities more difficult to
organize.
![]() |
Based on this analysis, what strategic options would you recommend for both music publishers and music retailers in the current marketing environment |
Distribution
Unilever did not have the ability to distribute to the
approximately 75,000 small outlets spread over the NE, yet access to these
stores was key because low-income consumers rarely shopped in large
supermarkets like Wal-Mart or Carrefour. Unilever could rely on its existing
network of generalist wholesalers who supplied its detergents and a wide
variety of products to small stores. These wholesalers had national coverage
and economies of scale but did not directly serve the small stores where
low-income consumers shopped, necessitating another layer of smaller
wholesalers, which increased their cost to US$0.10 per kg. Alternatively,
Unilever could contract with dozens of specialize distributors who would get
exclusive rights to sell the new Unilever detergent. These specialized
distributors would have a better ability to implement point of purchase
marketing and would cost less ($0.05 per kg).
Question:
- Describe the consumer behaviour differences among laundry products’ customers in Brazil. What market segments exists?
- Should Unilever bring out a new brand or use one of its existing brands to target the north-eastern Brazilian market?
- How should the brand be positioned in the marketplace and within the Unilever family of brands?
Case
4 Ryanair: the low fares airlines
The year 2004 did not begin well for Ryanair. On 28 January,
the airline issued its first profits warning and ended a run of 26 quarters of
rising profits. On that day, when the markets opened, the company was worth €5
billion. By close of business, its value had shrunk to worth €3.6 billion, as
its share price plunged from worth €6.75 to €4.86. Investors were dismayed by
the airline’s admission that it was facing ‘an enormous and sudden reduction of
25 to 30 per cent in yields’ (i.e. average fare levels) in the first quarter of
2004 (the last fiscal quarter of 2004). This was on top of an earlier fall of
10 to 15 per cent in the first nine months.
In April 2004, Chief Executive Michael O’Leary forecast a
‘bloodbath’, an ‘awful’ 2004/2005 winter for European airlines, amid continuing
fare wars, with a shakeout among the many budget airlines. ‘We will be helping
to make it awful,’ warned Mr O’Leary, as he announced an 800,000 free seats
giveaway. The most difficult markets were predicted to be Germany and the UK
regions where many new carriers, which were ‘losing money on an heroic scale’,
had entered the arena. O’Leary anticipated that the company’s 2004 profits
would decline by 10 per cent, while 2005 profits would increase by up to 20 per
cent with a 5 per cent drop in yields. However, if yields were to fall by as
much as 20 per cent, the 2005 outcome would be break-even, at best.
Yet, by 31 May 2005, on Ryanair’s 20th birthday,
the carrier was able to announce record results for the year ended 31 March
2005. Both passenger volumes and net profits grew year on year by 19 per cent
to 27.6 million from 23.1 million and €268.9 from €226.6 million respectively.
The all- important passenger yield figure (revenue per passenger) grew by 2 per
cent, partially offsetting the 14 per cent yield decline in 2003/2004.
Ancillary revenues were 40 per cent higher, rising faster than passenger
volumes, which resulted in total revenues rising by 24 per cent to €1.337
billion. Operating costs rose 25 per cent, fractionally more than revenue
growth, due principally to higher fuel costs. The 2005 results announcement was
followed by a 3.4 per cent jump in the company’s share price, to close to €6.46
on the day.
Ryanair’s adjusted after-tax margin for the full year at 20
per cent compared very to figures for Aer Lingus, British Airways, easyJet,
Lufthansa, Southwest and Virgin, with margins of 8, 1, 3, minus 5, 7, .1 per
cent respectively (2003/2004 results). Despite the dire warnings and the
temporary dip in fiscal 2004, Ryanair had arguably come through its crisis with
flying colours. How did it manage this?
Overview of Ryanair
Ryanair, Europe’s first budget airline, with 229 routes
across 20 countries at of May 2005, is one of the world’s most profitable,
fastest-growing carriers. Founded in 1985 by the Ryan family as an alternative
to the then state monopoly carrier Aer Lingus, Ryanair started out as a
full-service airline. After accumulating severe financial losses, finally, in
1990/91, the company came up with a survival plan, spearhead by Michael O’Leary
and the Ryans, to transform itself into a low-fares no-frills carrier, based on
the model pioneered by Southwest Airlines, the Texas-based operator. Ryanair,
first floated on the Dublin Stock Exchange in 1997, is quoted on the Dublin and
London Stock exchanges and on NASDAQ, where it was admitted to the NASDAQ-100
in 2002. In June 2005, Ryanair’s market capitalization stood €5 billion, the
second highest carrier in the world, next to Southwest Airlines, and ahead of
airlines with vastly greater turnover—such as Lufthansa with capitalization at
€4.7 billion, British Airways at €4.3 billion and Air France/KLM at €3.5
billion. Its market capitalization was nearly four times that of easyJet, its
UK-based budget airline rival. This was despite easyJet’s higher turnover,
similar passenger volumes and a slightly larger fleet.
