The Marketing Environment
The Marketing Environment
The Marketing Environment
ABSTRACT
It is axiomatic that a firm must continuously monitor and adapt to its business
environment. Additionally, it has long been the prevailing viewpoint that the business-to-
consumer (B2C) environment is sufficiently different from the business-to-business (B2B)
environment that a different model for examining the business environment is warranted.
However, while the models are somewhat different in the B2C and B2B arenas, they share a
common tendency of focusing on only one entity in the marketing channel. Not only does this
have an effect on strategic market planning, but also on the management of channel networks.
While most accept that a change in an environmental factor is likely to affect more than one
member of a channel, current thinking as depicted in traditional conceptual models tends to
downplay the need to understand the differential impact of that change on each firm in the
network. This article presents a new paradigm for understanding the environment that is useful
to practitioners, scholars, and educators.
INTRODUCTION
incumbent upon the academic community to develop and share ideas and concepts that will help
practitioners more effectively do their jobs.
The importance of monitoring the environmental factors impacting an individual business
is fundamental to effective marketing. Issues such as the hostility and uncertainty of the
environment have an impact on the innovativeness and the strategic approach employed by
organizations (Özsomer, Calantone & Di Benedetto, 1997; Hagberg-Anderson, 2006; Zhao &
Cavusgil, 2006). The business literature is replete with examples of companies that failed due to
their not adapting to environmental changes in the marketplace. It is axiomatic, then, that
adaptation to changes in the business environment is crucial for a business to survive, much less
thrive. So, every principles of marketing textbook we have seen devotes some space to adapting
to the environmental forces affecting a business. The focus of these discussions is on how
changes in the environmental forces can potentially affect the business, and how the company
can manipulate the four Ps of marketing while applying the marketing concept to adapt to those
changes.
The problem with the models of the business environment presented in current texts is
that they ignore the very pertinent issue of the effect the environmental change has on the
network of related businesses, both up and downstream, as well as how the change may affect
the decision calculus of the end user or final consumer. Educators seem to assume that students
are able and willing to make the intuitive leap required for understanding the impact of
environmental changes on network partners. Such an assumption is both questionable and short-
sighted. The purpose of the paper is to introduce a model of the business environment that brings
all the potential channel network members into the equation.
Environmental Scanning
Being central to the business does not necessarily mean that the trend has to initially have
a direct impact on the firm, but rather that the trend has an impact on the overall viability of the
firm’s marketing strategy and channel networks. That is, while the firm must consider the impact
of the environmental change on its core business, it must also consider how that same
environmental change impacts members of the channel network. For instance, the embargo the
U.S. placed on the export of wheat to the former U.S.S.R. to protest their invasion of
Afghanistan in the late 70s (change in the Political/Legal & Regulatory Force) certainly was
central for and had a direct impact upon wheat farmers in the U.S. It was also central for but had
an indirect impact on producers of farm implements, rural banks that had loaned money on land
values bolstered by projected output rather than real value of the property, and businesses in
small farming communities that suffered because of the closing and consolidation of smaller
wheat farms.
THEORETICAL UNDERPINNINGS
Complexity
Past researchers in channels have argued for development of a broader framework for
analyzing the dynamics and complexity of the business environment and its interactions with
marketing practice. Achrol and Stern (1988) persuasively argued for “open-system” explanations
in channels theory and research that consider the impact of external phenomena on observed
channel relationships. Indeed, Stern’s seminal work (1967) called for a perspective that included
considering channel systems as a whole operating in a complex environment, and not merely as
an aligned group of disparate organizations. More recent research has likewise pointed to the
need for taking channel members’ perspectives into account when making strategic marketing
decisions (Wagner & Hansen, 2004; Zhao & Cavusgil, 2006; Samiee, 2008; Mouzas, Henneberg
& Naudé, 2008; Hult, Ketchen & Chabowski, 2007; Lai, Bao & Li, 2008; Ling-yee, 2010; Chang
& Gotcher, 2010). The proper alignment of marketing strategies with environmental conditions
has been shown to be vital to the performance of multi-channel systems (Kabadayi, Eyuboglu &
Thomas, 2007).
