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Strategic Analysis and Decision Making

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Title: Strategic Analysis and Decision Making


1
Strategic Analysis and Decision Making
2
What is Strategy?
  • Art of the general
  • Thinking with regard to the whole business, not
    just the functional pieces
  • Plan which results from a set of activities that
    focuses on helping the organization manage its
    relationship to its environment
  • Central, integrated, externally oriented concept
    of how the business will achieve its objectives
    (Hambrick Fredrickson, 2001)

3
What is the purpose of strategic planning?
  • Provides overall and long-term direction to the
    firm
  • Allows firm to anticipate and adapt to challenges
  • Helps company identify market threats and
    opportunities
  • Helps firm examine internal strengths and
    weaknesses and determine core competence
  • Results in allocation of resources to align
    organization with the environment (strategic
    fit)

4
Process of Strategic Analysis, Formulation, and
Implementation
Strategic Analysis
Strategy
Objectives
Mission
Implementation (Design)
Hambrick Fredrickson, 2001
5
Mission, Goals and Objectives
  • Mission
  • Domain statement (Hambrick Fredrikson arena)
  • Products categories, market segments, geographic
    areas, core technologies
  • Mission Statements
  • Broad statements that include strategic vision,
    shared beliefs and values, reason for being,
    domain
  • Official goals vague and for image purposes

6
Mission, Goals and Objectives
  • Goals
  • Specific ends to be achieved through actions and
    policies
  • Act as constraints on actions and criteria for
    evaluation of performance
  • Multiple, conflicting, and politically determined
  • Objectives
  • Specific targets (who, what, where, when)

URI Strategic Plan, 2006-2009
7
Strategic Analysis Tools
  • External Analysis
  • Stakeholder analysis
  • Specific and general environment factors
  • Industry structure (Porter)
  • Home country advantages
  • Strategic Groups and Cognitive Communities
  • Inter-organizational Network Analysis
  • Blue ocean strategy
  • Internal Analysis
  • Distinctive competence
  • Value chain

8
General Environmental Analysis
  • Identify segments, agencies, actors (specific and
    general factors)
  • Examine past and current trends and try to
    forecast future trends
  • Tools forecasting, trend analysis, scenario
    analysis, simulations, delphi forecasting, etc.
  • Result identification of opportunities and
    threats in the external environment (half of SWOT
    analysis)
  • Opportunities potential for profitable action
  • Threats events or conditions that can harm
    organizational interests

9
Industry Attractiveness and Competition (Porters
Model)
  • Competition is a function of industry structure
    and firm behavior
  • Industry structure determines the profitability
    of the average competitor (return on invested
    capital)
  • Competitive advantage determines the
    profitability of an individual firm over the
    average competitor
  • Only sustained profitability provides long term
    economic value to the firm
  • Should firm enter or exit the industry?

10
Industry Attractiveness and Profitability
Porter (1980)
11
Threat of New Entrants
  • Potential entrants can use existing capabilities
    and cash flow from other businesses to enter
  • Result pressure on prices, costs, and rate of
    investment of industry incumbents
  • Barriers to entry patents, raw materials
    monopolies, supply side economies of scale, buyer
    demand effects, consumer switching costs, large
    capital requirements, regulations, lobbying
    activities, unequal access to distribution
    channels, high technological barriers, etc.
  • Concern retaliation by incumbents

12
Rivalry among Competitors
  • Includes price discounting, new service or
    product improvements, advertising.
  • Intensity of competition and basis on which
    rivals compete determines the extent to which
    rivalry reduces industry profitability
  • Some factors that increase rivalry
  • High numbers of competitors and relative equal
    power/size
  • Lack of market segmentation and diverse customers
  • Low industry growth rate
  • High fixed costs and low marginal costs
  • Lack of or low consumer switching costs
  • Large stakes in the industry
  • High exit barriers
  • Price competition rather than competition based
    on product features, support services, delivery
    time, brand image

13
Bargaining Power of Suppliers
  • High concentration of (few) suppliers (Microsoft
    and PC providers)
  • Low importance of industry to suppliers
  • High threat of forward integration among
    suppliers
  • Switching costs in changing suppliers
  • Suppliers have differentiated products or
    services
  • No substitute for supplies
  • Suppliers include labor

14
Bargaining Power of Buyers
  • High concentration of (few) buyers
  • Low degree of product differentiation
  • Low buyer switching costs
  • High threat of backward integration by buyer
  • Low impact of product on buyers product quality
  • Large amount of information available to buyer

