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Marketing warfare
COMPETITION IN INDIAN INDUSTRIES - A strategic perspective: N.
Ravichandran - Editor; Vikas Publishing House Pvt. Ltd., - 576,
Masjid Road, Jangpura, New Delhi-110014. Rs. 450.
ANY COMMERCIAL organisation can succeed only if it is financially
viable and also profitable. And profits flow from the market;
from the customers. Marketing is the process of ensuring that
sufficient customers conduct business with an organisation and
come back for more, which alone will ensure its continuous
profitability.
Marketing would be easy, if we were able to do it in isolation.
If our company was the only one in the field, the world of
customers would beat a path to our door. But there is always a
multitude of external influences, all of which conspire and
collude to make things more difficult for us. And competition is
the most conspicuous among these factors.
What exactly is competition? If we make, say, fountain pens:
then, other fountain pen makers constitute our competition. Not
only that. What else do we write with? Companies making ball
pens, fibre tip pens, pencils - all these are our competition.
And what about typewriters and word processors? What about
dictating machines? When we consider the possibility, and often
the reality, of fountain pens being used for gifts and giveaways,
we are in competition with a very large volume of consumer goods.
Competition is the cornerstone for customer delight. It is the
guarantee and passport for excellence in manufacture. It is the
insignia and lapel pin, announcing quality and reliability of the
goods and services which we buy. Few businesses enjoy a monopoly.
What is more, competition does not go about its way by carefully
avoiding us, or steering clear of us. Competition is there to get
at us, to grab us, and clean destroy us.
Their marketing efforts are designed to sell their products, and
push our products into wilderness. Marketing is warfare, and
competition deploys an ever changing armoury of weapons to secure
an edge. We need to keep our eyes and ears open, always and
everytime, even to survive, leave alone succeed.
The book under notice comprises the project work component in the
syllabus for the post-graduate course of study, in the Indian
Institute of Management at Ahmedabad, during the academic year,
1997-1998. The subject of the project work was ``Strategy
formulation and implementation'' in the Indian business scenario.
The volume has been edited by the professor in charge of the
curricular administration. He states in the preface with
legitimate pride: ``When my students made their final project
presentations, I was impressed with the quality and coverage of
the report. We decided to edit the project reports and bring them
out as a separate volume for wider use by academic and practising
community in India and other neighbouring countries.''
The book has been divided into six sections, or modules, as the
editor prefers to call them. The first module, consisting of two
chapters, provides the background to the book, and introduces the
reader to the central theme of the tome. The first chapter
(written by the professor himself) deals with the theory and
maxim of industry analysis and competitive strategy. Much of what
is discussed in this chapter is inspired by Michael Porter's work
on the subject. The writer has dealt with Porter's ``Five forces
model'' with specific reference to India. The second chapter in
this module, again, is a thematic presentation dealing with
India's economic reforms of the 1990s, and their relevance to the
development of industries. It is at once an authentic and
comprehensive exposition of what has actually taken place,
written by a former Finance Secretary to the Central Government.
The subsequent four modules contain 11 papers, each dealing with
an industry, individually and separately, prepared by a student
as part of his project work. These industries have been
categorised as matured industries (module two), high growth
industries (module four), declining industries (module five), and
industries of the future (module three). The last module is
entitled, ``Dynamics of corporate strategy''. It is an
illustrative case history of the Eicher-Enfield amalgamation,
written by the professor, again, with a penchant for analytical
presentation of the evolution, consolidation, decline, and
recovery phases of the Royal Enfield Motors at Madras.
Banking, steel and automobile industries are the subject of study
under the matured industries category. Tyres, paints, detergents
and pharmaceuticals constitute the high growth industries covered
in India. The cigarette industry is analysed under the
classification of declining industries. Cellular phone, financial
services and software comprise the sunrise industries in India.
Each paper vies with the other in terms of depth of exposition,
extent of research, and a clear focus on the issues pertinent to
conducting an industry analysis, in order to formulate a
competitive strategy. No wonder the professor took up the cudgels
to publish them in book form. In fact, the target audience for
this volume will extend from the student fraternity, required to
prepare project work as part of their curricular pursuit to the
faculty teaching strategy management in academic institutions;
and to managers wanting to gain an introduction into this
subject.
R. DEVARAJAN
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