Unfortunately, many of the tools and paradigms employed for years by both academics
and practitioners are simply not sufficient to address the realities of today’s marketplace. One of
these paradigms that begs for change is the model of the business environment. The model we
have employed for years is too simplistic to be of much use today. The purpose of this article is
to examine the current models of the business environment and, from that discussion, introduce a
new, more comprehensive model of the B2B environment which reflects the dynamic and
interconnected nature of the marketplace.
Value Networks
A major force driving marketing strategy is the importance of value creation in attracting
and keeping organizational customers. This is especially true for industries that turn out products
which are viewed as commodity-like by buyers. Value creation in this setting often amounts to
no more than competing on price. Yet, price is only one aspect of value creation, and marketers
who can add value to commodity-like products can often avoid or at least diminish the instances
of cutthroat price competition. Value creation is essential for marketers to build long-term
relationships (Beverland & Lockshin, 2003; Ritter, Wilkinson & Johnston, 2004; Ryssel, Ritter
& Geműnden, 2004; Hedaa & Ritter, 2005; Blocker & Flint, 2007). It has been argued that the
concept of value creation has morphed into value networks, which have their genesis in
Customer Relationship Management (CRM) (Ehret, 2004). CRM, according to Srivastava,
Shervani & Fahey (1998), is one of the three core business processes. Value networks provide
the forum for greater and more complex cooperation between customers and vendors for the
purpose of increasing the competitiveness and profitability of both. Additionally, it is incumbent
on the marketer to understand value from the customer’s perspective (Flint & Woodruff, 2001;
Flint, Woodruff & Gardial, 2002; Wagner & Hansen, 2004; Hult, Ketchen & Chabowski, 2007;
Chang & Gotcher, 2010). In effect, it is the B2B marketer’s ability to make its customers more
profitable that opens the door to future business (Hedaa & Ritter, 2005).
Derived Demand
The importance of derived demand to the firm is a function of both the degree of impact exerted by
such demand as well as the number of alternative markets available to the business marketer.
Managers dependent on a single end-user market should be especially wary of derived-demand
issues because their sales base is not sufficiently diversified to mitigate risk should their principal
market fail (p. 213).
In other words, the B2B marketer has a vested interest in helping its customers stimulate
the demand for their products. Li (2007) describes one of the common pitfalls in market
assessment as “taking input from direct customers only, without looking at demand from
customers’ customers” (p. 40). If derived demand means anything, it means that B2B marketers
must look beyond the needs of their direct customers and consider the needs of end users as well.
According to Anderson & Narus (2004):
Traditional corporate strategy seeks demand largely through technology push—sell what you can
make. Reflecting this strategy, buying and procurement strive to meet the specifications of
manufacturing and the forecasts of sales. Advocates of supply management turn this thinking on
its head. Relying upon demand pull—make what you can sell—supply management proactively
directs the entire supply network to meet the requirements of end-users. Their primary goal is to
efficiently deliver the greatest value possible to end-users (p. 102).
Looking at the business environment as a three-dimensional one in which the various layers in
the chain of supply encounter the same economic forces in different ways allows the marketer to
view the market holistically.
Network Development
Another critical element in marketing is the relationship between business networks and
the strategic planning process. This relationship extends both upstream and downstream—that is,
from the supply side through to the distribution side of the firm. To gain the maximum leverage
from this eventuality in marketing, firms need to see those upstream and downstream
relationships within the context of the overall network of businesses in which they operate. The
situation is characterized by Dwyer & Tanner (2004) thusly:
… we focused on the special challenges of developing and safeguarding relationships, which are
necessary for the exchange of complex, specialty, and risky products. This focus on buyer-seller
relationships can be myopic, however, because the parties are not the only entities in the
marketplace. They are connected in a network, a much larger and strategically significant web of
organizations (p. 53).
One-on-one relationships are critical, but to lose sight of the overall network may result
in a firm making a decision that, though it helps the individual relationship with a given firm,
does so to the detriment of the overall network. Each firm in a network has its own set of goals,
and yet all the firms in a network are limited in the power and resources they can bring to bear on
solving problems related to providing a satisfactory product to the end user, and thus are
interdependent on the other firms in that network (Wilkinson, 2006; Zhao & Cavusgil, 2006;
Hult, Ketchen & Chabowski, 2007; Lai, Bao & Li, 2008; Whipple, Lynch & Nyaga, 2010).