Ryanair’s fares strategy
Ryanair’s core strategy entails offering the lowest fares,
and the airline claims that it generally makes its lowest fares widely
available by allocating a majority of seat inventory to its two lowest fare
categories. In fact, was Ryanair, originally styled as the ‘low-fares airline’,
actually becoming a ‘no-fares airline’? Half of Ryanair’s passenger will be
flying for free by 2009, pledged Michael O’Leary in an interview with a German
newspaper. He said that ticket prices would fall by an average 5 per cent a
year over the next five years, as passenger numbers grew by five million
annually. One analyst speculated that Ryanair pronouncement on free seats ‘is
designed to put the wind up potential competitors in the hotly contested German
market. Of course, a balance must be struck between low fares to attract
customers and a sufficient yield to ensure viability.
An integral part of the low fares strategy is revenue
enhancement through ancillary activities, increasingly used to subsidize
airfares in order to improve Ryanair margins to compensate for falls in fare
yields. These include on-board sales, charter flights, travel reservations and
insurance, car rentals, in-flight television advertising, and advertising
outside its air-craft, whereby a corporate sponsor pays to paint an aircraft,
whereby a corporate sponsor pays to paint an aircraft with its logo.
Advertising on Ryanair’s popular website also provides ancillary income.
Despite the abolition of duty-free sales on intra-EU travel in 1999, Ryanair’s
revenue from duty-paid sales and ancillary services has continued to rise. In
2005, ancillary revenues comprised 18.3 per cent of total operating revenue, up
from 16.1 per cent the year before, and the ambition is to grow at twice the
rate of increase in its passenger traffic. The company has outlined plans to
continue raising ancillary revenues through further penetration of existing
products and the introduction of new ones, especially on-board entertainment
and gaming products/services. Ryanair is also considering entering the highly
competitive mobile phone market and has been in talks with various UK operators
with a view to forming a joint venture.
Its low fares policy notwithstanding, Ryanair was able to
realize a 2 per cent growth in yields in fiscal 2005. This is attributable to a
number of favourable factors in the competitive landscape. Underlying passenger
growth volumes returned in the industry as a whole, reducing the intensity of
competition. Mainstream European operators like British Airways, Lufthansa and
Air France/KLM were increasingly abandoning the short-haul sector, preferring
to concentrate their growth on more lucrative long-run haul routes. Moreover,
these airlines reacted to the massive price rise in the cost of aviation fuel
by introducing a fuel surcharge on their fares. For example, the surcharge
levied by British Airways equated to 22 per cent of an average Ryanair fare.
Another favourable factor was the failure of the threat of
new entrants to materialize. Michael O’Leary’s prophecy of a 2004/2005 winter
bloodbath in the European airline industry had been based on the forecast of
many new entrants into the budget airlines sector, thus intensifying
overcapacity. While new rivals continued to enter the fray, at any one time
large numbers were also dying off. Autumn 2004 saw the demise of a number of
budget airlines—for example, Volare, an Italian low-fare and charter operator,
and V-Bird, a Dutch-owned carrier. Yet, new entrants were still launching.
However, it was agreed that the industry could not sustain the some 47low-fares
airlines operating as of the end of November 2004, Michael O’Leary predicted
that the anticipated shake-out would be accelerated by rising oil prices. ‘Many
of our competitor airlines who were losing money heroically when fuel was US$25
a barrel are doomed the longer it stays at US$50. We anticipate there will be
further airline casualties as the perfect storm of declining fares and record
high oil prices force loss-making carriers out of the industry.
Low fares require cost savings
To quote Michael O’Leary, ‘Any fool can sell low air fares
and lose money. The difficult bit is to sell the lowest air fares and make
profits. If you don’t make profits, you can’t lower your air fares or reward
your people invest in new aircraft or take on the really big airlines like BA
and Lufthansa.’
According to the company, its no-frills service allows it to
prioritize features important to its clientele, such as frequent departures,
advance reservations, baggage handling and consistent on-time services.
Simultaneously, it eliminates non-essential extras that interfere with the
reliable, low-cost delivery of its basic flights. The eliminated extras include
advance seat assignments, in-flight meals, multi-class seating, access to a
frequent-flyer programme, complimentary drinks and amenities. In 1997, Ryanair
dropped its cargo services, at an estimated annual cost of IR£400,000 in
revenue. Without the need to load and upload cargo, the turnaround time of an
aircraft was reduced from 30 to 25 minutes, according to the company. It claims
that business travellers, attracted by frequency and punctuality, comprise 40
per cent of its passengers, despite often less conveniently located airports
and the absence of pampering.
In conjunction with the elimination of non-essential extras,
the organization of its operations enables the airline to minimize costs, based
on five main sources.
Fleet commonality (Boeing
737s, like Southwest Airlines): this results in lower maintenance and staff
training costs. In 2005, the company negotiated a new Boeing deal that takes
down its per-seat costs for all post-January 2005 deliveries to rock-bottom
levels. This deal not only establishes a platform for growth; a younger fleet
also enables further cost reductions through lower fuel utilization and
maintenance costs.
