Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter
Non-Market Strategy
A non-market strategy helps companies influence political, social, and legal environments. This guide explains its components, benefits, and applications.
Written By: Tumisang Bogwasi
Tumisang Bogwasi
Tumisang Bogwasi, Founder & CEO of Brimco. 2X Award-Winning Entrepreneur. It all started with a popsicle stand.
A non-market strategy is a corporate approach that focuses on influencing the political, social, legal, and cultural environment surrounding a business rather than competing solely through traditional market-based tactics. It involves shaping regulations, public perception, community relationships, and societal expectations to advance organizational goals.
Definition
Non-market strategy refers to the set of actions companies use to manage and influence external factors such as government policies, public opinion, social norms, and stakeholder relationships outside traditional market competition.
Key takeaways
Engages external stakeholders: Includes governments, NGOs, media, and communities.
Influences rules and norms: Shapes regulatory, legal, and social frameworks.
Complementary to market strategy: Works alongside pricing, innovation, and competition.
Used for risk management: Reduces political, regulatory, and reputational risks.
Key in regulated industries: Essential for energy, healthcare, mining, and telecoms.
Components of non-market strategy
1. Corporate political activity (CPA)
Lobbying
Political contributions
Government relations
2. Corporate social responsibility (CSR)
Sustainability initiatives
Community development
ESG commitments
3. Public affairs and communication
Media relations
Reputation management
Crisis communication
4. Legal and regulatory engagement
Compliance strategy
Participation in rule-making
Litigation management
5. Stakeholder management
NGOs and civil society
Local communities
Industry associations
Why non-market strategy matters
Reduces regulatory uncertainty
Builds legitimacy and trust
Protects business continuity
Enhances reputation and brand equity
Creates favorable operating environments
Examples of non-market strategies
A tech firm lobbying for data privacy laws aligned with its business model
Mining companies investing in local community development to reduce opposition
Banks engaging regulators on new financial rules
Consumer brands adopting ESG to build public trust
Market vs. non-market strategy
Aspect
Market Strategy
Non-Market Strategy
Focus
Customers, competitors
Government, society, institutions
Tools
Pricing, innovation, marketing
Lobbying, CSR, public affairs
Goal
Competitive advantage
Institutional advantage
Frameworks used in non-market strategy
1. PESTEL analysis
Assesses political, economic, social, technological, environmental, and legal forces.