Strategic Management
PESTEL Framework
Allows firm to look at external environment: political, economic, socio-cultural, technological, ecological, legal; factors are interdependent
What is the difference between corporate and business strategies?
Corporate strategy is formulated at headquarters and business strategy occurs within strategic business units
Mintzberg's Planning Framework
Design intended strategy; when unpredictable events occur unrealized strategies; bottom-up emergent strategy; realized strategy
VRIO
V - valuable R - rare I - costly to imitate O - organize to capture the value
What is competitive advantage?
a firm that formulates and implements a strategy that leads to superior performance relative to other competitors in the same industry or the industry average
path dependence
a process in which the options one faces in a current situation are limited by decisions made in the past
Strategic Group
a set of companies that pursue a similar strategy within a specific industry in their quest for competitive advantage
casual ambiguity
a situation in which the cause and effect of a phenomenon are not readily apparent
primary activities
add value directly as the firm transports inputs into outputs
support activities
add value indirectly
types of innovation
architectural innovation - new market, existing technology radical innovation - new and new incremental innovation - existing market and technology disruptive innovation - new technology, existing market
resource stocks
are the firm's current level of intangible resources
Threat of entry
barriers/obstacles that determine how easily a firm can enter an industry many barriers can = highly profitable industry
technological factors
capture the application of knowledge to create new processes and products
hyper-competition
competitive intensity has increased and periods of competitive advantage have shortened, especially in newer technology-based industries, marking an competitive advantage a string of short lived advantages
ecological factors
concern broad environmental issues such as natural environment, global warming, and sustainable economic growth
Triple bottom line
economic, social, and ecological achieve all lead to sustainable synergy
cost leader
focuses all attention on reducing cost
Industry
group of companies offering similar products or services
Threat of substitutes
idea that products or services from outside the given industry will come close to meeting the needs of current customers
short head
mainstream
monopolistically competitive
many firms, differentiated product, some obstacles to entry, basis for raising prices is pretty unique product while retaining customers
Perfect competition
many small firms, commodity product, easy entry, little or no ability for a firm to raise its prices
focused strategy
narrower scope
paradigm shift
new technology revolutionizes old, and the industry standard changes
Monopoly
only one firm supplying the market; many barriers to entry, considerable pricing power
legal factors
outcomes of the political processes manifested in laws, mandates, regulations, and court decisions
competitive advantage is the difference between
perceived value captured by how much customers are willing to pay for a product or service, and the total cost the firm incurs to create that value
discontinuities
periods of time in which underlying technological standards change
strategic position
position based on value creation and cost in a specific product market
Value drivers
product features customer service customization complements
strategic role of complements
product or service that adds value to the original product offering when two are used in tandem
resource-based view of a firm
provide a model that systematically aids in identifying core competencies
resource heterogeneity
resources differ across firms
resource immobility
resources don't move easily from firm to firm
SWOT analysis
s) strength w) weakness o) opportunities t) threats
social complexity
situations in which different social and business situations
fragmented industry structures
small firms trying to generate low profitability
socio-cultural factors
society's cultural norms, values, and cultures; ex) ppl become more health conscience
economies of scope
the average total cost of production decreases as the number of different goods increases
power of buyers
the bargaining power of buyers; demanding lower price for a better product; strong buyers reduce a firm's profitability
Power of suppliers
the bargaining power of suppliers captures the pressure that suppliers place on industry profitability - ex) labor unions
resource flows
the firm's level of investments to maintain or build a resource
rivalry among existing competitors
the intensity with which companies in an industry jockey for market share and profitability
the long tail
the remaining 80% of the market- obtain a large part of revenue from selling a small number of units from almost unlimited choices
structure-conduct-performance (SCP) model
theoretical framework, developed in industrial-organization economics, explains differences in industry performance; underlying industry structure determines firm conduct
Balanced scorecard
this approach harnesses multiple internal and external performance metrics in order to balance both financial and strategic goals
core competencies
unique strengths, embedded deep within a firm, that allow a firm differentiate its products and services from those of its rivals, creating higher value for the customer or offering products and services of comparable value at lower cost
business-level strategy
who - which customer segments will we serve what - customer needs wishes, and desires will we satisfy why - do we want to satify them how - will we satisfy our customer's needs
Oligopoly
"few sellers"; few (large) firms, differentiated products, high barriers to entry, some degree of pricing power - firms are interdependent - analyzed using game theory
Economic factors
- growth rates - interest rates - levels of employment - price stability - currency exchange rates
implications for the strategist
- quantitative and qualitative performance dimensions matter in judging how effective a firm's strategy is - goal of strategic management is to integrate and align each business function and activity to obtain superior performance at the co. level - no best strategy exists
Four main industry types
1) perfect competition 2) monopolistic competition 3) oligopoly 4) monopoly
the 5 forces model
1) threat of entry 2) power of suppliers 3) power of buyers 4) threat of substitutes 5) rivalry among existing competitors
What are the levels of strategy formulation?
corporate, business, functional
cost drivers
cost of input factors economies of scale learning-curve effects experience curve effects
differentiation
create higher value for customers than the competitors create - deliver products or services while keeping cost at the same or similar level
cost-leadership
create similar value for customers by delivering products or services at a lower cost than competitors, enabling the firm to offer lower prices to its customers
economies of scale
decreases in cost per unit as output increases
dynamic capabilities
describe a firm's ability to create, deploy, modify, reconfigure, upgrade, or leverage its resources
Strategy as planned emergence
describes any unplanned strategic initiative undertaken by mid-level employees of their own volition
value chain
describes the internal activities a firm engages in when transforming inputs and outputs
Mission statements
describes what the organization actually does --the products and services it plans to provide and the markets in which it plans to compete
consolidated industry structures
dominated by a few firms which are highly profitable
mobility barriers
industry-specific factors that separate one strategic group from another