Business Policy and Strategy Chapter 5
leverage
An LBO takes a public company private.
Levels of Strategies
Corporate, division, functional, and operational Level
Focus
means producing products and services that fulfill the needs of small groups of consumers. Type 4 is a low-cost focus strategy that offers products or services to a small range (niche group) of customers at the lowest price available on the market. Type 5 is a best-value focus strategy that offers products or services to a small range of customers at the best price-value available on the market.
Reasons for Market Development
new channels of distribution are available that are reliable, inexpensive, and of good quality. an organization has the needed capital and human resources to manage expanded operations. an organization's basic industry is becoming rapidly global in scope.
Differentiation
Type 3) is a strategy aimed at producing products and services considered unique industrywide and directed at consumers who are relatively price insensitive.
Unrelated
Unrelated - When their value chains are so dissimilar that no competitively valuable cross-business relationships exist.
Chapter 11 bankruptcy
allows organizations to reorganize and come back after filing a petition for protection.
Reasons for Horizontal Integration
an organization can gain monopolistic characteristics in a particular area or region without being challenged by the feds. an organization competes in a growing industry.
Chapter 9 bankruptcy
applies to municipalities.
buyout
by the company's management and other private investors using borrowed funds
long term objectives are needed at the:
corporate, divisional, and functional levels of an organization
Michael Porter's Generic Strategies
cost leadership, differentiation, focus
The balanced Scorecard
strategy evaluation and control technique. Seeks to balance financial measures with non-financial. Comprises a list of key objectives, assciiated time deimension, a primary responsible contact person/department
Cost leadership
emphasizes producing standardized products at a very low per-unit cost for consumers who are price sensitive. Type 1 is a low-cost alternative that offers products or services to a wide range of customers at the lowest price available on the market. Type 2 is a best-value strategy that offers products or services to a wide range of customers at the best price-value available on the marker.
Forward Integration
gaining ownership or increased control over distributors or retailers. Ex. - Franchising, establishing websites to sell products directly to consumers
Financial Objectives are
growth in revenues, growth in earnings, higher dividends, higher profit margins, higher earnings per share, improved cash flow
Business-process outsourcing (BPO)
involves companies taking over the functional operations (e.g., marketing or payroll) of other firms.
Chapter 7 bankruptcy
is a liquidation procedure used only when a corporation sees no hope of being able to operate successfully or to obtain the necessary creditor agreements. All the organization's assets are sold in parts for their tangible worth.
Chapter 13 bankruptcy
is a reorganization plan similar to Chapter 11, but it is available only to small businesses owned by individuals with unsecured debts of less than $100,000 and secured debts of less than $350,000.
Strategic objectives are
larger market share, lower costs than rivals, higher product quality, quicker on-time deliver than rivals
Not Managing by Objectives
managing by extrapolation, crisis, subjectives, and by hope
Divestiture
Selling a division or part of an organization Divestiture can be part of an overall retrenchment strategy to rid an organization of businesses that are unprofitable that require too much capital that do not fit well with the firm's other activities
Liquidation
Selling all of a company's assets, in parts, for their tangible worth
Backward Integration
Strategy of seeking ownership or increased control of a firm's suppliers
Joint Venture/Partnering
A joint venture occurs when two or more companies form a temporary partnership or consortium for the purpose of capitalizing on some opportunity.
Integration Strategies
Forward, Backward, horizontal, also referred to as vertical integration, allow a firm to gain control over distributors, suppliers and/or competitors.
Market Penetration
Increase market share for present products or services in present markets through greater marketing efforts. Ex. - increasing # of salespeople, increasing advertising expenditures
Market Development
Involves introducing present products or services into new geographic areas.
Intensive Strategies
Market penetration, market development, product development. Typically require intensive efforts if a firm's compeitive position with exisitng products is to improve
A leveraged buyout (LBO
occurs when a corporation's shareholders' stock is bought
acquisition
occurs when a large organization purchases (acquires) a smaller firm, or vice versa.
takeover or hostile takeover
occurs when a merger or acquisition is not desired by the party being acquired or purchased
Retrenchment
occurs when an organization regroups through cost and asset reduction to reverse declining sales and profits.
Merger
occurs when two organizations, usually about the same size, unite to form one new enterprise
Reasons for Forward Integration
present distributors are expensive or unreliable, the availabiltity of quality distributors is limited ,competes in an industry that is growing and is expected to continue to grow markedly
Reasons for Backward integration
present suppliers are especially expensive, unreliable,the number of suppliers is small and the number of competitors is large.
Clearly established objectives offer several benefits:
provide direction, allow synergy, aid in evaluation, establish priorities, reduce uncertainty, minimize conflicts, aid in resource allocation, aid in job design
Chapter 12 bankruptcy
provides special relief to family farmers & ranchers with debt equal to or less than $1.5 million.
Objectives should be:
quantitative, measurable, realistic, understandable, challenging, obtainable, congruent among organizational units, associated with a time line
Horizontal Integration
refers to a strategy of seeking ownership of or increased control over a firm's competitors. Often used as a growth Strategy
First mover advantage
refers to the benefits a firm may achieve by entering a new market or developing a new product or service prior to rival firms.
Two types of Diversification Strategies
related and unreleated
Long-term Objectives
represent the results expected from pursuing certain strategies
Defensive strategies
retrenchment, divestiture, liquidation
Product Development
seeks to increase sales by improving or modifying present products or services
Strategies
the actions to be taken to accomplish long-term objectives
Related
when their value chains possess competitively valuable cross-business strategic fits