Study Document
KUDLER
Option
Differentiating Between Market Structures Table
Compare the four market structures by filling in the table.
Perfect competition
Monopoly
Monopolistic competition
Oligopoly
Example organization
Grocery stores
Utility companies
Cable companies
Automobile companies
Goods or services produced by the organization
Indistinguishable from others unique
Very unique
Fairly unique
Barriers to entry nonexistent
Virtually insurmountable high
Relatively high
Number of organizations many few
A small group
Price elasticity of demand
Highly elastic none
Relatively inelastic
Relatively inelastic
Is there a presence of economic profits?
negligible yes yes
Kudler Fine Foods Virtual Organization:
The firm's strategic plan and marketing overview
Kudler Fine Foods is a purveyor of fine, gourmet and all-natural foods. It has a relatively small array of stores in the state of California. All stores offer products to customers that desire something out of the ordinary in their food selections. Kudler stocks wines, cheeses, and specialty items as well as fresh produce for 'foodies.' Kudler also has an online component. It currently adopts a differentiated market strategy -- it offers uniquely wholesome products to its consumers rather than competes on price alone. It also offers a wide array of international goods. This enables it to capitalize both upon the trend towards more 'organic' eating, as well as the appetite for more exotic foodstuffs. Both locavores that desire to eat California-grown fruit as well as serious wine aficionados in search of German wines can be satisfied at Kudler. But the firm faces a wide array of competitors in all the fields in which it sells goods and services and may be insufficiently differentiated to establish a unique market niche.
Food is an extremely difficult industry in which to compete, because customer 'buy-in' is relatively low. An upturn in price or a downturn in the economy and salaries can cause consumers to scurry to purchase other items from competitors. Also, because Kudler does not compete strictly on price, it must offer a high level of quality to consumers to justify their purchases of higher-end Kudler items. Price is extremely elastic -- consumers can easily vary their shopping habits, based upon the price of items, and can often stop at different stores to ensure that they find the best price or level of quality. For example, "when Roberta Mand needs groceries, she has a world of choices in her own backyard. For regular shopping, she goes to her neighborhood Kroger Co. store. But for steaks, she prefers the Costco Wholesale Corp. store. For a pecan-encrusted tilapia to take home for dinner, she's off to The Fresh Market. And if she's hankering for sushi, she hits the Wild Oats Markets Inc. store a couple of minutes away" (Food fight, 2009, Associated Press).
This is a clear 'negative' for Kudler in the sense that consumers can easily shift their buying habits, even if they stop at Kudler for an attractive deal one week. Also, Kudler must keep its prices competitive with grocery stores offering comparable quality. Even though Kudler may not be competing on a price strategy and offering the lowest prices possible for all items, it is still in competition with, for example, Whole Foods, in the market for organic bananas. Consumers also have a far wider array of venues where they can purchase groceries than ever before. Even Target is selling higher-end groceries today, and Wal-Mart has a large section of organic foods. The threat of seemingly limitless competition means that Kudler must create a core base of consumers that are uniquely loyal to its array of products.
Whole Foods has adopted this strategy by becoming 'the' organic grocery…
Works Cited
Fishman, Charles. (2007). The anarchist's cookbook. Fast Company. Retrieved:
http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/84/wholefoods.html
Food fight. (2009). Associated Press. Retrieved: