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Marketing Company news South Africa

Expert view on Key Account Management

In 1996 Professor McDonald started a research club in Cranfield University School of Management because it was obvious even then that the power had been transferred from suppliers to customers. Customers were exercising their new found power by dropping suppliers who didn't live up to their expectations and by forcing down prices from other suppliers.

The problem back in 1996 was that no business schools anywhere in the world had bothered to do any research into the transfer of power from the supplier to customer, so Professor McDonald decided to establish a research club based in Cranfield with the sole purpose of researching global best practice in the domain of key account management. This research club has been going for eighteen years and has systematically researched best practice, not just on the supply side, but also on the customer side. This dyadic research approach was essential because, even back in 1996, it was obvious that supplier decisions about customer relationships were based on a biased and ignorant foundation. Over the intervening years, the following topics have been the focus of our research.

1. Selecting key accounts

Professor McDonald heard a director of a major telecommunications company claim that they had 1,000 key accounts! The chief executive of a health care company claimed that they had 200 key customers.

Such numbers are, of course, totally ridiculous. A moment's thought will reveal that any supplying company has limited capacity to commit cross-functional resources to selected customers. Each of us has hundreds of friends, but we only have the capacity to devote real quality time and love to a handful - maybe four or five. The same principle applies to companies, who must decide extremely carefully which major customers they are prepared to allocate their scarce resources to. For best practice companies our research shows that this is rarely more than 20.

2. Categorising Key Accounts

Even today, Professor McDonald hears of suppliers classifying their key accounts using fatuous labels like A, B, C or gold, silver and bronze. Imagine a call centre operation letting it slip that they were dealing with a C or a bronze customer! The mind boggles over such derogatory, supplier-centric labels.

3. Key Account Profitability

Our research reveals that about 85 per cent of Western European companies do not know whether they make or lose money from their biggest customers. They think they know, but most don't.

We have enjoyed Activity Based Costing (ABC) for over twenty five years, yet most companies still haven't learned the lesson that it is the cost of dealing with the customer after the "product has left the factory" that causes either profit or loss. Even today, most companies still do product profitability and marmalade their fixed costs to customers based on turnover, so penalising customers who are inexpensive to service and rewarding customers who are expensive to serve.

4. Customer Needs Analysis

Most rational directors would surely agree that suppliers must really understand the needs of their customers and amend their approach accordingly. Alas, this certainly wasn't the case back in 1996 and is still largely untrue today. When key account managers are trained to sell volume and are paid accordingly, they have little interest in giving up substantial amounts of time and energy in researching the processes, organisation intricacies, financial details etc. of their customers. But without such an investment, they will never be able to align their offers with their customers' needs.

5. Strategic Planning for Key Accounts

This latter point is obviously related to the issue of preparing strategic plans for key accounts. Professor McDonald was recently running a KAM workshop for a blue-chip supplier of expensive equipment for hospitals. On being told that one hospital had a multi-million pound budget for such equipment, he asked about the supplier's strategic plan for this hospital. Alarmingly, he was told that there was only a one year forecast and budget. We were reminded of the famous saying that the good thing about not having a strategy is that failure comes as a complete surprise and is not preceded by a long period of worry and depression! Having strategic plans covering a period of a least three years agreed with the customer, is a major factor in successful and profitable relationships, yet even today little exists beyond supplier-centric forecasts and budgets.

6. Roles and skills of Key Account Managers

It was surprising to say the least, that little was known in 1996 about the roles and required skill sets of key account managers. Amongst other things, Professor McDonald supervised a major doctoral thesis on this topic, so he can speak with great authority about what world class key account manages should be doing and what skill sets they require. What is certainly true is that it is definitely not an enhanced version of selling and negotiating, but more of a general management role.

7. Other issues

Other areas for our research efforts included the role of IT, organisational structures, measuring KAM effectiveness, communications, cultural issues, all of them covered extensively in our research papers.

It is a sad reflection on universities and business schools the world over that what is without doubt one of the biggest issues facing business today is neither researched nor taught and it raises the interesting question of what they think their purpose is. Certainly, in the UK, there is a growing view that our university funding processes are driving our business schools deeper into irrelevant research cul-de-sacs of little relevance to practitioners.

Professor McDonald has written many papers on this topic and is the author of the best-selling book,

Key Account Management--- the definitive guide, ( Wiley, 2012 , now in its third edition based on the latest research ). He is widely considered to be a global leader in the topic of Key Account Management and frequently teaches on the European Institute of Purchasing MBA Programme in Geneva.

Legendary Marketing guru Professor McDonald, cited as one of the top thinkers who have changed the landscape of marketing and author of over 40 books will be visiting South Africa to present two one day workshops in Midrand on the 24 & 25 February 2015;


  • Day 1: MARKETING STRATEGY - How to develop a winning strategy to grow sales and profits, create shareholder value and enhance reputational value
  • Day 2: KEY ACCOUNT MANAGEMENT - Global best practice - how to win business from big powerful customers

For further details visit: www.sbs.co.za/wcm2015

About Malcolm McDonald

Professor Malcolm McDonald, until recently, Professor of Marketing and Deputy Director Cranfield School of Management with special responsibility for E-Business, is Chairman of six companies and spends much of his time working with the operating boards of the world's biggest multinational companies, such as IBM, Xerox, BP and the like, in most countries in the world, including Japan, USA, Europe, South America, ASEAN and Australasia. He has written thirty eight books, including the best seller "Marketing Plans; how to prepare them; how to use them" and many of his papers have been published. Professor Malcolm McDonald will be giving a series of three one-day classes: • Strategic Marketing Planning • Competitive Marketing Strategy • Key Account Management. 16 to 18 February 2004, Balalaika Hotel, Sandton. SBS Conferences: (021) 914-2888, www.sbs.co.za/wcm2004.
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