What Is Strategy and What Role Do Stakeholders Play?
What Is Strategy and What Role Do Stakeholders Play?
Example: Twitter
Competitive challenge: grow its user base
• Become more valuable for online advertisers
• Facebook allows advertisers to target their online ads precisely based
on demographic data
Competitive Advantage Example
Example: Twitter
Rather than formulating a guiding policy to grow active core users, Twitter
defined its user base more broadly.
• Defined users into 3 types to compare with Facebook
+ Common users
+ Famous users
+ Users who don’t have a Twitter account can still look at the news that they are
looking for, on Facebook you have to log in to view everything
• User types were hard to track and less valuable to advertisers.
+ Users on Facebook express more about their demographic (Pages, posts they
like, etc.) and they also need to log in to view everything so Facebook can track
these information and target the ads, Twitter don’t make users log in (in many
cases) and keep track like FB so their ads are not as effective.
Competitive Advantage Example
Example: Twitter
Different user definitions confused management and limited
guidance for employees.
Consequences of the unclear mission:
• Frustration among managers and engineers
• Turnover of key personnel
Internal turmoil resulted, including management demotions
and promotions of CEO friends.
Competitive Advantage Example
In smartphones: Apple
Apple has achieved a competitive advantage over Samsung,
Microsoft, and BlackBerry
• Why does Apple have a CA in smartphones over these companies?
Competitive Advantage Example
Corporate Strategy
Industry, markets, and geography (Lecture 8)
Where will we compete? Which industry will we compete?
Which market will we compete? Etc.
Business Strategy
Cost leadership, differentiation, or integration (Lecture 6)
How will we compete?
Functional Strategy
how to implement a chosen corporate and business strategy
Stakeholders and Competitive Advantage
Stakeholders:
• Organizations, groups, and individuals
• They can affect or are affected by a firm’s actions.
Have a vested claim or interest in the performance and continued
survival of the firm
Internal stakeholders:
• Stockholders/Shareholders, employees (including executives, managers, and workers),
and board members
External stakeholders: Any type of group or individual outside of the company that
has some sort of stake in the company or what the company does. So it could be a
vested interest or claim in how well the company does (its performance), and it can
also be a group that cares about what the company does but not how well it does.
• Customers, suppliers, alliance partners, creditors, unions, communities, media,
environmental organizations, governments at various levels, etc.
• Example: you are a tuna company, by catching tuna, you have to kill dolphins in the
procress. Then you will have environmental organizations or animal right organizations
look after you. These organizations don’t care how well your company perform, they only
care about what your company does is against any right or not.
Shareholders are always stakeholders in a
corporation, but stakeholders are not always
shareholders. A shareholder owns part of a
public company through shares of stock, while a
stakeholder has an interest in the performance of
a company for reasons other than stock
performance or appreciation.
Stakeholders and Competitive Advantage
Stakeholders and Competitive Advantage
Name the competitive advantage Threadless had over other clothing stores? Explain why it was a competitive advantage.
Is performing different activities the only way for a company to be unique in its industry?
What is a good example of a business strategy? What is and isn’t a strategy?
Do different stakeholders have different objectives? How do companies manage such conflicts? Answer in terms of “trade-offs”.
Do firms have legal obligations to all stakeholders? Which stakeholders?
Two companies own and run movie theaters. One costs $2 per movie, only shows movies several weeks after release, screens and sound are low quality, and it’s dirty. The other is
costs $10, shows brand new movies, great quality screens and sound and is very clean. Think about their strategic positioning. Are they direct competitors? Remember – even if
companies are in the same general industry, it does not mean they’re direct competitors if they compete along different dimensions (e.g., different price, quality, etc.). For example,
McDonalds and Red Robin both serve hamburgers, but they’re not really direct competitors.
Coke was one of the first to sell soda. Other sodas entered the market with their own version of Cola. Coke responded by concentrating on the soda flavors that customers liked while
keeping their prices low. Did Coke maintain a sustainable competitive advantage?
My company’s strategy creates value that other competitors currently cannot copy, but they will be able to copy it in the near future. Is this a competitive advantage? Is it sustainable?
Give examples of external stakeholders.
Give examples of internal stakeholders.
What are the three stakeholder attributes and what do they mean?
Describe stakeholder impact analysis. What is its purpose?
Which of the following summarizes the difference between corporate strategy and business strategy?