Strategic Management Prelim 1

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Trade Offs

"The essence of strategy is choosing what NOT to do" - Porter Don't straddle You can't be everything to everyone, but you can be everything to someone

Second-order fit

Activities are reinforcing

Generic (business-level) strategy

Pursue value investments (value drivers raise willingness to pay) when: 1. marginal customers are value-sensitive 2. returns to increasing value than returns on reducing costs Pursue cost reduction (cost drivers) when: 1. Marginal customers are price-sensitive 2. Value improvements are costly, difficult, or easily imitated by competitors

Access-based positioning

Segmenting customers who are accessible in different ways (e.g. geography or scale - anything that requires a different set of activities to reach them)

Core operational differences

Airbnb has no upper bound on its room capacity, platform reduces entry costs for "sellers," ease of adjusting availability Marriott's capacity is the same on any given day or week with a limited capacity given the hotel, high investment costs, low marginal costs

Airbnb value proposition

Airbnb suppliers: home owners value for suppliers: connects with guests, payment legitimacy, flexibility value for guests: diversity, local experience, price, group size, private, independent HOW: search & matching, pricing, online reviews

Airbnb vs Marriott's approach to data

Airbnb: each touch point, trying new things, continuously testing, improved algorithms "data warehouse" → integrated system Marriott: revenue management system, longevity, multiple ways to book (affects the amount of customer information)

Cross-network effects

more guests → more hosts → value to both sides

Differentiation → Value Drivers

relationships within/between firms attributes off products and services relationship with customers

Power of the 5 forces (threat of substitute products)

- Closeness (from the consumers' perspective) between substitutes and the industry's product/service - low switching costs

Disadvantages of Differentiation

- Customers, not producers, determine the product's value - Value is multi-dimensional, quality is not the only dimension of value - It is generally difficult to measure exact value - Can undermine costs of producing a high-value product

Factors that reduce the threat of new entrants

- Economies of scale: supply side - Demand side economies of scale - Switching costs - Capital requirements - Brand loyalty / reputation - Access to distribution channels - Government regulation - Expected retaliation

Power of the 5 forces (Bargaining power of buyers)

- High buyer concentration - slow market growth - high percent of product sold to buyer - lack of differentiation in products sold to buyers - lack of strategic importance of product to the buyer - threat of backward integration by buyers

Power of the 5 forces (bargaining power of suppliers)

- High supplier concentration - Low percentage volume sold to the industry - Distinctiveness of suppliers products - Strategic importance of the suppliers products - Threat of forward integration

Additional External Environment Factors

- Industry growth rate - Technology & innovation - Government - Complementary products and services

Power of the 5 forces (Risk of Entry by potential competitors)

- Lack of economies of scale (high capital requirements) - Lack of product differentiation - Low customer switching costs - Government regulation

Power of the 5 forces (Rivalry among established firms)

- Large number and relatively similar size of competitors - Price competition - Lack of product differentiation - Lack of mutual familiarity / repeated interaction

Why are trade offs necessary

-inconsistencies in image of reputation -incompatibility in activities -limits on internal coordination and control

When barriers to entry are high...

... the threat of new entrants is low (and vice versa)

Dangers of imitation

1. Collective Inertia (ex: open office plan) 2. Causal ambiguity - unclear actual source of differentiation (ex: successful movies - why do they do so well) 3. Management myopia - lack of foresight / imagination

Porter's Five Forces

1. Competitive rivalry 2. Power of suppliers 3. Power of buyers 4. Threat of entrants 5. Threat of substitutes

Bottlers Industry Analysis

High barriers to entry (exclusive franchises, high capital investment in bottling, lines, and distributions, limited shelf space) Threat of substitute products is LOW Bargaining power of suppliers (concentrate producers) is VERY HIGH - two big suppliers, high switching costs for bottlers Bargaining power of Buyers (i.e. restaurants/retailers) is HIGH - large volume purchases Competitive Rivalry is moderate to high - big competition between Coke and Pepsi

Cola Wars Summary

Industry chain has led to concentrate producer dominance Both Coke and Pepsi have been winning the war - increased share, expanded primary demand for colas Smaller brands are losing

Sustaining Competitive Advantage

Isolating mechanisms that prevent industry forces from eating up the firm's profits -- reduce imitation by competitors Barriers to imitation: - property rights (legal protection) - initial investments - increased customer switching costs - brand power - exclusivity - internal trade secrets

