Thinking Strategically about the Companys internal environment: Resources and Competitive position
By: Prof R.K. Verma Dean, SBS, Sharda University
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The Components of a Companys Macro-Environment
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Company industry& competitive environment
The Strategically Relevant Components of a Companys External Environment Thinking Strategically About a Companys Industry and Competitive
Environment Question 1: What Are the Industrys Dominant Economic Features? Question 2: What Kinds of Competitive Forces Are Industry Members Facing? Question 3: What Factors Are Driving Industry Change and What Impacts Will They Have? Question 4: What Market Positions Do Rivals OccupyWho Is Strongly Positioned and Who Is Not? Question 5: What Strategic Moves Are Rivals Likely to Make Next? Question 6: What Are the Key Factors for Future Competitive Success? Question 7: Does the Outlook for the Industry Present an Attractive Opportunity?
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Strategic Implications of the Five Competitive Forces
Sr. No. Competitive Forces Strong 1 2 3 4 5 6 Rivalry among competing sellers Buyers Supplirs New Entrants Substitute products Implication vigorous Bargaining leverage Bargaining leverage Low entry barrirs Intense Unattractive Type of pressure Moderate Weak Weak / moderate Weak Weak High barriars No good Superior profit
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Common Types of Driving Forces
Internet and e-commerce opportunities Increasing globalization of industry Changes in long-term industry growth rate Changes in who buys the product and
how they use it
Product innovation
Technological change/process innovation
Marketing innovation
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Common Types of Driving Forces
Entry or exit of major firms Diffusion of technical knowledge Changes in cost and efficiency Consumer preferences shift from standardized to differentiated
products (or vice versa)
Changes in degree of uncertainty and risk
Regulatory policies / government legislation
Changing societal concerns, attitudes, and lifestyles
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What Market Positions Do Rivals Occupy?
One technique to reveal
different competitive positions of industry rivals is strategic group mapping
A strategic group is a
cluster of firms in an industry with similar competitive approaches and market positions
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What strategic moves are rivals likely to make a next?
Which
rival has the best strategy? Which rivals appear to have weak strategies? firms are poised to gain market share, and which ones seen destined to lose ground? rivals are likely to rank among the industry leaders five years from now? Do any up-and-coming rivals have strategies and the resources to overtake the current industry leader?
Which
Which
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Key Success Factor
Technology-Product & Production technology, patent, trademark Manufacturing- Scale of economy & experience curve
Distribution supply chain, wholesaler & retailer network
Marketing Brand, Product line, technical assistance & CRM Skill & capabilities talented workforce, product innovation, motivation,
design
Other types overall low cost, convenient location, agility
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Does the Outlook for the Industry Present an Attractive Opportunity?
Involves assessing whether the industry
and competitive environment is attractive or unattractive for earning good profits
Under certain circumstances, a firm uniquely
well-situated in an otherwise unattractive industry can still earn unusually good profits
Attractiveness Conclusions
is relative, not absolute
have to be drawn from the perspective of a particular company
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Core Concept: Assessing Industry Attractiveness
The degree to which an industry is attractive or unattractive is often not the same for all industry participants or potential entrants. The opportunities an industry presents depend partly on a companys ability to capture them.
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Before executives can
chart a new strategy, they
must reach common
understanding of the
companys current position.
W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne
Evaluating a companys resources-Questions
Question 1: How Well Is the Companys Present Strategy
Working? Question 2: What Are the Companys Resource Strengths and Weaknesses and Its External Opportunities and Threats? Question 3: Are the Companys Prices and Costs Competitive? Question 4: Is the Company Competitively Stronger or Weaker than Key Rivals? Question 5: What Strategic Issues and Problems Merit FrontBurner Managerial Attention? (Tools: SWOT analysis, Value chain analysis, benchmarking & competitive strength assessment)
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Company Situation Analysis: The Key Questions
1. How well is the companys present strategy working? 2. What are the companys resource strengths and weaknesses and its external opportunities and threats? 3. Are the companys prices and costs competitive? 4. Is the company competitively stronger or weaker than key rivals? 5. What strategic issues merit front-burner managerial attention?
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Q #1: How Well Is the Companys Present Strategy Working?