Contracting out of
aircraft cleaning, ticketing, baggage handling and other services, other than
at Dublin Airport; this is more economical and flexible, while it entails less
aggravation in terms of employee relations.
Airport charges and
point-to-point route policy: Ryanair uses secondary airports that are less
congested, motivated to offer better deals and have fewer delays, resulting in
increased punctuality and shorter turnaround times.
Staff costs and
productivity: productivity-based pay schemes and non-unionized staff.
Marketing costs;
Ryanair was the first airline to reduce and finally eliminate travel agents’
fees. In January 2000, Ryanair launched its www.ryanair.com website. This has
had the effect of saving money on staff costs, agents’ commissions and computer
reservation charges, while significantly contributing to growth. In 2005,
Internet sales accounted for 97 per cent of all bookings. Ryanair supplements
its advertising with the use of free publicity to highlight its position as the
low fares champion, by attacking various constituencies that threaten its cost
structure. These include EU regulators, airport authorities, politicians and
trade unions. Its per passenger marketing costs of 60c are considered to be the
lowest across the European airline sector.
The year 2005 saw enormous volatility in the price of oil,
and the global airline industry faced losses of US$6 billion. Ryanair, which
had been unhedged with respect to oil prices since September 2004, announced on
1 June that it was hedging 75 per cent of its fuel needs for the October 2005
to March 2006 period, at a price of US$47 a barrel. At times, in previous
weeks, the price had stood at US$53-plus per barrel. At the end of June, the
price had hit US$60 and analysts were predicting it would rise to US$70-plus in
the coming months.
Low costs contribute to a low break-even load factor of 62
per cent, so the airline can make money even if it fills fewer seats than other
budget competitors with higher costs and higher break-even load factors. For
example, easyJet’s break-even load factor is 73 per cent, while that of Virgin
Express is 83 per cent. Table 6 shows Ryanair’s operating cost structure.
Table 6 Ryanair
consolidated profit and loss accounts
Operating revenues
Scheduled revenues
Ancillary revenues
|
|
Year ended 31 March 2005
€000
|
|
Year ended 31 March 2004
€000
|
1,128,116
|
924,566
|
|||
208,470
|
149,658
|
|||
Total operating revenues—continuing operations
|
1,336,586
|
|
1,074,224
|
|
Operating expenses
|
|
|
|
|
Staff costs
|
|
140,997
|
|
123,624
|
Depreciation and amortization
|
|
98,703
|
|
98,130
|
Other operating expenses
|
|
|
|
|
Fuel and oil
|
|
265,276
|
|
174,991
|
Maintenance, materials and repairs
|
37,934
|
|
43,420
|
|
Marketing and distribution costs
|
19,622
|
|
16,141
|
|
Aircraft rentals
|
|
33,471
|
|
11,541
|
Route charges
|
|
135,672
|
|
110,271
|
Airport and handling charges
|
|
178,384
|
|
147,221
|
other
|
|
97,038
|
|
78,034
|
Total operating expenses
|
1,007,097
|
|
803,373
|
|
Operating profit before exceptional costs and goodwill
|
|
329,489
|
|
270,851
|
Profit for the year
|
|
266,741
|
|
206,611
|
Customer service
The airline’s claims of attention to customer service are
encompassed in its Passenger Charter, which embraces a number of doctrines:
Sell the lowest fares at all times on all routes and match
competitors’ special offers.
Allow flight and name changes with requisite fee
Strive to deliver on-time performance
Provide information to passengers regarding commercial and
operational conditions
Provide complaint response within seven days
Provide prompt refunds
Eliminate overbooking and involuntary denial of boarding
Publish monthly service statistics
eliminate lost or delayed luggage
Ryanair will not provide refreshments or meals or
accommodation to passengers facing delays; any passenger who wish to avail
themselves of such services will be asked to pay for them directly to the
service provider
Ryanair facilitates wheelchair passengers travelling in
their own wheelchair; where passengers require a wheelchair, Ryanair directs
those passengers to a third-party wheelchair supplier at the passenger’s own
expense; Ryanair is lobbying the handful of airports that do not provide a free
wheelchair service to do so.
The company has confirmed that it would introduce a number
of cost-cutting new features on its flights. For instance, the Ryanair fleet
would heretofore be devoid of reclining seats, window blinds, headrests, seat
pockets and other ‘non-essentials’. Leather seats instead of cloth ones would
allow faster turnaround times since leather is quicker and easier to clean.
More controversially, Michael O’Leary hoped eventually to wean passengers off
checked-in luggage, eliminating the need for baggage handling, suitcase holding
areas and lost property. In 2004, Ryanair had one of the lowest baggage
allowances of any major airline, at 15 kg a person, and charged up to €7 for
every additional kilo, one of the highest surcharges in European aviation.