Why did Walmart open in small-towns / rural locations

Local monopolies - avoid direct competition Meet demand Lower rental costs Lower payroll First mover advantage - most of these towns can only support 1 discount retailer

Will the Cola War Continue

Market for carbonated soft drinks - health concerns, flat growth, but growth in substitutes, cost conscious buyers when economy turns Global markets - coke as defender & pepsi as raider Retailers & Suppliers - increasing power of mass merchandisers (consolidation in the retail sector) Distribution - consolidation among bottlers, increase in distribution costs, vertical integration

Marriott value Proposition

Marriott suppliers: hotel owners value for suppliers: reputation, loyalty, access to customers, infrastructure, industry knowledge, pricing higher, management capabilities value for guests: safety, consistency, other services/amenities, location, points for future stay, convenience HOW: loyalty program, management capabilities, brands

Was Walmart successful because of the industry

NO, Discount retailing isn't that attractive - margins are low - competing on pricing - low switching costs for buyers - undifferentiated products - high ad costs

third-order fit

Optimization of effort

Strategy

Performing different activities from competitors or performing similar activities in different ways

Operational Effectiveness

Performing similar activities better than competitors (increasing productivity, quality, speed) Important to success, but not sufficient NOT Strategy

Variety Based Positioning

Producing a subset of an industry's products or services Will likely serve only a subset of customer needs

Quantification of Walmart's competitive advantage

Sales were way larger COGs as a proportion of sales was higher than competitors Operating expenses were lower than competitors - payroll and rent are way less A 1% saving = $700 million

Needs-based positioning

Servicing most or all the needs of a particular group of customers

First-Order fit

Simple consistency between each activity (function) and the overall strategy

Internal Analysis: Resource Based View (RBV)

Some firms can thrive in unattractive industries - because they have internal resources/capabilities that enable them to neutralize the disadvantages in their external environment To understand why some firms are more profitable than others, look inside for sustained basis of competitive advantage

What is strategy

Strategy is the attempt to achieve a sustainable competitive advantage through: 1. Strategic/unique positioning: deliberately choosing a different set of activities to deliver a unique mix of values 2. Trade-offs: choosing what NOT to do is equally important 3. Everything matters: creating fit among a company's system of activities

Bargaining Power of Suppliers

Suppliers have bargaining power when: 1. their products have few substitutes and are important to buyers 2. the focal industry is not an important customer to the supplier 3. Differentiation makes it costly for buyers to switch suppliers 4. Can threaten to integrate forward

Added-value

maximal value created - maximal value created without the firm If another firm offers an identical product, there is no added value in order to increase added value, add services (increase consumers' willingness to pay) and/or cut costs

Same side network effects

more guest → more reviews, information, data, better search → more value for each user

Why is creating a sustainable strategy difficult

strategy should be thought of in terms of decades, long term horizons shifts in positioning are expensive (both in time and money) can lead managers to focus on operational effectiveness - quick returns, short term horizons, concrete outcomes growth trap: go after easy, new customers - blurs strategic position

Given the differences in business models and operating models, why should Marriott worry about airbnb

undercutting price & occupancy changing demographics changing needs of travelers (less business travel)

Competitive Rivalry

Damaging when it comes to price competition

A "sixth" factor - Complements

Complements: companies whose products are sold in tandem with another companies products Complementary products are "best" used together

How to create cost leadership

Consistency among value-chain activities A firm tries to gain competitive advantage by decreasing the cost of its products relative to the cost of other firms products A firm mainly focuses on developing cost drivers

Industry Structure

Consolidation: one firm or one dominant firm, monopoly In-between: few firms share dominance, oligopoly Fragmented: many firms, no one dominant - Each firm only a small % of industry output - Will resemble "perfect competition" where no one will make a profit above capital costs

Sources of Competitive Advantage

Increase consumers willingness to pay Decrease costs

Walmart Case Takeaways

Created competitive advantage through cost leadership - reduce costs lower than competitors & provide products at lower price for customers

5 elements of strategy - Hambrick & Fredrickson

1. Economic Logic - how will we obtain our returns? 2. Arenas - Where will we be active? and with how much emphasis? 3. Staging - what will be our speed and sequence of moves 4. Vehicles - how will we get there? 5. Differentiators - How will we win?

