Marketing Strategies and Competitive Advantages of Fast Food Industries in the UK
By
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER 01: INTRODUCTION1
Background1
Purpose1
Significance3
Introduction to Organisation3
Aims and Objectives4
Research Questions4
Thesis Disposition5
CHAPTER 02: LITERATURE REVIEW6
Competitive Advantage6
Types of Competitive Advantage7
a)The Cost Advantage8
b)Differentiation Advantage8
Competitive Strategies9
Food Advertising11
Marketing Strategy13
Characteristic13
Strategic Options14
International Marketing and Global Marketing14
Adaptation Strategy16
Standardization Strategy17
The Marketing Mix18
Characteristic19
Types19
1)Product19
2)Pricing20
3)Placement21
4)Promotion21
Theoretical Framework22
Attribution Theory22
Correspondent Inference23
The Discounting Principle23
Involvement25
REFERENCES27
CHAPTER 01: INTRODUCTION
Background
To gain an edge in competitive landscape, firms must innovate to sustain their growth and development. New product development is the core of innovation. Therefore, since Schumpeter, researchers have conducted numerous studies' to probe the drivers of new product development, such as the role of R&D, team composition, organizational support, product champion, inter-functional cooperation such as marketing, engineering, manufacturing integration, etc. Also, past research suggests that in order to commercialize new products successfully, firms should assimilate a range of technological inputs into novel combinations, exploit market opportunities afforded by the environment, and ensure that these new products effectively meet the needs of the market. However, the odds of new product development projects succeeding are still sobering. Every year, we see thousands of new products introduced into the market, and simultaneously researcher see hundreds of new products exit the market. One would ask: Why are some firms more successful at commercializing new products than others? The researcher try to provide some initial answers built on previous research.
Purpose
First, the competitive landscape of firms has been changed from individual firms to firm networks. The new competition rules call for new theoretical explanations for how firms compete in market place. One theme of this stream of research is the importance of social network in building competitive advantage. The premise of this stream of research is built on the idea that networks can allow firms to create value that no single firm could have created alone. The growing importance of networks in innovation makes it urgent to develop a deeper appreciation how firms manage their web of networks over time.
Existing studies have explored how social structure shape innovation results. This stream of research has greatly helped us understand the nature of network relationships and their impact on performance. The problem with an orientation toward the 'why' question is that it is syntactically inclined to teleological or functional answers. Ironically, the two main perspectives (open networks and closed networks) in social network research have garnered both theoretical and empirical support, but they have also produced specialized versions of the two theories which retard the recognition of capability in managing relationships and have generated diatribes between proponents of the different horns of a dilemma. The focus on structural effects on performance can easily lead to an avoidance of the 'how' question, which focuses on some of the conditions under which certain behaviour and performance outcomes are likely. Networks do not naturally exist; they need to be established and nurtured over the course of firm development. Firms can play the role of the strategic centre in inter firm networks to manage their web of partners over time to sustain their innovativeness. Social network structure affords opportunities, but ...