Garnering the resources of the network is essential to helping customers create products and
services that help them compete in their marketplace (Windahl & Lakemond, 2006; Stanko,
Bonner & Calantone, 2007; Wittmann, Hunt & Arnett, 2009).
Existing Paradigms
In this model, customers are distinct from distributors in that the former highlights the
concept of derived demand. Distributors are customers of the producer, but are not the only
customers with which the B2B marketer must be concerned. Because the B2B marketer’s
success depends on the demand of the final consumers for products, the impact of the
environment on the customer (final consumer) is critical. Certainly, any environmental force that
has a significant impact on distributors’ operations will have an impact on the producer. For
example, if economic conditions result in an increase in interest rates, distributors will find it
more costly to obtain the financing necessary to support their operations and inventory. This
could in turn lead to higher distribution costs for the producer. Similarly, technological
improvements in logistics or warehouse operations could reduce costs for both the distributor
and the producer. Because B2B distribution channels are shorter than B2C channels (Dwyer &
Tanner, 2002), the distributors and suppliers that comprise these channels play a more important
role in the B2B marketplace.
Suppliers certainly are critical to the operations of the marketer. Strategically managing
the relationship with suppliers is a key element to gaining and maintaining a sustainable
competitive advantage (Sheth and Sharma, 1997; Zolkiewski and Turnbull, 2002). When the
environmental factors affecting business have an inordinate impact on suppliers, the producer is,
in turn, impacted. This is especially true if the supplier poses a credible threat of forward
integration. That these environmental forces merit special attention in the B2B marketplace
seems obvious. However, in a real sense, even the model depicted in Figure 2 is deficient in
terms of providing a basis to examine the external environment in the B2B marketplace.
A NEW PARADIGM
To fully grasp the effect of the business environment and the impact of changes in that
environment, marketers need to view that environment in a different context than the one
traditionally used (Hedaa & Ritter, 2005; Neill, McKee & Rose, 2007; Mouzas, Henneberg &
Naudé, 2008). This need is highlighted by Bean and Robinson (2002) when they say, “The
notion of embracing new, relevant conceptions of the environment, contrary to the inclination
toward the conservative position that sometimes cements academicians to outmoded
frameworks, is just one element required in developing renewed efforts toward an updated
marketing strategy model to guide the discipline” (pp. 206-207). The expanded model depicted
in Figure 2 is certainly an improvement over the traditional model shown in Figure 1 when
considering the B2B marketplace. However, it is not sufficient for fully accounting for the
differential impact of those environmental variables on the network associated with the
marketing firm, nor does the model take into account the impact of these environmental variables
on the final consumer. Certainly the producer is affected by the major environmental forces: the
Socio-Cultural Force; the Economic Force; the Political/Legal & Regulatory Force; the
Technological Force; and the Natural Force. Additionally, it is generally accepted that the
producer is affected by the Supplier, the Distributor, Competitors, and the Consumer as forces in
the environment.
However, according to Kim & Maubourgne (1999), a firm needs to recognize that
changes in the environment often affect the company very differently than they affect its
customers, and that marketers who maintain a competitive advantage understand, appreciate, and
account for that differential effect. Expanding on that, we argue that the marketers need to take
into account how the environment affects its distributors, suppliers, and ultimate consumers of
the product differently than it affects their own firms. Additionally, the producer is directly
affected by its suppliers, distributors, and the final consumers of its products as entities in the
overall business environment. Wind (2006), while not advocating completely throwing out the
models we have used in marketing, has called for a broadening of how we view the B2B market.
Figure 3 presents an expanded view of the B2B environment that is representative of this
broadened approach.
The model is three-dimensional, depicting the producer, the suppliers, the distributors,
and the ultimate consumers as operating on four interconnected, but separate, parallel planes.
