Title: Strategic Management
1Session 11
Business StrategyBuilding Sustainable
Competitive Advantages
2Session Topics Three Items
- 1. Evaluating and Choosing Business Strategies
Seeking Sustained Competitive Advantage - Evaluating Cost Leadership Opportunities
- Evaluating Differentiation Opportunities
- Evaluating Speed as a Competitive Advantage
- Evaluating Market Focus as a Way to Win
Competitive Advantage
- 2. Selected Industry Environments and Business
Strategy Choices - Emerging Industries
- Growth Industries
- Mature
- Declining Industries
- Fragmented Industries
- Global Industries
- 3. Dominant Product/Service Businesses
Diversification to Build Value
3Key Issues Strategic Choice in Single Businesses
1. What strategies are most effective at building
sustainable competitive advantages for single
business units?
2. When should dominant-product/service
businesses diversify to build value and
competitive advantage? What grand strategies are
most appropriate?
4How should you choose among competitive advantage
strategies?
5Prominent Sources of Competitive Advantage
Cost leadership
Differentiation
Speed
Market focus
6For Each of the Four CL, Diff, Speed/RR, MF
- Skills and Resource Requirements
- Structural/Organizational Requirements
- Value Chain Examples
- Advantages
- Risks
-
-
7Evaluating A Businesss Cost Leadership
Opportunities
- A. Skills and Resources Fostering Cost Leadership
- Sustained capital investment and access to
capital - Process engineering skills
- Intense supervision of labor or core technical
operations - Products or services designed for ease of
manufacture or delivery - Low-cost distribution system
- B. Organizational Requirements Supporting Cost
Leadership - Tight cost control
- Frequent, detailed control reports
- Continuous improvement and benchmarking
orientation - Structured organization and responsibilities
- Incentives based on meeting strict, usually
quantitative targets
8Evaluating A Businesss Cost Leadership
Opportunities --C. Examples of Ways Businesses
Achieve Competitive Advantage
9Advantages of a Cost Leadership Strategy
Low-cost advantages reduce likelihood of pricing
pressure from buyers
Sustained low-cost advantages may push rivals
into other areas, lessening price competition
New entrants must face an entrenched cost leader
without experience to replicate cost advantages
Low-cost advantages should lessen attractiveness
of substitutes
Higher margins allow low-cost producers to
withstand supplier cost increases
10Key Risks of Cost Leadership
Many cost-saving activities are easily duplicated
Exclusive cost leadership can become a trap
Obsessive cost cutting can shrink other
competitive advantages involving key product
attributes
Cost differences often decline over time
11Evaluating A Businesss Differentiation
Opportunities
- A. Skills and Resources Fostering Differentiation
- Strong marketing abilities
- Product engineering
- Creative talent and flair
- Strong capabilities in basic research
- Corporate reputation for quality or technological
leadership - Long tradition in an industry or unique
combination of skills - Strong cooperation from channels and suppliers of
major components
- B. Organizational Requirements Supporting
Differentiation - Strong coordination among functions in RD,
product development, and marketing - Subjective measurement and incentives instead of
quantitative measures - Amenities to attract highly skilled labor,
scientists, and creative people - Tradition of closeness to key customers
- Some personnel skilled in sales and operations -
technical and marketing
12Evaluating A Businesss Differentiation
Opportunities --C. Examples of Ways Businesses
Achieve Competitive Advantage
13Advantages of a Differentiation Strategy
Rivalry is reduced when a business successful
differentiates itself
Buyers are less sensitive to prices for
effectively differentiated products
Brand loyalty is hard for new entrants to overcome
14Key Risks of Differentiation
Imitation narrows perceived differentiation,
rendering differentiation meaningless
Technological changes that nullify past
investments or learning
Cost difference between low-cost competitors and
the differentiated business becomes too great for
differentiation to hold brand loyalty
15Creating a Competitive Advantage Based on Speed
- Has become a major source of competitive
advantage for many firms - Involves the availability of a rapid response to
customers by - Providing current products quicker
- Accelerating new product development or
improvement - Quickly adjusting production processes
- Making decisions quickly
16Evaluating A Businesss Rapid Response
Opportunities
- A. Skills and Resources Fostering Speed
- Process engineering skills
- Excellent inbound and outbound logistics
- Technical people in sales and customer service
- High levels of automation
- Corporate reputation for quality or technical
leadership - Flexible manufacturing capabilities
- Strong downstream partners
- Strong cooperation from suppliers of major
components
- B. Organizational Requirements Supporting Rapid
Response - Strong coordination among functions in RD,
product development, and marketing - Major emphasis on customer satisfaction in
incentive programs - Strong delegation to operating personnel
- Tradition of closeness to key customers
- Some personnel skilled in sales and operations -
technical and marketing - Empowered customer service personnel
17Evaluating A Businesss Rapid Response
Opportunities --C. Examples of Ways Businesses
Achieve Competitive Advantage
18Advantages of a Speed-Based Strategy