The intensity of rivalry depends on

1. Number of - and similarity among - competitors 2. Height of industry exit barriers (specialized equipment) 3. Fixed costs are high and/or product is perishable 4. Industry growth is slow 5. Firms can't read one another's signals well

Examples of Cost Drivers

1. Scale or volume of economies - average cost per unit decreases in bulk 2. Scope economies - cost of producing two products together is lower than separately 3. Learning curve 4. Low input costs - easier to absorb changes 5. Vertical integration - for tasks that are (not) specialized to the firm, coordination costs are lower (higher) within the firm than with a market supplier 6. Organizational practices (ex. Walmart frugality)

Differentiation

A firm tries to gain competitive advantage by increasing (perceived) value of its products relative to the value of other firms products By increasing the perceived value off its products, the firm can charge a higher price than it would otherwise A firm mainly focuses on developing value drivers

A multi-sided platform

A marketplace to facilitate transactions between seller and buyer, usually a "spot transaction"

Unique Positioning

Being different: deliberately choosing a different set of activities to deliver a unique mix of values - Porter

Bargaining power of buyers

Buyers are most powerful when: 1. When the buyer industry is more concentrated than the seller industry 2. Buyers purchase in large quantities 3. A single buyer is a large customer to a firm 4. Buyers can switch suppliers at low cost

Marriott Case Takeaways

Customer segmentation is the first step in assessing how big of a threat an entrant can be Assessing differences in how incumbents and entrants store, analyze, and use data for strategic decisions Understand the difference between dedicated and flexible capacity → helps assess the effect that airbnb has had on hotels Measuring impact of entrants can be a challenge in industries with demand fluctuations

Threat of substitute products

Different products serving similar customer needs (ex: railways vs. airlines vs cars) May initially appear to be very different from the industries product - can be easy to overlook (EX: blockbuster vs. netflix vs. youtube OR walkman vs. iPod) Threat of substitute is high when buyer's cost of switching are low

Why is Operational Effectiveness not sufficient

Easy for competitors to imitate Competitive convergence > mutually destructive - leads to zero sum competition (price wars) - productivity gains captured by consumers - more difficult to invest in longer term strategy

How does Walmart's culture and HR management practices contribute to low cost strategy

Empowering associates Upper management came from working in the store Business trips with shared rooms Aligned their success with the company → employees were monetarily incentivized to stop shoplifting

Fit among activities

Everything matters - creating a fit among a company's activities, system not collection of parts System of activities are far more sustainable than individual activities - more difficult to imitate && requires integration of all decisions and actions EXAMPLE: Southwest

Why is the soft drink concentrate industry so profitable

First mover advantage - Barriers to entry are high -Coke and Pepsi have high levels of brand equity and consumer loyalty - New entrants are unlikely to sway persisting consumer tastes - Pre-existing contracts with bottlers, limiting bottlers' ability to produce similar products with rivals - essentially impossible for new entrants to find bottlers for the distribution of their drinks

Concentrate Producer Industry Summary

High barriers to entry Locked-in buyers Low supplier power Constrained competition Lots of substitutes but limited impact

Willingness to Pay

The highest price a customer would be willing to pay for a product in absence of a competing product and in context of other purchasing opportunities How to estimate - differs depending on different levels (individual, group, or nation), different contexts, and different times

How does Walmart achieve cost leadership

Transparency in supply chain - automatic orders (tech) Low inventory in stores with a mix of products (everything is in the front, not back) Partnerships with important vendors, negotiations "no nonsense" Warehouse / Distribution Centers - buy in bulk, efficient in distribution,*cross docking (truck to truck so saves time), hub & spoke (commitment with warehouses and fill in with stores) Low costs always Management is frugal Located in more rural areas

Cola Wars Takeaways

Understand the underlying economics of the industry & how it affects profitability ** Attractiveness of the industry affects both incumbents and new entrants

Sustainability of Walmart's Advantage

Walmart's dominance over vendors - relatively high/strong buying power (buys in huge quantities & undifferentiated product)

Competitive Advantage

When a company earns a higher rate of profit than the average rate off other firms within the same industry Through doing something unique and valuable Through an integrated set of choices that is distinguishable from its rivals

Ryan Air Case Takeaways

dangers off entering a market with a set off choices that closely resembles those made by incumbents (Ryan Air lacked a distinctive position - launch strategy is hazardous even though incumbents are bloated and inefficient When fixed costs are high and variable costs are low, in the context of a rivalry, such an advantage is often not sufficient to be profitable Incumbents are sorely tempted to retaliate against an entrant in order to retain customers: can drop prices significantly to "save" an incremental customer


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