Main projects 2006-2009 Center for Marketing Center for Strategic Marketing Professor S. Kouchtch, Director, Institute of Strategy, Leadership and Innovations.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Company Overview. Statement of Purpose The following will identify the mission, value and objective of the company with a brief introduction to the business.
Advertisements

Quality Management Training Quality circles Bench Mark Kaizen.
Team 8 Training June, 2002 Christina Brehme Emily Lim Cécile Rozuel Pauliina Saresma.
Measuring for Success NCHER Legislative Conference Sophie Walker September 26, 2013.
LOCAL SYSTEM OF INNOVATION CENTERED ON AUDIOVISUAL PRODUCTION Marcelo Matos Fluminense Federal University and RedeSist - IE/UFRJ.
The Reality of the Struggle to Align the Business with I.T. Rosana F. Chaidez Large Company Technology Networking Conference June 17th – 18th, 2008.
An Overview of Strategic Marketing
CHAPTER 1 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management
FOODIMA Food Industry Dynamics and Methodological Advances Contract No Priority 8.1 B1.1 Sustainable Management of Europe’s Natural Resources 5th.
MIB Research Seminar Dr., Senior Lecturer Maria M. Smirnova.
The priority factor model for customer relationship management system success Reporter :林曉薇 Date: 2006/12/05 Author : Tae Hyup Roh, Cheol Kyung Ahn, Ingoo.
Weaving Marketing into the Fabric of the Firm
MIB program: research projects Center for Marketing Strategic and International Management Andrei Panibratov, Associate professor, Doctor in Economics,
CURRENT STATE OF PURCHASING AND SUPPLY MANAGEMENT IN FINLAND AND IN RUSSIA - A CROSS COUNTRY SURVEY Jari Jumpponen, Sergei Kouchtch, Katrina Lintukangas,
Innovativeness & Interaction: Conceptual Research Approach Maria M. Smirnova Sergey P. Kouchtch GSOM Saint Petersburg.
Drive of creation «Разработка стратегии» Описание услуги Research & Consulting company ALT ALT Research & Consulting Company Presentation.
Business-Society Relations in Retail Value Chain (23E54000, 6cr) CSR in supply chain management Mika Skippari Aalto University School of Economics.
An investment perspective of HRM
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1–11–1 Marketing Deals with Products, Price, Distribution, and Promotion The Marketing Mix –Four.
Corporate Management. Requirements Candidates need to display a knowledge of the language of corporate or strategic management and have an understanding.
Chapter 3 The purchasing management process
NADEZHDA GOREYKO SVETLANA AVDASHEVA
Dr.Mohamed E. Osman & Prof.Thuwayba A. Al Barwani With Dr.Abdo M. Al Mekhlafi Dr. Khalid Al Saadi Ms.Laila Alhashar Ms.Fathiya Al Maawali Ms.Zuhor Al lawati.
Managing relations in the early implementation stages of alliances.
MEADOW: Guidelines for a European survey of organisations Nathalie Greenan CEE and TEPP-CNRS Exploring possibilities for the development of European data.
Research method2 Dr Majed El- Farra 1 Research methods Second meeting.
1.Macbeth et al. (2012): Procurement and supply in projects: Misunderstood and under- researched. Project Management Institute. 2.Pesämaa et al. (2009):
Theodor-Lieser-Str. 2 | Halle | | | phone LEIBNIZ INSTITUTE OF AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT IN CENTRAL.
DEFINITION OF MANAGEMENT
Thoughts about collaboration between University in Semarang and Univ. of Copenhagen GROWTH AND EMPLOYMENT.
When?April 1997 Who are we and where are we from? 1.Old Guys Network (graduates from the Moscow State University) 2.Brain Drain (different research.
INTERNATIONAL POLICY CONFERENCE “COMPETITIVENESS & DIVERSIFICATION: STRATEGIC CHALLENGES IN A PETROLEUM- RICH ECONOMY” National Systems of Innovation (NSI):
VALERIE MATHIEU PAPER NO. 13 Presented By Jared Norrell Service strategies within the manufacturing sector: Benefits, costs and partnership.
Financed bySupported byImplemented in cooperation with Financed bySupported byImplemented in cooperation with Customer Development and Management.