Key Issues
Identify competitive approach
Low-cost
leadership
Differentiation Focus
on a particular market niche market coverage
Determine competitive scope
Geographic Operating
stages in industrys production/distribution chain
Examine recent strategic moves Identify functional strategies
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Identifying the Components of a SingleBusiness Companys Strategy
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Approaches to Assess How Well the Present Strategy Is Working
Qualitative assessment Quantitative assessment What
What is the strategy?
are the results?
Completeness Internal consistency Rationale Relevance
Is company achieving its financial and strategic objectives? Is company an above-average industry performer?
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Qualitative Assessment
1)
Profitability ratios
3)
Leverage ratios
Gross Profit Margin Operating profit margin Net Profit margin Return on total assets Return on stockholders equity Earning per share
2)
Debt-to-assets ratio Debt-to-equity ratio Long-term debt-to-equity ratio Times-interest-earned ratio
4)
Activity ratios
Days of inventory Inventory turnover Average collection period Other Important
Liquidity ratios
Current ratio Quick ratio Working capital
5)
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Dividend yield on common stock Price/earnings ratio Dividend payout ratio Internal Cash flow
Key Indicators of How Well the Strategy Is Working
Trend in sales and market share Acquiring and/or retaining customers Trend in profit margins Trend in net profits, ROI, and EVA Overall financial strength and credit ranking Efforts at continuous improvement activities Trend in stock price and stockholder value
Image and reputation with customers
Leadership role(s) Technology, quality,
innovation,
e-commerce, etc.
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Q #2: What Are the Companys Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats ?
S W O T represents the first letter in
S
trengths eaknesses pportunities hreats
W O T
S O
W T
For a companys strategy to be well-conceived, it must be
Matched
to its resource strengths and weaknesses
Aimed
at capturing its best market opportunities and erecting defenses against external threats to its well-being
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Identifying Resource Strengths and Competitive Capabilities
A strength is something a firm does well or an attribute that
enhances its competitiveness
Valuable competencies or know-how Valuable physical assets Valuable human assets Valuable organizational assets Valuable intangible assets Important competitive capabilities An attribute that places a company in a position of market advantage Alliances or cooperative ventures with partners
Resource strengths and competitive capabilities are competitive assets!
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Competencies vs. Core Competencies vs. Distinctive Competencies
A competence is the product of organizational learning and
experience and represents real proficiency in performing an internal activity
A core competence is a well-performed
internal activity central (not peripheral or incidental) to a companys competitiveness and profitability
A distinctive competence is a competitively valuable activity a
company performs better than its rivals
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Company Competencies and Capabilities
Stem from skills, expertise, and
experience usually representing an
Accumulation
of learning over time and Gradual buildup of real proficiency in performing an activity
Involve deliberate efforts to develop the ability to do
something, often entailing
Selecting
people with requisite knowledge and skills Upgrading or expanding individual abilities Molding work products of individuals into a cooperative effort to create organizational ability A conscious effort to create intellectual capital
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Core Competencies -- A Valuable Company Resource
A competence becomes a core competence when the well-
performed activity is central to a companys competitiveness and profitability
Often, a core competence results from collaboration
among different parts of a company
Typically, core competencies reside in a companys
people, not in assets on a balance sheet
A core competence gives a company a
potentially valuable competitive capability and represents a definite competitive asset
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Examples: Core Competencies
Expertise in integrating multiple technologies
to create families of new products
Know-how in creating operating systems
for cost efficient supply chain management
Speeding new/next-generation products to market
Better after-sale service capability Skills in manufacturing a high quality product System to fill customer orders accurately and swiftly
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Distinctive Competence -- A Competitively Superior Resource
A distinctive competence is a competitively significant activity
that a company performs better than its competitors
A distinctive competence
Represents
a competitively valuable capability rivals do not have
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Presents
Can
attractive potential for being a cornerstone of strategy
provide a competitive edge in the marketplace because it represents a competitively superior resource strength
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Examples: Distinctive Competencies
Sharp Corporation
Expertise
in flat-panel display technology
Toyota and Honda
Low-cost,
high-quality manufacturing capability and short design-to-market cycles to design and manufacture ever more powerful microprocessors for PCs distribution and use of state-of-the-art retail technology
Intel
Ability
Wal-Mart
Low-cost
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Determining the Competitive Value of a Company Resource
To qualify as competitively valuable or to be the basis for
sustainable competitive advantage, a resource must pass 4 tests:
1. Is the resource hard to copy?
2. Does the resource have staying power is it durable?
3. Is the resource really competitively superior? 4. Can the resource be trumped by the different capabilities of rivals?
