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Figure 3.1: From Thinking Strategically about the Company’s Situation to Choosing a Strategy

Thinking strategically about a firm’s external environment. Forming a strategic vision of where the firm needs to head. Identifying promising strategic options for the firm. Selecting the best strategy and business model for the firm. Thinking strategically about a firm’s

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Figure 3.1: From Thinking Strategically about the Company’s Situation to Choosing a Strategy

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  1. Thinking strategically about a firm’s external environment Forming a strategic vision of where the firm needs to head Identifying promising strategic options for the firm Selecting the best strategy and business model for the firm Thinking strategically about a firm’s internal environment Figure 3.1: From Thinking Strategically about the Company’s Situation to Choosing a Strategy Chapter 3 Chapter 4

  2. Figure 3.2 The Components of a Company’s Macro-Environment

  3. Question 1: What are the Strategically Relevant Factors in the Macro-environment? • 6 Principles Components of the Macro-environment: • Political factors • Economic conditions • Sociocultural forces • Technological factors • Environmental forces • Legal and regulatory factors

  4. Question 2: How Strong are the Industry’s Competitive Forces?

  5. Question 3: What Factors are Driving Industry Change and What Impact Will They Have? Driving forces are the major underlying causes of changing industry and competitive conditions • Identify those forces likely to exert greatest influence over next 1 - 3 years • Usually no more than 3 - 4 factors qualify as real drivers of change 2. Assess impact • What difference will the forces make - favorable? unfavorable?

  6. Question 4: How are Industry Rivals Positioned in the Market? • One technique for revealing the different competitive positions of industry rivals is strategic group mapping • A strategic group consists of those rivals with similar competitive approaches and positions in the market

  7. Procedure for Constructing aStrategic Group Map STEP 1: Identify competitive characteristics that differentiate firms in an industry from one another STEP 2: Plot firms on a two-variable map using pairs of these differentiating characteristics STEP 3: Assign firms that fall in about the same strategy space to same strategic group STEP 4: Draw circles around each group, making circles proportional to size of group’s respective share of total industry sales

  8. Example: Strategic Group Map of Selected Retail Chains

  9. Example: Strategic Group Map of Selected Automobile Manufacturers

  10. Question 5: What Strategic Moves Are Rivals Likely to Make Next? • A firm’s own best strategic moves are affected by • Current strategies of competitors • Future actions of competitors • Profiling key rivals involves gathering competitive intelligence about their • Current strategies, capabilities, objectives, and assumptions • Most recent moves • Announced plans

  11. Question 6: What are the Industry’s Key Success Factors? • Competitive elements most affecting every industry member’s ability to prosper • Specific strategy elements • Product attributes • Resources • Competencies • Competitive capabilities • Market achievements • KSFs spell the difference between • Profit and loss • Competitive success or failure

  12. Identifying IndustryKey Success Factors • Answers to three questions pinpoint KSFs • On what basis do customers choose between competing brands of sellers? • What resources and competitive capabilities does a seller need to have to be competitively successful? • What shortcomings put a company at a significant competitive disadvantage? • KSFs consist of the3 - 6 really major determinants of financial and competitive success in an industry

  13. Question 7: Is the Industry Outlook Conducive to Good Profitability? Develop conclusions about whether the industry and competitive environment is attractive or unattractive, both near- and long-term, for earning good profits Objective Principle A firm uniquely well-suited in an otherwise unattractive industry can, under certain circumstances, still earn unusually good profits

  14. Thinking strategically about a firm’s external environment Forming a strategic vision of where the firm needs to head Identifying promising strategic options for the firm Selecting the best strategy and business model for the firm Thinking strategically about a firm’s internal environment Figure 3.1: From Thinking Strategically about the Company’s Situation to Choosing a Strategy Chapter 3 Chapter 4

  15. Question 1: How Well is theCompany’s Present Strategy Working? • Two steps involved • Determine current strategy of company • Examine key indicators of strategic andfinancialperformance

  16. Quest. 2: What are the Company’s Competitively Important Resources and Capabilities? • Competitive Assets • Are the firm’s resources and capabilities. • Resources can be tangible and intangible • Resources are combined together into important capabilities • Can be leveraged into sustainable competitive advantages over rivals • Resource and Capability Analysis • Identify Resources and Capabilities • Test to see if they are valuable, rare, hard to copy, and nonsubstitutable

  17. Question 3: Is the Company Able to seize Market Opportunities and Nullify External Threats? • S W O T represents the first letter in • Strengths • Weaknesses • Opportunities • Threats • For a company’s strategy to be well-conceived, it must be matched toboth • Resource strengths and weaknesses • Best market opportunities and external threats to its well-being

  18. Competencies vs. Core Competenciesvs. Distinctive Competencies • A company competence is an internal activity an organization performs with proficiency • A core competence is a proficiently performed internal activity that is central to a company’s strategy and competitiveness • A distinctive competence is a competitively valuable activity that a company performs better than its rivals

  19. Potential Resource Strengths Potential Resource Weaknesses Potential Company Opportunities Potential External Threats • Powerful strategy • Strong financial condition • Strong brand name image/reputation • Widely recognized market leader • Proprietary technology • Cost advantages • Strong advertising • Product innovation skills • Good customer service • Better product quality • Alliances or JVs • No clear strategic direction • Obsolete facilities • Weak balance sheet; excess debt • Higher overall costs than rivals • Missing some key skills/competencies • Subpar profits • Internal operating problems . . . • Falling behind in R&D • Too narrow product line • Weak marketing skills • Serving additional customer groups • Expanding to new geographic areas • Expanding product line • Transferring skills to new products • Vertical integration • Take market share from rivals • Acquisition of rivals • Alliances or JVs to expand coverage • Openings to exploit new technologies • Openings to extend brand name/image • Entry of potent new competitors • Loss of sales to substitutes • Slowing market growth • Adverse shifts in exchange rates & trade policies • Costly new regulations • Vulnerability to business cycle • Growing leverage of customers or suppliers • Reduced buyer needs for product • Demographic changes Table 4.3: SWOT Analysis -What to Look For