Successive Annual Reports cite-on-time performance (defined
as up to 15 minutes after scheduled time in UK Civil Aviation Authority
statistics) and baggage handling as of key importance to customers. On
punctuality, Ryanair claims to be the most punctual airline between Dublin and
London. On baggage handling, Ryanair claims less than one bag lost per 1000
carried, better than even the best US airline, Alaska Airlines, with 3.48 bags
per 1000 lost, and considerably better than its role model Southwest Airlines
with 5.00 per 1000 lost.
Tables 7and 8, and Figure 3 provide some independent
comparisons of Ryanair with other airlines on punctuality and customer
perceptions.
Reporting airport/airline
|
Origin/ destination
|
% early to No. of 15minutes
|
Average delay flights
|
||
|
flights
|
late
|
(minutes)
|
unmatched
|
|
Birmingham—Ryanair
|
Dublin
|
180
|
88
|
6
|
0
|
Birmingham—Aer Lingus
|
Dublin
|
299
|
89
|
7
|
2
|
Birmingham—MyTravel
|
Dublin
|
4
|
50
|
20
|
0
|
Heathrow—Aer Lingus
|
Dublin
|
785
|
71
|
16
|
2
|
Heathrow—bmi British Midland
|
Dublin
|
432
|
71
|
14
|
0
|
Stansted—Ryanair
|
Dublin
|
727
|
79
|
11
|
1
|
Gatwick—British Airways
|
Dublin
|
180
|
82
|
9
|
0
|
Gatwick—Ryanair
|
Dublin
|
298
|
87
|
8
|
2
|
Heathrow— bmi British Midland
|
Brussels
|
354
|
73
|
13
|
1
|
Heathrow— British Airways
|
Brussels
|
452
|
84
|
9
|
2
|
Heathrow— bmi British Midland
|
Palermo
|
8
|
25
|
37
|
0
|
Heathrow—Alitalia
|
Milan(Linate)
|
174
|
63
|
15
|
0
|
Heathrow— British Airways
|
Milan(Linate)
|
178
|
80
|
10
|
0
|
Heathrow— bmi British Midland
|
Milan(Linate)
|
172
|
68
|
13
|
0
|
Heathrow—Alitalia
|
Milan (Malpensa)
|
298
|
48
|
24
|
0
|
Heathrow— British Airways
|
Milan (Malpensa)
|
180
|
80
|
10
|
0
|
Stansted— Ryanair
|
Bergamo
|
172
|
76
|
10
|
0
|
Stansted— easyJet
|
Bologna
|
60
|
70
|
14
|
0
|
Stansted— easyJet
|
Milan(Linate)
|
60
|
42
|
39
|
0
|
Stansted— easyJet
|
Rome (Ciampio)
|
120
|
76
|
12
|
0
|
Stansted— Ryanair
|
Rome (Ciampio)
|
356
|
79
|
9
|
0
|
Stansted— easyJet
|
Edinburgh
|
327
|
60
|
20
|
0
|
Stansted— easyJet
|
Nice
|
120
|
70
|
24
|
0
|
Stansted— Virgin Express
|
Nice
|
1
|
0
|
184
|
0
|
Stansted— Ryanair
|
Montpellier
|
59
|
76
|
14
|
2
|
Stansted— Ryanair
|
Prestwick
|
562
|
87
|
6
|
4
|
Stansted— easyJet
|
Glasgow
|
276
|
87
|
8
|
0
|
Glasgow—Aer Lingus
|
Dublin
|
176
|
80
|
9
|
4
|
Glasgow—bmi British Midland
|
Dublin
|
2
|
100
|
0
|
0
|
On punctuality, it must be borne in mind that one is not
necessarily comparing like with like when contrasting figures for congested
Heathrow with Stansted or Luton, even if all serve London. Also not counted in
the statistics were cancelled flights. Ryanair has been known to ‘consolidate’
passengers by transferring them from their original flight to later or
alternative routing without any notice, if passengers were unfortunate enough
to have originally been booked on a low seat occupancy flight. Ryanair has
announced that it would ignore European Commission proposals stipulating that
passengers whose flight has been cancelled and who have to wait for an
alternative flight should be provided with care while waiting, stating ‘we do
not, and never will offer refreshments’.
Clouds on the horizon?
Despite its winning performance in its 2005 results, a
number of issues faced Ryanair
While the competitive threat of new budget carriers had not
emerged, some of the mainstream carriers were becoming quasi-budget airlines on
short-haul routes. An important instance of this was Aer Lingus, the national
state-owned airline of Ireland, operating domestic and international services,
with a fleet of 30 aircraft. The events of 11 September 2001 were particularly
traumatic for Aer Lingus, as the airline teetered on the verge of bankruptcy.
