1 / 29

Strategic Management In Action

Strategic Management In Action. Ch 6: Competitive Strategies Group Six: Knowl Richardson Landon Cotham Dustin Eggleston Maddie Ramsey Amber Morris Katy Martin. Competitive Strategies. Competition is Present in All Organizations.

dante
Download Presentation

Strategic Management In Action

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Strategic Management In Action Ch 6: Competitive Strategies Group Six: Knowl Richardson Landon Cotham Dustin Eggleston Maddie Ramsey Amber Morris Katy Martin

  2. Competitive Strategies • Competition is Present in All Organizations. • Competitive Advantage- Qualities that Set an Organization Apart. • Distinctive Capability- When an Organization Does Something that Others Can’t, or Does it Better than Others Do. • Unique Resource- An Organization Has Something that Other Competitors Don’t.

  3. Competitive Strategies • Exploit Competitive Advantages and Current Resources. • Competition- Organizations Battle or Vie for Some Desired Object or Outcome. (Customers, Market Share)

  4. 3 Approaches to Defining Competition • Industry Perspective-Focuses on Competitors as Organizations that are Making/Selling the Same or Very Similar Products/Services. • Market Perspective- Views Competitors as Organizations that Satisfy the Same Customer Need.

  5. 3 Approaches to Defining Competition • Strategic Groups Perspective- Competitors are Groups of Firms Competing in an Industry with Similar Strategies, Resources, and Customers. • This defines WHO competitors are because the most relevant competitors are in your strategic group.

  6. Miles and Snow’s Adaptive Strategies • Based On Strategies that Organizations Use to Adapt to their Uncertain Competitive Environments. • Four Strategic Postures: Prospector, Defender, Analyzer, and Reactor.

  7. Prospector • Organization Innovates by Finding and Exploiting New Product/Market Opportunities. • Analyze the Changing Environment to See Future Profit-bearing Actions Now. • Competitors Don’t Know What They’re Going to do Next (MTV).

  8. Defender • Used to Protect Current Market Share by Emphasizing Existing Products and Producing a Limited Product Line. • GM reducing lines of vehicles and models offered to lower cost and retain damaged market share. • Do Whatever it Takes to Prevent Competitors from Invading the Market. • Only works if The Product(s) Remain Competitive with Competitors’.

  9. Analyzer • Watch For and Copy Successful Ideas of Prospectors and Their Pioneers. • Thoroughly Analyze Business Ideas Before Trying Them.

  10. Reactor • Lack of a Coherent Strategy or Apparent Means of Competing. • React to Environmental Change Only when Forced by Environmental Pressures. • Fail to React Quickly Because They Don’t Have the Necessary Resources • NOT Recommended, Seen as a “Default” Strategy. Without Change, Reactor will Always be in a Weak Competitive Position

  11. Porter’s Generic Competitive Strategies • Appropriate Competitive Strategy Needed Along with Five Forces Model and Value Chain. • Strategy Based on Competitive Advantage From Only Two Sources: • Having lowest costs in the industry. • Having significant and desirable differences from competitors.

  12. Porter’s Generic Competitive Strategies • Generic Competitive Strategies can be Made from Cost Leadership, Differentiation, and Focus. • Why “Generic”? • These strategies can be pursued by any type/size organization in any type/size industry.

  13. Cost Leadership Strategy • Organization Strives to Have the Lowest Costs in its Industry and Produce Products for Broad Customer Base. • Not Necessarily Lowest Prices, but With Lowest Costs, can Potentially Charge Lowest Prices and Still Earn Profits. • Allows a Better Position if a Price War Starts.

  14. How to be Successful in Cost Leadership Strategy • Be Efficient in All Areas. • Narrow Product Lines Aimed at Average Customer. • Have Plain/Effective Establishments.

  15. Disadvantages Of Cost Leadership Strategy • Competitors Could Find Better Cost Cutting Strategy, Taking Away Advantage. • Competitor Might Imitate Cost Leader’s Actions and Erode Advantage. • Cost Leader Might Lose Sight of Changing Customers’ Wants. • It doesn’t matter how efficiently you make products/services if no one wants them.