15
Threat of Substitute Products/Services
  • Substitutes perform the same service or similar
    function as industry products by different means
  • Threat is greater when
  • Low buyer switching costs
  • Attractive price-performance trade-off offered
  • Availability of alternative products or services
    grows
  • Availability of substitute raw materials,
    components, subassemblies, processes grow
  • Availability of new technology-enabled processes
    makes older products/services obsolete

16
Other Issues Regarding Industry Structure
  • Mistaken focus on industry factors rather than
    industry forces
  • Industry growth rate, government, technology and
    innovation, complementary products and services
  • Understand industry change by examining the
    effects of above developments on the five forces

17
How does the internet affect industry
attractiveness?
  • Consider
  • 1. Threat to entry
  • Rivalry among competitors
  • Bargaining power of suppliers
  • Bargaining power of customers
  • Threat of substitutes

Internet has become a table stake Necessary
but not sufficient condition for competition
18
Industry Structure and Strategy
  • Understanding industry structure is a starting
    point for developing strategy
  • Clarify sources of profitability
  • Identify appropriate units for which to set
    strategy
  • Know average profitability of industry and try to
    find a way to make above-average profits
  • Five forces provide a baseline for examining any
    one companys strengths and weaknesses
  • Develop strategic actions from the analysis
  • Positioning the company
  • Exploiting industry change
  • Shaping the industry proactively

19
Other Types of External Analysis
  • 1. Competitive advantages of nations (Porter,
    1990)
  • May provide competitive advantages of industries
    which are located in a particular
    state/nation/region
  • Examples Factor conditions (human, physical,
    knowledge, and capital resources
    infrastructure), demand conditions (buyers),
    related and supportive industries (suppliers and
    distributors) and rivalries among firms
    (governance issues, regulations, capital markets,
    stock ownership).
  • Examples Swiss and German pharmaceuticals
    Japanese consumer electronics

World Economic Forum
Transparency International
20
Other Types of External Analysis
  • 2. Strategic Groups or Cognitive Communities
  • Firms will pursue similar competitive strategies
    with similar performance results
  • Thus, firms are clustered in groups based on
    these similar resource configurations
  • Sophisticated economic analyses determine these
    clusters (size, market share, product
    differentiation, labor costs, technology, etc.)
  • Act as benchmarking firms to determine
    appropriateness of strategy and effectiveness of
    performance
  • Example Scottish knitwear communities hotel
    products

21
Other Types of External Analysis
  • 3. Inter-organizational Networks
  • Globally competitive firms joined into networks
    to enter foreign markets to enhance competitive
    position (joint ventures, alliances)
  • Resources and relationships must be analyzed to
    understand competitive structure
  • Both competition and cooperation strategies must
    be considered, along with their opportunities and
    costs
  • Example Major pharmaceuticals and biotech
    start-ups auto industry

22
Other Types of External Analysis
  • 4. Blue oceans (Kim Mauborgne, 2004)
  • White space between industriesunknown market
    space untouched by competition
  • Demand is created rather than fought over
  • The important issue is the strategic move set
    of managerial actions and decisions that make a
    major market-creating business
  • Examples? Cirque du Soleil the PC online
    community-generated media (e.g., YouTube)

23
Internal Organizational Analysis Value Chain
Analysis
  • All activities that contribute to the creation of
    the product or service and its delivery to the
    customer
  • Primary activities inbound logistics,
    operations, outbound logistics, marketing and
    sales, and service
  • Support activities organizational
    infrastructure, human resource management,
    technology development, procurement
  • Analysis determines what areas are performing
    well or poorly in relation to competitors
    (strengths and weaknesses in SWOT)

24
Support Activities
Primary Activities Pizza Restaurant
Obtain funds, carry out accounting and payroll
functions, and perform other administrative tasks
for each primary activity
Firm Infrastructure
Hire, train, evaluate, supervise kitchen workers
Hire, train, evaluate, supervise drivers
and warehouse workers
Hire, train, evaluate, supervise Marketing/ adve
rtisers
Hire, train, evaluate, supervise waitstaff
Human Resource Management
Develop new menus, and new food ordering
processes improve cooking methods
Improve truck routing and warehouse receiving
Improve restaurant layout improve service methods
Discover new promotional materials and media
Technology Development
Buy trucks Lease warehouse space
Buy TV and radio time and newspaper ad space
Procurement
Buy dough, cheese, ovens, and other cooking
supplies
Buy tables, chairs, silverware, to equip service
area
Inbound Logistics
Outbound Logistics
Marketing /Sales
Service
Operations
Example of a value chain for pizza restaurant
25
Methodology for Evaluating Value Chain Activities
  • Consider resources and capabilities in each area
  • Are resources valuable and costly to copy?
  • How are capabilities deployed and do they
    integrate skills and resources?
  • Criteria to evaluate value to customers,
    rareness, ease of imitation, and sustainability
  • Rating inadequate, adequate, attractive,
    potential, competitive, distinctive

