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The New Law of Demand and Supply: The Revolutionary New Demand Strategy for Faster Growth and Higher Profits
 
 
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The New Law of Demand and Supply: The Revolutionary New Demand Strategy for Faster Growth and Higher Profits [Hardcover]

Rick Kash (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 17, 2002
A groundbreaking business book for the twenty-first century, The New Law of Demand and Supply overturns the traditional supply-side approach to how business is done, showing why a demand-based approach is essential to success in today’s economy.

For more than two hundred years, companies have based their approach to business on supply-side economics, concentrating on creating products and services and then attempting, through marketing, publicity, distribution and promotion to stimulate a demand for them. While most companies have factored in customer feedback, focus groups, and broad-based market research, their basic approach has remained the same. And it is a mistake. In The New Law of Demand and Supply, Cambridge Group CEO Rick Kash argues that in order to succeed in today’s market, companies must reverse their approach by first determining what current and emerging demand exists and then by creating products and services to meet that demand.

For a host of reasons–from the reduced life cycles of products and services, to deregulation, to increased competition as a result of globalization, to the ability of customers to compare prices and values at a keystroke–the market, Kash argues, has fundamentally and permanently changed from one that is driven by supply to one that is driven by demand. Traditional businesses that remain locked in a supply-side mentality are doomed to failure. Today’s most successful companies, from McDonald’s to IBM, from EMC to Pepsi-Cola, use the principles of demand strategy to first understand all the factors that go into creating demand in their targeted markets, as well as what their emerging needs will be in the future. In the heart of the book, Kash outlines a specific six-step demand strategy on how to implement a demand-first approach–from homing in on who your most profitable customers are to determining what needs they have (whether articulated or not) that are not currently being addressed. Using that information, companies can create unique products that are differentiated from their competitors’ to meet those demands. Rather than being forced to compete on price, they can trump the competition by competing on value, offering the options, features, products, and services that better meet an existing demand. As a result, companies often can actually charge more for what they produce and improve their margins. Diving under the hoods of a score of successful Fortune 500 companies that have made demand strategy central to the way they do business, including Gatorade, Capital One, Sara Lee, and Sears, Kash details how these companies have used this strategy to re-create their businesses.

Ten years ago, Reengineering the Corporation brought about a sea change in the way companies were run. Now, The New Law of Demand and Supply redefines the ground rules of today’s economy and gives managers the tools they need to outperform the competition and achieve dramatic growth and profits.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Rick Kash believes supply-side economics has reached the end of its effectiveness, and in The New Law of Demand and Supply he argues for an inverse approach--one he contends is already employed to some degree by many of the world's most successful companies. Kash, CEO of The Cambridge Group consulting firm, uses some of these organizations--such as Gatorade and Sears Credit--to illustrate the concept of demand strategy he proposes to meet these new-world needs. Based on "thoroughly understanding existing and future demand and only then creating the supply to satisfy it," the approach is fully described in chapters devoted to each of its six phases. "Analyze the demand forces and industry factors impacting your business," for example, is a logically presented first step that calls for a wide focus on external elements like demographics, competitors, societal trends, the economy, legislation, and technology. Next comes "Select your most profitable demand segments," advocating a careful search for areas that match your capabilities but can be differentiated from the offerings of others. Subsequent steps (develop a "demand value proposition" that elevates you above the crowd, identify ways to realize this agenda, allocate necessary resources, and execute) are likewise explained thoroughly. The result is an intriguing platform with planks that are potentially applicable in a multitude of situations. --Howard Rothman

From Publishers Weekly

The central premise seems obvious: if you want profits, give consumers what they want. But Kash, who runs the Chicago-based consulting firm the Cambridge Group, points out that the prevalent supply-side economic model means companies spend their greatest efforts developing efficient mass production techniques, then stimulating consumer demand through marketing and publicity. He suggests the money would be better spent identifying the biggest "demand segments" for their products and services. "[A] business must understand the demand in its market before it creates supply," he says, in order to develop the products that will offer their best customers the most value in many cases, at higher costs those customers are willing to absorb in exchange for enhanced benefits. Kash's examples, drawn in large part from his client list, cover the corporate spectrum, from the food and beverage industry and technology manufacturers to financial service providers. The case histories are packed with details of Kash's meticulous quests to discover consumer demands why, for example, frequent business-class travelers are willing to sacrifice in-flight entertainment for leg room, or why certain credit card users will accept high interest rates to get low monthly payments but the intense focus on using that information for maximizing profit, particularly through the ability to charge higher prices for specialized goods, may limit the book's appeal to the rarefied corporate decision makers Kash writes about.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Doubleday Business; 1 edition (September 17, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385504322
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385504324
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,414,379 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Rick Kash is the founder and CEO of The Cambridge Group, the growth-strategy consulting firm. He is also the author of The New Law of Demand and Supply. Kash works with companies around the world to help them grow through demand-based business models.