In late 2001, the choice was to change, or to be taken over or liquidated. Led
by a determined and focused chief executive and senior management team, the
company set about cutting costs. By the end of 2002, Aer Lingus had turned a
2001 €125 million loss into a €33 million profit, and it improved still further
in 2003 with a net profit of €69.2 million. In essence. Aer Lingus claimed that
it had transformed itself into a low-fares airline, and that it matched Ryanair
fares on most routes, or that it was only very slightly higher. The airline’s
chief operating officer said that “Aer Lingus no longer offers a gold-plated
service to customers, but offers a more practical and appropriate service…it
clearly differentiates itself from no-frills carriers. We fly to main airports
and not 50 miles away. We assign seats for passengers, we beat low fares
competitors on punctuality, even though we fly to more congested airports, and
we always fulfil our commitment to customers—unlike no frills carrier. While
Aer Lingus had been an early adopter, other mainstream airlines like British
Airways and Air France/KLM were also converting short-haul intra-European routes
to the value model offered by Aer Lingus.
Further source of pressure came from the EU. A decision from
the EU Commission in February 2004 ruled that had been receiving illegal state
subsidies for its base airport at publicly owned Charleroi Airport (styled
‘Brussels South’ by Ryanair). Of course, it was not only the Charleroi decision
but also the precedent it could set that was of concern. Other deals with
public airports would come under scrutiny, although the vast majority of the
airline’s slots were at private airports. Also, it was estimated that Ryanair
would have to repay €2.5 million and €7 million to Charleroi’s regional
government. Ryanair appealed the decision, but also threatened to initiate
state aid cases and complaints against every other airline flying into any
state airports offering concessions and discounts. Airport fees comprised 19
per cent of Ryanair’s operating costs and were deemed to be an inherent part of
the airline’s low-cost model. Thus, Ryanair warned that there was no mid-cost
alternative model. Nevertheless, two months after the Charleroi verdict,
Ryanair confirmed that it had agreed a new deal there. It would keep flying all
its 11 routes from Charleroi, continuing existing airports and handling charges
until the airport, which accommodated 1.8 million passengers a year at the
time, reached two million passengers a year. The EU Commission was not readily
convinced and initiated an investigation of the new settlement.
On another regulatory matter, the EU had devised fresh rules
to cover overbooking that results in boarding denials to passengers by
air-lines. Air travellers bumped off overbooked flights by EU airlines would
receive automatic compensation of between €250 and €600. Compensation might
also be claimed when flights are cancelled for reasons that are the carrier’s
responsibility, provided the passengers have not been given two weeks’ notice
or offered alternative flights. Ryanair declared that the new rules would not
impact its operations, as it did not overlook its flights, and had the fewest
number of cancellations and the best punctuality record in Europe. It suggested
that, it the EU is serious, it should just outlaw the practice of over-booking
entirely.
A few days prior to the EU decision on
Charleroi, on 30 January 2004, at the Central London County Court, a disabled
man won a landmark case against Ryanair after it charged him £18 (€25) for a
wheelchair he needed at Stansted to get from the check-in desk to the aircraft.
The passenger was awarded £1336 (€2400) in compensation from Ryanair, as the
UK-based Disability Commission said it may launch a class action against the
airline on behalf of 35 other passengers. Ryanair’s immediate reaction was to
levy 70c a flight on all customers using the affected airports. In December
2004, the decision against Ryanair was upheld on appeal, although it was
somewhat mitigated when the Court of Appeal decided that Stansted Airport was
also answerable and had to pay half of Ryanair’s liability for damages, with
interest. In response, Ryanair’s lawyer suggested that the 50:50 split in
liability was unclear and unexplained, and ‘could well have been delivered by
King Solomon’.
Also in 2004, a disgruntled Ryanair passenger set up a
website inviting complaints about the airline. Ryanair moved to have the
website shut down in early 2005, on the grounds that it contained material that
is ‘untrue, unfounded, malicious and deeply damaging to the good name and
trading reputation of Ryanair’, and that the name and appearance of the site,
which resembled that of Ryanair’s home website could be construed as ‘abusive
registration’. However, the site has reappeared under an ISP provider in
Canada, and its number of hits has increased since the incident was reported in
the British satirical magazine Private
Eye.
On another front, Ryanair was in dispute against the British
Airports Authority (BAA), as it filed a writ at the High Court in London for
alleged ‘monopoly abuse’ at Stansted. Michael O’Leary warned that the action
was only the first skirmish in what would become ‘the mother and father of a
war’. The Chief Executive of the BAA announced that he did not intend to
negotiate further reductions to Ryanair’s deeply discounted deal on landing
charges at Stansted, due to finish in March 2007. The average charge per
passenger would rise form £3 to £5 at the airport, whose capacity utilization
was now so high that it was running out of slots at peak times. Meanwhile,
Michael O’Leary was scathing about ‘grandiose plans’ to build a second runway
at Stansted at cost of £4 billion, ‘when the cost of a runway and even a
terminal should run no more than £400 million.
