The_Black_amp;_Decker_595057文献.pdf
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Harvard Business School 9-595-057
Rev. March 30, 2001
The Black Decker Corporation (A):
Power Tools Division
Joe, I like you guys. But, look, I give Makita 10 feet of space. I give you 10 feet of
space. They outsell you 8 to 1. What are we going to do about that?
In January 1991, statements like this no longer surprise Joseph Galli. Black Decker’s (BD)
vice president of sales and marketing for power tools had heard similar sentiments expressed by
many trade accounts. Makita Electric of Japan had practically taken over the professional power tools
for tradesmen business since it entered the United States market a decade ago. “Tradesmen” was one
of the three major segments of the power tools business—the others being “Consumer” and
“Industrial.” “Consumer” represented “at home” use, while both “Tradesmen” and “Industrial”
covered professional users. The distinguishing characteristic of the Tradesmen segment was that
these buyers, such as a carpenter, bought tools for their own use on a job site. In Industrial, the buyer
was generally a corporation purchasing tools for use by employees. By late 1990, Makita’s success in
the Professional-Tradesmen segment was such that it held an 80% share in cordless drills, the single
largest product category, and a 50% segment share overall. BD had virtually created the portable
power tools business in the United States beginning in the early 1900s. While it maintained the #1
market sh
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