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Book
Summary: Marketing
Places Attracting Investment, Industry and Tourism to
Cities, States and Nations
Printed
with permission from TCI
Management Consultants. A group of senior-level management
consultants, offering strategic planning and marketing services
to a wide range of public and private sector clients.
Marketing
Places Attracting Investment, Industry and Tourism
to Cities, States and Nations
by Philip Kotler, Donald H. Haider and Irving Rein
The Free Press, New York, 1993
ISBN 0-02-917596-8
In this book Philip Kotler, marketing genius and professor
of business at Northwestern University, turns his spotlight
on the marketing of places towns, cities, regions
and nations. He is ably assisted in the enterprise by Donald
Haider, Director of the Public/Non-profit Management Program,
and Irving Rein, Professor of Communication Studies, both
of whom are also at Northwestern.
Place
Marketing provides a comprehensive framework within which
communities can market themselves in a global economy:
"A
central proposition of this book is that marketplace shifts
and changes occur far faster than a community's capacity
to react and respond. Buyers of the goods and services that
a place can offer (i.e. businesses, firms, tourists, investors,
among others) have a decided advantage over place sellers
(i.e. local communities, regions, and other places that
seek economic growth). The challenge of place marketing
is to strengthen the capacity of communities and regions
to adapt to the changing marketplace, seize opportunities,
and sustain their vitality.
This
book presents a fresh approach called strategic place
marketing for the revitalization of towns, cities,
regions, and nations. Strategic marketing calls for designing
a community to satisfy the needs of its key constituencies.
Place marketing succeeds when stakeholders such as citizens,
workers and business firms derive satisfaction from their
community, and when visitors, new businesses and investors
find their expectations met. Place marketing, at its core,
embraces four activities:
designing
the right mix of community features and services
setting attractive incentives for the current and potential
buyers and users of its goods and services
delivering a place's products and services in an efficient,
accessible way
promoting the place's values and image so that potential
users are fully aware of the place's distinctive advantages"
(p.18)
Place
marketing comprises six generic strategies that communities
and regions can use to improve their competitive positions:
attracting
tourist and business visitors
attracting businesses from elsewhere
retaining and expanding existing businesses
promoting small business expansion and fostering new business
start-ups
expanding exports and outside investments
expanding the population or changing the mix of residents
But before a community can embrace some or all of these strategies,
it must 'do its homework' in terms of understanding its own
competitive advantages and disadvantages; identifying who
its target markets are; improving the products and services
that it can offer to these target markets; and determining
how it can communicate its message to them. The book follows
the general flow of this logic.
The
first chapter outlines how places get into trouble. It discusses
city growth and decay dynamics, and the kinds of external
and internal forces that may operate to erode a place's
traditional markets and competitiveness. External factors,
about which a place can do very little, include technological
change, intergovernmental power shifts and global economic
restructuring. Internal factors include major companies
leaving (often as a result of these external factors) and
economic recession. This negatively affects businesses in
the community, leading to unemployment. As a result the
tax base of the community is stagnant or declines, which
in turn creates the conditions for infrastructure breakdown
and reductions in services. This makes the place even more
unattractive and additional businesses leave as a result.
As well the place loses its ability to attract new businesses,
residents and tourists. This downward spiral only leads
to further erosion of the tax base, and exacerbation of
the problem.
The
conclusion of this chapter is that in order to help themselves,
places in trouble need to carry out six fundamental tasks:
interpreting
what is happening in the broad environment
understanding the needs, wants, and behavior choices of
specific internal and external constituencies
building a realistic vision of what the place can be
creating an actionable plan to complement the vision
building internal consensus and effective organization
evaluating at each stage the progress being achieved with
the action plan
This
process is the essence of strategic place marketing.
The
second chapter discusses how places market themselves. The
authors present the four main target markets for place marketing,
which are 1) visitors (business and pleasure); 2) residents
and workers; 3) business and industry; and 4) export markets
(i.e. consumers of the goods and services produced by the
place or region). In this chapter they also discuss who
undertakes place marketing activities i.e. the public
and private sector actors involved.
The
third chapter presents a model of how these target markets
make their choices. Grounded in a well-documented model
of buyer behavior, it discusses how the various stages of
problem recognition, information search, evaluation of alternatives,
purchase decision and post-purchase behavior function within
the target markets being pursued by places. It contains
a very interesting section of the usefulness of the various
'places rated' services available, and how such ratings
are compiled.
Chapter
4 presents a discussion of the various activities that a
community should undertake in the development of a plan
for strategic place marketing. This essentially is a detailed
articulation of the six steps to strategic place marketing
earlier outlined. The authors place particular emphasis
upon the undertaking of a SWOT analysis as assessment
of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats
facing the community or region.
