Monday, June 30, 2014

Segmenting, Differentiating, Positioning - Strategic Marketing in China

Undertaking the right efforts in segmenting the market, positioning and differentiating your company’s products and services undoubtedly is important in any global market. However, with its size, regional and even local diversities as well as industry complexities, doing so in China may be even more important to the success of your company in this country, than anywhere else.

The conundrum.
In my personal experience managing Strategic Marketing at one of the largest global electric and electronics engineering and manufacturing companies and doing the same at two services oriented companies, segmenting the Chinese market in a meaningful yet conclusive manner is always easier said than done.

No matter what products and services your company sells, nor whether they are primarily sold directly or indirectly to customers, the questions are always the same:
  • Is the Chinese market to be divided into cities, provinces or (arbitrarily defined) regions?
  • How to determine the ranking in importance of each geographic division of the country to the business?
  • How to effectively cover these geographies with the organization?
  • How to avoid cannibalization between the direct sales force and/or between the indirect sales channels in the geographies?
  • How to reach the customers and distribute products and services efficiently with supply chain and after-sales service, so that the company can uphold the value proposition it promises, to all customers?
  • What benefits can the company provide to its sales and distribution partners to entice them to sell the company’s products and services, rather than the competitors’?
  • How to measure the actual performance of the chosen geographic markets, direct sales force and indirect sales channels in comparison to the potential of these markets and channels?


Tackling the matter head-on.
Certainly the ability to cover the Chinese market holistically depends to a great extent on your current organizational size and your company’s ability to reach beyond its current locations. Nevertheless, with the recent developments of the Central and Western China economic hubs and advances of third party logistics providers and online channels, also small- and medium-size companies may nowadays have the possibility to reach potential markets that lie far beyond the coastal areas.

On the other hand, in my experience advising both small and large enterprises, even companies that already have a considerable reach in China and have been here for a decade or more, sometimes have surprisingly failed to develop their presence in – for their particular products and services – very highly positioned geographic markets in terms of revenue potential.

I therefore advise to most companies with products and services that are not necessarily confined to local distribution, to begin the task of segmenting China, by starting with the factor that usually matters most for all sales and profit oriented organizations: the customer; using the most natural geographic division: the provinces and municipalities on province level; and thereby asking these questions:
  • How many potential customers are there in each province?
  • What is their annual spend on the type, or similar types of products and services the company sells?
  • What is their annual purchase in units or frequency on our type, or similar types of products and services?
  • How widely spread apart are these potential customer?
  • What technology, level of service or brands are they purchasing at the moment, is a trend in shifts of preference of technology, level of service or brands observable?
  • How do they purchase the products or services? How are the products/services usually delivered to them?
  • Are there potential customers that do not yet purchase the type, or similar types of products and services the company sells, but who may, if they knew about the company’s offering?
The above analysis informs three important input factors for your market segmentation, which can be summarized in a table as shown in Figure 1:
  • A ranking of all Chinese provinces in terms of potential Total Market Volume (TM)
  • A determination of average price expectation of customers in each Chinese province, which can be used as one input to determine the Total Accessible Market (TAM)
  • An insight of the typical purchase behavior in each Chinese province
  • An insight of what could be the Total Target Market (TTM) for the company
Figure-1

Figure 1 – Market Size Analysis by Chinese provinces and municipalities on province level

As briefly mentioned above, this first analysis may already present some surprises to you, as it has done for other – seemingly well established – companies in China before, such as the previous neglect of provinces with unknown but abundant sales opportunities, or over-serving of provinces with a – relatively speaking – small actual market opportunity.

Matching opportunity with capability.
Seeing the opportunity is the one thing. Being able to benefit from it, is the other. At this point it is advisable to detail the analysis in two directions:
  • What is the attractiveness of each China provincial market?
  • What is the level of our organizational capability to serve each provincial market?
Figure 2 shows a diagram used by many global players to frequently analyze their geographic markets, customer industry segments and products/services in comparison to their organizational capability.

Figure-2-2


Figure 2 - Market Attractiveness Analysis – Concept and Sample

The Market Attractiveness Analysis thereby forces you to look deeper into the actual market opportunity, beyond just the market size, asking questions about such factors, including: market growth, profitability, is moving into the market complementary to your portfolio, does it have implications on your brand image, does it follow your customer demand, etc. and Organizational Capability meanwhile makes you look into your relative market share compared to your competitors, your technological capability, your current sales and distribution capability, your current brand image, etc.

