Global Enterprise and Competition: 66.511.202 Fall 2007 Ashwin Mehta, Visiting Faculty
Global Enterprise and Competition: 66.511.202 Fall 2007 Ashwin Mehta, Visiting Faculty
66.511.202
Fall 2007
Ashwin Mehta, Visiting Faculty
1
Approach to Global Enterprise
Global Strategy
Business Strategy
International Strategy
Corporate/
Global
Strategy
Corporate
Structure &
Integration
Business Strategy
Business
Structure &
Integration
International Strategy,
Structure &
Integration 3
Strategy Process
Mission/Vision
Environmental Implementation
Assessment Objectives/Goals -Structure
-Macro Trends -Leadership
-Industry Analysis Strategy Options -Staffing
-Completion -Incentives
Strategy Selection -Evaluation
-Internal Analysis -Corporate -Control
(Resource, -Business
Capabilities, etc. -International
4
Strategy - Results from
Industry Analysis
Competitor Analysis
External Analysis
Situation Analysis
Internal Analysis
5
The External Environment
Economic
The
Firm
Competitive Forces
Competitive
Political/Legal Environment Global
Technological
6
KEY QUESTION TO ASK
7
UNDERSTANDING THE MACRO ENVIRONMENT
– Lifestyle trends?
•Socio-cultural – Demographic changes?
– Etc.
– Transferable – Favorable
marketing logistics
approaches
– Arbitrage
opportunities
– High R&D costs
Source: Adapted from M.E. Porter, Competition in Global industries (Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 1986);
G. Yip, “Global Strategy in a World of Nations, “ Sloan Management review 31:1 (1989), 29-40
9
Group Project - Template
Describe major (between 5 and 10) environmental trends affecting Your Company
and its industry. These trends can be related to economic (such as GDP, interest
rates, unemployment, taxes, etc.), governmental (e.g. regulation, trade laws, etc.),
technological (e.g. new technologies, R&D spending, etc.), socio-cultural (e.g.
demographics,
Trend Assessment*
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
*: Scale: 1=very negative impact; 5=very positive impact
10
Industry Analysis
Porter’s Model:
11
ANALYSIS OF COMPETITIVE FORCES
To identify
Main SOURCES of competitive forces and
STRENGTH of these pressures
Objective
COMPETITIVE FORCES MATTER BECAUSE:
To be successful, strategy must be designed
to cope effectively with competitive pressures -
objective must be to build a strong, market
position based on competitive advantage!
12
COMPETITIVE FORCE OF POTENTIAL ENTRY
New entrants boost competitive pressures
By bringing new production capacity into play
Through actions to build market share
Seriousness of threat of entry depends on
BARRIERS to entry
Expected REACTION of existing firms to entry
Barriers to entry exist WHEN
It is difficult for newcomers to enter market
A new entrant’s small sales volume puts it a price/cost
disadvantage
13
Threat of New Entrants --
Barriers to entry:
• Economies of Scale (Intel in microprocessors)
• Product Differentiation (hi advertising in consumer goods)
• Capital Requirements (airplane mfg)
• Switching Costs (Windows to Linux)
• Access to Distribution Channels (store shelf space)
• Cost Disadvantages Independent of Size (V high mkt
share)
• Government Policy (oil drilling)
14
Competitive threat of outsiders entering
a market is stronger when
Entry barriers are low
Incumbent firms do not vigorously fight newcomer
Newcomer can expect to earn attractive profits
15
KEY SUCCESS FACTORS AS BARRIERS TO ENTRY
Global presence
17
Bargaining Power of Buyers --
18
Threat of Substitute Products/Services
Substitute Products:
Those products that appear to be
different but can satisfy the same need as
another product. To the extent that
switching costs are low, substitutes can
have a strong effect on an industry.
19
THREAT OF SUBSTITUTES
Soft drinks Movie rentals
Block buster
Coke Pepsi
Hollywood video
Bottled water
Cable TV
20
PRINCIPLE OF COMPETITIVE MARKETS
Competitive threat of substitute
products is strong when
Prices of substitutes are viewed attractive by buyers
Buyers’ costs of switching to substitutes are low
Buyers view substitutes as having equal or better performance features
21
IMPACT
Complementor:
OF COMPLEMENTOR
Three
Examples
Any factor that makes it more
Hot dogs
attractive for suppliers to supply an
industry on favorable terms or that + More sales
makes it more attractive for buyers
to purchase products or services Buns
from an industry at prices higher
than it would pay absent the Music
complementor + More attractive offering
MP3 player
Microsoft
+
Market dominance/standard
Intel
22
Rivalry Among Existing Firms --
23
Rivalry Among Existing Firms --
Government
Communities
Creditors
Trade Associations
Unions
Complementors
(Intel and Microsoft)
25
Competitive environment is unattractive when:
Rivalry is very strong
Entry barriers are low
Competition from substitutes is strong
Suppliers & customers have considerable bargaining power
26
Competitive environment is ideal when:
Rivalry is only moderate
Entry barriers are relatively high
There are no good substitutes
Suppliers & customers are in a weak bargaining position
27
COPING WITH THE COMPETITIVE FORCES
Objective is to craft a strategy that will
Insulate company from competitive forces
Influence industry’s competitive rules in company’s favor
Provide a strong position from which “to play the game”
of competition
Help create sustainable competitive advantage
28
INDUSTRY LIFE CYCLE
Market Size
Time
Source: Adapted from K. Rangan and G. Bowman, “Beating the Commodity Magnet,” Industrial Marketing Management 21 (1992), 215-224; P.