Creates a way to lessen rivalry because firm has
the availability of something a rival may not
Allows firm to charge buyers more, engender
loyalty, or enhance its position relative to its
buyers
Generates cooperation and concessions from
suppliers since they benefit from increased
revenues
Substitutes and new entrants are trying to keep
up with the rapid changes rather than introducing
them
19Key Risks of a Speed-Based Strategy
Speeding up activities that have not been
conducted in a fashion prioritizing rapid
response should only be done after attention to
training, reorganization, and/or reengineering
Some industries - stable, mature ones - may not
offer much advantage to a firm introducing some
forms of rapid response
20Creating a Competitive Advantage Based on Market
Focus
- Involves building cost, differentiation, and/or
speed competitive advantages targeted to a
narrow, market niche - Allows a firm to
- Learn its target customers
- Build up organizational knowledge of ways to
satisfy its target market better than larger
rivals - Risks of focus strategies
- Can attract major competitors to the segment
- Believing a focus strategy, by itself, creates
success, rather than a form of low cost,
differentiation, or speed
21Industry Environments and Strategy Choices
Emerging Industries Growth Industries Mature
Industries Declining Industries Fragmented
Industries Global Industries
22For each Industry Environment
Characteristics Strategic Options
23Characteristics of Markets in Emerging Industries
- Proprietary technology and technological
uncertainty - Competitor uncertainty regarding inadequate
information - High initial cost structure
- Few entry barriers
- First-time buyers require initial inducement
- Inability to easily obtain raw materials and
components - Need for high-risk capital
24Strategic Options for Emerging Industries
1. Ability to shape industrys structure
2. Ability to rapidly improve product quality
3. Establish favorable relations with key
suppliers
4. Ability to establish technology as dominant
force
5. Acquire a core group of loyal customers
6. Ability to forecast future competitors
25Characteristics of Industries Transitioning to
Maturity
- Intense competition for market share
- Increased sales to experienced, repeat buyers
- Greater emphasis on cost and service
- Declining profitability
26Strategic Options for Maturing Industries
1. Prune the product line
2. Emphasize process innovation
3. Emphasize cost reductions
4. Focus on selecting loyal buyers
5. Pursue horizontal integration
6. Expand internationally
27Pitfalls to Avoid in Competing in Maturing
Industries
A middle-ground approach to selecting a generic
competitive strategy
Sacrificing market share for short-term profits
Waiting too long to respond to price reductions
Retaining unneeded excess capacity
Engaging in sporadic efforts to boost sales
Placing hopes on new products
28Characteristics of Mature/Declining Industries
- Demand grows more slowly than economy,or even
declines - Slowing growth is caused by
- Technological substitution
- Demographic shifts
- Shifts in consumer needs
29Strategic Options for Mature/Declining Industries
1. Focus on key market segments offering growth
opportunities
2. Emphasize product innovation and quality
improvement
3. Emphasize production and distribution
efficiency
4. Gradually harvest the business
30Pitfalls to Avoid in Competing in
Mature/Declining Industries
Being overly optimistic about prospects for an
industry revival
Getting trapped in a profitless war of attrition
Harvesting from a weak position
31Characteristics of Fragmented Industries
- No firm has a significant market share
- No firm can significantly influence industry
outcomes - Examples
- Professional services
- Retailing
- Wood and metal fabrication
- Agricultural products
- Funeral industry
32Strategic Options for Fragmented Industries
1. Tightly managed decentralization - Intense
local coordination, high personal service, local
autonomy
2. Formula facilities - Standardized, efficient,
low-cost facilities at multiple locations
3. Increased value added - Difficult to
differentiate products/services
4. Specialization - Product type, customer type,
type of order, geographic areas
5. Bare bones/no frills - Intense low margin
competition (low overhead, minimum wages, tight
cost controls)
33Characteristics of Global Industries
- Differences in prices and costs among countries
due to - Currency exchange fluctuations
- Differences in wage and inflation rates
- Other economic factors
- Differences in buyer needs across countries
- Differences in competitors and ways of competing
among countries - Differences in trade rules and governmental
regulations across countries
34Strategic Options Pursuing Global Market
Coverage
1. License foreign firms to produce and
distribute a firms products
2. Maintain a domestic production base and export
products
3. Establish foreign-based plants and
distribution in foreign countries
35Strategic Options Choosing a Generic
Competitive Strategy
1. Broad-line global competition
2. Global focus strategy
3. National focus strategy
4. Protected niche strategy
36Grand Strategy Selection Matrix
37Model of Grand Strategy Clusters
38Conclusion Selecting a Business Strategy
toAchieve a Competitive Advantage
Focusing on key sources of competitive advantage
requiring total, consistent commitment
Weighing skills, resources, organizational
requirements, and risks of each source of
competitive advantage
Considering unique effects of the generic
industry environment on a firms value chain
activities