Strategy Formulation:: Situation Analysis and Business Strategy
Strategy Formulation:: Situation Analysis and Business Strategy
Strategic window
a unique market opportunity that is available for a particular time.
The first firm through a strategic window can occupy a propitious niche and
discourage competition (if the firm has the required internal strengths).
Such a niche may also be called a strategic sweet spot.
Review of Mission and Objectives
Business strategy
focuses on improving the competitive position of a
company’s or business unit’s products or services within the
specific industry or market segment that the company or
business unit serves
Business strategy can be competitive and/or cooperative
Porter’s Competitive Strategies
Competitive strategy raises the following questions:
Should we compete on the basis of lower cost (and thus
price), or should we differentiate our products or
services on some basis other than cost, such as quality or
service?
Consolidated industry
dominationby a few large companies
premium on a firm’s ability to achieve cost leadership
Hyper-Competition and Competitive
Advantage Sustainability
Competitive advantage in a hyper-competitive
market is characterized by a continuous series of
multiple short-term initiatives that replace current
products with new products before competitors can
do so.
Hyper-Competition and Competitive
Advantage Sustainability
Sustained competitive advantage is increasingly a
matter not of a single advantage maintained over
time, but more a matter of sequencing advantages
over time.
Cooperative Strategies
Cooperative strategies
used to gain a competitive advantage within an
industry by working with other firms
The two general types of cooperative strategies are
collusion and strategic alliances.
Cooperative Strategies
Collusion
the active cooperation of firms within an industry to
reduce output and raise prices to avoid economic law
of supply and demand
Collusion may be explicit or tacit
Cooperative Strategies
Strategic alliances
a long-term cooperative arrangement between two or
more independent firms or business units that engage in
business activities for mutual economic gain
Cooperative arrangements fall along a continuum from
weak and distant to strong and close.
Reasons to Form an Alliance
Joint venture
cooperative business activity, formed by two or more
separate organizations for strategic purposes, that
creates an independent business entity and allocates
ownership, operational responsibilities and financial
risks and rewards to each member, while preserving
their separate identity/autonomy
Types of Alliances
Licensing arrangement
agreement in which the licensing firm grants rights to
another firm in another country or market to produce
and/or sell a product
Types of Alliances
Value-chain partnership
a strong and close alliance in which one company or
unit forms a long-term arrangement with a key supplier
or distributor for mutual advantage
Strategic Alliance Success Factors
Strategic
alliance
success
factors
Chapter end questions
STRATEGY FORMULATION:
CORPORATE STRATEGY
Corporate Strategy
37
Corporate strategy
thechoice of direction of the firm as a whole and the
management of its business or product portfolio
Corporate Strategy
38
Growth strategies
expand the company’s activities
Stability strategies
make no change to the company’s current activities
Retrenchment strategies
reduce the company’s level of activities
Growth Strategies
42
Acquisition
100% purchase of another company
Concentration Strategies
43
Vertical growth
achieved by taking over a function previously provided
by a supplier or distributor
Vertical growth results in vertical integration.
Vertical integration
the degree to which a firm operates vertically in
multiple locations on an industry’s value chain from
extracting raw materials to manufacturing to retailing
Vertical Integration
45
Horizontal growth
expansion of operations into other geographic locations
and/or increasing the range of products and services
offered to current markets
Horizontal growth results in horizontal integration
Horizontal integration
the degree to which a firm operates in multiple geographic
locations at the same point on an industry’s value chain
Diversification Strategies
47
Synergy
the concept that two businesses will generate more
profits together than they could separately
Diversification Strategies
48
Retrenchment strategies
used when the firm has a weak competitive position in
some or all of its product lines from poor performance
management may follow one of several retrenchment
strategies, ranging from turnaround or becoming a
captive company to selling out, bankruptcy, or liquidation.
Retrenchment Strategies
52
Turnaround strategy
emphasizes the improvement of operational efficiency when
the corporation’s problems are pervasive but not critical.
the two basic phases of a turnaround strategy are
contraction and consolidation
Contraction
effort to quickly “stop the bleeding” with a general, across-
the-board cutback in size and costs.
Consolidation
stabilization of the now -leaner corporation
Retrenchment Strategies
53
Bankruptcy
company gives up management of the firm to the courts in
return for some settlement of the corporation’s obligations
the company will be stronger and better able to compete in
a more attractive industry. In contrast to bankruptcy, which
seeks to perpetuate a corporation
Liquidation
management terminates the firm
When the industry is unattractive and the company too weak
to be sold as a going concern, management may choose to
convert as many saleable assets as possible to cash
Portfolio Analysis
55
Portfolio analysis
management views its product lines and business units as a
series of investments from which it expects a profitable
return
One of the most popular aids to developing corporate
strategy in a multiple-business corporation is portfolio
analysis.
