Strategic Management Assignment 3
Strategic Management Assignment 3
Michael Porter presented three generic strategies that a firm can apply or use to
achieve competitive advantage. Each of the strategies has the potential to allow a firm
to perform better than its rivals in the industry. These generic strategies are:
It is a firm’s generic strategy based on appeal to the industry wide market using a
competitive advantage based on low cost or creating low cost position. With cost
leadership, a firm must manage the relationships throughout the value chain and
lower cost throughout the entire chain.
This requires a tight set of interrelated tactics that include:
Cost minimization in all activities in the firm’s value chain such as research and
development service, sales force and advertising
Advantages
An overall cost position enables a firm to achieve above average returns despite
strong competition.
It protects a firm against rivalry from competitors because lower costs allow a firm
to earn returns even if its competitors eroded their profits through intense rivalry.
It protects firms against powerful buyers. Buyers can exert power to drive down
prices only to the level of the next most efficient producer.
It provides more flexibility to cope with demands from powerful suppliers for input
cost increases.
The factors that lead to low cost position also provide substantial entry barriers
from economies of scale and cost advantages.
Finally, a low cost position puts the firm in a favourable position with respect to
substitute products introduced by new and existing competitors.
Pitfalls
There is too much focus on one or few value chain activities. Firms need to pay
attention to all activities in the value chain.
All rivals share a common input or raw materials. Here, firms are vulnerable to
price increases in the factors of production. Since they are competing on cost, they
are less able to pass on price increases, because customers can take their
businesses to rivals who have lower prices.
2. Differentiation
This is a firm’s generic strategy based on creating differences in the firm’s product or
services offering by creating something that is perceived industrywide as unique and
valued by customers.
Differentiation can take many forms and it includes
Advantages
By increasing a firm’s margins differentiation also avoids the need for low cost
position.
Higher entry barriers result because of customer loyalty and the firm’s ability to
provide uniqueness in its products and services.
It also provides higher margins that enables the firm to deal with supplier power.
It reduces buyer power because buyers lack comparable alternatives and are
therefore less price sensitive.
Finally, it enhances consumer loyalty, thus reducing the threats from substitutes.
Pitfalls
Too much differentiation. Firms may strive for quality or service that is higher
than customers desire. Thus, they become vulnerable to competitors who provide
an appropriate level of quality at a lower price.
Too high price premium. Customers may desire the product but they are repelled
by the price premium.
Differentiation that is easily imitated. Resources that are easily imitated can not
lead to sustainable advantages.
Focus
Focus has two variants – cost focus and differentiated focus. In cost focus, a firm
strives to create a cost advantage in its target segment. In a differentiation focus, a
firm seeks to differentiate in its target market.
Both variants of the focus strategy rely on providing better service than broad based
competitors who are trying to serve the focuser’s target segment. Cost focus exploits
differences in cost behavior in some segments while differentiation focus exploits the
special needs of buyers in other segments.
Focus requires that a firm either have a low-cost position with its strategic target, high
differentiation or both. As earlier noted, with cost and differentiation strategies, these
positions provide defenses against each competitive force. Focus is also used to
select niches that are least vulnerable to substitutes or where competitors are
weakest.
Pitfalls
Erosion of cost advantages within the narrow segment. The advantages of cost
focus strategy may be fleeting if the cost advantages are eroded overtime.
Even product and service offerings which are highly focused are subject to
competition from new entrants and from imitations. Some firms adopting a focus
strategy may enjoy temporary advantages because they select a small niche with
few rivals. However, their advantages may be short-lived.
Focusers can become too focused to satisfy buyer needs. Some firms attempting
to attain competitive advantages through a focus strategy may have too narrow
product or service.
Q 2.
Low-cost Position
An overall low-cost position enables a firm to achieve above average returns despite
strong competition. It protects a firm against rivalry from competitors, because lower
costs allow a firm to earn returns even if its competitors eroded their profits through
intense rivalry.
