Responding to the Marketing Environment Using Environmental Scanning
In order to keep themselves up to date with these challenges, organisations should utilise a concept called Environmental Scanning. This is a concept from business management by which businesses gathers and utilises information about events, trends, and relationships in an organisation’s external environment, the knowledge of which would assist management in planning the organisation’s future course of action and thereby could develop a competitive advantage. To sustain this competitive advantage the company must also respond to the information gathered from environmental scanning by altering its strategies and plans when the need arises. Environmental scanning usually refers just to the macro environment, but it can also include industry and competitor analysis, consumer analysis, product innovations, and the company’s internal environment.
Key techniques of environmental scanning include:
1. Ad-hoc scanning - Short term, infrequent examinations usually initiated by a crisis
2. Regular scanning - Studies done on a regular schedule
3. Continuous scanning – continuous structured data collection and processing on a broad range of environmental factors
Many theorists and business analysts suggest that in today’s turbulent business environment the best scanning method available is continuous scanning. This allows the firm to act quickly, take advantage of opportunities before competitors do, and respond to environmental threats before significant damage is done.
Key Objectives of Environmental Scanning
1. To detect trends and events important to the organisation
2. To define potential opportunities, threats or changes for the organisation implied by those trends and events,
3. To promote a future orientation in the thinking of management and staff
4. To alert management and staff to trends that are converging, diverging or interacting.
Approaches a company may use in responding to issues that have been detected:
1. Opposition strategy occurs when the firm tries to influence the environmental forces so as to negate their impact - this is only successful where you have some control over the environmental variable in question and can often be difficult to undertake.
2. Adaptation strategy occurs when the firm adapts their marketing plan to the new environmental conditions.
3. Offensive strategy occurs when the firm tries to turn the new influence into an advantage. A quick response can often give the firm a competitive advantage.
4. Redeployment strategy occurs when the firm decides to divert their assets into another industry.
5. Contingency strategies occur when the firm determines a broad range of possible reactions thereby finding substitutes for their business strategies.
6. Passive strategy is when the firm does not respond to the issues detected. The companies may not realise that salient forces are affecting their future prospects. The company therefore continues as normal, ignorant of the environmental issues that are threatening its existence or opportunities that could be seized.
Benefits of Environmental Scanning:
1. It provides a better general awareness & responsiveness to a dynamic business environment
2. It improves strategic planning as the firm has acquired relevant information pertaining to their industry.
3. It enables the organisation to be more effective in dealing with their publics.
4. It improves industry and market analysis.
5. It improves resource allocation (Diffenbach, 1983)

- Employees



