Chapter 6 - Functional Level Strategy
Chapter 6 - Functional Level Strategy
Economies of scale
Lower unit costs due to large
scale production volumes.
Learning effects
Cost reductions due to
learning by doing.
The experience curve
Systematic unit-cost reductions that are the result of
accumulated output.
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Production and Efficiency:
Economies of Scale
A typical long-run
unit-cost curve:
FIGURE 6.1
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Production and Efficiency:
The Experience Curve
A typical experience curve:
FIGURE 6.2
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Production and Efficiency:
Learning Effects
Economies of scale
and learning effects:
FIGURE 6.3
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Production and Efficiency: The Experience Curve
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Production and Efficiency: Flexible Manufacturing
Marketing strategy:
Product design
Advertising
Promotion
Pricing
Distribution
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The Relationship Between Average
Unit Costs and Customer
Defection Rates
FIGURE 6.5
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The Relationship Between Customer
Loyalty and Profit
per Customer
FIGURE 6.6
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Materials Management, JIT, and
Efficiency
Materials management
Getting materials into and through
the production process and out
through the distribution system
to the end user.
Just-In-Time (JIT)
Reduce inventory holding costs by having materials
arrive JIT to enter the production process.
JIT risk: There are no buffer stocks for nondelivery or
unanticipated increases in demand.
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R&D Strategy and Efficiency
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Achieving Superior Innovation
Incremental innovation
Poor commercialization
Poor positioning strategy
Technological myopia
Slowness in marketing
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Achieving Superior Customer
Responsiveness
Developing a customer focus:
Top leadership commitment to customers.
Employee attitudes toward customers.
Bringing customers into the company.
Satisfying customer needs:
Customization of the features of products and services to meet
the unique need of groups and individual customers.
Reducing customer response times:
Marketing that communicates with production.
Flexible production and materials management.
Information systems that support the process.
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Business-Level Strategy
What Is Business-Level Strategy?
Business-level strategy
A plan of action to use the firm’s resources and
distinctive competencies to gain competitive
advantage.
Abell’s “Business Definition” process
Customer needs – product differentiation (what)
Customer groups – market segmentation (who)
Distinctive competencies – competitive actions (how)
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Choosing a Generic Business-Level Strategy
Product/Market/Distinctive-Competency Choices
and Generic Competitive Strategies
Cost Leadership Differentiation Focus
TABLE 6.1
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Types of Business-Level Strategies
FIGURE 6.7
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Choosing a Business-Level Strategy
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Choosing a Business-Level Strategy
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Choosing a Business-Level Strategy
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Choosing a Business-Level Strategy
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Strategic Groups and Business-Level
Strategy
Implications for business-level strategy
Immediate competitors are companies pursuing same
strategy within the same strategic group.
Different strategic groups can have a different
standing with respect to the effects of the five
competitive forces.
First mover advantage
Benefits are first choice of customers and suppliers,
setting standards, building entry barriers.
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Choosing an Investment Strategy at
the Business Level
Investment strategy
The resources (human, functional, and financial)
required to gain sustainable competitive advantage.
Competitive position
Market share is an indicator of competitive strength.
Distinctive competencies are competitive tools.
Life Cycle Effects
An industry’s life cycle stage affects its attractiveness
to investment prospects.
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Choosing an Investment Strategy at the
Business Level
TABLE 6.2
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