About Bruce
Search this site:


Subscribe to E-Mail Updates
About the SiteAbout Adam Smith Adam Smith, Esq. Newsletter Adam Smith, Esq. Newsletter

March 29, 2006

"The Vanishing Middle"

This is McKinsey's analysis of "The Vanishing Middle"—here, the phenomenon across 25 product categories ranging from mobile phones to banking, appliances to apparel, that both premium and no-frills products grow at the expense of middle-of-the-road offerings. 

This works itself out in different ways in different industries. 

In some cases—think cellphones, banking, apparel, beer—there is growth both at the high- and the low- ends, as the middle empties out (the "hourglass" model).  In other industries—airlines, PC desktops and servers, groceries at retail—there is primarily a move to the no-frills/value end (the "pear" model).   And in yet a third sector there's general migration to the high end—coffee machines, MP3 players [read: the iPod], digital cameras, razors, wine (the "palm tree" model).

Each syndrome comes with its own set of, as McKinsey might well put it, threats and opportunities.  In hourglass-land, you need a well-defined value brand, or a  premium brand, or both.  Nokia, notably, does both in the cellphone/handset market.   In pear-land, you need to ruthlessly wring costs out as fast as you can—and it better be faster than your competition.  Think Dell, Wal-Mart. 

Finally, in palm-tree-land, you can justify a premium only through relentless innovation (I, too, am looking at Gillette's new 5-blade "Fusion" razor, having already been led down the path of the Atra, Sensor, and Mach3) or through an emotional connection (back to the iPod).

Of note is McKinsey's observation that there are "significant variations" in how the polarization phenomenon plays itself out from category to category, and that "the pattern of polarization does not lie in a category's DNA," but rather is a dynamic process profoundly affected by how service providers stretch what they offer to take advantage of the perceived evolution of customer demand.  (And of course, what's offered feeds back into demand:  Would I imagine I needed a five-blade razor if the Fusion had never gone on sale?)

There are two points here:

  • "Polarized," or "vanishing middle," markets are widespread; indeed, they may well be more common than the classically conceived ski slope model.
  • They do not arise, nor do they evolve, in a vacuum.  Firms can have an impact, and the strategies and approaches firms adopt to both respond to, and educate and entice, their customers can be the difference between Dell and Tandy, Toyota and GM, or Wal-Mart and Sears.

Is your firm truly catering to your clientele's sweet spot? 

How well do you understand their concept of "compelling value for the money?"  Are you trying to be a Dell and a Lexus at the same time? 

And lastly, assuming you want to live at the top left of McKinsey's "polarization" chart, are you providing the intellectual innovation, the emotional connection to your clients, and the level of service above reproach, that it takes to command a seat at that table?

Posted by Bruce at March 29, 2006 1:45 PM | TrackBack
Posted to Cultural Considerations | Finance | Globalization | Leadership | Marketing | Strategy

Printer-friendly version
Comments
Email this entry to:


Your email address:


Message (optional):


Post a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?


Law Firm Finance 101 Seminar

People Are Talking

"Adam Smith, Esq. is, and will remain, the definitive voice on law firm strategy."
David Jabbari, Global Head of Know-How, Allen & Overy

"I just don't know what the profession would do without you."
—Chairman, AmLaw 25 firm

“Constantly stunning.’—Managing Partner

"I read three things:  The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and Adam Smith, Esq.—and I tell my partners to do the same."
—Managing Partner, AmLaw 50 firm

“You have a fascinating niche which you cover ever so much better than does the conventional legal press.”
—Walter Olson of Overlawyered

“Required reading: Amazing.”—Venture Capitalist

"You're the brand name in law firm economics. There is no one out there—repeat, no one—who covers this business better, or thinks about it more creatively, than you. I tell people this guy is really, really good."
—Chair/Managing Partner, AmLaw 50 firm

Links: law
Links: corporate law
10b-5 Daily
Business Pundit
CorporateCounsel.Net Blog
Conglomerate

links: economics
Atlantic Blog
BusFilm by Larry Ribstein
Business Pundit
Carnival of the Capitalists
Chicago Boyz
Ensight
Marginal Revolution
Ronald Coase Institute
Stephen Bainbridge
Links: tech & culture

"Adam Smith, Esq.,"® an inquiry into the economics of law firms, and the maroon banner, are a federally registered trademark belonging to Adam Smith, Esq., LLC, which is partially owned and controlled by Bruce MacEwen.

Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.