While the overall channel system is potentially affected by a change in one of the environmental
forces, each organization in the channel network is affected uniquely by that change, and
therefore when scanning the environment, each member of the network needs to not only think
about the implications of this change for his/her own company, but also for other organizations
in the network as well as for customers. This implies a broader, channel-level environmental
scanning process, where the marketer considers the differential impact of those five overall
environmental forces on the suppliers, distributors, competitors, and consumers with an eye
toward anticipating their probable reactions to the changes in those forces. The model also takes
into account the impact of competitors on the different members of the network as well as on the
final consumers.
Suppliers face the same environmental forces that the other members of the network face,
albeit those forces will likely have a different manifestation and impact on suppliers than on the
other members of the network. Additionally, they are impacted by their other customers who
place demands on them, and depending on the relative size of those customers, suppliers must
factor them into any decisions they make. At the same time, the supplier faces its own set of
competitors who need to be taken into consideration. The manner in which the B2B marketer
interacts with its suppliers and distributors has a major impact on whether they engage in
opportunistic behavior that is detrimental to that marketer (Ryu & Eyuboglu, 2007; Lai, Bao &
Li, 2008). For instance, when dealing with suppliers, it is necessary to consider whether they
pose a credible threat of forward integration and what the B2B marketer can do to curtail such an
action (Meredith, 2007). In other words, how likely is it that today’s suppliers might become
tomorrow’s direct competitors? Another issue has to do with how supplier adaptations to
changes in the environment affect its other customers. For instance, Lewin and Johnston (2008)
found that downsizing by suppliers had a deleterious effect on customer service and satisfaction.
As an example of how this paradigm works, let’s consider the impact of an increase in
fuel prices (economic force) on an automobile manufacturer and its network of relationships.
Consumers. The impact on consumers is the one that portends the greatest pressure on the
auto industry. If the price increase is significant enough and if consumers
believe the increased gasoline prices will continue in the long term, they will
likely adjust their purchase decisions to reflect the new reality. So, the gas
mileage of automobiles purchased will become a more important criterion of
selection.
Distributors. The car dealerships have to decide the best way to move existing inventory and
how to prepare their service departments for changes in the service demands
created by a new generation of automobiles that employ different propulsion
technologies. The gasoline costs associated with operating the dealerships will
also increase, which may lead to an increase in prices. These changes may also
require the dealer to do a better job of targeting its efforts to reflect the reality of
the local marketplace as well as trying to optimize the outputs versus the inputs
related to its use of autos and trucks to operate its business.
Producers. Certainly this increase affects the auto producer and the other channel members
directly, in that it will cost more to operate their own fleet of trucks and
corporate-owned vehicles. More importantly, the change in gasoline prices will
likely mean a change in the design of autos being produced. The next generation
of autos may need to be lighter in weight and yet will need to maintain safety
factors. They may need to have hybrid engines or engines that can run on a
variety of fuels, or even engines that use a completely different form of energy
such as hydrogen or electricity.
Suppliers. The increase in gasoline prices will affect suppliers in that the prices they charge
the manufacturer will likely rise to compensate for the increased energy costs.
Additionally, they will need to adapt the components they produce for auto
makers. For instance, these components may need to be made of different
materials or a lighter version of the same materials. This change may well alter
the mix of suppliers. For instance, if an auto producer desires to sell a line of
electric cars, the components to operate and control the engines will be very
different than those used on gasoline-powered cars, and will in all likelihood
involve the use of suppliers not heretofore used. Current suppliers, to protect
their position in the marketplace, may have to make drastic changes in the mix
of products they sell.
Another historical example of how this model works is to be found in the area of
computer and Internet technology. As computer technology advanced, the Internet developed
into a powerful tool that offered substantial benefits to all members of the B2B marketplace.
Let’s consider the impact of the Internet on the same industry (auto manufacturers):
Consumers. Shopping for cars has been enhanced due to a great deal more information about
makes and models of cars, as well as the ability to shop at the websites of
multiple dealerships at once, or to actually purchase a car online. An additional
CONCLUSION
What the previous examples illustrate is the broad effect of environmental changes. They
also illustrate the point that such changes have a differential impact on the various levels in chain
of supply and production. While this is not presented as some startling revelation, it does
illustrate the deficiency in our current models of B2B environments. From a slightly different
perspective, it also highlights the impact of environmental changes on channel networks and
dynamics.
