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Competing With Information Technology

This chapter discusses how businesses can use information technology to gain competitive advantages. It identifies five main competitive strategies - cost leadership, differentiation, innovation, growth, and alliance strategies. It also explains how IT can be used across a business' value chain to improve processes and better meet customer needs through technologies like ERP systems, data analysis, remote monitoring, and e-commerce. The chapter provides case studies of companies like GE that have built strategic customer relationships and gained benefits through IT-enabled reengineering of business processes.

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
3K views

Competing With Information Technology

This chapter discusses how businesses can use information technology to gain competitive advantages. It identifies five main competitive strategies - cost leadership, differentiation, innovation, growth, and alliance strategies. It also explains how IT can be used across a business' value chain to improve processes and better meet customer needs through technologies like ERP systems, data analysis, remote monitoring, and e-commerce. The chapter provides case studies of companies like GE that have built strategic customer relationships and gained benefits through IT-enabled reengineering of business processes.

Uploaded by

motz
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 41

Chapter 2 Competing with

Information Technology

James A. O'Brien, and George Marakas.


Management Information Systems with MISource
2007, 8th ed. Boston, MA: McGraw-Hill, Inc.,
2007. ISBN: 13 9780073323091
Learning Objectives
 Identify several basic competitive strategies and explain
how a business can use IT to confront the competitive
forces faced by a business
 Identify several strategic uses of IT and give examples
of how they give competitive advantages to a business
 Give examples of how business process reengineering
frequently involves the strategic use of IT
 Identify the business value of using Internet
technologies to become an agile competitor or to form a
virtual company
 Explain how knowledge management systems can help
a business gain strategic advantages

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 2


Strategic IT
 Technology is no longer an afterthought in
business strategy, but the cause and driver
 IT can change the way businesses compete
 A strategic information system is any
information system that uses IT to help an
organization…
 Gain a competitive advantage
 Reduce a competitive disadvantage
 Or meet other strategic enterprise objectives

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 3


Case 1 GE, Dell, Intel, GM and
Others
 Does IT matter?
 No
 Nicholas Carr argues that IT is infrastructure,

much like electricity


 Too commonplace to offer a competitive

advantage
 Yes
 It is not just networks and computers
 The important part is the software and

information and how IT is used


Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 4
Case Study Questions
 Do you agree with the argument made by
Nicholas Carr to support his position that IT
no longer gives companies a competitive
advantage?
 Do you agree with the argument made in
support of the competitive advantage that IT can
provide to a business?
 What are several ways that IT could provide
competitive advantage to a business?

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 5


Competitive Forces
 To succeed, a business must develop strategies
to counter these forces…
 Rivalry of competitors within its industry
 New entrants into an industry and its markets
 Substitute products that may capture market
share
 Bargaining power of customers
 Bargaining power of suppliers

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 6


Competitive Forces and Strategies

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 7


Five Competitive Strategies
 Cost Leadership
 Become low-cost producers
 Help suppliers or customers reduce costs
 Increase cost to competitors
 Example: Priceline uses online seller bidding

so the buyer sets the price


 Differentiation Strategy
 Differentiate a firm’s products from its
competitors’
 Focus on a particular segment or niche of
market
 Example: Moen uses online customer design

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 8


Competitive Strategies (cont’d)
 Innovation Strategy
 Unique products, services, or markets
 Radical changes to business processes
 Example: Amazon’s online, full-service

customer systems
 Growth Strategy
 Expand company’s capacity to produce
 Expand into global markets
 Diversify into new products or services
 Example: Wal-Mart’s merchandise

ordering via global satellite tracking


Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 9
Competitive Strategies (cont’d)
 Alliance Strategy
 Establish linkages and alliances with
customers, suppliers, competitors,
consultants, and other companies
 Includes mergers, acquisitions, joint ventures,
virtual companies
 Example: Wal-Mart uses automatic

inventory replenishment by supplier

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 10


Using Competitive Strategies
 These strategies are not mutually exclusive
 Organizations use one, some, or all
 A given activity could fall into one or more
categories of competitive strategy
 Not everything innovative serves to differentiate
one organization from another
 Likewise, not everything that differentiates
organizations is necessarily innovative

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 11


Ways to Implement Basic Strategies

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 12


Other Competitive Strategies
 Lock in Customers and Suppliers
 Deter them from switching to competitors
 Build in Switching Costs
 Make customers and suppliers dependent on the use of
innovative IS
 Erect Barriers to Entry
 Discourage or delay other companies from entering the
market
 Increase the technology or investment needed to enter
 Build Strategic IT Capabilities
 Take advantage of strategic opportunities when they arise
 Improve efficiency of business practices
 Leverage Investment in IT
 Develop products and service that would not be possible
without a strong IT capability
Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 13
Customer-Focused Business
 What is the business value in being customer-
focused?
 Keep customers loyal
 Anticipate their future needs
 Respond to customer concerns
 Provide top-quality customer service
 Focus on customer value
 Quality, not price, has become the primary
determinant of value
 Consistently

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 14


Providing Customer Value
 Companies that consistently offer the best value
from the customer’s perspective…
 Track individual preferences
 Keep up with market trends
 Supply products, services, and information
anytime, anywhere
 Tailor customer services to the individual
 Use Customer Relationship Management
(CRM) systems to focus on the customer

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 15


Building Customer Value via the
Internet

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 16


The Value Chain and Strategic IS
 View the firm as a chain of basic activities that
add value to its products and services
 Primary processes directly relate to
manufacturing or delivering products
 Support processes help support the day-to-
day running of the firm and indirectly
contribute to products or services
 Use the value chain to highlight where
competitive strategies will add the most value