The answers to the Market Attractiveness Analysis are profoundly valuable for your company’s business strategy determination. They can range from choosing not to address/enter a certain market (not attractive, not capable), to absolutely address/enter a market segment (attractive and capable) to the definition of strategic actions, such as concentrating on certain niches or increasing a market’s attractiveness (not attractive but capable), or increasing your company’s organizational capability (attractive, not capable).
Short-, mid- and long-term orientation – (Re-)focus.

Aided by the visualization provided by the Market Attractiveness Analysis, your company can make quick decisions on which markets to focus in the short-term, which markets to develop in the mid-term and which markets to keep an eye on and prepare for in the long-term.
At this stage the company can begin to plan its market approach as well as sales channel determinations based on a very solid opportunity analysis. As a way to efficiently address the Chinese market, it may be advisable to group the selected provinces into geographic regions.

Figure-3
Figure 3 – Regional Clusters

Again the Market Attractiveness vs. Organizational Capability approach can be utilized by your organization to determine, which geographic regions are most attractive, and most attainable for your company in the short-, medium- and long-term, ensuring that you focus your forces to the most attractive and lowest hanging fruits, while staying abreast of your organizational development needs to be prepared for sustainable growth.
Plan your approach.

Having determined the geographies one wants to address, I have come to appreciate the model of “Five Major Elements of Strategy”, first introduced by Hambrick and Frederickson in 2001 as way to define your company’s particular strategy toward establishing and growing one’s position in any market.

The model, depicted in Figure 4, begins with the category Arenas, which you have been able to designate by way of the aforementioned geographic segmentation steps. Thereafter the framework considers the key factors for business development: Vehicles – how will you get there? Will you develop your own products and services? Will you form Joint-Ventures or partnerships? Will you license your products, services, IP? Will you undertake acquisitions? Differentiators – how will you win? Is it your brand image? Will you customize to meet the Chinese customers’ particular needs? Is it the price, or style of your product? Will you stand out by offering a particular quality or reliability aspect? Staging – what will your speed and sequence of events be? Do you focus on rapid market coverage, or another set of initiatives? Economic logic – how will you attain your returns? Are you building scale for market coverage and cost efficiency? Are you offering a premium product for a premium price? How do you justify your price position?

Figure 4 – Five Major Elements of Strategy

My advice to any business is to only begin making determinations about the appropriate sales and distribution channels for the geographic markets in China, industry and product segments, after the aforementioned steps have been completed – even if the global/corporate business strategy dictates the sales approach. Not seldom have I experienced the situation of lagging sales performance in China, as the company stuck to the “way we have always done it” – or the company’s inability to adapt to the customer purchase behavior, because “it is not the way we do it”.

The secret to selling effectively and successfully in China is to learn about its market make-up, industrial structures, common purchase behavior and underlying/consequential sales channels. There is nothing against introducing a new, proven or better way of doing business as perhaps developed in your home economy – yet, for short- and medium-term success – and thereby effective positioning for future, sustainable success, adaptation to the local reality is key.

The conundrum of cannibalization.
Once the Chinese market is divided in geographic segments the challenge of effectively covering the individual markets becomes a question faced by most companies. Perhaps the abundance of customers and sales opportunities in one region requires the establishment of a sizeable sales, technical support and service team, while other regions, equally enticing in terms of revenue potential, yet with vast distance to bridge, may require the establishment of strong sales partners – maybe in tie with a direct sales force.

While for understanding of the market and keeping control over it a somewhat arbitrarily defined regional segmentation is profoundly important, sales partners, and often also the direct sales force are not easily confined by such invisible boundaries, and so, your company may also face the potentially harmful issue of cannibalization between sales partners and direct sales force.
In my experience as strategic marketer I recommend three approaches to mitigate the risks of cannibalization:
  1. Assign clear customer targets to sales partner and direct sales force, be it (if possible), geographies, industries, specific customer groups, product or services types
  2. Closely control the sales performance of sales partners and direct sales force within the boundaries of the aforementioned targets – too often I have seen the effects of overeager revenue drive – fueled by the strong economic growth of China – allowing sales channels to step out of their boundaries to generate revenue wherever possible – to the detriment of the overall system
  3. Actually allow some level of cannibalization – competition fuels effectiveness, doesn’t it?
Support, support, support.
I have observed more often than not that industrial and services based companies are rather strongly setup in China in terms of their sales force, indirect sales partners, technical sales and service support, covering the regions they believe are key for their business, yet, surprisingly still trust on a relatively small, often centrally based marketing troupe.

