One of the tenets of the conventional wisdom of the strategic management literature is that if a business succeeds in increasing its market‐share it will usually enjoy an improvement in its profitability. It is not simply that it serves as one of a battery of measures of relative performance, nor that, ceteris paribus, increases in the volume of sales must be linked to increases in the total amount of profits earned, but that increases in market share will directly cause increases in profitability, that is profits deflated to take into account the level of output. As might be expected, the strength of feeling that is displayed about the virtues of market‐share as a strategic tool varies enormously among opinion leaders. Those from the influential Boston Consulting Group (1970) are almost messianic in their exhortations to businesses to aim single mindedly for increased market‐share in order to move down their experience curves. Others, most notably from the Strategic Planning Institute, through its Profit Impact of Market Strategies Programme (PIMS), e.g. Schloeffer, et al., (1974), Buzzell, et al., (1975) and Gale (1972), imply the importance of market‐share by the emphasis they place upon its influence in their reporting of the results of regressing return‐on‐investment in a model which contains over thirty other variables.
Article navigation
1 March 1987
Review Article|
March 01 1987
When Does Market‐Share Matter?
Graham Hall
Graham Hall
Manchester Business School
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7387
Print ISSN: 0144-3585
© MCB UP Limited
1987
Journal of Economic Studies (1987) 14 (3): 41–54.
Citation
Hall G (1987), "When Does Market‐Share Matter?". Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 14 No. 3 pp. 41–54, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb002647
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
Relationships for quality improvement in the Hong Kong‐China supply chain
International Journal of Quality & Reliability Management (February,1999)
Market share, profitability, and business strategy: Determinants of profitability
Planning Review (February,1975)
Is Low‐Cost High Differentiation Better, Some Objective Evidence
Management Research News (October,1990)
Strategic planning at la roche college: A case studyY
Planning Review (May,1983)
Messianic eschatology: Some redemptive reflections on marketing and the benefits of a process approach
European Journal of Marketing (October,1997)
Related Chapters
“‘Torn’ Between Justice and Forgiveness: Derrida on the Death Penalty and ‘Lawful Lawlessness’”
Crime and Punishment: Perspectives from the Humanities
Placing William Forster Lloyd in context
English, Irish and Subversives among the Dismal Scientists
Research in Political Sociology
The Many Faces of Populism: Current Perspectives
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