As if these issues were not enough, a number of Dublin-based
Ryanair pilots were planning to establish their own association, the Ryanair
European Pilots Association with links to the British Airline Pilots
Association (BALPA), the Irish Airline Pilots Association (IALPA) and the
European Cockpit Association. In November 2004, these pilots, supported by
IALPA, took a complaint about victimization against Ryanair to the Irish Labour
Court. Ryanair could potentially face a compensation bill of £44 million if 170
victimization claims brought by its Dublin-based pilots were to be upheld. The company
had out-lined various consequences to pilots if they joined a trades union:
possible redundancy when the existing 737-200 fleet was phased out, no share
options or pay increases, non promotions and no payment for future recurrent
training. The airline declared its determination to keep out trades unions and
to take a case to the High Court to prove that legislation attempting to force
companies to negotiate with unions was unconstitutional. A ruling favourable to
the pilots in February 2005 by the Irish Labour Relations Commission, ordering
that Ryanair had to attend a hearing dealing with the pilot’ complaints, was
dismissed by Michael O’Leary: ‘It is no surprise that the brothers have found
in favour of the brothers. We will fight them on the beaches, in the fields,
and in the valleys,’ he said. Meanwhile, the airline is also fighting a number
of legal challenges, including proceedings against IALPA, accusing it of
conducting an organized campaign of harassment and intimidation of Ryanair
pilots through a website, warning them off flying the airline’s new aircraft.
Indeed, the carrier claims that specific threats issued on the website are
being investigated by the Irish police. In April 2005, Ryanair abandoned an
experiment in paid-for in flight entertainment, after passengers were reluctant
to rent the consoles at the £5 required to receive the service. Apparently,
market research discovered passengers are unwilling to invest on such short
flights, with the ideal being six-hour flights to longer-haul holiday
destinations. When the experiment was launched in November 2004, Michael
O’Leary hailed the move as ‘the next revolution of the low-fares industry…we
expect to make enormous sums of money’.
Questions:
How does Ryanair’s pricing strategy account for its
successful performance to date? Would you suggest any changes to Ryanair’
pricing approach? Why/why not?
Is the ‘no-fares’ strategy a useful approach for Ryanair in
the short term? In the long term?
Do the issues facing Ryanair threaten its low-fares model?
Case
V LEGO: the toy industry changes
How times have changed for LEGO. The iconic Danish toy
maker, best known for its LEGO brick, was once the must-have toy for every
child. However, LEGO has been facing a number of difficulties since the late
1990: falling sales, falling market share, job losses and management
reshuffles. Once vote ‘Toy of the Century’ and with a history of uninterrupted
sales growth, it appears LEGO has fallen victim to changing market trends.
Today’s young clued-up consume is far more likely to be seen surfing the web,
texting on their mobile phone, listening to their MP3 player or playing on
their Game Boy than enjoying a LEGO set. With intensifying competition in the
toy market, the challenge for LEGO is to create aspirational, sophisticated,
innovative toys that are relevant to today’s tweens.
History
In 1932 Ole Kirk Christiansen, a Danish carpenter,
established a business making wooden toys. He named the company ‘LEGO’ in 1934,
which comes from Danish words ‘leg godt’, meaning ‘play well’. Later,
coincidentally, it was discovered that in Latin it means, ‘I put together’. The
LEGO name was chosen to represent company philosophy, where play is seen as
integral to a child’s successful growth and development. In 1947 the company
began to make plastic products and in 1949 it launched its world-famous
automatic building brick. Ole Kirk Christiansen was succeeded by his son
Godtfred in 1950, and under this new leadership the LEGO group introduced the
revolutionary ‘LEGO System of Play’, which focused on the importance of
learning through play. The company began exporting in 1953 and soon developed a
strong international reputation.
The LEGO brick, with its new interlocking system, was
launched in 1958. During the 1960s LEGO began to use wheels, small motors and
gears to give its products the power of motion. LEGOLAND was established in
Billund in 1968, as a symbol of LEGO creativity and imagination. Later, in the
1990s, two new parks were opened in Britain and California. LEGO figures were
introduced in 1974, giving the LEGO brand a personality. The 1980s saw the
beginning of digital development, with LEGO forming a partnership with Media
Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the USA. This resulted
in the launch of LEGO TECHNIC Computer and paved the way for LEGO robots. LEGO
introduced a constant flow of new products in the 1990s, and placed greater
focus on intelligence and behaviour. The new millennium saw LEGO crowned the
‘Toy of the Century’ by Fortune magazine
and the British Association of Toy Retailers. LEGO is currently the fourth
largest toy manufacturer in the world after Mattel, Hasbro and Bandai, with a
presence in over 130 countries.
Challenges for the traditional toy market
A number of environmental shifts have been affecting the toy
market over the past decade. Some of these are described below.
Kids getting older
younger. By the time most kids reach the age of eight they have outgrown
the offerings of the traditional toy market. A central factor in children
abandoning toys earlier in their lack of free time to play. Children today have
a lot more scheduled activities and, with greater emphasis on academic
achievement, a lot more time is spent studying. Faced with more media and
entertainment choices these sophisticated and technologically savvy consumers
are favouring electronic, fashion, make-up and lifestyle products. The most
susceptible group to this age compression are ‘tweens’—children between the
ages of 8 and 12—a US$5 billion market, accounting for 20 per cent of the
US$20.7 billion traditional toy industry.