A low-cost position also protects firms against powerful buyers. Buyers can exert
power to drive down prices only to a level of the next most efficient producer. Also a
low-cost position provides more flexibility to cope with demands from powerful
suppliers for input cost increases.
The factors that lead to a low-cost position also provide substantial entry barriers from
economies of scale and cost advantages. Finally, a low-cost position puts the firm in a
favourable position with respect to substitute products introduced by new and existing
competitors.
Differentiation
Differentiation provides protection against rivalry since brand loyalty lowers customer
sensitivity to price and raises customer switching costs. By increasing a firm’s margin,
differentiation avoids the need for a low-cost position. Higher entry barrier results
because of customer loyalty and the firm’s ability to provide uniqueness in its products
and services.
Differentiation provides higher margins that enable a firm to deal with supplier power.
It also reduces buyer power because buyers lack comparable alternatives and are
therefore fewer prices sensitive. Supplier power is also decreased because there is a
certain amount of prestige associated with being a supplier to a producer of a highly
differentiated products and services. Lastly differentiation enhances customer loyalty,
thus reducing the threat from substitutes.
Focus
Focus requires that a firm either have low-cost position with its strategic target, high
differentiation or both. As noted earlier with regard to cost and differentiation
strategies, these positions provide defenses against each competitive force. Focus is
used to select niches that are least vulnerable to substitutes and where competitors
are weakest.
Focus strategy experiences less rivalry and lower buyer bargaining power by providing
products and services to a targeted market segment. New rivals have difficulty
attracting customers based only on lower prices. Additionally, brand image and quality
heightens rival entry barriers. Again, focus strategy enjoys some protection against
substitute products and services because of their relatively high reputation, brand
image and customer loyalty.
Q3
Most turnarounds require a firm to carefully analyze the external and internal
environments. The external analysis leads to identification of market segments or
customer groups that may still find the product attractive. Internal analysis results in
actions aimed at reduced costs and higher efficiency. Typically, a firm needs to
undertake a mix of both internally and externally oriented actions to effect a
turnaround.
• Selective product and market pruning. Most mature or declining firms have
many product lines that are losing money or are only marginally profitable. One
strategy is to discontinue these product lines and focus all resources on a few core
profitable areas.
Q. 4
The experience curve, developed by the Boston Consulting Group in 1968, is a way of
looking at efficiencies developed through a firm’s cumulative experience. In its basic
form, experience curve relates production costs to production output. As output
doubles, costs decline by 10 percent to 3 percent. For example, if it costs GH¢1.00
per unit to produce 100 units, the per unit cost will decline to between 70 to 90 Ghana
pesewas as output increases to 200 units.
The factors that account for this increased efficiency include the following.
The success of an experience curve strategy depends on the industry life cycle for
the product. Early stages of a product’s life cycle are typically characterized by
rapid gains in technological advances in production efficiency. Most experience
curve gains come early in the product life cycle.
If a company is the first to market with the product and has good financial backing,
an experience curve strategy may be successful.
Limitations
If other competitors are well positioned in the market, have strong capital
resources, and are known to promote their products lines aggressively to gain
market share, an experience curve strategy may lead to nothing more than price
war between two or more strong competitors.
The experience curve has lost favour as a strategic tool because it combines
several sources of cost reduction (learning, scale, process innovation etc) that can
be better understood individually.
It has also lost favour because of the realization that cost reductions from
experience are not automatic – they must be managed.
The main idea of this principle is that innovation (creation) encourages economic
growth but innovation by one company also leads to destruction of complacent firm’s
monopoly market share. Companies that once dominated markets lose their
dominance and shrink in profitability and importance.
Creative Destruction refers to the fact that new ways of organizing production or
distribution while being creative (having benefits) also are destructive (having costs).
Many assume that the benefits exceed the costs, but there is no reason why this
should always be so.
• New products
Q. 6
Industry life cycle refers to the stages of introduction, growth, maturity and decline that
occur over the life of an industry.
