Strategic Marketing. Lesson 7. Core Competence and Finding Growth Opportunities

Part 2: Advanced Marketing Analytics Tools

🎧 This lesson is available for listening.

🎯 Lesson 7. Core Competence and Finding Growth Opportunities

✅ Learning Outcomes of This Lesson

  • You will define the core competencies of your company.
  • You will outline a list of possible growth directions for your business.

🌟 Core Competence

Running a business means juggling many operations. But sustainable success comes from focusing on what your company does best.

Think of it this way: 🎶 A musician hires a producer so they can focus on making music, not on contracts and promotion. In the same way, businesses should delegate non-core processes — like cleaning, IT, logistics, or even parts of marketing — and concentrate resources on what creates the most value for customers.

According to Philip Kotler & Kevin Keller (Marketing Management):

  • A core competence is a source of competitive advantage that creates real value for customers.
  • It must be applicable across multiple markets.
  • It should be hard for competitors to imitate.

✅ Positive Examples (recognized and used effectively)

1. Starbucks

  • Core competence: Operational management + standardized customer experience.
  • Advantage: A customer knows they’ll get the same coffee quality and “third place” atmosphere anywhere in the world.
  • Applicability: Competes not only in coffee, but in lifestyle, co-working, and digital loyalty.
  • Hard to copy: A global operating model + powerful CRM (personalization through the mobile app).

2. Costco

  • Core competence: Unique procurement and logistics model.
  • Advantage: Lowest prices while maintaining quality. Customers trust they’re always getting the “best deal.”
  • Applicability: Works in FMCG, electronics, pharmacy, even insurance.
  • Hard to copy: The paid membership + strict margin discipline can’t be replicated by Walmart or Target.

❌ Negative Examples (missed or lost core competence)

1. Blockbuster

  • Potential competence: Nationwide film distribution.
  • Mistake: Saw itself as a “DVD rental business,” not as an “entertainment distribution operator.”
  • Lost to Netflix, which doubled down on distribution (first by mail, then digital).

2. Sears

  • Potential competence: The strongest U.S. distribution + catalog system (a precursor of Amazon).
  • Mistake: Believed their strength was assortment and retail, not logistics.
  • Amazon took over by scaling exactly what Sears failed to reimagine.

🏕 Core Competence in Our Party Rental Company (Wake County, NC)

Since our company is young, identifying a true core competence is still in progress. But even a new business can build a strategy around it using Bain & Company’s 8-step method — and validating results against Kotler & Keller’s three criteria.

Step 1: Identify strengths

📊 From Yelp, Google, and local forums, customers consistently value:

  • Clean and well-maintained inventory
  • Honest pricing (no hidden fees)
  • On-time delivery & setup
  • Attentive, personal communication

Step 2: Benchmark against competitors

Competitors: hidden fees, delays, poor communication.
Our company: ✅ transparent booking, ✅ real photos, ✅ free delivery in Wake County ($100+), ✅ “turnkey” setup option.

Criteria What clients value Our Party Rental Company
Communication Fast, attentive Personal support via phone & email
Inventory quality Clean, reliable Real photos, sanitized after every use
Delivery & setup On-time, stress-free Free, scheduled delivery + setup option
Booking simplicity Convenience, but hidden fees Transparent online booking 24/7
Extra services Variety, safety Tailgate packs, games, coolers
Loyalty Almost none Rewards program for repeat clients

Step 3: Invest in what clients really value

➡️ Simplicity, honesty, and stress-free event organization.

Step 4: Create a roadmap

  • Strengthen the “transparency & simplicity” positioning.
  • Actively collect reviews (Yelp, Google).
  • Expand loyalty program.
  • Emphasize turnkey service + free delivery.

Step 5: Build partnerships

Examples: local catering companies, sports clubs → strengthen tailgate & family packages.

Step 6: Engage the whole team

Every staff member must live the value of honest and simple service — from the first call to equipment pickup.

Step 7: Protect your strengths as you grow

Even if we expand beyond Wake County, the DNA of the company must remain: simplicity, transparency, and personal service.

Step 8: Outsource non-core activities

  • Logistics overflow (rent vehicles in peak season).
  • Accounting & payroll → outsource.
  • Equipment cleaning → partially outsource to free resources.

🔍 Testing Against Kotler & Keller’s 3 Criteria

  • Competitive advantage → Transparent pricing, turnkey service, and free delivery = trust + loyalty.
  • Applicability → Works equally for backyard parties, tailgates, and corporate gatherings.
  • Hard to copy → Big companies can mimic prices, but not the local trust, personal care, and flexibility of a family-run business.

👉 Party Rental Commany core competence = delivering a stress-free, honest, and personalized rental experience through transparent pricing, easy booking, and community-first service.

📈 Growth Opportunities

Why do we need to define core competence? Because it’s the foundation for finding growth opportunities through value.

Kotler’s “Holistic Marketing Structure” is a simple tool for this:

Customer focus Core competencies Partners
Value research Discover explicit & hidden needs Analyze what we do best
Value creation Design new benefits & offers Use core competencies to deliver
Value delivery CRM, CX, service/support Operations, logistics, IT, quality

This 3D view — clients, company, partners — ensures growth ideas are realistic and sustainable.

DO THIS TO WIN

✏️ Assignment 7-1 & 7-2

  • Task 7-1: Define your company’s core competencies and check them against Kotler & Keller’s three characteristics.
  • Task 7-2: Generate at least 5 new growth opportunities using the holistic marketing structure. Explain which ones you discarded and why.

✨ In short: even a young business, if systematic, can define its core competence, protect it, and use it as the foundation for long-term growth.

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