Principles of Strategic Management (2)
Principles of Strategic Management (2)
Management:
A
Comprehensive Approach
Strategic Management
• Should two or more firms perform at the same level, they have
competitive parity.
Sustainable Competitive Advantage (SCA)
• Apple, for example, has enjoyed a sustainable competitive
advantage over Samsung in the smartphone industry for over a
decade since its introduction of the iPhone in 2007.
• Other phone makers such as Microsoft (which purchased Nokia)
and BlackBerry have all but exited the smartphone market, while
new entrants such as Xiaomi and Huawei of China are trying to
gain traction.
What strategy is NOT?
• Grandiose Statements Are Not Strategy. “Our strategy is to win” or “We
will be No. 1.” Such statements of desire, on their own, are not strategy. They
provide little managerial guidance and often lead to goal conflict and confusion.
Moreover, such wishful thinking frequently fails to address economic
fundamentals.
SWOT
* Cost-leadership * Growth
* Differentiation * Stability
* Focus * Retrenchment
Programs and
budgets
Structure Staff
Evaluation
Feedback
Analysis:
External Analysis
11
Strategy Highlight
Airbnb: Disrupting the Hotel Industry
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The Firm within Its External Environment,
Industry, and Strategic Group, Subject to
PESTEL Factors
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PESTEL Framework
• Political (market and non-market) • Technological
Government pressures Innovation in products
Subsidies and incentives and processes
Lobbying and contributions Machine learning and AI
Differences in countries, states, Diffusion
and regions Research & development
• Economic • Ecological
Growth rates Global warming
Employment levels Sustainability
Interest rates Pollution (e.g., BP's oil spill)
Currency exchange rates
• Legal
• Sociocultural Court system
Norms, culture, values Legislation
Demographics Hiring laws
Lifestyle changes (De-)regulation
Subway, Whole Foods benefit
14
Strategy Highlight
Blockbuster’s Bust
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Industry Structure and Firm Strategy: The Five
Forces Model
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External Analysis
gives us the
Opportunities and
Threats outside the
firm.
Analysis:
Internal Analysis
Inside the Firm: Core Competencies,
Resources, and Capabilities
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What Are Core Competencies?
• Unique strengths
• Results in:
– Creating higher value for the customer or
– Offering products and services at lower cost
• Based on structures, processes, and routines
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Resource-Based View
Tata cars…
Crocs…
Xerox…
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Dynamic Capabilities
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Dynamic Capabilities at IBM
Current disruptions:
• Cloud computing
• Systems of engagement
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5-25
• Support Activities
Indirectly add value: Provide support to the primary activities
Cost
Advantage
Similar Product
Competitive At Lower Cost
Advantage
Differentiation
Advantage
Price Premium
From Unique
Product
32
• Eliminate
– Sales people
– After sales service
• Reduce
– Warranties
• Raise
– Offers tens of
thousands of home
furnishing items
• Create
– New way to shop for
furniture
Formulation:
Corporate Strategies
What is Corporate Strategy?
• Corporate strategy
Corporate strategy is the way a company creates value through
the configuration and coordination of its multi-market activities
Quest for competitive advantage when competing in multiple
industries
8–37
38
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Firms vs. Markets: Make or Buy?
• Should a firm do things in-house (to make)? Or obtain
externally (to buy)?
8–39
Alternatives on the Make-or-Buy Continuum
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Strategic Outsourcing
• Example: Off-shoring
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Motivations For Product/Geographic
Diversification
• Organizational design
Structure
Processes
Procedures
• Key components:
Structure
Culture
Control
Organizational Inertia
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Key Elements of Organizational Structure
• Are interdependent
• Impact a firm’s performance
• Changes over time as the firm grow in:
– Size and complexity
• Successful new ventures generally grow:
– First by increasing sales
– Then by obtaining larger geographic reach
– Finally by diversifying
• Through vertical integration
• Entering into related and unrelated businesses
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Changing Organizational Structures and
Increasing Complexity as Firms Grow
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50
• Closed Innovation
– New products discovered, developed, and commercialized internally
• Open Innovation
– Ideas and innovation can originate from external sources
• Customers, Suppliers, Universities, Start-ups, Competitors
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Strategy Highlight 51
In 2001:
Approach:
•Sony: closed innovation
•Apple: open innovation
Results in 2018:
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Strategic Management
Internal Env.
External Env.
* PESTEL (STEEP) * Resources,
* Capabilities
* Porter’s 5 Forces * VRIO
SWOT
* Cost-leadership * Growth
* Differentiation * Stability
* Focus * Retrenchment
Programs and
budgets
Structure Staff
Evaluation
Feedback