000 03218 a2200205 4500
020 _a0029072115
020 _a9780029072110
082 0 4 _a658.802
090 _c1490
_d1490
100 1 _aDay, George S.
245 1 0 _aMarket driven strategy :
_bprocesses for creating value /
_cGeorge S. Day.
250 _aillustrated edition ed.
260 _a[S.l.] :
_bFree Press,
_c1990.
300 _a405 p. ;
_c25 cm.
500 _aHardcover.
520 _aToday, countless new niche and specialty market opportunities are emerging as the era of mass marketing comes to an end. George S. Day argues persuasively that old ways of competing and much of the conventional wisdom about organizations are being overturned by a convergence of forces: mass markets are fragmenting into narrow segments that are themselves becoming global markets; information technologies are blurring the boundaries between markets and organizations while accelerating the pace of decisions; technological change continues to shrink product life cycles while customers are demanding ever higher levels of responsiveness and quality. These forces are also spawning new types of retailers, distributors, and linkages with customers. Contending that the rate of change in the market has clearly outstripped the speed at which a conventionally managed company can respond, Day makes a compelling case for first creating customer value, without which there can be no shareholder value. He presents a proven market-driven approach to formulating and implementing competitive strategy at the business-unit level -- "in the trenches" -- based upon materials that have been empirically tested and critiqued in more than 200 internal executive programs and strategic planning sessions at such companies as U.S. West, General Motors, Marriott, Kodak, and General Electric, where he is director of the Product Planning Program. Day introduces the five critical, interdependent choices that managers must make to create a market-driven organization in the 1990s. With dozens of examples from companies such as Otis Elevator, GE, H.J. Heinz, IKEA, Nestl�, Acuson, and 3M, he shows how forward-thinking companies select their markets, differentiate their products, choose their communication and distribution channels, decide on the scale and scope of their support activities, and select future areas for growth. Finally, Day persuasively documents that at these winning companies there is a commitment to thinking and planning processes that harness the power of bottom-up understanding of customers and competitive realities with top-down vision and leadership. A powerful vision is a shared intention that creates a winning atmosphere throughout the organization. By focusing attention on a desired leadership position, measuring progress against that achievement, and continually seeking new ways to gain competitive advantage by serving customers better, the actions and aspiration of the organization are given meaning.
856 4 0 _3Amazon.com
_uhttp://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0029072115/chopaconline-20
856 4 0 _3Amazon customer reviews
_uhttp://www.chopac.org/cgi-bin/tools/azrev.pl?q=0029072115
942 _aNBS
_cBK
_k658.802 DAY
999 _c344009
_d344009