Master Programme “Governance of Science, Technology and Innovation” National Research University – Higher School of Economics (HSE) Institute for Statistical.
The role of Knowledge Intensive Service Activities (KISAs) in building the innovative capacity of the Irish software sector Majella.
COGITA is made possible by Bologna, 23 October 2014 European Public Policies on CSR: The perceptions SMEs Eleni Apospori, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of.
Irwin/McGraw-Hill Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-1.
1-1 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Globalization Internationalization of markets and corporations Global (worldwide) markets rather than national.
© 2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied, duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Large-scale organisations in context VCE Business Management Unit 3.
Ing. Peter Burger Regional dimension of of the knowledge economy (REDIPE) – the project is supported by Slovak Research and Development.
87 th International Conference SIEC-ISBE “Education for Business Sustainability” Krakow, July 27-31, 2015 “ Best educational practices from the Arctic.
Chapter 3 Strategic Information Systems Planning.
© 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Judith M. Whipple, Ph.D. Department of Marketing and Supply Chain Management Michigan State University 325 North Business Complex
CURRENT RESEARCH IN LOGISTICS AND SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT AT CORVINUS UNIVERSITY OF BUDAPEST Attila Chikán – Andrea Gelei Department of Logistics and.
TOWARDS “CLEAN” MINING TECHNOLOGY THROUGH TECHNICAL SCIENTIFIC INNOVATION Nicolae Ilias, Romania.
GENERAL DIRECTORATE TRADE, FAIRS AND MARKETS Commercial Districts’ policy experience in the Lombardy Region.
LOGO Mamdouh Abdel Aziz Refaiy Dr. Associate Professor, Business Administration Department, Faculty of Commerce, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt. Evaluating.
Presented by: S.M.TABATABAEE NASAB. Supply Chain flow The supply chain- 1 The global environment- 2 Inter – corporate coordination - 15 Inter- functionalCoordination-
 The goal of a market analysis is to determine the attractiveness of a market and to understand its evolving opportunities and threats as they related.
BUILDING BUSINESS RELATIONSHIPS Suppliers and customers develop relationships: A new way of doing business?
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 00 Chapter 11 Alliances as Vehicles.
When?April 1997 Who are we and where are we from? 1.Old Guys Network (graduates from the Moscow State University) 2.Brain Drain (different research.
“Connecting the scientific diaspora of the Republic of Moldova to the socio economic development of the home country” Dr. Gabriela Tejada Kick-off Meeting.
An overview for prospective students interested in pursuing a doctorate in the management disciplines PhD Project Conference November 18-20, 2015.
Impact of the inter-firm cooperation on company's performance: major changes during the economic crisis November 27, 2013 Oksana Kabakova.
Dr. Jörg Bürgi PhD KMU nachhaltig GmbH / SME sustainable Ltd. CH 4803 Vordemwald – Moderator Sustainable.
Innovation through Vertical Relations between Firms, Suppliers and Customers: Lessons from Germany Najib Harabi, Professor of Economics, Solothurn University.
P&G Customer Business Development. L i s t Who are you, P&G? What is CBD? Discussion.
CHAPTER 11 STRUCTURE AND CONTROLS WITH ORGANIZATIONS.
STROI network – project presentation. Discussion seminar February Results for the P5: Customer Orientation and Marketing Olga Tretyak, Marina.
Cristina Macarron Department of agriculture economics 31 DE MAYO DE 2008 Georg-August-Universität Göttingen.
MODELS OF STRATEGIC RESTRUCTURING OF COMPANIES AFTER GLOBALIZATION.
Richard Escritt, Director – Coordination of Community Actions DG Research, European Commission “The development of the ERA: Experiences from FP6 and reflections.
HR Strategies & its impact on Business Strategy.
Commitment 9: Set out EIT strategic agenda
The Organizational Context
Presentation transcript:

