Research Tidbits from Bureau West Research Group - May, 2003
Benefit from Competitive Intelligence

Competitive intelligence (the polite term for corporate espionage) doesn’t go away during a down market – it just gets that much more competitive. Smart corporate espionage actually becomes more crucial during a recession, to help companies elbow past competitors, gauge risk, and avoid costly product-development setbacks. Or as one expert put it: "Nothing changes table manners faster than a smaller pie."

Here are some competitive intelligence tactics you can use:

  • Mine online forums for valuable information
    At Bureau West Research Group, we consider this to be one of our secret weapons: using online forums and Internet newsgroups for research. Not only will you learn what the market thinks of your competition, you’ll also learn about perceptions of your company, as well as consumer attitudes, motivators and barriers.
  • Get your employees to spy for you
    Cognos, which sells planning and budgeting programs to clients such as Dow Chemical, recently turned competitive intelligence into a companywide free-for-all. Any of the firm’s 3,000 workers can submit scoops about Cognos competitors through an internal website called Street Fighter. The site has drawn more than 200 entries per month. R&D and sales execs pore over it daily, and bona fide tips are rewarded with prizes like DVD players.
  • Install an early-warning system for rumors
    Visa’s head of market intelligence, Dale Fehringer, assigns an employee to trawl the Web two hours a day for insights on MasterCard and other rivals. Fehringer swears it’s time well spent: When MasterCard announced its merger with Europay in 2001, Fehringer’s team had been tracking the potential impact of the deal for months. Within an hour of the announcement, he says, the CEO dispatched a letter to board members outlining Visa’s position on the merger.
  • Keep an eye on the traffic
    Paul Senatori, head of CI at Competitive Insights (and former intelligence chief at Oracle), claims he can size up workday trends that help gauge a company’s morale. If the cars in the executive spaces are speeding out at 5:01 p.m., it might be a good time to start cherry-picking talent.
  • Learn to be a conversational pickpocket
    Former Defense Intelligence Agency officer John Nolan runs three-day "interpersonal relations" seminars, teaching execs how to be amateur agents when they’re at a bar or trade show. The goal is to master the body language and vocabulary that can elicit what Nolan says are the magic words: "I shouldn’t tell you this, but..." Among his conversation starters: feigning boredom, which can put a source at ease and get him or her to more easily volunteer information; making a deliberate misstatement to prod a listener to correct it with fact; and holding a poker face when you discover that your source couldn’t keep a secret after all. If that’s enough to make you paranoid the next time you’re chatting up a stranger at an industry conference, take comfort: You probably should be.

Sources: Bureau West research; Business 2.0, May 2003

America’s Middle Market Wants Luxury

America’s middle-market consumers are trading up to higher levels of quality and taste. The members of the 47 million households that constitute the middle market (those earning $50,000 and above in annual income) are broadly educated and well-traveled as never before, and they have around $3.4 trillion of disposable income. As a result, they are willing to pay premiums for the kinds of well-designed, well-engineered, and well-crafted goods – often possessing the artisanal touches of traditional luxury market goods – not before found in the mass middle market.

As consumers shop more selectively, the categories "new-luxury" goods occupy tend to polarize. Consumers tend to trade up to the premium product in categories that are important to them but trade down – buying a low-cost brand or private label, or even going without in categories that are less meaningful to them. Consequently, people’s buying habits do not invariably correspond to their income level. They may shop at Costco but drive a Mercedes, or they may buy private-label dishwashing liquid but drink Sam Adams beer. Left in the cold are midpriced items that fail to distinguish themselves on luxury or price. Companies unable to match the prices of low-cost products or promise the emotional engagement of luxury goods face "death in the middle."

There are three major types of "new-luxury" goods:

  • Accessible Superpremium. These products are priced at or near the top of their category, but middle-market consumers can still afford them, primarily because they are relatively low-ticket items. For example, Belvedere Vodka, which undergoes four rounds of distillations for a smoother taste, is able to command about $28 a bottle, a 75 percent premium over Absolut at $16. Nutro pet food, which contains nutritious ingredients, sells at 71 cents a pound, a 58 percent premium over Alpo, which costs about 45 cents a pound.

  • Old-Luxury Brand Extensions. These are lower-priced versions of goods that have traditionally been affordable only by the rich – households earning at least $200,000 annually. In 2002, unit sales of BMW 325 sedans – which consumers buy for their advanced technology, their work-hard, play-hard image, and the excitement of driving them – were up 12 percent over 2001 levels. The Chevy Malibu, by contrast, fails to offer any technological features its rivals lack, or to give drivers any special pleasure in driving or owning it. Despite the Malibu’s $19,000 list price, $10,000 less than the 325’s, its sales were down 4 percent in 2002. Also on the list of old-luxury companies extending their brands are Mercedes-Benz, Ermenegildo Zegna, Tiffany, and Burberry, offering affordable products alongside their traditional ones.

  • Mass Prestige or "Masstige." These goods occupy a sweet spot between mass and class. While commanding a premium over conventional products, they are priced well below superpremium or old-luxury goods. An eight-ounce bottle of Bath & Body Works body lotion, for example, sells for $9, or $1.13 per ounce. That’s a premium of 276 percent over an 11-ounce bottle of Vaseline Intensive Care, which sells for $3.29, or 30 cents an ounce. But it is far from being the highest-priced product in the category. An eight-ounce bottle of Kiehl’s Creme de Corps, one of many superpremium skin creams, retails for $24, a 167 percent premium over the Bath & Body Works product – and many brands cost considerably more. Coach similarly positions its leather goods at prices below Gucci’s, but well above those of Mossimo at Target.

How can you benefit from this trend? Cast a critical eye at categories in which products and services have become expensive and stale, or cheap and undifferentiated. Then conduct research with customers and potential customers to find out how to engage them emotionally. This is where projective techniques can be useful – techniques such as story-telling as well as the use of visual stimuli to reach beyond respondents’ rational thinking to the emotional level. To conduct this kind of research, give us a call at Bureau West Research Group, tel: (818) 752-7210.

Sources: Harvard Business School Working Knowledge, April 21, 2003 ; Bureau West research


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