  16. Differentiation Strategy • Provide Unique Products with Features that Customers Value and See as Different, so they Pay a Premium for it. • Compete by Offering Truly Unique Products in Eyes of Customers. • All Resources Concentrate on Isolating and Knowing Specific Market Segments. • Use Multiple Methods to Differentiate Themselves. • Offer Wide Product Lines.

  17. Differentiation Strategy • Differentiate Along Many Different Dimensions to Reach All Niches of Market. • Work to Establish Brand Loyalty • Brand Loyalty- When customers consistently and repeatedly seek out, purchase, and use a particular brand. • Unique Resources and Capabilities Tend to be in Marketing and Research & Development

  18. Disadvantages of Differentiation Strategy • Can be Costly, Must Manage Costs, but Not Too Much so You Retain Differentiation. • Competitors’ Imitation Products/Services may Affect Uniqueness. • Customers Could Become More Price Sensitive. • Product Differences May Lose Their Importance. • Organization Might Find that Advantage Based on Being Different and Unique no Longer Work.

  19. Focus Strategy • Organization Pursues a Cost or Differentiation Advantage but Within a Narrow Customer Group/Segment. • Focus on a Specific Market Niche. • Three Broad Ways to Segment Specialized Market Niches: • Geographical • Type of Customer • Product Line Segment

  20. Three Niche Focuses • Geographical Niche- Region or Locality • Midwest Airlines • Customer Niche- Focuses on Specific Group of Customers’ Unique Needs • Christine Columbus- Female Travelers • Product Line Niche- Focus on Specific & Specialized Product Line

  21. Advantages to Focus Strategy • Focuser Knows the Market Niche Well • Stay close to customers and respond quickly to changes. • Develop Strong Brand Loyalty • Can Have Niche to Themselves if Competitors Don’t Offer Similar Products/Services

  22. Disadvantages of Focus Strategy • Focuser Often Operates on a Small Scale • Hard to lower costs significantly • Niche Customers may Change Taste or Needs • Difficult for focuser to change niches • Focuser is Subject to Being “outfocused” by competition

  23. Stuck In The Middle • Organization hasn’t developed a low cost or a differentiation competitive advantage • Costs too high to compete with low cost leader • Products and services aren’t differentiated enough to compete with differentiator • Getting Unstuck: Choosing the right competitive advantage to pursue

  24. Contemporary Views on Competitive Strategy • Provide expanded and more realistic description of competitive strategies • Integrated Low Cost-Differentiation Strategy • Simultaneously achieving low costs and high levels of differentiation • Information Systems have opened the door for competing on the basis of having low costs and being unique • Mintzberg’s Generic Competitive Strategies • Six possible competitive strategies • Differentiation: Price, marketing image, Product design, product quality, product support • Undifferentiated

  25. Implementing Competitive Strategy • The Role of Functional Strategies • determine competitive strategy through resources and capabilities • Determines how competitive strategy is implemented • A competitive advantage will not be possible without a functional strategy

  26. Competitive Actions • Organization will be competing against other organizations through offensive and defensive moves • Offensive moves: organization's attempts to exploit and strengthen its position through attacks on competitor’s position • Defensive moves: organization’s attempts to protect its competitive advantage and market share

  27. Evaluating and Changing Competitive Strategy • Strategies must be monitored and evaluated for performance effectiveness and efficiency • Determine what happened and why • Pinpoint area of competitive weakness • If desired levels of performance haven’t been reached, changes may be necessary

  28. Summary/Takeaways • Competitive Strategies • Miles and Snow’s Adaptive Strategies • Prospector • Defender • Analyzer • Reactor • Porter’s Generic Competitive Strategies • Cost Leadership • Differentiation Strategy • Focus Strategy

  29. Summary/Takeaways • Contemporary Views on Competitive Strategy • Integrated Low-cost Differentiation Strategy • Mintzberg’s Generic Competitive Strategy • Competitive Actions • Offensive Moves • Defensive Moves

More Related