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Identifying Resource Weaknesses and Competitive Deficiencies
A weakness is something a firm lacks, does poorly, or a
condition placing it at a disadvantage
Resource weaknesses relate to
Inferior or unproven skills, expertise, or intellectual capital Lack of important physical, organizational, or intangible assets Missing capabilities in key areas
Resource weaknesses and deficiencies are competitive liabilities!
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Identifying a Companys Market Opportunities
Opportunities most relevant to a
company are those offering
Good
match with its financial and organizational resource capabilities prospects for profitable long-term growth
Best
Potential
for competitive advantage
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Identifying External Threats
Emergence of cheaper/better technologies Introduction of better products by rivals Entry of lower-cost foreign competitors Onerous regulations
Rise in interest rates
Potential of a hostile takeover Unfavorable demographic shifts
Adverse shifts in foreign exchange rates
Political upheaval in a country
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SWOT
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Role of SWOT Analysis in Crafting a Better Strategy
The most important part of S W O T analysis is not
developing the 4 lists of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats, but rather
Using
the 4 lists to draw conclusions about a companys overall situation and
Acting
on the conclusions to
Better match a companys strategy to its
resource strengths and market opportunities,
Correct the important weaknesses, and
Defend against external threats
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The Three Steps of SWOT Analysis
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Q #3: Are the Companys Prices and Costs Competitive?
Assessing whether a firms costs are competitive with
those of rivals is a crucial part of company analysis
Key analytical tools
Value
chain analysis-Activity
based costing
Benchmarking
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Best practice ; cost and effectiveness
The Concept of a Company Value Chain
A companys business consists of all activities undertaken in
designing, producing, marketing, delivering, and supporting its product or service
A companys value chain consists of a linked set of value-
creating activities performed internally
The value chain contains two types of activities
Primary Support
activities where most of the value for customers is created activities facilitate performance of the primary activities
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Representative Company Value Chain
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The Value Chain: Primary and Support Activities
The Value Chain
General administration Human resource management Technology development
Procurement Inbound logistics
Operations
Outboun d logistics
Marketing and sales
Service
Primary Activities
Source: Adapted with the permission of The Free Press, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc., from Competitive Advantage: Creating and Sustaining Superior Performance by Michael E. Porter. Copyright 1998 by Michael E. Porter.
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The Value Chain: Some Factors to Consider in Assessing a Firms Primary Activities
Location of distribution facilities to minimize shipping times Excellent material and inventory control systems Systems to reduce time to send returns to suppliers Warehouse layout and designs to increase efficiency of operations for incoming materials Efficient plant operations to minimize costs Appropriate level of automation in manufacturing Quality production control systems to reduce costs and enhance quality Efficient plant layout and workflow design Effective shipping processes to provide quick delivery and minimize damages Efficient finished goods warehousing processes Shipping of goods in large lot sizes to minimize transportation costs Quality material handling equipment to increase order picking Highly motivated and competent sales force Innovative approaches to promotion and advertising Selection of most appropriate distribution channels Proper identification of customer segments and needs Effective pricing strategies Effective use of procedures to solicit customer feedback and to act on information Quick response to customer needs and emergencies Ability to furnish replacement parts as required Effective management of parts and equipment inventory Quality of service personnel and ongoing training Appropriate warranty and guarantee policies
Inbound Logistics
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Operations
Outbound Logistics
Marketing and Sales
Service
The Value Chain: Some Factors to Consider in Assessing Firms Support Activities
Effective planning systems to attain overall goals and objectives Ability of top management to anticipate and act on key environmental trends and events Ability to obtain low cost funds for capital expenditures and working capital Excellent relationships with diverse stakeholder groups Ability to coordinate and integrate activities across the value system Highly visible to inculcate organizational culture, reputation, and values
General Administration
Effective recruiting, development, and retention mechanisms for employees
Quality relations with trade unions
Quality work environment to maximize overall employee performance and minimize absenteeism Reward and incentive programs to motivate all employees
Human Resource Management
Effective research and development activities for process and product initiatives Positive collaborative relationships between R&D and other departments State-of-the art facilities and equipment Culture to enhance creativity and innovation Excellent professional qualifications of personnel Ability to meet critical deadlines
Technology Development
Procurement of raw material inputs to optimize quality, speed and minimize the associated costs Development of collaborative win-win relationships with suppliers Effective procedures to purchase advertising and media services Ability to make proper lease versus buy decisions
Procurement
Analysis and selection of alternate sources of inputs to minimize dependence on one supplier
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Characteristics of Value Chain Analysis
Combined costs of all activities in a companys value chain
define the companys internal cost structure
Compares a firms costs activity
by activity against costs of key rivals
From
Price
raw materials purchase to
paid by ultimate customer
Pinpoints which internal activities are a
source of cost advantage or disadvantage
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Why Do Value Chains of Rivals Differ?
