After breaking into China's smartphone market, where it becomes a leading brand, Xiaomi sees sales stagnate and then decline as the disruption strategy that empowered its rise loses momentum. As competitors counter every move, targeting its core consumer segment, the company urgently needs to reignite growth and develop a sustainable competitive advantage. The case describes the changing market landscape, Xiaomi's product portfolio, distribution systems, partnerships, brand management, promotion and pricing. The question is whether to remain focused on smartphones-on which Xiaomi's reputation has been built-or transform into an IoT 'ecosystem' encompassing a wider range of product categories. The challenge is to understand the respective pros and cons and formulate a detailed implementation plan for the chosen strategy.
This case illustrates the key issues and challenges in creating and sustaining a successful brand in emerging markets. Peter England, India's largest apparel brand by sales volume, is struggling to formulate a strategy to sustain the brand's market dominance. Indian consumer tastes are changing rapidly, making it difficult for any brand to stay relevant and fashionable over time. Meanwhile, other domestic brands and foreign players are expanding rapidly, aiming to dethrone Peter England as the market leader. To sustain the brand's dominance, the executive team has to dissect the forces shaping the market and develop a new positioning for the brand, a robust platform that can accommodate its broad portfolio of products and sub-brands. The executive team also has to develop an implementation plan for the brand positioning, entailing product development, advertising, promotions, pricing and distribution. Please visit the dedicated case website "http://cases.insead.edu/branding-in-india" to access supplementary material.
On issues big and small, people often don't make the best possible decisions for the long term. The authors argue that the root cause of this sub-optimal decision-making is that our behaviour is guided by two types of processes: System 1 thinking and System 2 thinking. Whereas System 1 tends to operate effortlessly and automatically, the operations of System 2 are slower, more effortful and deliberate. System 1 judgments are based on perceptions, intuitions and emotions, while System 2 judgments in-depth logical analysis and reasoning. Not surprisingly, on a day-to-day basis, System 1 guides much of our behaviour. They introduce The Hot-Cold Decision Triangle, a framework that can enable better choices by enabling us to avoid the power of visceral urges.