New research suggests that the metric doesn’t mean what it used to.
August 26, 2024
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Market share has traditionally correlated strongly with profitability because of efficiency, market efficiency, and customer perception effects. But, as the authors demonstrate, the relationship has been changed by the digital transformation in firms. The authors’ research finds that the market-share profitability relationship has become weaker for firms that favor investment in value creation over value appropriation and for firms operating in B2B markets. In both cases, digital helps smaller firms catch up with larger rivals. But digital can also amplify market share effects for large firms focusing digital investments on customer-facing processes and for large firms that create digital platforms.
Market share regularly ranks amongst the most important KPIs for C-suite executives. And for good reason: Larger market share has long been associated with higher profitability. But does this relationship still hold today, given companies’ increasing digitalization? Or have strategies focused on market share growth become outdated?
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Julian R.K. Wichmann is an assistant professor of marketing at the University of Cologne in Germany. He researches strategic marketing issues surrounding the influence of digitalization and new technologies on retailing, advertising, and brand-consumer relationships.
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Alexander Edeling is an associate professor of Marketing at KU Leuven in Belgium.
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Alexander Himme is Associate Professor of Management Accounting at Kühne Logistics University in Germany.
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