Market orientation has been defined as an organization-wide generation of market
intelligence pertaining to current and future needs of customers, dissemination of intelligence
within the organization, and responsiveness to it (Kohli, Jaworski & Kumar, 1993). Siguaw,
Simpson and Baker (1998) demonstrated that in B2B markets the adoption of behaviors
consistent with market orientation (the generation, dissemination, and responsiveness to market
intelligence) is a viable strategy for countering environmental threats and easing channel
tensions. This more holistic, multi-layered strategic thinking within B2B markets that has been
advocated in this paper builds upon the “benevolent channel leadership” originally advocated by
Stern (1967), the “supportive leadership” idea proposed by Schul, Pride & Little (1983), a type
of non-market governance (Heide 1994), and the benchmarking and modeling of market
orientation behaviors by other firms in the channel (Siguaw, Simpson & Baker, 1998).
Marketing academicians serve the dual purpose of educating future marketing leaders and
providing useful insights for marketing practitioners. While the concept of channel networks is
not a new one, the model proposed here should prove useful in getting students to understand the
dynamic nature and strategic importance of channel networks, and should serve to provide a
more cohesive framework for them to examine changes in the business environment. For
practitioners, the model should serve as a framework for them to understand changes in the
business environment from the perspective of their channel network partners. Doing so will go a
long way toward introducing workable adaptations into business practices.
FUTURE RESEARCH
1. Does channel-level environmental scanning result in better decision-making for a firm operating in
dynamic versus static markets? What about in more complex versus less complex markets?
2. What is the relative effect of the three-dimensional model on different learning styles?
3. What are the most effective approaches for getting students to see beyond the obvious implications
of a situation, that is, to analyze things on a deeper level?
4. Is there a variation in firms as to their ability to employ channel-level environmental scanning?
5. Does the level of dependency and interconnectedness in a channel affect how often each channel
member should monitor the effects of environmental changes on the other members?
Marketing managers must take an expansive view of the environment, but doing so is a
challenge. First, it is a challenge because of the urgency of day-to-day operations that tends to
force strategic thinking into the background. That is, in the normal course of events, planning for
how to strategically react to the environment requires a step back from handling the more urgent,
short-term demands that are omnipresent. The second reason that taking the expansive view is a
challenge is that it requires B2B managers to examine the world through the eyes of their
distributors, their suppliers, and the final consumers. Employing such a level of empathy is no
simple task. It requires the B2B marketer to possess expertise in both upstream and downstream
operations as well as in the dynamics of the marketplace at the consumer level. Obviously, in
such a setting, having access to multi-faceted marketing intelligence is critical (Trim & Lee,
2006). The importance of environmental scanning with an expansive view takes on a new depth.
Marketing managers would do well to implement the following approaches:
1. Appoint individuals to be “Environmental Scanning Czars” for each of the members of the
network depicted in Figure 3. That is, have a person who engages in active environmental
scanning for the supplier groups that are part of the network, have one for the distributor group in
the network, and have one for the final consumer groups that buy the products their customers sell.
Obviously, as the diversity of suppliers, distributors, and consumer groups gets larger, a company
may need more than one “czar” for each of the constituencies.
2. Subscribe to a set of publications for each of the network groups. These publications should be
limited to those that provide a good deal of information about competitive dynamics and changes
in that industry. Additionally, subscribing to online information services will be useful. Those
publications should go to the person appointed as the czar for that particular network group.
3. Set up a regular series of meetings to examine changes in the B2B marketer’s environment. The
frequency with which such meetings take place is related to the dynamism in the market. Such a
schedule should allow for called meetings in the event of a major shock in one of the network
groups that promises to have a residual effect on others.
4. Establish a periodic system of conducting research with the final consumer market. This can be
done through distributors, through research houses, or by internal people. Such research should be
focused on examining how the consumer context for the product is changing. Additionally, at least
some emphasis should be placed on determining how the evoked set for those consumers is
changing. Focus groups lend themselves very well to this type of research. Such an effort should
not only give the B2B marketer insight into the consumer market and help it design components
that make the final product more attractive, it should also serve to give the B2B marketer some
insight into ways to help their direct customers meet the needs of final consumers.
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