• The first stage of the industry life cycle is the introduction stage. This stage is
characterized by :
• Growth stage is the second of the product life cycle and it is characterized by:
In general, as the product moves through its life cycle, the proportion of repeat buyers
to new purchases increases.
• Maturity stage, being the third stage of the industry life cycle is characterized by
the following:
Since markets are becoming saturated, there are few opportunities to attract new
adopters. It’s no longer possible to grow around competition so direct competition
becomes predominant. With few attractive prospects, marginal competitors begin to
exit the market. At the same time rivalry among existing rivals intensifies because
there is often fierce price competition at the same time that expenses associated with
attracting new buyers are rising.
• Decline stage occurs when industry sales and profits begin to fall. This stage is
characterized by:
At the decline stage, a firm’s strategic options become dependent on the actions of
rivals. If many competitors decide to leave the market, sales and profit opportunities
increase. On the other hand prospects are limited if all competitors remain.
The importance of considering the industry life cycle is to determine a firm’s business
level strategy and its relative emphasis on functional area strategies and value
creating activities. Managers must become even more aware of their firm’s strengths
and weaknesses in many areas to attain competitive advantages. For example, firms
depend on the Research and Development activities in the introductory stage of the
life cycle. Research and Development is the source of new products and features that
everyone hopes will appeal to customers.
Firms develop products and services to stimulate customer demand. Later, during the
maturity stage, the functions of the products have been defined, more competitors
have entered the market and competition is intense, managers then place greater
emphasis on production efficiencies and process engineering in order to lower
manufacturing costs. This helps to protect the firm’s market position and to extend the
product life cycle because the firm’s lower costs can be passed on to consumers in
the form of lower prices and price sensitive customers will find the product more
appealing.
Limitation
While the life cycle idea is analogous to a living organism (ie. birth, growth, maturity
and death) the comparison does have limitations. Products and services go through
many cycles of innovation and renewal. For most part, only fad products have a single
life cycle. Maturity stages of an industry can be transformed or followed by a stage of
rapid growth if consumer tastes change, technological innovations take place or new
developments occur in the general environment.
Q. 7
WHAT IS MEANT BY BEING “STUCK IN THE MIDDLE”? IS IT A BENEFIT OR A
PROBLEM?
The three Porter’s generic competitive strategies are alternative, viable approaches to
dealing with the competitive forces. When a firm fails to develop its strategy in at least
one of these three directions, the firm is said to be “stuck in the middle” and it is an
extremely poor strategic situation.
This firm lacks the market share, capital investment and resolve to play the low cost
game, the industry wide differentiation necessary to obviate the need for low cost
position or the focus to create differentiation or a low-cost position in a more limited
sphere.
The firm stuck in the middle is almost guaranteed low productivity and profitability. It
either loses the high volume customers who demand low prices or must bid away from
low cost firms. It also loses high margin business.
The firm stuck in the middle also probably suffers from a blurred corporate culture and
a conflicting set of organizational arrangements and motivation system. The above
discussion clearly shows that a firm stuck in the middle is a problem and not a benefit.
The diagram below shows a situation where a firm is stuck in the middle.
The firm stuck in the middle must make a fundamental strategic decision. Either it
must take steps necessary to achieve cost leadership or at least cost parity, which
usually involves aggressive investments to modernize and perhaps the necessity to
buy market share or it must orient itself to a particular target (focus) or achieve some
uniqueness (differentiation). The latter two options may well involve shrinking in
market share and even in absolute sales. The choice among these options is
necessary based on the firm’s capabilities and limitations.
More importantly, when a firm is stuck in the middle, it usually takes time and
sustained efforts to extricate the firm from this unenviable position. Yet there seems to
be a tendency for firms in difficulty to flip back and forth over time among the generic
strategies. Given the potential inconsistencies involved in pursuing these three
strategies, such an approach is almost always doomed to failure.