The effects are often incomprehensible lack of sales performance, but are frequently only realized by the management – too late – through sales representatives and sales partner satisfaction surveys or outright complaints by them, such as, lack of sufficient or outdated marketing materials and product documentation, lack of brand presence in the market, lack of sufficient technical and product features training and knowledge transfer to existing and potential customers, lack of frequent physical sales support to sales partners in remote regions.

Often it may be assumed that by entering into clearly defined sales partnerships with distributors and re-sellers, who may already have a sizable customer base, that this may – more or less automatically – result in actual revenue generation. The reality however is often the complete opposite. Without sufficient and complete marketing material, actual brand identity in the market and foremost without training of both the sales partners and existing/potential customers, the sales partner’s sales representatives may not feel well equipped enough to represent your product – the truth of the matter here is that sales representatives sustain their lives from selling, and so they will rather sell what is the easiest and present promises of the highest return to them, rather than selling your product, never mind whether your product or service is actually the better alternative for the customer.

Effective Performance Management in China – micro-management is necessary (unfortunately).
If you ask managers with more than a decade or two of hands-on China experience what the secret to success in China is, unanimously you will find that “micro-management” is within the top 3 answers.

While mature industry purchasing processes, clearly defined supply and value chains, equally mature sales channels, etc. may allow a company in Western developed markets to establish its revenue to generate within these clear structures and may thus be able to trust in a positive outcome, doing so in China may lead to surprisingly discouraging results.

After revamping a sales force from a previously loose setup consisting of a vast number of vaguely assigned sales agents with only quarterly performance reviews, to one that is closely managed with clearly assigned customer development targets – both for sales partners and direct sales force, with monthly reviews of the corresponding customer development results, I have experienced first-hand the benefits of such tedious, but highly effective performance management approach.

Micro-management results certainly in some short-term resistance, but just within a few months of non-relenting, monthly reviews – and armed with the positive revenue development impact it generates – every element of the sales force will gladly stay within this high performance management structure.

Just don’t give up, or it will all fall apart again, quickly.

Both for sales partners and direct sales force I recommend a set of targets that are complementary to each other and ensuring that those targets are SMART: specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, time-bound. Examples of such targets are shown in Figure 5.

Figure-5
Figure 5 – Sample Sales Targets

It is thereby advisable that in regards to specific customers, customer clusters and the like, these are clearly named and listed in mutually confirmed target agreements with sales partners and direct sales representatives and singularly (meaning: one by one) addressed during the monthly performance reviews.

Conclusion – perform the steps for sustainable results.
China remains an economy with strong economic growth and abundant sales opportunities. The development of the Central/Western economic hubs, increasing consciousness of Chinese buyers in regards to quality and total lifetime value of purchased products and services – or total cost of ownership of the same – and increasing modernization in most if not all industries continue to fuel these opportunities.

Yet the regional and local diversities are not diminishing and the complexities of doing business in China remain – complex.

Therefore, your company will only succeed if it understands the market well, divides your customers in segments that are meaningful for your products, services and organizational capability and consequentially, if it develops strong sales channels that are clearly targeted and aligned toward these segments.

Support and (micro-) manage your direct sales force and indirect sales partners and control their actual performance tightly and your company with its supreme products and services will surely capture and grow a significant market share in China, too.

Michael Adick | MBA
Managing Director | Articulate Ltd.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Is your organization set up to capture your true potential in China? - 7 Steps to true China market focus

One country, one political system, one market, uniform tariffs and transportation system. Addressing the market with a unified product or services portfolio, value proposition, marketing messaging and single sales approach should be a no-brainer - and it reduces internal complexity.

22 provinces, 4 municipalities, 5 autonomous regions, 2 Special Administrative Regions, 660 cities, of which 10 with populations of more than 4 million, 8 primary dialects – equally communalities and vast differences in requirements, needs and purchasing behaviors, concentrated/over-crowded markets in the coastal line, vast distances and incomplete transportation infrastructure between economic centers in Central/West China. Urbanization, burgeoning middle-class and the highest number of ultra-rich in the world. Modern financial instruments and transactions in economic hubs, still highly cash-based economies in less developed areas.