  20. Role of SWOT Analysis inCrafting a Better Strategy • Developing a clear understanding of a company’s • Resource strengths • Resource weaknesses • Best opportunities • External threats • Drawing conclusions about how • Company’s strategy can be matched to both its resource capabilities and market opportunities • Urgent it is for company to correct resource weaknesses and guard against external threats • Developing actions for improving strategy

  21. Question 4: Are the Company’s Cost Structure and Customer Value Proposition Competitive? • Assessing whether a firm’s costs are competitive with those of rivals is a crucial part of company analysis • Key analytical tools • Value chain analysis • Activity-based costing • Benchmarking

  22. The Concept of a Company Value Chain • A company consists of all the activities and functions it performs in trying to deliver value to its customers. • A company’s value chain shows the linked set of activities, functions, and business processesthat it performs • A company’s value chain consists of two types of activities • Primary activities (where most of the value for customers is created) • Support activities that are undertaken to aid the individuals ands groups engaged in doing the primary activities

  23. Figure 4.3: Representative Company Value Chain

  24. Figure 4.4: A Representative Value Chain System (for an Entire Industry)

  25. Benchmarking Costs ofKey Value Chain Activities • Focuses on cross-company comparisons of how certain activities are performed and the costs associated with these activities • Determine whether a company is performing particular value chain activities efficiently by studying the practices and procedures used by other companies • Learn what is the “best” way to do a particular activity from those who have demonstrated they are “best-in-industry” or “best-in-world” • Assess if company’s costs of performing particular value chain activities are in line with competitors • Learn how other firms achieve lower costs • Take action to improve company’s cost competitiveness

  26. Strategic Options for Remedying a Cost Disadvantage • Adopting best practices • Reengineer/Revamp value chain • Relocate high-cost activities • Outsourcing • Invest in technological improvements • Find ways to detour around the activities or items where costs are high • Redesign the product to speed manufacturing • Work with suppliers and buyers to reduce their costs

  27. Question 5: Is the Company Competitively Stronger or Weaker Than Key Rivals? Competitive Strength Assessment List KSFs/competitive strength measures Rate firms on each factor using rating scale of 1 to 10 (1 = very weak; 5 = average; 10 = very strong) Decide whether to use a weighted or unweightedrating system Sum individual ratings to get an overall measure of competitive strength for each rival Determine whether firm enjoys a competitive advantage or suffers from a competitive disadvantage based on the overall strength ratings

  28. KSF/Strength Measure ABC Co. Rival 1 Rival 2 Rival 3 Rival 4 Quality/product performance 8 5 10 1 6 Reputation/image 8 7 10 1 6 Manufacturing capability 2 10 4 5 1 Technological skills 10 1 7 3 8 Dealer network/distribution 9 4 10 5 1 New product innovation 9 4 10 5 1 Financial resources 5 10 7 3 1 Relative cost position 5 10 3 1 4 Customer service capability 5 7 10 1 4 Overall strength rating 61 58 71 25 32 An Unweighted Competitive Strength Assessment Rating Scale: 1 = very weak; 5 = average; 10 = very strong

  29. KSF/Strength Measure Weight ABC Co. Rival 1 Rival 2 Rival 3 Rival 4 Quality/product performance 0.10 8/0.80 5/0.50 10/1.00 1/0.10 6/0.60 Reputation/image 0.10 8/0.80 7/0.70 10/1.00 1/0.10 6/0.60 Manufacturing capability 0.10 2/0.20 10/1.00 4/0.40 5/0.50 1/0.10 Technological skills 0.05 10/0.50 1/0.05 7/0.35 3/0.15 8/0.40 Dealer network/distribution 0.05 9/0.45 4/0.20 10/0.50 5/0.25 1/0.05 New product innovation 0.05 9/0.45 4/0.20 10/0.50 5/0.25 1/0.05 Financial resources 0.10 5/0.50 10/1.00 7/0.70 3/0.30 1/0.10 Relative cost position 0.30 5/1.50 10/3.00 3/0.95 1/0.30 4/1.20 Customer service capability 0.15 5/0.75 7/1.05 10/1.50 1/0.15 4/0.60 Sum of weights 1.00 Overall strength rating 5.95 7.70 6.85 2.10 3.70 Table 4.4: A WeightedCompetitive Strength Assessment Rating Scale: 1 = very weak; 5 = average; 10 = very strong

  30. Why Do a CompetitiveStrength Assessment ? • Reveals strength of firm’s competitive position vis-à-vis key rivals • Shows how firm stacks up against rivals, measure-by-measure—pinpoints firm’s competitive strengths and competitive weaknesses • Indicates whether firm is at a competitive advantage / disadvantage against each rival • Identifies possible offensive attacks (pit company strengths against rivals’ weaknesses) • Identifies possible defensive actions (a need to correct competitive weaknesses)

  31. Question 6: What Strategic Issues and Problems Merit Front-Burner Managerial Attention? • Based on the answers to the preceding 4 questions and the 7 questions posed in conducting industry and competitive analysis, what items should be on the company’s “worry list” ? • Requires thinking strategically about • Pluses and minuses in the industry and competitive situation • Company’s resource strengths and weaknesses and attractiveness of its competitive position A “good” strategy must address “what to do” about each and every strategic issue!

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