Main projects Center for Marketing Center for Strategic Marketing Professor S. Kouchtch, Director, Institute of Strategy, Leadership and Innovations

Main aims of research activities Mission Statement The Center for Strategic Marketing is dedicated to creation of new knowledge on concepts and approaches to marketing strategy and tactics in both consumer and industrial markets with particular emphasis on contribution to understanding of marketing in transition markets through applied research and comparative studies. Main research directions –Strategic marketing (markets in transition), –Industrial marketing and purchasing, –Hi-tech marketing, –Integrated marketing communications.

Our research partners Our research partner include: State University Higher School of Economics (Moscow) Lappeenranta University of Technology (Finland) IMP Group –Manchester Business School (UK) –University of Bath (UK) –Helsinki School of Economics (Finland) –Norwegian School of Management –Copenhagen Business School Dortmund University (Germany) Dresden Technical University (Germany)

Value creation in Russian markets: marketing perspectives National Project Innovativeness in Russian markets Center for Marketing Partners: LUT, MBS, IMP Group Main results: 3 surveys on Russian firms ( ) (quantitative & qualitative) 1 monograph; 12 conference papers; 1 journal paper in progress; 1 text book in progress (by Dec 2007) 1 conference organized (Oct 2007) (IMP Group) 1 round table organized (June 2007) 8 research seminars (at GSOM, MBS (UK), LUT) RHF grant Partners: LUT – NORDI research center Main results: 1 round table planned (Dec 2007) 2 conference papers planned on results by Dec 2007 Main projects

Main projects Projects planned for Innovativeness in Russian markets ( , in partnership with Lappeenranta University of Technology (LUT)) Russian market entry strategies of international companies ( , in cooperation with Dortmund University, Manchester Business School (MBS), chambers of commerce and research organizations) –Including writing of case studies for new Ph. Kotler Marketing textbook 2009 Value creation in Russian markets: marketing perspectives ( – series of in-depth interviews planned to interpret results of surveys ) (in cooperation with LUT, MBS, IMP Group) Consumer behavior towards ecological products in Russia (in cooperation with Dresden University (Germany)

Value creation in Russian markets: marketing perspectives Main conferences overview (12 conference papers): European Marketing Academy conference (EMAC 2006, 2007,2008) Academy of Marketing (AM 2006, 2007) Industrial Marketing and Purchasing Group Conference (IMP 2006, 2007,2008) INFORMS Marketing Science Conference 2007 Main activities : Round table on Supply Chain Management in Russia (June 2007) –With participation of industry experts, businessmen and researchers International Research Conference on Marketing Strategies of Russian Companies (Oct 2007) –Main sessions on Marketing Effectiveness, Marketing and Innovations, Relationships and Interaction –Participants from several Russian regions; –Conference is organized with support of IMP Group – research centers in the UK, Denmark, Finland, Sweden)

Purchasing as Strategy and Strategic Thinking - Opportunities and Challenges ( empirical evidence from Russian companies ) S. Kouchtch & M. Smirnova

Research idea How can we study buyer-supplier relationships in Russian economy? What is different? –Is this specifics determined by cultural or managerial factors? What can be the theoretical and managerial implications of this research? –How can we ensure that this research will contribute both to theory and practice? How can we classify buyer-seller relationships? What are the factors, influencing interaction? Are the relationship styles different? How the governance (coordinating) mechanism is formed? How can we evaluate relationship performance? How should we approach the problem of buyer-supplier relational patterns analysis from conceptual perspective? How should the methodology be developed? How should the study be conducted? How could the results be disseminated? Object Methodology

The IMP Model (1982) Buyer Supplier Characteristics of dyadic interaction process Environment Atmosphere of interaction

Strategic Supplier Wheel (Cousins, 1999) Corporate strategy and supply strategy Organization Structure Performance Measurement Skills and Capabilities Costs and benefits analysis Relationship Portfolio

Environmental factors (competition, technological changes, etc) Skills and capabilities Status of purchasing Purchasing Strategy (Cousins, Spekman, 2000, Carr, Smeltzer, 1997) Purchasing performance measurement Goals and strategic orientation Relationship portfolio Dyadic (key) supplier-customer interaction Interaction style (Ivens, 2002) Governance mechanism (Williamson, 1985, Campbell, 1985, etc) Costs-benefits analysis (Ulaga, Eggert, 2002, Walter et al, 2003) Conceptual Research Model 2 nd stage 1 st stage

Methodology 2 waves of research: –Purchasing strategy analysis –Key-supplier interaction analysis Personal fully structured interviews –access problems (Hallen&Johanson, 2004) –closeness and low readiness to share knowledge and information (Mikhailova&Husted, 2003) Partly replication of previous studies ( Carr & Smeltzer, 1997; Ivens, 2002; Walter et al, 2003; Ulaga & Eggert, 2002; Jumpponen, Kouchtch, Lintukangas, Smirnova, Virolainen, 2006 ) Questionnaire pre-test (6 in-depth interviews to check understanding of questions, structure, logic) Back-translation

