02 SHV Analysis Flashcards

1
Q

Paradigm shift: What are 5 basic ideas?

A
  1. Marketing actions are investments
  2. Marketing investments create marketing assets
  3. Marketing assets create value
  4. Objective of marketing is to select strategies that max. SHV
  5. Financial and marketing value drivers help measuring and guiding how to max. SHV
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2
Q

Srivastava, R. K., Shervani, T. A., & Fahey, L. (1998). Market-based assets and shareholder value: A framework for analysis.

What are 3 traditional vs. emerging assumptions on the marketing-finance interface?

A
  1. Purposes of marketing:
    • Traditional: Create value for customers; win in the product marketplace
    • Emerging: Create and manage market-based assets to deliver SHV
  2. Perspective on customers and channels:
    • Traditional: Object of marketing’s actions
    • Emerging: Relational asset that must be cultivated and leveraged
  3. What to measure:
    • Traditional: Product-market results, assessment of customers
    • Emerging: Financial value results; configuration of market-based assets
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3
Q

What are the 4 criteria to count as an asset according to the resource based view (RBV)?

A
  1. Convertible
  2. Rare
  3. Imperfectly imitable
  4. Not perfectly substitutable
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4
Q

What does the SHV approach mean for marketing? (5 aspects)

A

The shareholder value approach…

  1. Helps marketing to properly define its objectives
  2. Provides the language for integrating marketing more effectively with other functions of firm
  3. Allows marketing to demonstrate importance of its assets
  4. Protects marketing budgets from profit-maximization policies
  5. Puts marketing in a pivotal role in strategy formulation process
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5
Q

Formula SHV

A
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6
Q

How to increase SHV? (4 aspects)

Srivastava, R. K., Shervani, T. A., & Fahey, L. (1998). Market-based assets and shareholder value: A framework for analysis.

A
  1. Enhance CFs (CF)
  2. Accelarate CFs (t,T)
  3. Reduce volatility and vulnerability of CFs (r)
  4. Enhance residual value of CFs (RV)
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7
Q

How can marketing enhance CFs? (7 aspects)

Srivastava, R. K., Shervani, T. A., & Fahey, L. (1998). Market-based assets and shareholder value: A framework for analysis.

A
  1. Price/market share premiums
  2. Cross-sell products/services
  3. Develop new sales
  4. Lower sales and service costs
  5. Reduce working capital
  6. Brand extensions
  7. Cobranding and comarketing
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8
Q

How to accelerate CFs? (4 aspects)

Srivastava, R. K., Shervani, T. A., & Fahey, L. (1998). Market-based assets and shareholder value: A framework for analysis.

A
  1. Faster response to marketing efforts
  2. Earlier brand trials and referrals
  3. Time to market acceptance
  4. Strategic alliances, cross-promotions
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9
Q

How to reduce volatility in CFs? (3 aspects)

Srivastava, R. K., Shervani, T. A., & Fahey, L. (1998). Market-based assets and shareholder value: A framework for analysis.

A
  1. Enhancing loyalty and switching costs
  2. Shifting to services and consumables
  3. Integrate operations to reduce capital requirements
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10
Q

How to enhance the residual value (RV) of CFs? (4 aspects)

Srivastava, R. K., Shervani, T. A., & Fahey, L. (1998). Market-based assets and shareholder value: A framework for analysis.

A
  1. Increase size of customer base
  2. Cross-sell products and services
  3. Use brand extensions
  4. Make upgrades
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11
Q

Name 5 ways to operationalize SHV

A
  1. Market capitalization = shares oustanding * share price
  2. Market-to-book ratio = EquityMarketValue - EquityBookValue
  3. Tobin’s q = (EquityMarketValue + DebtMarketValue) / Replacement cost of assets
  4. Economic Value Added (EVA) = Economic profit = NOPAT - (Capital employed * WACC) [last term is the cost of financing capital]
  5. Market Value Added (MVA) = EquityMarketValue - Capital employed
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12
Q

APPLICATION: Profitable Growth

Stewart (2004): Champions of Profitable Growth.

What did the they do?

A
  1. They looked at firms with high revenue growth between 1983 and 2003 (absolute value) and ranked them
  2. They calculated the MVA (=EquityMarketValue - Capital Employed) of these firms for 2003
  3. They built a ratio MVA2003/Revenues2003 and ranked the firms again according to this ratio
  4. For the overall ranking, they combined the two rankings (Revenue growth and MVA/Revenue ratio) to find out who are high-growth-value adders
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13
Q

APPLICATION: Profitable Growth

Stewart (2004): Champions of Profitable Growth.

What are 4 of their findings? What is the overall finding?

A
  1. To be a high-growth-value adder in Europe or North America, MVA ratio needed to be larger than 0.144
  2. In Asia and Southern Hemisphere, companies just needed to have a positive MVA to qualify as a value adder
  3. Energy and telecom companies are good in translating revenue growth into SHV in Europe but not in North America
  4. Electronic and automobile companies are high-growth-value adders in Asia, but automobile companies are laggards in North America and Europe

Overall: Revenue growth does not always translate into SHV

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14
Q

APPLICATION: Profitable Growth

What is relevant from your own analysis of firms between 2008-2013?

A
  • MVA is calculated only on equity: MVA = Market Cap. - Shareholder Equity
    • Market Cap. = shares outstanding * share pice
    • Shareholder Equity = Book Value of Equity
  • High-growth-value adders can in particular be found in the chemical industry and the computer industry
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