Kim Warren on Strategy
Strategy insights and living business models
Strategy Dynamics Briefing 30: When resources bring access to others
One specially useful case where resource attributes arise is when one resource brings access to other potential resources, most often customers…
One specially useful case where resource attributes arise is when one resource brings access to other potential resources, most often customers – a new product makes it possible to sell to a certain number of previously unavailable customers, and adding a new distributor makes it possible gives access for our products to their end-customers, for example. We describe the first resource as “primary,” and the resource to which it brings access is “secondary.” This terminology does not imply any importance — both are vital.The most visible example to the general public of this principle is when opening a new retail store in an additional town gives access to consumers who we could not previously reach. We constantly hear of new outlets opening for Starbucks, Wal-Mart, IKEA, etc., and many of us change our shopping habits when an appealing new store appears in our neighborhood. Behind this expansion lie sophisticated procedures for assessing the likely customer-base, sales and profitability of each new unit.But gaining access to potential customers is not the same as actually winning those customers. Having opened a new store, we must of course offer products and services that its target consumers want at prices that offer good value. Then there is the question of how far to push that expansion. Early in the life of a retail chain, every new store can be opened in a locality that is new for that chain, and where there are large numbers of potential consumers. As expansion continues, however, two things change:
Unfortunately, hidden beneath the reasonable top-line indicators there is a sharp fall in the true number of new consumers won with each new opening, and new stores increasingly succeed only by taking sales from others. Furthermore, the later consumers turn out to spend less with the stores than those captured from around the initial locations. The costs of operating these later stores is not covered by the incremental revenues and gross profit from the sharply reducing rate of new consumers, and profits go into decline.
The generic structure this example illustrates consists of:
This strategic error can lead to further difficulties, such as damage to the firm’s reputation in the market as it is seen to operate second-rate units, diversion of management attention onto solving the problem they themselves created, damage to investor confidence, and poor morale amongst middle – and front-line management. It is worth recalling that McDonalds’ too once got into this difficulty. In its 2002Annual Report letter to shareholders, the new Chairman stated that the business was “in transition from a company that emphasizes adding restaurants to customers to one that emphasizes adding customers to restaurants.” The company also cut its target annual profit growth rate. Result? – a subsequent increase in profit growth and a strong recovery in its stock price.
This briefing summarises material from chapter 5 of Strategic Management Dynamics, pages 274-280.
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- locations for new stores reach only smaller numbers of potential consumers
- each new store’s catchment area increasingly overlaps with existing units, so much of its sales only arise by taking sales from neighbors.

- The in-flow of new stores (the primary resource) brings with it an attribute co-flow or new potential customers (the secondary resource)
- That growing potential of the attribute resource is then converted into an active resource, in this case consumers who really use the stores
- The secondary resource (customers) drives revenue, and costs are incurred [a] adding the primary resource (stores) [b] operating that resource (running the stores) and [c] converting potential customers into active ones.

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