Title: Strategic Computing and Communications Technolgy
1Strategic Computing and Communications Technolgy
- Course web page
- http//www.sims.berkeley.edu/hal/Courses/StratTec
h07 - Syllabus, schedule, lectures, reading
- http//courseweb.berkeley.edu for some special
services - Requirements
- Individuals
- Submit 4 news items 2 or 3 paragraph analysis
of each over semester - Participate in class discussions
- Group projects
- We appoint mixed groups
- Technology assessment in middle
- Policy debate at end
2Strategy Overview
3What is strategy?
- Definitions
- A course of action to achieve targets
- A plan or method employed in order to achieve a
goal or objective - In practice often a checklist of things to pay
attention to and watch out for - External and internal
43 approaches to business strategy
- Education
- Michael Porter, Competitive Strategy
- Executive
- Jack Welch, Winning
- Economics
- Shapiro and Varian, Information Rules
- Brandenberger and Nalebuff, Co-opetition
- Jeff Rohlfs, Bandwagon Effects
5Michael Porters Five Forces
Porter, Michael E., Competitive Strategy, Free
Press, 1998
6Supplier power
- Importance of costsÂ
- Impact of inputs on your product cost or design
- Competitive environment
- Supplier concentration, bargaining power
- Presence of substitute inputs
- Importance of volume to supplier
- Switching costs of suppliers
- Threat of forward integration
7Barriers to entry
- Costs
- Absolute cost advantages
- Economies of scale
- Capital requirements
- Scarcity
- Access to distribution
- Proprietary learning curve
- Access to inputs (IP)
- Proprietary products
- Brand identity
- Other
- Customer switching costs
- Expected retaliation (I.e., capacity threat)
- Government policy
8Buyer power
- Competitive environment
- Buyer concentration
- Bargaining power
- Substitutes available
- Product differentiation
- Price sensitivity
- Buyers' switching costs
- Brand identity
- Buyer volume
- Threat of backward integration
9Threat of substitutes
- Customer switching costs
- Buyer inclination to substitute
- Price-performance trade-off of substitutes
10Internal rivalry
- Economic factors
- Industry concentration
- Fixed costs, scale requirements
- Exit barriers
- Intermittent overcapacity
- Industry growth
- Customer perceptions
- Product differences
- Switching costs
- Brand identity
- Diversity of rivals
11Critique of Porter
- Product of its times (1980s)
- Relatively stable environment
- Not a very clear taxonomy
- Competitors, actual and potential?
- Substitutes, internal or external?
- Not much emphasis on technology and innovation
12Jack Welch (CEO of GE)
- Winning, Harper Business 2005
- Three steps
- Find a smart, realistic, fast way to gain
substantial competitive advantage - Put the right people in the right place to drive
this forward - Seek out best practices, adapt them, and continue
to improve them - GE initiative Be No 1 or No 2 in each market
and fix, sell, or close deal to be there. - 5 Slides
131. What playing field looks like
- Who are your competitors?
- What has what share globally and in each market?
- Is your business commodity or high value, long
cycle or short, where on growth curve? What are
drivers of profitability? - What are strengths and weaknesses of each
competitor? How good are its products? How much
does each one spend on RD? How big is its sales
force? - Who are your customers and how do they buy?
142. What the competition is doing?
- What has each competitor done in past year to
change the playing field? - Has anyone introduced game-changing new products,
technologies, or new channel? - Are there new entrants, and what have they been
doing?
153. What have you been doing?
- What have you done to change the playing field?
- Have you bought a company, introduced a new
product, taken a competitors salesperson,
licensed a new technology? - Have you lost competitive advantages you once
had a salesperson, special product, proprietary
technology?
164. Whats around the corner?
- What scares you the most in the year ahead? What
could a competitor do to nail you? - What new products or technologies could your
competitor launch that might change the game? - What mergers/acquisitions would knock you off
your feet?
175. What is your winning move?
- What can you do now to change the playing field?
New acquisition, new product, new market? - What can you do to make customers stick to you?
18Critique of Welch
- Very action oriented, not so analytic
- Good for CEO, not for industry analyst
- Strategy and tactics intermingled
- Doesnt emphasize specific industry forces
- Good meeting agenda, not necessarily something to
study
19Brandenberger and Nalebuff
Value Net
Customers
Actual and potential companies and products
Company
Competitors
Complementors
Suppliers
Whats this?
20Co-opetition and complements
- Customers value entire system
- Hardwaresoftware, DVD playerdisks
- Sometimes you compete, sometimes you co-operate
- Think of Intel and Microsoft, IBM and Oracle
- Not a zero sum game!
- Complementors can be critical to your business,
particularly in technology
21Shapiro and Varian
- Forces important for info tech industries
- Differentiation of products and prices
- Intellectual property
- Switching costs and lock-in
- Network effects
- Standards and interconnection
- Systems effects and complementors
22Example Apple Ipod story
- Price of songs (differentiation of prices)
- Competition (free songs)
- Systems effects (players content)
- Channel conflict (online offline)
- Standardization (interoperability)
- Entrants (mobile phones)