Chapter 4 - Building Competitive Advantage Through Functional-Level Strategy
Chapter 4 - Building Competitive Advantage Through Functional-Level Strategy
Building Competitive
Advantage Through
Functional-Level
Strategy
Dr. Jashim U. Ahmed
External
Factors:
Competitive
changes
Environmental
changes
Marketing
Manufacturing
Finance
Logistics
Functional Strategic Plans
Source: William Copacino and Donald B. Rosenfield, Analytic Tools for Strategic Planning, International
Journal of Physical Distribution and Materials Management 15 (3), (1985): 48. [modified content].
Functional-Level Strategies
Functional-level strategies
Through differentiation
Lower cost structure
Economies of Scale
Learning Effects
Experience Curve
Flexible Manufacturing and Mass Customization
Marketing
Materials Management and Supply Chain
R&D Strategy
Human Resource Strategy
Information Systems
Infrastructure
Economies of Scale
Economies of scale
Unit cost reductions associated with a large scale of output
Ability to spread fixed costs over a large production
volume
Ability of companies producing in large volumes to
achieve a greater division of labor and specialization
Specialization has favorable impact on productivity by
enabling employees to become very skilled at performing
a particular task
Diseconomies of scale
Unit cost increases associated with a large scale of output
Increased bureaucracy associated with large-scale
enterprises
Resulting managerial inefficiencies
Learning Effects
Learning Effects are:
Cost savings that come from learning by
doing
Labor productivity
Learn by repetition how to best carry out the
task
Management efficiency
Learn over time how to best run the operation
Flexible Manufacturing
and Mass Customization
Mass Customization
Marketing
Marketing
Marketing
strategy
Pricing
Promotion
Advertising
Distribution Product design
Customer
defection rates
Supply Chain
Materials Management
R&D Strategy
2.
Hiring strategy
Assures that the people a company hires have the
attributes that match the strategic objectives of the
company
Employee training
Upgrades employee skills to perform tasks faster and
more accurately
Self-managing teams
Members coordinate their own activities and make their
own hiring, training, work, and reward decisions.
Information Systems
Information systems impact on
productivity is wide-ranging:
Web-based information systems can
automate many of the company
activities
Potentially affects all the activities of a
company
Automates interactions between
Company and customers
Company and suppliers
Infrastructure
A Companys Infrastructure:
The companys structure, culture, style of
strategic leadership, and control system:
Quality as reliability
They do the jobs they were designed for and do it
well
Quality as excellence
Improving Quality as
Reliability
Six Sigma methodology: the principal tool now
used to increase reliability and is a direct
descendant of Total Quality Management (TQM)
Demings Steps in a
Quality Improvement Program
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Implementing Reliability
Improvement Methodologies
Imperatives that stand out among companies that
have successfully adopted quality improvement
methods:
and
can be differentiated by attributes that collectively
define product excellence.
Innovation can:
Uncertainty
Poor commercialization
Technological myopia
Slow to market
Idea generation
3.
4.
5.
Achieving Superior
Responsiveness to Customers
Customer responsiveness: giving customers what
they want, when they want it, and at a price they are
willing to pay - as long as the companys long-term
profitability is not compromised.
Response time
Increase speed
Premium pricing
Functional-Level Strategy
The
The
Functional-Level Strategy
Balance the major corporate aim of satisfying
customer needs against the requirement of
efficient and economical systems performance.
Ensure their function adds value to the
organization.
Achieving the match between corporate strategic
aspirations and operational capabilities.
Concerned with continuous improvement.
Transforming resources into finished products or
services.
Balance customer service needs against the
economic use of resources.
Customer-Supplier Model
Your
Your
Suppliers
Suppliers
Inputs
Requirements
and feedback
Your
Your
Process
Process
Your
Your
Outputs Customers
Customers
Requirements
and feedback
Six Sigma
Six Sigma is based on a statistical
measure that equates to 3.4 or fewer
errors or defects per million
opportunities. An ultimate stretch
goal of all organizations that adopt a
Six Sigma philosophy is to have all
critical processes, regardless of
functional area, at a Six Sigma level
of capability.
Source: Evans J. R. & Lindsay, W. M. (2005).
The Management and Control of Quality. p.132, Thomson.
Summary of Core
Concepts of TQM
Working
with Customers
Continuous Staff Analysis of Work
Processes
Working with Suppliers
Source: Vinzant, J. C. and Vinzant, D. H. (1991).
Strategic management spin-offs of the Deming
approach, Journal of Management History, Vol. 5, No.
8, pp. 516-531.
Thank you