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Brain Circuits

How to capitalize on the nonmarket sustainability advantage

Published 13 November 2024 in Brain Circuits • 3 min read

A new approach beyond a company’s products and services could be the key to gaining a competitive edge in a sustainable economy. This explainer shows how it’s done.

Why does ‘nonmarket’ matter?

  • Traditionally, the political, regulatory, legal, and wider social considerations that occur outside the market, but which have an impact on a business, have been grouped under the heading ‘nonmarket’.
  • However, as regulations, public policies, activism, and social expectations increasingly affect markets, and as stakeholders influence one another in unpredictable ways, leading firms are increasingly focusing on the impact that the nonmarket domain has on the bottom line and integrating market and nonmarket strategy.

 

How do nonmarket factors affect businesses?

  • Nonmarket factors profoundly shape most markets; not least by impacting market size as changing laws and social trends dramatically expand or contract markets – and even give birth to completely new ones.
  • Industry structure and competitive dynamics are also key factors. Intellectual property rules, for instance, shape the power balance between incumbents and new entrants (witness the pharmaceutical industry’s ability to maintain high prices through patents).
  • Nonmarket influences on cost structures can result from policies such as carbon taxes, minimum wage laws, and trade tariffs, all of which have major effects on firms’ cost structures.

 

How to develop a nonmarket strategy

  • Analysis. This involves mapping both issues and stakeholders. Companies need to assess their stage of evolution, how they interact in different arenas (legislative, regulatory, public opinion), and the power balance between stakeholders.
  • Define goals and pathways. The next step is to set clear goals, build influential coalitions, identify key influence pathways, and plan tactics. This includes setting market-related goals (shaping regulations, influencing standards), defining focal issues and geographic scope, building coalitions with partners (competitors, supply chain players, NGOs, governments), identifying influence paths to reach decision-makers, and choosing appropriate tactics (lobbying, public campaigns, participation in standards bodies).
  • Capacity checks. These can help an organization build competencies in areas such as stakeholder engagement, policy analysis, and social innovation. This involves developing human capital through hiring experts, training staff, and cultivating an externally engaged culture.
  • Feasibility checks. Check the ethics of proposed actions, anticipate responses, evaluate resource requirements, and plan for contingencies.
  • Implementation. Finally, execute your strategy with agility and adaptability.

 

Key takeaway 

Firms that master the new nonmarket environment will not only outperform their peers but, by leveraging their resources, influence, and innovative capacity to shape the broader ecosystems in which they operate, play a pivotal role in driving the transition to a more sustainable and equitable global economy. 

 

Authors

Michael Yaziji

Michael Yaziji is an award-winning author whose work spans leadership and strategy. He is recognized as a world-leading expert on non-market strategy and NGO-corporate relations and has a particular interest in ethical questions facing business leaders. His research includes the world’s largest survey on psychological drivers, psychological safety, and organizational performance and explores how human biases and self-deception can impact decision making and how they can be mitigated. At IMD, he is the co-Director of the Stakeholder Management for Boards training program.

David Bach

David Bach

President of IMD and NestlĂŠ Professor of Strategy and Political Economy

David Bach is President of IMD and Nestlé Professor of Strategy and Political Economy. He assumed the Presidency of IMD on 1 September 2024. He is working to broaden and deepen IMD’s global impact through learning innovation, excellence in degree- and executive programs, and applied thought leadership. Recognized globally as an innovator in management education, Bach previously served as IMD’s Dean of Innovation and Programs.

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