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 17


Using IS in the Value Chain

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 18


Strategic Uses of IT
 A company that emphasizes strategic business
use of IT would use it to gain a competitive
differentiation
 Products
 Services
 Capabilities

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 19


Case 2 GE Energy and GE
Healthcare
 The Internet rapidly advanced large-scale storage and data
analysis
 Products could be networked and accessed at customer
sites
 Connectivity was cheap
 Unprecedented opportunities for strategic relationships
and returns
 GE saw unprecedented opportunities for strategic
relationships and returns
 Invested heavily in remote monitoring and diagnostics
 Profitability went up
 Created customer dependency
 Has created longer-term customer relationships
Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 20
Case Study Questions
 What are the business benefits of using IT to
build strategic customer relationships for GE
Energy and GE Healthcare?
 What are the business benefits for their
customers?
 What strategic uses of information technology
do you see implemented in this case?
 How could other companies benefit from the
use of IT to build strategic customer
relationships?

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 21


Reengineering Business Processes
 Called BRP or simply Reengineering
 Fundamental rethinking and radical redesign
of business processes
 Seeks to achieve improvements in cost,
quality, speed, and service
 Potential payback is high, but so is risk of
disruption and failure
 Organizational redesign approaches are an
important enabler of reengineering
 Includes use of IT, process teams, case
managers
Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 22
BPR Versus Business Improvement

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 23


The Role of IT
 IT plays a major role in reengineering most
business processes
 Can substantially increase process
efficiencies
 Improves communication
 Facilitates collaboration

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 24


A Cross-Functional Process
 Many processes are reengineered with…
 Enterprise resource planning software
 Web-enabled electronic business and
commerce systems

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 25


Reengineering Order Management
 IT that supports this process…
 CRM systems using intranets and the Internet
 Supplier-managed inventory systems using the
Internet and extranets
 Cross-functional ERP software to integrate
manufacturing, distribution, finance, and human
resource processes
 Customer-accessible e-commerce websites for
order entry, status checking, payment, and
service
 Customer, product, and order status databases
accessed via intranets and extranets
Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 26
Becoming an Agile Company
 Agility is the ability to prosper
 In rapidly changing, continually fragmenting
global markets
 By selling high-quality, high-performance,
customer-configured products and services
 By using Internet technologies
 An agile company profits in spite of
 Broad product ranges
 Short model lifetimes
 Individualized products
 Arbitrary lot sizes

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 27


Strategies for Agility
 An agile company…
 Presents products as solutions to customers’
problems
 Cooperates with customers, suppliers and
competitors
 Brings products to market as quickly and cost-
effectively as possible
 Organizes to thrive on change and uncertainty
 Leverages the impact of its people and the
knowledge they possess

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 28


How IT Helps a Company be Agile

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 29


Creating a Virtual Company
 A virtual company uses IT to link…
 People
 Organizations
 Assets
 Ideas
 Inter-enterprise information systems link…
 Customers
 Suppliers
 Subcontractors
 Competitors

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 30


A Virtual Company

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 31


Virtual Company Strategies
 Basic business strategies
 Share information and risk with alliance partners
 Link complimentary core competencies
 Reduce concept-to-cash time through sharing
 Increase facilities and market coverage
 Gain access to new markets and share market
or customer loyalty
 Migrate from selling products to selling solutions

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 32


Building a Knowledge-Creating
Company
 A knowledge-creating company or learning
organization…
 Consistently creates new business
knowledge
 Disseminates it throughout the company
 Builds it into its products and services

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 33


Two Kinds of Knowledge
 Explicit Knowledge
 Data, documents, and things written down or
stored in computers
 Tacit Knowledge
 The “how-to” knowledge in workers’ minds
 Represents some of the most important
information within an organization
 A knowledge-creating company makes

such tacit knowledge available to others

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 34


Knowledge Management
 Successful knowledge management
 Creates techniques, technologies, systems,
and rewards for getting employees to share
what they know
 Makes better use of accumulated workplace
and enterprise knowledge

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 35


Knowledge Management
Techniques

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 36


Knowledge Management Systems
 Knowledge management systems (KMS)
 A major strategic use of IT
 Manages organizational learning and know-how
 Helps knowledge workers create, organize, and
make available important knowledge
 Makes this knowledge available wherever and
whenever it is needed
 Knowledge includes
 Processes, procedures, patents, reference
works, formulas, best practices, forecasts, and
fixes
Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 37
Case 3 CDW, Harrah’s, and Others
 A satisfied customer has expectations met
 A loyal customer wants to do business with the
company again, and recommends it to others
 A good customer loyalty system combines
 Customer feedback
 Business information
 Sophisticated analysis
 IT must take the lead in loyalty
 Create actionable results

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 38


Case Study Questions
 Does CDW’s customer loyalty program give
them a competitive advantage?
 What is the strategic value of Harrah’s approach
to determining and rewarding customer loyalty?
 What else could CDW and Harrah’s do to truly
become customer-focused businesses?

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 39


Case 4 The U.S. Dept. of Commerce
 The DOC uses DOC Insider to offer advice on
doing business abroad
 The AskMe system includes…
 Automated best practices
 Automatic experts’ profile creation
 Methods for accessing and delivering
knowledge
 Real-time collaboration services
 Analytic capabilities

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 40


Case Study Questions
 What are the key business challenges facing
companies in supporting their global marketing
an expansion efforts?
 How is the AskMe knowledge management
system helping to meet this challenge?
 How can the AskMe system help identify
weaknesses in global business knowledge with
the DOC?
 What other global trade situations could the
AskMe system provide information about?

Chapter 2 Competing with Information Technology 41

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