Intensifying
competition from the electronic and games market. As noted above, today’s
young consumer is far more likely to be seen surfing the web, texting on their
mobile phone, listening to their MP3 player or playing on their Game Boy than
enjoying a LEGO set. A survey by NPD Funworld, in 2003, found that tween boys
who played video game spent approximately 40 per cent less time playing with
action figures when compared with the previous year. Handheld toys with a video
and gaming element suit the mobile lifestyle of today’s tween. As demand for
these more sophisticated toys increases, traditional toy makers are facing more
direct competition with the electronic and video games market.
Fickleness of young
consumers. The toy market today is very fashion-driven, leading to shorter
product life cycles. Toy manufacturers are facing increasing pressure to
develop a competency in forecasting market changes and improving their speed of
response to those changes. In an effort to get a share of the huge revenues
generated by the latest hot toy, many toy manufacturers have left themselves
more vulnerable to greater earnings volatility.
Power of the retail
sector. Consolidation in the retail sector and the expansion of many retail
chains has placed enormous pressure on the profit margins of traditional toy
makers. Major retailers can exert tremendous power over their suppliers because
of the vast quantities they buy. Many retailers insert a clause in their
supplier contracts that gives them a certain percentage of profit regardless of
the retail price.
Traditional toy makers are struggling to keep up with these
environmental changes. It appears no one is safe, when even the world-renowned
LEGO brand can fall victim to changing market trends. The cracks first began to
show in 1998, when LEGO made a loss for the first time in its history. This
began a major reversal in the fortunes of a company that had become accustomed
to decades of uninterrupted sales growth (see Table 9). Ironically, it is the
success of LEGO that may ultimately have paved the way for its downfall.
Table 9 : LEGO
financial information
LEGO financial information (Mdkk)
|
2004
|
2003
|
2002
|
2001
|
2000
|
Income statement
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
6704
|
7196
|
10006
|
9475
|
8379
|
Expenses
|
(6601)
|
( 8257)
|
(9248)
|
(8554)
|
(9000)
|
Profit/(loss) before special items, financial income and
expenses and tax
|
103
|
(1061)
|
868
|
921
|
(621)
|
Impairment of fixed assets
|
( 723)
|
( 172)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Restructuring expenses
|
( 502
|
( 283)
|
-
|
( 122)
|
( 191)
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
(1122)
|
(1516)
|
868
|
799
|
( 812)
|
Financial income and expenses
|
( 115)
|
18
|
( 251)
|
( 278)
|
( 280)
|
Profit/(loss) before tax
|
(1237)
|
(1498)
|
617
|
521
|
(1092)
|
Profit/(loss) on continuing activities
|
(1473)
|
(953 )
|
348
|
420
|
( 788)
|
Profit/(loss) discontinuing activities
|
( 458)
|
18
|
(22)
|
(54)
|
(75)
|
Net profit/(loss) for the year
|
(1931)
|
(935)
|
326
|
366
|
(863)
|
Employees:
Average number of employees (full-time), continuing
activities
|
5569
|
6542
|
6659
|
6474
|
6570
|
Average number of employees (full-time), discontinuing
activities
|
1725
|
1756
|
1657
|
1184
|
1328
|
What went wrong for LEGO
According to Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen, owner of the business
and grandson of its founder, following many years of success the LEGO culture
had become ‘inward looking’ and ‘complacent’ and had failed to keep pace with
the changes taking place in the toy market. This lack of environmental
sensitivity was evident in the US market in 2003, where LEGO failed to predict
demand for its Bionicle figures, resulting in two of its best-selling products
from this range being out of stock in the run-up to Christmas. It appeared
nothing had been learned from the previous year, when also in the run-up to
Christmas the much sought-after Hogwarts Castle sets were out of stock across
the UK.
LEGO had also become over-dependent on licences in the
1990s, for products such as Star Wars and Harry Potter, as its main source of
growth. This left LEGO vulnerable to the faddishness of these products: the years
in which Star Wars and Harry Potter films were released coincided with
profitable years for LEGO, while losses were reported in the intervening years.
The diversification of the brand into the manufacture of
items such as clothing, bags and accessories was another mistake for LEGO. The
company over-complicated its product portfolio and it ran close to
over-stretching the LEGO brand. Kristiansen, resumed leadership in 2004 to
guide the company out of crisis, is quoted as saying ‘LEGO was so busy chasing
the fashion of the day it took its eye off its core brand.’
He phasing-out of its long-established pre-school Duplo
brand, to be replaced by LEGO Explore, was another error. Parents were left
confused, with many believing the larger-size Duplo brick had been
discontinued. This error resulted in a loss of revenues from the pre-school
market in 2003. Adult fans of LEGO (AFOLs) were also left disgruntled when LEGO
changed the colour of its new building bricks so that they no longer matched
the colour of the old bricks.