 

Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
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 (2)
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars From the makers of Duh Magazine., June 14, 2003
By 
sporkdude "sporkdude" (San Jose, Ca United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The New Law of Demand and Supply: The Revolutionary New Demand Strategy for Faster Growth and Higher Profits (Hardcover)
Okay, this should not be revolutionary to anyone. Companies should concentrate on demand and customers? Uh, thanks. Try to differentiate your product to get higher returns. Uh, thanks again. Proper resource allocation is essential. No, really?

Kash makes some good suggestions on how companies should develop, market, research and produce in order to meet demand, instead of concentrating all efforts into the supply side. These suggestions, which are very sound, are just plain common sense. It's not revolutionary in any terms. He develops six principles on which to do this and devotes chapters to it, ranging from researching to resource allocation. I would provide the list here, but then that would mean Kash's book would be entirely useless.

What's more insulting than the "revolutionary" in the title are the complements on the back of the book. Such people as the head of McDonalds, EMC, and Gillete have gave great reviews for this book. Of course, if you read the book, you'll see that Kash has actually praised those executives countless times. If someone wrote a book about me, and praised me - heck, I'd consider it a literary masterpiece.

This book just basically is a list of principles wrapped around tons of success stories and a complete lack of humility. Avoid it.

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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Must Read, November 19, 2002
This review is from: The New Law of Demand and Supply: The Revolutionary New Demand Strategy for Faster Growth and Higher Profits (Hardcover)
As a strategy executive at a Fortune 50 company, I am constantly reading the business press for practical, new ways to take good business concepts to the bottom line. Rick Kash has them.

In "The New Law of Demand and Supply," Kash presents a proven approach for making businesses larger and more profitable by putting demand ahead of supply. In practice, this means that companies must expend more effort understanding demand in the marketplace before they start developing new products, streamlining supply chains, or incenting sales reps. Unless these activities are targeted at the right sets of customers, they may actually end-up destroying rather than creating value.

As some reviewers have noted (disparagingly), the approach is based on basic business truisms. But rather than highlighting a weakness, this observation is a comfortable reminder that the recommendations reflect the day-to-day business world and are not merely interesting academic ideas. In the business world, success comes less from blazing insight than from effective execution. "The New Law of Demand and Supply" presents a clear step-by-step methodology for companies to grow their businesses around their most profitable and valuable customers.

Most companies have large, entrenched organizations that effectively work against focusing on their most profitable customers. Sales, manufacturing, and engineering/product development organizations simply want more volume to keep commissions, plant utilizations, and employee curiosity high. It takes strong leadership to stand-up and say," We do not know more about our customers than our competitors do," or "Our products are not highly valued by our customers." But "The New Law of Demand and Supply" persuasively makes the case that the alternative is an inevitable decline in market position and financial viability.

Many once dominant U.S. industries and companies have been humbled by their lack of true understanding of demand or of institutional will to act on it. Rick Kash is telling others how to avoid their fate.

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The book every marketer needs to drive strategy, December 13, 2002
By 
Gary S. Briggs (Los Gatos, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The New Law of Demand and Supply: The Revolutionary New Demand Strategy for Faster Growth and Higher Profits (Hardcover)
The central argument Mr Kash makes is dead on: After decades of building businesses based on what a company can make, companies have to build their businesses on what consumers demand. A simple principle but, as the author makes clear, one that is hard to execute as it is so contrary to how most business people have been trained to plan. I've worked on a project once with the Cambridge Group, Mr Kash's firm, and this book summarizes the philosophy that has made this firm one of the best marketing strategy firms in the country: Get past the old thinking of selling what you think the consumer will buy. You have to do the hard work of analyzing the consumer market from understanding their true needs and then building your business to deliver on those needs.

A must read for every marketer who wants to lead their businesses overall strategy.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
For several years we were dazzled, confused, and ultimately numbed by talk of the new economy-a cybernetic wonderland, powered by microchips and liberated by the Internet, that would blow away the drab old rules and usher in a brave new era of business and finance. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
inelastic pricing, demand segment, demand strategy, emerging demand, customer councils, creating supply, most profitable customers, marketing revolution, demand economy, fact base, mortgage industry, industry factors, pricing power, value proposition, demand forces
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Demand Value Proposition, Capital One, United States, America Online, The Cambridge Group, Demand Strategist, Adam Smith, Quaker Oats, Vernon Hill, Commerce Bank, Mike Ruettgers, Wall Street, Bill George, Commerce Bancorp, Dell Computer, Healthy Choice, Oscar Mayer, Jane Thompson, Stokely-Van Camp, Home Depot, John Delaney, New Coke, United Cargo, American Express, Bank Administration Institute
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