This case was a finalist in Academy of Management, Dark Side Case Competition, 2021 and This case was a finalist in the North American Case Research Association Case competition 2020, Business Strategy Track.

Can Philip Morris Sustain the Big Shift in the Global Smoking Landscape?

Can Philip Morris Sustain the Big Shift in the Global Smoking Landscape?
Case Code: BSTR634
Case Length: 16 Pages
Period: 2014-2019
Pub Date: 2022
Teaching Note: Available
Price: Rs.500
Organization : Philip Morris International
Industry : Tobacco Industry
Countries : United States
Themes: Business Level Strategies, Leadership and Change Management
Can Philip Morris Sustain the Big Shift in the Global Smoking Landscape?
Abstract Case Intro 1 Case Intro 2 Excerpts

Excerpts

Cigarettes - A Dying Business

Cigarette smoking had been on a steep decline from the early 2000s. Owing to government campaigns, rising health consciousness among people, and heightened wariness against tobacco products, there had been a steep fall in the number of smokers. In the decade between 2007 and 2017, the USA – the fourth largest producer of tobacco – had witnessed a significant fall in the number of cigarettes..

PMI’s Future Smoking Products

In tandem with its peers, PMI, the world’s largest tobacco company, had also predicted an industry-wide slump in cigarette volumes. These adverse business developments had pushed PMI into developing healthier alternatives with fewer or no toxicants, generally referred to as Harmful and Potentially Harmful Constituents (HPHCs). Calantzopoulos was of the view that the best strategy for achieving a ‘smoke-free world’ was by offering smokers a healthier alternative rather than imposing regulatory restrictions..

HTP Variants

PMI had zeroed in on HTPs as its future business products. It had been working on several variants of the HTPs. Out of the 4 product platforms, Platform 1 was for testing two of its electrically heated tobacco products. Both the products were run by an electronic system that heated the tobacco within a controlled temperature range not exceeding 350 °C..

FDA Approval

For branding and promotional purposes, PMI named its HTPs iQOS, which stood for ‘I Quit Ordinary Smoking’. iQOS was touted by PMI as a safer alternative to the combustible cigarette. iQOS was launched in Japan in 2014, and by 2019, it was being sold in 38 countries across the world..

Challenges

The iQOS was not PMI’s maiden attempt to make an MRTP. In 1998, PMI had launched Accord – its first ever MRTP product. However, Accord proved to be a failure. Accord was launched in the US as well as in global markets like Japan, which was the biggest market for tobacco products. It was assumed that as Japanese consumers valued cleanliness more than other markets, Accord would strike a chord with them..

Summing Up

At the juncture of the massive strategic inflexion point that the smoking industry was facing, the future of PMI was surrounded by numerous challenges. While PMI had kick-started the ambitious mission of commercializing iQOS, it was self-victimizing its combustible cigarettes business by raising campaigns like “Quit Smoking” and “Hold My Light”..

Exhibits

Exhibit I: Philip Morris International – Selected Financial Data
Exhibit II: PMI Shipment Volume by Region
Exhibit III: iQOS User Growth
Exhibit IV: Advertisement in Japan
Exhibit V: Heat-not-Burn Product Ownership in Japan
Exhibit VI: Heat-not-Burn Tobacco Product Market – Key Players

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