See handout of process by Duncan, Ginter, Swayne
26
Distinctive or Core Competence
  • Knowledge base or set of skills general enough to
    apply in variety of settings
  • Results in clear benefits for customers
  • Is difficult, if not impossible, for other firms
    to replicate
  • Sources first mover status, scales of
    operation, experience, intra- and
    inter-organizational relationships
  • Hambrick Fredricksons differentiators

27
Pitfalls to avoid in internal analysis
  • All strengths are not necessarily advantages
  • Dynamic process which requires continuous
    examination
  • Extend value chain analysis beyond the firm if
    necessary (inter-organizational relationships)
  • Outsource non-value adding activities

28
Result of External and Internal Analysis
  • Determine the competitive advantage of the firm
    in its environment
  • Basis upon which one is going to compete with
    others and succeed Economic Logic
  • Cost (amazon.com)
  • Differentiation (quality, brand image, service,
    proprietary technology, etc.) (Prada)
  • Focus on market segment (Edward Jones brokerage)
  • Combination (Discount Tire service and price)
  • Formulation of Strategic Plan

29
Strategic Plans (Vehicles)
  • Types
  • Corporate (in what businesses do we compete?)
  • Business (how do we compete in each of our
    business units?)
  • Functional (how will functional units such as
    marketing, human resources, operations, etc.
    carry out strategic plans?)
  • SBU-Strategic Business Unit
  • Product/service unit that competes in defined
    market with identifiable sets of customers and
    competitors
  • Example GE Financial Services of General
    Electric Corporation

30
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31
Corporate Level Plans
  • Growth Strategies
  • Organic (Starbucks)
  • Vertical integration
  • Global expansion
  • Inter-organizational strategies (Corning)
  • Diversification (related and unrelated) (Textron,
    Frito-Lay)
  • Retrenchment Strategies
  • Downsizing, divestment, liquidation, bankruptcy

32
Business Level Plans
  • Low cost strategy efficiency in operations and
    service are key to provided low prices to
    customers
  • Product/service differentiation provide unique
    product/service to customer
  • Focus strategy concentrate on serving one/few
    customer segments (Paccar heavy trucks)
  • Others market penetration, market development,
    product diversification, product development

33
Functional Level Plans
  • Example Low cost
  • HR productivity and efficiency performance
    measures
  • Marketing inexpensive methods
  • Production just-in-time inventory advanced
    technology waste reduction
  • Finance tight control of costs low debt

34
  • Comprehensive
  • Alignment
  • Ready to design
  • supporting
  • structures

Economic Logic Competitive Advantage
Arenas (Domains)
Economic Logic
Vehicles (Plans Structures)
Staging (Speed Sequencing)
Differentiators (Distinctive Competencies)
Model of Strategy
(Hambrick Fredrickson, 2001)
35
Strategy Evaluation Criteria
  • Does your strategy fit with what is happening in
    the environment?
  • Does your strategy exploit your key resources?
  • Will your differentiators (distinctive
    competencies) be sustainable?
  • Are the elements of your strategy internally
    consistent?
  • Do you have enough resources to pursue this
    strategy?
  • Can you implement your intended strategy?

36
Business Models
  • Not the same as strategy not as comprehensive
    or analytical
  • Provides a nice story or picture of how the
    business works, but does not deal with
    competitive conditions in the environment and how
    the business will deal with these
  • Example
  • Business model internet retailing
  • Strategy How is a particular internet retailer
    going to compete effectively in the domain it has
    identified?

37
Strategy Execution(Neilson, Martin, Powers,
2008)
  • Four key areas
  • Clarify information flows
  • Clarify decision rights roles,
    responsibilities, and accountabilities for making
    decisions
  • Align performance with rewards (motivation)
  • Re-structure the organization both vertically and
    horizontally

Problem we often re-structure without
thinking about the other three aspects of
strategy execution
Organizational Effectiveness Simulator
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