Is your organization set up to capture your true potential in China, or are you missing out by approaching the market merely as a singular form? Are you under-invested in potential markets, or actually over-invested in some areas, whereas missing potential in others?

Many companies - no matter whether they are large multinationals with close to 30 years history of doing business in China, medium-sized companies or small firms - have still not adopted an effective China market approach - offering too generic, unfitting products & services, organizing their sales according to overseas company standards rather than according to China’s reality, under-serving potential markets or cannibalizing internally, or utilizing standardized value propositions and marketing messaging – missing to make the mark with local buyers and decision-makers.

Few companies however have realized that the true potential of selling successfully in China lies in the adoption of products and services catering to real local requirements, flavors and designs, in the development of a product mix that Chinese customers really need - not what company’s headquarters wants to sell - and by effectively organizing their sales force according to the differences between regions, markets and personalities in the country.

Beginning the journey to customize product/services portfolio, value proposition and marketing & sales approach to China thereby is neither overly costly nor overly time-intensive, taking a targeted, structured approach:

  • Structure China according to prevalent regions that make sense according to your product & services portfolio – e.g. geographically, economically or according to industry concentrations,
  • Weigh these regions according to their potential customer concentration, products & services requirements, propensity to purchase your products or services, purchasing power, competitive landscape,
  • Overlay weighting of logistical reach and cost, eliminate markets that cannot be feasibly served
  • Identify focus markets and your optimal products & services offering for these markets,
  • Develop value propositions and marketing messaging according to the individual focus markets and your customized products & services offering in these markets,
  • Restructure and build up your sales force according to the individual focus markets, their potential customer concentration, propensity to buy and purchasing power,
  • Plan and implement marketing & sales channels accordingly.

Truly capturing the full potential of the Chinese market will require you, your organization and – not the least – your overseas Headquarters to think out of the box, but the success of some companies that have already begun to lead the way – such as Volkswagen, Unilever, Procter & Gamble, and others – in customizing their product & services offerings as well as marketing & sales approaches based on the regional differences in China may be motivation enough to begin the journey at your organization, as well.

Michael Adick
Managing Director, Articulate Ltd.

March 2014

Can your managers solve problems and make (the right) decisions confidently for your organization?

It may be a lingering stigma that managers in China are either – depending on your viewpoint – unable to, unwilling to or not enabled to solve problems and make (the right) decisions independently at their organizations.

Certainly there may be cultural implications to the way managers from different origins approach problems, such as negativity around (and thus the barrier for) disclosing “the bad news”, propensity or lack thereof to speak out in meetings, making or defending ones’ point, or the inclination or lack thereof to embrace responsibility for something that may not 100% match with ones’ job description.

Yet there are many organizations operating in China where managers are operating effectively, perfectly well, having learned and adopted effective approaches to solve problems and making decisions day by day.

These managers have been enabled by their organizations to:

  • use methods and tools to solve problems quickly and effectively through proven problem-solving & decision making models,
  • understand, practice and utilize the personal skills and attributes to enhance their efficiency and effectiveness in problem-solving and decision-making,
  • master pro-active approaches to appraise and solve problems through using an array of innovative thinking, systems thinking, quantification and qualification,
  • employ the skills to enhance inter-disciplinary and cross-team communication and teamwork. 
  • develop confidence in making and defending their points in teamwork, meetings and presentations.

You can either keep using the costly route to identify “that perfect manager” on the labor market, using expensive head hunting services and paying premium salaries – with uncertain outcomes -, or tap on your existing labor force in-house and pro-actively enable them to develop towards efficient, effective problem-solving and decision-making.

Remember: good managers are not born, they are made.

Michael Adick
Managing Director, Articulate Ltd.