Chapter
5 discusses strategies for place improvement. Here the authors
stress that strategic place marketing is more than simply
promoting the image of a place real work has to be
done in the area of 'product improvement' as well. They
suggest that a strategic place marketing plan should consider
improvements that should take place in five areas: 1) urban
design; 2) infrastructure; 3) basic services such as fire,
police and education; 4) attractions; and 5) people. They
discuss this last category primarily in terms of the kinds
of stereotypes that may apply to the inhabitants of an area
(i.e. residents of Sicily are criminals, those living in
the deep south are friendly but slow-moving), and discuss
ways in which negative stereotypes may be overcome and positive
images capitalized upon.
Chapter
6 is devoted to discussing a place's image, and strategies
that places can use to build on a positive image, or correct
a negative one. The authors mention five factors that are
critical to the development of an appropriate and useful
image:
it
must be valid
it must be believable
it must be simple
it must have appeal
it must be distinctive
They
assess the advantages and disadvantages of the various tools
that are available for communicating an image: slogans,
themes and positions; visual symbols; and events and deeds.
Once
the product has been improved and the image has been developed,
the next step is promotion to the various target markets
identified (i.e. visitors, businesses, etc.). Chapter 7
addresses this topic, and discusses the use of:
advertising
direct marketing
sales promotions
public relations
personal selling
television images (e.g. the image of Miami created by the
show "Miami Vice", which became something of a
negative image that the community had to overcome)
songs (e.g. 'I left My Heart in San Francisco')
sports teams
sites (e.g. the town of Dyersville, Iowa, which became a
tourist Mecca after the movie Field of Dreams)
They
discuss in further detail the use of advertising media,
including television, radio, magazines, newspapers, billboards,
direct mail, telephone campaigns and brochures. (As this
book was published in 1993, there is no mention of the Internet,
but clearly that would be another major promotional and
advertising devices nowadays.) This chapter concludes with
a section on how to evaluate the results of a promotional
campaign.
With this background in place, the book then turns to a
discussion of each of the six generic strategies mentioned
earlier. Chapter 8 discusses attracting the tourism and
hospitality business markets (e.g. business conventions).
Chapter 9 deals with the base of business and industry in
the community, and discusses attracting new businesses from
elsewhere, retaining and expanding existing businesses,
and encouraging new business start ups. Chapter 10 addresses
the strategy of helping local businesses expand exports
(which will help to make the business more stable and will
likely increase investment and job creation in the community),
and Chapter 11 deals with attracting residents. Each of
these chapters contains many examples of communities that
have successfully adopted each particular strategy.
The
final chapter of the book addresses the issue of organizing
for change. Here the authors discuss the challenges that
community leaders will increasingly face in future, and
that responses that strategic place marketing must consider:
|
Challenges
|
Responses
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- places
are increasingly at risk as a result of the accelerating
pace of change in the global, political and technological
environment.
-
places are increasingly at risk as a result of normal
processes of urban evolution and decay
-
places are facing a growing number of competitors
in their efforts to attract scarce resources
-
places have to rely increasingly on their own local
resources to face the growing competition
|
-
places need to establish a strategic vision to face
these challenges
-
places need to establish a market-oriented strategic
planning process to face these challenges
-
places must adopt a genuine market perspective toward
their product and consumers
-
places have to build quality into their programs
and services to compete with other places
-
places need skill to effectively communicate ate
and promote their competitive advantages
-
places need to diversify their economic base and
develop mechanisms for flexibly adapting to changing
conditions
-
places must develop and nurture entrepreneurial
characteristics
-
places must rely more on the private sector to accomplish
their tasks
-
each place needs to develop its own unique change
process as a result of differences in the place's
culture, politics and leadership processes
-
places must develop organizational and procedural
mechanisms to sustain place development and maintain
momentum once it has begun
|
While
somewhat dated (1993) now, Marketing Places provides an
excellent framework for communities, cities or regions to
follow in improving their infrastructure and services, and
promoting themselves to the outside world. With hundreds
of examples of communities that have followed all or parts
of the strategic place marketing process that they outline,
the book contains a wealth of real-world success stories.
It is highly recommended reading for any who are in the
business of improving or promoting their communities.
"All
places are in trouble now, or will be in the near future.
The globalization of the world's economy and the accelerating
pace of technological changes are two forces that require
all places to learn how to compete. Places must learn how
to think more like businesses, developing products, markets
and customers...The collaborative benefits of business and
government working together, shaped by different cultures,
traditions and institutions, are compelling leaders at all
place levels and sizes to rethink their responses. If the
trends toward collapsing economic borders among nations
accelerates as we think they will, economic regions and
places will transcend political boundaries. In a borderless
economy, they will emerge as the new actors on the world
scene.
The
central tenet of Marketing Places is that in spite of the
powerful internal and external forces that buffet them,
places have within their collective resources and people
the capacity to improve their relative competitive positions.
Their responses to the new, bottom up economic order should
be placed on an equal footing with national responses to
the competitiveness challenge. A strategic market planning
perspective provides places with the marketing tools and
opportunities to rise to that challenge." (p. 346)
The
above summary has been provided to you compliments of TCI
Management Consultants
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