Using the BCG (Boston Consulting Group) Growth-Share
Matrix depicted in the Figure below is the simplest way
to portray a corporation’s portfolio of investments.
BCG Growth—Share Matrix
7-56
BCG Matrix
57
Question marks
new products with the potential for success but need a
lot of cash for development
Stars
market leaders that are typically at or nearing the
peak of their product life cycle and are able to
generate enough cash to maintain their high share of
the market and usually contribute to the company’s
profits
BCG Matrix
58
Cash cows
productsthat bring in far more money than is needed
to maintain their market share
Dogs
productswith low market share and do not have the
potential to bring in much cash
BCG Matrix—Limitations
59
Corporate parenting
viewsa corporation in terms of resources and
capabilities that can be used to build business unit
value as well as generate synergies across business
units
Corporate Parenting
63
STRATEGY FORMULATION:
FUNCTIONAL STRATEGY
AND STRATEGIC CHOICE
Functional Strategy
69
Functional strategy
theapproach a functional area takes to achieve
corporate and business unit objectives and strategies by
maximizing resource productivity
Marketing Strategy
70
Marketing strategy
deals with pricing, selling and distributing a product
Marketing Strategy
71
Brand extension
using a successful brand name to market other products
Push strategy
trade promotions to gain or hold shelf space in retail
outlets
Pull strategy
advertising to “pull” products through the distribution
channels
Marketing Strategy
74
Penetration pricing
attempts to hasten market development and offers the
pioneer the opportunity to use the experience curve to
gain market share with low price and then dominate the
industry
Financial Strategy
76
Financial Strategy
examines the financial implications of corporate- and
business-level strategic options and identifies the best
financial course of action
Leveraged buyout
company is acquired in a transaction financed largely
by debt usually obtained from a third party, such as
an insurance company or an investment banker.
Research and
78
Development Strategy
Research and Development Strategy
deals with product and process innovation and
improvement
also deals with the appropriate mix of different types
of R&D and question of how new technology should be
accessed—through internal development, external
acquisition or strategic alliances.
Research and
79
Development Strategy
The following are R & D choices:
Technological leader
pioneering an innovation
Technological follower
imitating the products of competitors
Open innovation
firmuses alliances and connections with corporate,
government, academic labs and consumers to develop
new products and processes
Operations Strategy
80
Operations Strategy
determineshow and where a product or service is to be
manufactured, the level of vertical integration in the
production process, the deployment of physical
resources and relationships with suppliers
Purchasing Strategy
81
Purchasing Strategy
deals
with obtaining raw materials, parts and supplies
needed to perform the operations function
The
basic purchasing choices are multiple, sole and
parallel sourcing.
Purchasing Strategy
82
Multiple sourcing
the purchasing company orders a particular part
from several vendors
Sole sourcing
relies on only one supplier for a particular part
Parallel sourcing
two suppliers are the sole suppliers of two different
parts, but they are also backup suppliers for each
other’s parts
Logistics Strategy
83
Logistics Strategy
dealswith the flow of products into and out of the
manufacturing process
Outsourcing
HRM strategy
addresses the issue of whether a company or business
unit should hire a large number of low-skilled
employees who receive low pay, perform repetitive
jobs and will most likely quit after a short time (the
fast-food restaurant strategy) or hire skilled employees
who receive relatively high pay and are cross-trained
to participate in self-managing work teams
Information Technology
85
Follow-the-sun management
Multinational corporations are finding that having a
sophisticated intranet allows employees to practice
follow-the-sun management, in which project team
members living in one country can pass their work to
team members in another country in which the work day
is just beginning.
The Sourcing Decision:
86
Location of Functions
Outsourcing
purchasing from someone else a product or service that
had been previously provided internally
the reverse of vertical integration
Offshoring
theoutsourcing of an activity or a function to a wholly
owned company or an independent provider in another
country.
Disadvantages of Outsourcing
87
Customer complaints
Lack of control
Do Losing
everything hand
Stakeholder Priority Matrix
91
Political strategy
plan to bring stakeholders into agreement with a
corporation’s actions
Some of the most commonly used political strategies
are constituency building, political action committee
contributions, advocacy advertising, lobbying and
coalition building.
Pressures from the
94
Corporate Culture
In evaluating a strategic alternative, strategy makers
must consider pressures from the corporate culture and
assess a strategy’s compatibility with that culture.
If there is little fit, management must decide if it should:
Strategic choice
the evaluation of alternative strategies and selection of
the best alternative
Dialectical inquiry
requires that two proposals using different assumptions be
generated for each alternative strategy under consideration
Process of Strategic Choice
97