Methodology (2) N=162 (16 regions) 6 industry groups – (machinery – 14,2%, pulp and woodworking industry – 32,9%,retailing and wholesale – 16,1,metallurgy – 5,8%, ICT – 16,1%, light and food industries - 23,9%) Number of employees –( – 44,4%, – 20,6%, ,9%; – 11,9%, 5000 and more – 4,4%) Market share differences –(до 5% - 18,8%, 5-15% - 25%, 16-25% - 20%, % - 14,9%, 51-75% - 8,1%, % - 3,1%) Year and way of foundation –(49% of companies were founded after 1991, 51% - privatized)

Study sample: regions involved 19,4% 13,1%

Status of purchasing and strategic orientations Strategy developed – 83,9% Strategy documented – 60,2% Long-term documented plan for 5-10 years – 15,6% Future development of supply chain: –supplier relationships development (88,3%), –operative effectiveness improvement (63%), –business processes development (48,1%), –personnel management improvement (44,4%), –time management improvement (27,8%), –participation in R&D (18,5%), –outsourcing (8%)

Strategic priorities in purchasing RankShare of firms Compared rank* Costs reduction 187%1 Long-term supplier relationships 279,5%3 Lead-time reduction 374,5%4 Quality improvement 472,7%2 Purchasing and sales activities alignment 550,3%- Just-in-time system creation 647,2%- Improved time-to-market 741,6%7 Firm’s flexibility improvement 839,8%- Stock reductions 932,9%- Integrated supply chain creation 1021,1%- Supplier base reduction 1116,8%5 Joint R&D 1216,8%10 Outsourcing 1312,4%8

Priorities in supplier relationships (Håkansson, 1982 ) RankShare of firms Trust186,6% Profit286,4% Satisfaction382,8% Quality of goods supplied482,7% Quality of services provided579,6% Cost reduction678,8% Quality of interaction coordination778,4% Joint problem solving875,3% Supplier’s problem solving ability974,7% Effectiveness of communications1073,5% Strategic perspectives of interaction1173,4%

Trust between Russian companies Please, give your evaluation to the following statements concerning interactions with the supplier: Average This supplier meets the commitments given to our company 4,20 This supplier is not always honest with us 1,97 We trust the information given by this supplier 4,10 This supplier is worth trusting 4,30 We consider that we should be cautious while interacting with this supplier 2,43 This supplier appreciates our opinion while taking important decisions 3,82 We can share the confident information concerning our firm with this supplier 2,83 We are sure about this supplier’s professionalism 4,36

Investments in the interaction with the supplier: russian context Our company has made considerable investments in the collaboration with this supplier 2,43 In case we stop the collaboration with this supplier, these investments will lose the importance and value for our company 2,40 We have considerably adopted our business processes to interact more effectively with this supplier 2,38 Training our personnel how to interact more effectively with this supplier took a lot of time and financial costs 1,86 We have considerably adopted the characteristics of our products to collaborate with this supplier 2,00 We have substantially adopted our production process to interact with this supplier 2,15 We have adopted our production plans to collaborate with this supplier 2,25 We have adopted our logistic system to interact with this supplier 2,37 To work with this supplier we have spent a lot of time to get to know supplier’s procedures and requirements of documents’ circulation 2,15

The level of adaptation in relationships between Russian companies Can you assert that while interacting with your firm, this supplier: Average suggests to your company the ideas of new product development 2,45 takes part in developing existing products and services of your company 2,49 makes suggestions on developing and optimizing the product processes of your company 2,37 suggests technological know-how for your company 2,37

Conclusions and implications theoretical implications unpredictable variations in the role of factors methodological uncertainty topics for analysis Asymmetry in relationships Value creating mechanisms and determinants Governance mechanisms Dyadic perspective Industry-specific investigation –Industry group based –Longitudinal analysis –Comparative studies managerial implications strategic thinking? No. strategic priorities benchmarking emphasis on capabilities development goals alignment importance

Further research directions Survey (Finland) 2005 Survey (Russia) 2006 Dyadic qualitative research Survey (Russia) 2008 Interviews region А region B region D region C