Several factors can cause differences
in value chains of rival companies
Internal Strategy
operations
Approaches
Underlying
used in execution of the strategy
economics of the activities
Differences complicate task of assessing
rivals relative cost positions
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The Value Chain System for an Entire Industry
Assessing a companys cost competitiveness involves
comparing costs all along the industrys value chain Suppliers value chains are relevant because
Costs,
performance features, and quality of inputs provided by suppliers influence a firms own costs and product performance
Forward channel allies value chains are relevant because
Costs
and margins are part of price paid by ultimate end-user Activities performed affect end-user satisfaction
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Representative Value Chain for an Entire Industry
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Example: Value Chain Activities
Pulp & Paper Industry Timber farming Logging Pulp mills Papermaking Distribution
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Example: Value Chain Activities
Home Appliance Industry Parts and components manufacture
Assembly
Wholesale distribution Retail sales
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Example: Value Chain Activities
Soft Drink Industry Processing of basic ingredients
Syrup manufacture
Bottling and can filling Wholesale distribution Advertising Retailing
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Albertsons
Example: Value Chain Activities
Software Computer Industry Programming Disk loading
Marketing
Distribution
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Developing Data to Measure a Companys Cost Competitiveness
After identifying key value chain activities, the next step
involves breaking down departmental cost accounting data into costs of performing specific activities
Appropriate degree of disaggregation depends on
Economics Value
of activities
of comparing narrowly defined versus broadly defined activities different economics a significant or growing proportion of costs
Guideline Develop separate cost estimates for activities
Having
Representing
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Activity-Based Costing: A Key Tool in Analyzing Costs
Determining whether a companys costs are in line with those
of rivals requires
Measuring
how a companys costs compare with those of rivals activity-by-activity
Requires having accounting data to measure cost
of each value chain activity Activity-based costing entails
Defining
expense categories according to specific activities performed and Assigning costs to the activity responsible for creating the cost
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Benchmarking Costs of Key Value Chain Activities
Focuses on cross-company comparisons of how certain
activities are performed and costs associated with these activities
Purchase
of materials Payment of suppliers Management of inventories Getting new products to market Performance of quality control Filling and shipping of customer orders Training of employees Processing of payrolls
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Objectives of Benchmarking
Identify best practices in performing an activity
Understand the best practices in performing
an activity learn what is the best way to do a particular activity from those demonstrating they are best-in-world
Learn how other firms achieve lower costs Take action to improve companys cost competitiveness
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Ethical Standards in Benchmarking: Dos and Donts
Avoid talk about pricing or
competitively
sensitive costs
Dont ask rivals for sensitive data Dont share proprietary data without clearance Have impartial third party assemble and present competitively
sensitive cost data with no names attached
Dont disparage a rivals business to outsiders based on data
obtained
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What Determines if a Company Is Cost Competitive?
