Deep consumer understanding is at the heart of the strategy discussion. To be effective, strategy must be rooted in a desire to meet user needs in a way that creates value for both the company and the consumer.
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As current CEO Bob McDonald explains, âWe donât give lip service to consumer
understanding. We dig deep. We immerse ourselves in peopleâs day-to-day lives. We work hard to find the tensions that we can help resolve. From those tensions come insights that lead to big ideas.â Those big ideas can be the basis of a powerful where-to-play choice.
It is tempting to believe that strategy in general, and where-to-play and how-to-win choices in particular, are needed only for outward-facing functionsâthose folks who interact with external consumers and competitors. But every line of business and function
should have a strategyâone that aligns with the strategy of the company overall and decides where to play and how to win specifically for its context. At P&G, corporate functions are all tasked with crafting their own strategies in this way. Joan Lewis, global consumer market knowledge officer, explains: âWhere to play and how to win has been a very important framework for us. Organizations are often good at one or the other without realizing that theyâre two different sets of decisions. At one point, we werenât as disciplined about our where-to-play choices. It was everywhere anybody needed consumer insight or anywhere we thought it could add value. Just like a business dilutes its focus and in turn its growth potential when you try to do too many things at a time or do things that are further away from your core strengths, we were relatively diluted in the nature of the impact we could have.
At P&G, it boiled down to three themes that would enable the company to win, in the places and ways it had chosen, regardless of the details of individual differences between businesses:
⢠Make the consumer the boss.
⢠Win the consumer value equation.
⢠Win the two most important moments of truth.â (Lafley and Martin, âPlaying to Winâ,
p.141)
âThe first dictum, that the consumer is boss, was a reorientation to the companyâs aspirationâto improve the lives of consumers. We wanted everyone focused on the end consumer in all aspects of the business: in innovation, branding, go-to-market strategies, investment choices, and so on. We wanted to be clear about just who the most important stakeholder is and always should be. Not shareholders. Not employees. Not retail customers. But rather the end user: the people who buy and use P&G products. The second crucial theme was to win the consumer value equation. This quickly and unambiguously defined the way that P&G would win: by opening up a bigger gap between
the value it offers to consumers and the cost of delivering that value than competitorsâ gaps. This meant providing unique value to consumers (through brand differentiation and innovative products). And it meant maintaining a cost position that would let P&G offer that value to the consumer at an attractive price and still make a healthy profit. This edict turned everyoneâs attention toward the where-to-play and how-to-win choices that create sustainable competitive advantage through differentiation.
So, given that P&G needs retailers to stock Gain, the company needs to offer a compelling value proposition to retailers, or the end consumer will never see the product. Wherever there is an intermediary channel between the firm and the end consumer, that
intermediate customer and what it values must be understood.
To understand the consumer value equation, you must truly get to know your consumersâto engage with them beyond the quantitative survey, through deeper, more personal forms of researchâwatching them shop, listening to their stories, visiting them at home to observe how they use and evaluate your products. Only through this kind of deep user understanding can you hope to generate insights about where to play and how to win.