29
Kotler, “Managing Products through their Product Life Cycle,” in Marketing Management: Planning, Implementation, and Control, 7th ed (Upper
Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1991)
Strategic Groups
Strategic group 1
Competitor A
Competitor B
Competitor C
Attribute B .....
(Quality, Perf, etc.)
Strategic group 2
Competitor X
Competitor Y
Competitor Z
.....
30
Group Project - Template
31
Group Project - Template
6. Industry Evolution
Domestic _____
Multi-Domestic _____
Global _____
32
Group Project - Template
7. Industry Profitability*
0 – 5% ___
5.1-10% ___
10.1-15% ___
15.1-20% ___
Over 20% ___
(*: take top 5 to 10 companies to calculate average profitability)
34
Group Project - Template
35
Group Project - Template
Total 100
36
Group Project - Template
37
Group Project - Template
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
38
Group Project - Template
39
COMPARATIVE INDUSTRY REFORMANCE
ROA
•Semiconductor Global Auto ROS
Grocery Store
How do
such differences in
profitability
materialize?
40
Session 3
TWO THEORIES FOR HOW AND WHY SOME FIRMS PERFORM
BETTER THAN OTHERS
41
RESOURCES AND CAPABILITIES:
BUILDING BLOCKS OF STRATEGY
Strategy
lities
Resour Capabi cies)
ce ten
s (compe
•The inputs that firms use to create A firm’s skill in using its resources
goods and services to create goods and services.
• Undifferentiated or firms-specific The combination of procedures
and expertise that the firm relies
• Tangible or intangible
on to engage in distinct activities
• Easy to acquire or difficult in the process of producing goods
and services
42
TYPES OF CORE COMPETENCIES
Superior skills in producing high quality product
Superior system for delivering customer orders accurately & swiftly
Better after-sale service capability
More skill in achieving low operating costs
Unique formula for selecting good retail locations
Unusual innovativeness in developing new products
Better merchandising & product display skills
Superior mastery of an important technology
Unusually effective sales force
45
What made Wal-Mart a BIG Success?*
Capabilities-based competitor
Cross docking
Investments in interlocking support systems
Transportation system
Managerial controls
Human resources system
48
Industry Value Chain
Forward
Buyer/User
Suppliers Company
Channels Value Chain
49
Value Chain System
50
The Value Chain System
51
Firm Value Chain
Firm Financing, legal support,
Infrastructure accounting
Primary Activities
52
USING VALUE CHAINS TO GAIN COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
Identical Differentiated
Find a different
Longer-lasting
way to perform
advantage
activities
Shorter-term
Find a better way
advantage
to perform the
(competitors
same activities
catch up)
53
TRADE OFF PROTECTION YOUR RIVALS CHOOSE NOT TO COPY YOU
54
55
STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
56
SENIOR VS. MIDDLE MANAGERS
Manageable list
Prioritized list
59
Environmental (Macro) Trends
Economic
Technological Opportunities
Political -
Socio-Cultural -
-
External Analysis
Threats
-
Industry Trends -
Industry Evolution -
Competitive Forces
60
Resources
Financial
Physical
Human Strengths
Management -
Organization -
Culture
Tangibles -
Intangibles
61
Business Acumen*
Questions:
What is happening in the World today?
What does it mean to others?
What does it mean to us?
What would have to happen first (for the results we want to occur)?
What do we have to do to play a role?
What do we do next?
Cosmopolitans Globalization
Gillette
64
*: Global Cosmopolitans, Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Strategy+Business
Push for Cosmopolitanism: The Gillette Case*
Pre 1980’s – “Stone Age” Theory of marketing
slow spread from home to hinterlands
Retail trade getting more advanced --- retails chains (e.g. Wal-Mart) and Internet
Imperatives
Innovation
Organizations
Standardization
World Sourcing
Leadership
Coordination
65
*: Global Cosmopolitans, Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Strategy+Business