Cost competitiveness depends on how well a company
manages its value chain relative to how well competitors manage their value chains When costs are out-of-line, high-cost activities can exist in any of three areas in the industry value chain
1. Suppliers activities 2. Companys own internal activities 3. Forward channel activities
Activities, Costs, & Margins of Suppliers Internally Performed Activities, Costs, & Margins Activities, Costs, & Margins of Forward Channel Allies
Buyer/User Value Chains
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Options to Correct Internal Cost Disadvantages
Implement use of best practices throughout company Eliminate some cost-producing activities altogether by revamping
value chain system
Relocate high-cost activities to lower-cost geographic areas See if high-cost activities can be performed
cheaper by outside vendors/suppliers
Invest in cost-saving technology Innovate around troublesome cost components
Simplify product design
Make up difference by achieving savings in backward or forward
portions of value chain system
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Remedying Supplier related cost Disadvantage
Negotiate Lower Prices Switching Lower Price Subsititude Collaborating with Vendors
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Translating Performance of Value Chain Activities to Competitive Advantage
A company can create competitive advantage by managing its
value chain to
Integrate
knowledge and skills of employees in competitively valuable ways economies of learning / experience
Leverage
Coordinate
related activities in ways that build valuable capabilities dominating expertise in a value chain activity critical to customer satisfaction or market success
Build
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Translating Performance of Value Chain Activities into Competitive Advantage
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Q. #4: Is the Company Stronger or Weaker than Key Rivals?
Overall competitive position involves
answering two questions
How
does a company rank relative to competitors on each important factor that determines market success? a company have a net competitive advantage or disadvantage vis--vis major competitors?
Does
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Assessing a Companys Competitive Strength vs. Key Rivals
1. List industry key success factors and other relevant measures of competitive strength 2. Rate firm and key rivals on each factor using rating scale of 1 to 10 (1 = very weak; 5 = average; 10 = very strong) 3. Decide whether to use a weighted or unweighted rating system
(a weighted system is superior because chosen strength measures are unlikely to be equally important)
4. Sum individual ratings to get an overall measure of competitive strength for each rival 5. Based on overall strength ratings, determine overall competitive position of firm
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ECIs Balanced Business Scorecard
Financial Perspective
GOALS MEASURES
Internal Business Perspective
GOALS
Manufacturing excellence
MEASURES
Cycle time Unit cost Yield Silicon efficiency Engineering efficiency Actual introduction schedule versus plan
Survive Succeed Prosper
Cash Flow Quarterly sales growth and operating income by division Increased market share and ROE Design productivity New product introduction
Customer Perspective
GOALS
New products
Innovation and Learning Perspective
GOALS
Technology leadership
MEASURES
Percent of sales from new products On-time delivery (defined by customer) Number of cooperative engineering efforts
MEASURES
Time to develop next generation Process time to maturity
Manufacturing learning
Product focus
Responsive supply Time to market
Percent of products that equal 80% sales
New product introduction versus competition
Customer partnership
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Why Do a Competitive Strength Assessment ?
Reveals strength of firms competitive position
vis--vis key rivals Shows how firm stacks up against rivals, measure-by-measure pinpoints firms 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)
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What Strategic Issues Merit Managerial Attention?
Based on results of both industry and competitive analysis and
an evaluation of a companys competitiveness, what items should be on a companys worry list? Requires thinking strategically about
Pluses
and minuses in the industry and competitive situation Companys 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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Identifying the Strategic Issues
How to stave off market challenges from new foreign competitors? How to combat price discounting of rivals? How to reduce a companys high costs? How to sustain a companys present growth
in light of slowing buyer demand?
Whether to expand a companys product line?
Whether to acquire a rival firm? Whether to expand into foreign markets rapidly or cautiously?
What to do about aging demographics of a companys customer
base?
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Stating the Issues Clearly and Precisely
A well-stated issue involves such phrases as
How
to . . . ? to . . . ? should be done about . . . ?
Whether What
Issues need to be precise, specific,
and cut straight to the chase
Issues on the the worry list
raise questions about
What What
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actions need to be considered to think about doing
After studying this chapter, you should have a good understanding of:
The benefits and limitations of SWOT analysis in conducting an internal
analysis of the firm. The primary and support activities of a firm's value chain. How value-chain analysis can help managers create value by investigating relationships among activities within the firm and among the firm and its customers and suppliers. The different types of tangible and intangible resources, as well as organizational capabilities. The four criteria that a firm's resources must possess to maintain a sustainable advantage. The usefulness of financial ratio analysis as well as its inherent limitations. How to make meaningful comparisons of performance across firms. The value of recognizing how the interests of a variety of stakeholders can be interrelated.
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