While other toy manufacturers have moved production to
low-cost destinations such as China, LEGO has been reluctant to follow suit.
Today it still manufactures the bulk of its product in Billund and Switzerland.
The reasons posited for the company’s reluctance to move include a strong sense
of loyalty to Billund, where one-quarter of the residents work at the LEGO
factory, and concerns that a move would affect its brand image. While its
loyalty to these sites is admirable, and brand image worries understandable,
the question is whether its long-term future is viable without such a move.
A new direction for LEGO
In an attempt to turn around its fortunes LEGO has developed
a number of new marketing strategies. These include the following.
A back-to-basics strategy is seeing LEGO refocus on its core
brick-based product range and place more emphasis on its key target
group—younger children. In 2003, LEGO relaunched its classic range of
brick-based products and many new product lines have centred on eternal themes
such as Town, Castle, Pirates and Vikings. LEGO has reinstated the Duplo brand
and introduced the Quarto brand, which consists of larger bricks for children
under two. Other new lines include LEGO Sports, born from strategic alliances
with the National Hockey League and US National Basketball Association. While
the traditional audience of LEGO has always been young boys it has introduced a
new range, ‘Clikits’, a social toy developed specifically for a female
audience. Clikits consists of pretty pastel-coloured bricks, which provide
numerous options to create jewellery and fashion accessories.
LEGO has admitted to over-diversifying its brand. In
response to this, LEGO has withdrawn many of its manufacturing lines, instead
opting to outsource these to third parties via licensing deals. LEGO is also
selling its LEGOLAND parks in a bid to refocus efforts on its core product and
improve its financial situation.
In an attempt to create a story-based, multi-channel, LEGO
has engaged in a number of licensing deals, with varying degrees of success,
but more importantly it is now developing its own intellectual property. The
Bionicle range, launched in 2001, was the first time LEGO has created a story
from the start as the basis for a new product range. The Bionicles combine
physical snap-together kits with an online virtual world. This toy brand has
also been extended into entertainment in the form of comics, books and a
Miramax movie: Bionicle: Mask of light. The
range has proved a major success for LEGO and, building on this success, it has
developed Knights Kingdom.
Sub-brands that LEGO has neglected, including Mindstorms and
LEGO TECHNIC, both aimed at older
children and enjoyed by some adults, are being given more attention. With so
many adult fans of LEGO, efforts are also being made to further engage the
adult market. The company is currently considering whether to market its
management training tool, entitled LEGO Serious Play, to a wider adult
audience.
LEGO has overhauled its packaging, and the style and tone of
its advertising. The emphasis is now being placed on the LEGO play an
educational experience as opposed to product detail. The strap-line ‘play on’
was introduced in January 2003 to accompany the change. The slogan draws its
inspiration from the company’s five core values: creativity, imagination,
learning, fun and quality. LEGO is also making greater use of more interactive
communication tools to promote its products, which it is believed will
encourage consumers to interact more with the brand. 2005 has seen LEGO invite
fans on a tour of the company. Here they are given the opportunity to meet new
product developers, designers and toolmakers, and learn about the company’s
history, culture and values.
LEGO is also taking steps to reverse its insular culture. In
an attempt to build a more market-driven organization, it is spending more time
consulting children, parents, retailers and AFOLs. The company established the
LEGO Vision Lab in 2002 to examine how the future will look to children and
their families. A variety of sources are being used to make assessments of
future worldwide family patterns, including anthropology, architecture,
consumer patterns and awareness, culture, philosophy, sociology and technology.
Plagued by supply-chain inefficiencies LEGO has improved
production time from concept to the retailer’s shelf. An example of this is the
Duplo Castle, which was developed in nine months.
Conclusion
Having taken its eye off the ball, LEGO is fighting back
with a new customer-focused strategic approach. Continuous improvement, in
response to changing market trends, is now key if LEGO is to ward off the many
challenges it still faces. It is still involved in many licence agreements,
making it vulnerable to this cyclical market. Its back-to-basics strategy has
been widely praised but it remains to be seen if LEGO can balance this with its
increasing activity in software. With children’s growing appetite for video
games with a more violent content, can LEGO satisfy this target group while
still remaining true to its wholesome ‘play well’ brand values? Will LEGO
succeed in its attempts to target young girls and its desire to target a more
adult audience? Will it succeed in its attempts to reduce costs and improve
efficiencies? Will CEO Jorgen Vig Knudstorp succeed where his predecessors have
failed? Only in the fullness of time will these questions be answered but one
thing is for sure: no brand, no matter how powerful, can afford to become
complacent in an increasingly competitive business environment.
Questions:
- Why did LEGO encounter serious economic difficulties in the late 1990s?
- Conduct a SWOT analysis of LEGO and identify the company’s main sources of advantage.
- Critically evaluate the LEGO turnaround strategy.
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