The strategic triangle of 3C's
3C's framework of Kenichi Ohmae
Kenichi Ohmae
introduces the 3C's model which stands for the corporation, the
customer, and the competition. The 3C's model (three C's framework) of Kenichi Ohmae, a
famous Japanese strategy guru, stresses that a strategist should focus
on three key factors for success. "In the construction of any business
strategy, three main players must be taken into account:
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the corporation itself,
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the customer, and
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the competition".
Only by integrating the three C's (Customer, Competitor,
and Company) in a strategic triangle, sustained competitive advantage
can exist. Kenichi Ohmae refers to these key factors as the three C's or the
strategic triangle.

3C's model: Customer-based strategies are the basis of all
strategy. ..."There is no doubt that a corporation's foremost concern
ought to be the interest of its customers rather than that of its
stockholders and other parties. In the long run, the corporation that is
genuinely interested in its customers is the one that will be
interesting to investors".
Segmenting by objectives:
Here, the differentiation is done in terms of the
different ways different customers use the product. Take coffee, for
example. Some people drink it to wakeup or keep alert, while others view
coffee as a way to relax or socialize (coffee breaks).
Segmenting by customer coverage:
This type of strategic segmentation normally emerges
from a trade-off study of marketing costs versus market coverage. There
appears always to be a point of diminishing returns in the
cost-versus-coverage relationship. The corporation's task, therefore, is
to optimize its range of market coverage, be it geographical or channel,
so that its cost of marketing will be advantageous relative to the
competition.
Resegmenting the market:
In a fiercely competitive market, the corporation and
its head-on competitors are likely to be dissecting the market in
similar ways. Over an extended period of time, therefore the
effectiveness of a given initial strategic segmentation will tend to
decline. In such a situation it often pays to pick a small group of key
customers and reexamine what it is that they are really looking for.
Changes in customer mix:
Such a market segment change occurs where the forces at
work are altering the distribution of the user-mix over time by
influencing demography, distribution channels, customer size, etc. This
kind of change calls for shifting the allocation of corporate resources
and/or changing the absolute level of resources committed in the
business, failing which severe losses in the market share can occur.
3C's framework: Corporate-based strategies. They aim to
maximize the corporation's strengths relative to the competition in the
functional areas that are critical to success in the industry.
Selectivity and sequencing:
In order to win the corporation does not need to have a
clear lead in every function from sourcing to functioning. If it can
gain a decisive edge in one key function, it will eventually be able to
pull ahead of the competition in other functions that may now be no
better than mediocre.
A case of make or buy:
In case of rapidly rising wage costs, it becomes a
critical decision for a company to subcontract a major share of its
assembly operations. Its competitors may not be able to shift production
so rapidly to subcontractors and vendors, and the resulting difference
in cost structure and/or in the company's ability to cope with demand
fluctuations could have have significant strategic implications.
Improving cost-effectiveness:
This can be done in three basic methods. The first is by
reducing basic costs much more effectively than the competition. The
second method is simply to exercise greater selectivity in terms of
orders accepted, product offered, or functions to be performed which
means cherry-picking the high-impact operations so that as others are
eliminated, functional costs will drop faster than sales revenues. The
third method is to share a certain key function among the corporation's
other businesses or even with other companies. Experience indicates that
there are many situations in which sharing resources in one or more
basic sub-functions of marketing can be advantageous.
3 C's model: Competitor-based strategies according to
Kenichi Ohmae can be constructed by looking at possible sources of
differentiation in functions ranging from purchasing, design, and
engineering to sales and servicing.
The power of an image:
Both Sony and Honda outsell their competitors as they
invested more heavily in public relations and promotion and managed
these functions more carefully than did their competitors. When product
performance and mode of distribution are very difficult to
differentiate, image may be the only source of positive differentiation.
But as the case of the Swiss watch industry reminds us, a strategy built
on image can be risky and must be monitored constantly.
Capitalizing on profit- and cost-structure differences:
Firstly, the difference in source of profit might be
exploited, for e.g. profit from new product sales, profit from services
etc. Secondly, a difference in the ratio of fixed cost to variable cost
might also be exploited strategically for e.g. a company with a lower
fixed cost ratio can lower prices in a sluggish market and win market
share. This hurts the company with a higher fixed cost ratio as the
market price is too low to justify its high-fixed-cost-low-volume
operation.
Tactics for flyweights:
If such a company chooses to compete in mass-media
advertising or massive R&D efforts, the additional fixed costs will
absorb such a large portion of its revenue that its giant competitors
will inevitably win. It could though calculate its incentives on a
graduated percentage basis rather than on absolute volume, thus making
the incentives variable by guaranteeing the dealer a larger percentage
of each extra unit sold. The Big Three, of course, cannot afford to
offer such high percentages across the board to their respective
franchised stores; their profitability would soon be eroded if they did.
Hito-Kane-Mono
A favorite phrase of Japanese business planners is
hito-kane-mono, or people, money, and things (fixed assets). They
believe that streamlined corporate management is achieved when these
three critical resources are in balance without any superfluity or
waste. For example cash over and beyond what competent people can
intelligently expend is wasted. Again too many managers without enough
money will exhaust their energies and involve their colleagues in
time-wasting paper warfare over the allocation of the limited funds. Of
the three critical resources, funds should be allocated last. Based on
the available mono-plant, machinery, technology, process know-how,
functional strengths and so on-the corporation should first allocate
management talent. Once these hito have developed creative, imaginative
ideas to capture the business's upward potential, the kane, or money,
should be allocated to the specific ideas and programs generated by
individual managers.
References:
http://www.valuebasedmanagement.net/methods_3C's.html
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