March 2014

Are you getting the most out of your China Sales Force? - 8 steps to achieve improvement of your Sales Force effectiveness

Having personally lead sales teams in China since 2000, and having worked with companies across multiple B2B and B2C industries as sales & marketing consultant, trainer and coach, I know that we all share similar concerns about our Sales Force:
  • Are we getting the most out of our China Sales Force?
  • Are our Sales Processes guiding, supporting and not hampering our Sales Force in their efforts?
  • Do our Sales People really employ a structured, targeted and result oriented sales approach?
  • Do our Sales People know that customer objections often are opportunities to (up-/cross-)sell?
  • Is our Sales Organization structured according to our business divisions or according to the market?
  • How can we measure the effectiveness of our Sales Force without resorting to micro-management?
  • How can we stabilize a volatile Sales Force over the long-run?
The continuing issues with Sales in China are not isolated to any particular industry, company origin or organizational size. 

Surely, large multinational organizations may have more resilient, and often automated processes along which their Sales Force operate – yet, ultimately sales and the act of selling boils always down to the individual Sales Person and the individual customer, where the real impact of effective selling is experienced by the customer and where money is made (or not) by the company.

Stemming from my experience as sales & marketing consultant I suggest taking these 8 steps to achieve lasting improvement of your Sales Force effectiveness:
  1. Organize the Sales Force according to the market, not (only) according to – often historically grown, or Headquarters-dictated – business divisions,
  2. Establish a standardized Sales Process that guides and supports the Sales Force – eliminate unnecessary steps that slow down and lead to frustration of the Sales People,
  3. Provide – but don’t overburden – your Sales People with a simple set of easy-to-use tools along the Sales Process,
  4. Establish a steady mix of “oldies” and “newbies” – constantly refreshing the Sales Force, in a structured, sustainable manner,
  5. Provide regular education on sales approaches, tactics and soft-skills that match the outlined sales process,
  6. Educate and enable your Sales People to turn customer objections into additional sales,
  7. Only measure what the Sales Person really can influence – does performance rating based on margins really help achieve our goals, or are we missing out by diminishing motivation?
  8. Establish a process of regular measurement, progress check and feedback – without over-burdening the Sales Force with redundant reporting tasks.
Remember: to get the most out of your China Sales Force, your Sales People need to be motivated and eager, dedicated and target-oriented, confident and compelling, educated and supported, but also in particular: structured and organized.

Michael Adick
Managing Director, Articulate Ltd.

March 2014

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Talent Attraction and Retention – Solving the Conundrum of Small- and Medium-Size Enterprises

In our conversations in China we often encounter the same question over and over again, and it is probably the single most issue covered in many Human Resources Professionals events:

“How do we attract high profile candidates and how do we effectively retain them?”

The prevalence of this question greatly increases within the circle of small- and medium-size enterprises, – seemingly naturally – lacking alluring brand names and large organizational structures, which high profile graduates – supposedly – assume as being guarantees for both their personal brand-building and career development.

Yet, herein already lies the answer, but let us move aside a general misconception first.

It is probably the common-most stated excuse made by small- and medium sized companies – apart from the lack of the organizational size and structures – that they cannot succeed in attracting high profile candidates competing with the large multinationals, because they can't pay the types of paychecks those multinationals can.

However, if we look at some of the leading global enterprises, we quickly realize that especially these enterprises do in fact not pay outrageously high packages. Indeed, they often pay below their industry average.

So, that leaves us only with brand-name and organizational size as key differentiators in the labor market?

In finding the conclusion to the conundrum, it helps to remember what perhaps we were looking for, when we entered the labor market as young talents: We certainly looked at the financial aspects – but as fresh starters, was that really the single-most important matter for us? – We looked at employers' brands that may help us develop our own personal name-card – yet, was that really on the top of our list?

Indeed, the probably single most important aspect for choosing the place to work at for high profile candidates is the opportunity to learn the skills of the trade, and develop their careers.

That means the key to successful attraction and retention of high profile candidates lies in organizations' willingness and ability to provide a steady path of learning and career development to their talents. And we quickly realize that this is, what large multinationals are actually doing all along, coupling this "employment value-add" – so-to-speak – with their undoubtedly stronger brand names.

Thus concluding, especially for small- and medium-size enterprises to turn the availability of steady and programmatic talent learning and career development at their organizations also into a successful talent acquisition strategy, they too will need to actively demonstrate and communicate this key differentiator to the high profile talent pool – thereby building a strong Employer Brand in the labor market on their own.

The Articulate Ltd. Team wishes you and your teams and families a Happy Chinese New Year!

Michael Adick | MBA
Managing Director, Articulate Ltd.

January 2014