Commentary/Rajeev Srinivasan
The Art of War by Other Means
I forget who coined the phrase that diplomacy is the continuation of war by other
means -- probably von Clausewitz. Today, though, marketeers are the ones who have
taken this dictum to heart, applying the strategic and tactical principles of
old masters such as Chanakya, Sun-Tzu and von Clausewitz to the unending battles
for brand supremacy and competitive advantage. Sustainable competitive advantage
is worth big bucks, so this is not fun and games--it's a jungle out there,
folks!
As a marketing/sales type myself (in engineer lingo, ``marketing weenie'' or
``sales critter''), I suppose I am committing some sort of treason by exposing
our deep, dark secrets. But it is quite entertaining to look at some of these
invisible battles for mindshare. The fact of the matter is that there is
relatively little difference between the products and services of most firms; on
the other hand, brand awareness and loyalty are worth billions of dollars.
Consider the soft-drink business: quite honestly, there is absolutely no
difference between Coca-Cola and Pepsi-Cola. Both are sugared coloured water,
generally bad for you (a mineral-water-swilling Californian friend of mine
swears he once spilled a soft drink on his car, and that it took the paint
off!), and yet a) their brands are worth something like $ 10 billion in market
valuation, b) they spend perhaps $ 100 million a year in advertising and other
promotion.
Another example is the titanic struggle waged world-wide by Proctor & Gamble and
Unilever in pushing their ``new and improved'' versions of soap powder, shampoo
and other such generic products. Mind-share and brand loyalty are key to success
in these markets. Come to think of it, the selling of various religions is also
along the same lines: underneath, religions are all soap powder-like generic
articles -- very little difference in the essentials, but lots of packaging and
promotion -- and, of course, people go around killing to `prove' their brand
loyalty.
Similarly, car companies have spent untold billions in advertising,
sponsorships, trade shows with scantily-clad lovelies draped all over sleek
roadsters, just to create that certain image in people's minds. And it does pay
off, as seen by the continuing success of expensive automobile brands such as
Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, BMW, Lexus, Rover, etc. A car is basically a box on
wheels, yet the sex appeal--the not-so-subliminal message that a person with a
fancy car is more attractive to the opposite sex--has become a truism in our
minds.
Automobiles were the first technologically advanced products to be marketed like
breakfast cereal and soap powder, but the computer industry is catching on, too.
Anyone who has been to the gigantic Comdex show in Las Vegas can attest to the
glitter that's now rubbing off on the denizens of the Silicon Valley and
Seattle. Similarly, I attended the NASSCOM fair in Bangalore recently, and it
was also spectacular.
At NASSCOM's Cybercity conference and exhibition, the `suits' mingled with
scruffy engineers (although the Indian software type is more presentably
outfitted than the average Silicon Valley guy/gal, noted for their unkempt
excess body hair, sandals, and shorts). I understand there was a fashion show as
well, (to be politically incorrect, is it ``Chips and Chicks''?). Alas, I had to
miss it because of pressing business. But the point is, here is the very epitome
of the techno-heavy industry, and it too is being influenced by marketing glitz.
The biggest brand in the computer industry is Microsoft, with its ubiquitous
``Windows everywhere'' campaigns. A lot of people have become aware of Microsoft
because of the relentless hype machine unleashed by the citizens of Redmond,
Washington. For example, the launch of Windows 95 probably wasted more forests's
worth of newsprint and oceans's worth of ink than even the sorry saga of Diana,
princess of Wales.
Yet, it has paid off -- Microsoft has displaced many well-known brands to become,
according to The Economist, one of the world's top ten brands. Considering that
the world's #1 brand McDonald's has a brand equity valued at about $ 17 billion,
it is well worth Microsoft's efforts to attempt to establish itself as
synonymous with computing: it adds many billions to Bill Gates's coffers.
Getting away from all the positioning (``marketing fluff'', my technoid friends
sniff), there is serious stuff going on the computer industry. Microsoft and
Intel have managed to carve out a lucrative niche for themselves. Opponents of
this mighty `Wintel' brand charge them, variously, of monopoly practices,
predatory pricing, and just plain anti-competitive activities.
For example, it is alleged that Microsoft has systematically used the weapon of
``overhanging the market'', ie by pre-announcing things that are way off in
the future (aka ``vapourware'') to prevent smaller companies from gaining
early-mover advantage. (Although, to be fair, Microsoft is by no means alone in
indulging in vapourware and its close cousin, ``slideware''). Also, Microsoft is
accused of ``bundling'' or forcing customers to buy things they don't need just
to get the things they do want. However, US courts have never fully accepted
these charges.
Microsoft has used its ``cash cow'', its operating system business (DOS and
Windows) to expand into other areas. In military fashion, it identified
vulnerable territory, marshalled its forces, and attacked. One example is the
area of `office suites', including word processing, spreadsheets and
presentations -- i e the applications most people use -- Microsoft Office has 80%
marketshare. It may surprise many to know that ten years ago, Microsoft was
nowhere in the picture, and Lotus, WordPerfect etc ruled the roost -- they have
withered before the Microsoft assault.
In essence, Microsoft has now become too entrenched for a `frontal assault' by
its foes, and therefore they are now concentrating on `flanking attacks'. For
example, Netscape, IBM, Oracle, Novell and Sun have formed an alliance -- finding
all their core markets under attack by Microsoft -- to launch a diversionary
manoeuvre using the increasingly popular Internet and the related Java paradigm.
Java is the ``accidental platform'' -- intended originally for computers embedded
in appliances, cars, etc., its initial success, surprisingly, was in making Web
pages more jazzy; however, it has, in its short existence of about two years,
suddenly become an alternative `platform', with the great advantage of
portability -- ie it can run on Intel machines, Macs, UNIX machines,
mainframes,... whatever. And it also promises to get people off the expensive
yearly `upgrade' routine for hardware and software, in addition to being highly
secure and immune to viruses and so forth.
Somewhat to everyone's surprise, Microsoft now finds itself vulnerable in its
core market -- Java-based, inexpensive Network Computers can replace the
ubiquitous PC, at considerably lower cost. And Java Computing is the new
network-based computing model that can replace the Windows model. Given the
wildly popular acceptance of Java as a computer platform as well as a basis for
devices such as SmartCards, fax machines, television set-top boxes, etc, Microsoft finds
itself with a serious competitor to its goal of making Windows widespread in the
enterprise and in the home.
This is all high drama, and it is most entertaining for all of us on the
periphery. The war of words has just gone up a notch, with Microsoft clearly
attacking Sun, Netscape and friends by threatening software developers -- if you
go with Java, we will essentially disown you. High stakes, because the
developers are the true hidden assets of computer companies: if the people who
create interesting applications desert you (as Apple found to its discomfiture),
your boxes and systems software are of little value.
Returning the favour, Sun has just sued Microsoft, alleging trademark violation,
breach of contract, and a variety of other sins. At issue is the allegation that
Microsoft has unilaterally extended Java, by putting in Windows-only code into
it (thus subverting the multi-platform appeal of Java) in an attempt to stifle
its promise as a platform. The new Microsoft Web browser, Internet Explorer 4.0,
is the immediate target of the suit. At the moment, Microsoft's lawyers have not
responded.
So the battle goes on. The outcome will be quite significant to all the parties
involved, and it will either mean that Microsoft/Intel loses its grip on the
computer market, or that Sun, Netscape, Oracle, find themselves marginalised.
Either way, someone is poised to become ``roadkill on the information highway''.
It is war by other means, indeed.
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