Theodore Levitt’s 1960 article “Marketing Myopia” is a business classic that earned its author the nickname “the father of modern marketing”. It is also a beautiful demonstration of the problem solving skills that are crucial in so many areas of life – in business and beyond.
The problem facing Levitt was the same problem that has confronted business after business for hundreds of years: how best to deal with slowing growth and eventual decline. Levitt studied many business empires – the railroads, for instance – that at a certain point simply shrivelled up and shrank to almost nothing. How, he asked, could businesses avoid such failures?
His approach and his solution comprise a concise demonstration of high-level problem solving at its best. Good problem solvers first identify what the problem is, then isolate the best methodology for solving it. And, as Levitt showed, a dose of creative thinking also helps. Levitt’s insight was that falling sales are all about marketing, and marketing is about knowing your real business. The railroads misunderstood their real market: they weren’t selling rail, they were selling transport. If they had understood that, they could have successfully taken advantage of new growth areas – truck haulage, for instance – rather than futilely scrabbling to sell rail to a saturated market.
Produkteigenschaften
- Artikelnummer: 9781912127337
- Medium: Buch
- ISBN: 978-1-912127-33-7
- Verlag: Macat Library
- Erscheinungstermin: 04.07.2017
- Sprache(n): Englisch
- Auflage: 1. Auflage 2017
- Serie: The Macat Library
- Produktform: Kartoniert
- Gewicht: 110 g
- Seiten: 94
- Format (B x H x T): 129 x 198 x 5 mm
- Ausgabetyp: Kein, Unbekannt