Strategy Chapter 6

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Business-level strategy may involve..

a single product or group of similar products that use the same distribution channel

Managers can evaluate performance differences among clusters of firms in the same industry by conducting..

a strategic-group analysis

What do complements achieve for a product?

add value to a product or service when they are consumed in tandem

The cost leader attempt to optimize..

all of its value chain activities to achieve a low-cost position

Differentiation risks with power of buyers

erosion of margins

Differentiation risks with power of suppliers

erosion of margins

cost leadership risks with power of buyers

erosion of margins

cost leadership risks with power of suppliers

erosion of margins

Differentiation risks with threat of entry

erosion of margins; replacement

cost leadership risks with threat of entry

erosion of margins; replacement

What is the reason for diseconomies of scale?

as firms get too big, the complexity of managing and coordinating raises the cost, negating any benefits of scale (large firms tend to become overly bureaucratic, with too many layers of hierarchy- they grow inflexible and slow in decision making)

Why is it difficult to execute a cost-leadership and differentiation position at the same time?

because cost leadership and differentiation are distinct strategic positions, and pursuing them simultaneously results in trade-offs that work against each other

why are those two business strategies called generic strategies?

because they can be used by any organization (manufacturing or service, large or small, for-profit or non-profit, public or private, domestic or foreign) in the quest for competitive advantage, independent of industry context

Why did JetBlue run into some trouble?

because they tried to combine two different business strategies at the same time (a cost-leadership strategy, focused on low cost, and a differentiation strategy, focused on delivering unique features and service)

minimum efficient scale (MES)

between Q1 and Q2, the returns to scale are constant- the output range needed to bring the cost per unit down as much as possible, allowing a firm to stake out the lowest-cost position achievable through economies of scale

strategic trade-offs

choices between a cost or value position

A clear strategic position can form the basis for...

competitive advantage

Although increased value creation is a defining feature of a differentiation strategy, managers must also...

control costs

When considering different business strategies, managers also must..

define the scope of competition

business-level strategy

details the goal-directed actions managers take in their quest for competitive advantage when competing in a single product market

cost leadership risks with rivalry among existing competitors

focus of competition shifts to non-price attributes; lowering costs to drive value creation below acceptable threshold

Larger output also allows firms to...

invest in more specialized systems and equipment, such as enterprise resource planning software or manufacturing robots

Differentiation risks with rivalry among existing competitors

focus of competition shifts to price; increasing differentiation of product features that do not create value but raise costs; increasing differentiation to raise costs above acceptable threshold

narrow competitive scope with cost strategic position

focused cost leadership

narrow competitive scope with differentiation strategic position

focused differentiation

examples of input factors

raw materials, capital, labor, and IT services (maybe also regulations)

By launching some innovation, what happens to your curve?

new curve, steeper (called experience-curve effect)

What are often needed to create superior product features?

strong R&D capabilities (getting patents and stuff)

Many firms that attempt to combine cost-leadership and differentiation strategies end up being...

stuck in the middle (managers have failed to carve out a clear strategic position)

Economies of scope

the savings that come from producing two or more outputs at less cost than producing each output individually, even though using the same resources and technology

The focus of competition in a differentiation strategy tends to be on...

unique product features, service, and new product launches, or on marketing and promotion rather than price

In the learning curve, we assumed the underlying technology remained constant, while only cumulative output increased. In the experience curve,

we now change the underlying technology while holding cumulative output constant

diseconomies of scale

when a firm produces too much output to where there's no longer an economies of scale benefit

scope of competition

whether to pursue a specific, narrow part of the market or go after the broader market

To formulate an appropriate business-level strategy, managers must answer the who, what, why, and how questions of competition:

Who- which customer segments will we serve? What customer needs, wishes, and desires will we satisfy? Why do we want to satisfy them? How will we satisfy our customers' needs?

strategic position

a firm's strategic profile based on value creation and cost

broad competitive scope with cost strategic position

cost leadership

The most important cost drivers that managers can manipulate to keep their costs low are:

cost of input factors, economies of scale, learning-curve effects, experience-curve effects

Learning effects differ from economies of scale as shown:

differences in timing (learning effects occur over time as output accumulates, while economies of scale are captured at one point in time when output increases; no diseconomies to learning), differences in complexity (in the manufacture of steel rods, effects from economies of scale can be quite significant, while learning effects are minimal; complete contrast in brain surgery)

broad competitive scope with differentiation strategic position

differentiation

There are two fundamentally different generic business strategies:

differentiation strategy and cost-leadership strategy

A business strategy is more likely to lead to a competitive advantage if...

it allows firms to either perform similar activities differently or perform different activities than their rivals that result in creating more value or offering similar products or services at lower cost

Learning curve (economies of learning)

it takes less and less time to produce the same output as we learn how to be more efficient (learning by doing drives down costs)

A company that uses a differentiation strategy can achieve a competitive advantage as long as...

its economic value created (V-C) is greater than that of its competitors

A cost leader can achieve a competitive advantage as long as...

its economic value created (V-C) is greater than that of its competitors

Even if a firm fails to achieve cost parity, it can still gain a competitive advantage if..

its economic value creation exceeds that of its competitors

In 6.2, it talks about differentiation strategy and mapping out competitive advantage

know how this works- economic value creation stuff

The more complex the underlying process to manufacture a product or deliver a service, the more...

learning effects we can expect

90% learning curve (meaning of this)

per-unit cost drops 10% every time output is doubled

Economies of scale also occur because of certain..

physical properties (cube-square rule: principle that makes big-box stores such as Walmart cheaper to run and build

What are the most salient value drivers that managers have at their disposal?

product features, customer service, complements

Differentiation benefits with rivalry among existing competitors

protection against competitors if product or service has enough differential appeal to command price premium

Differentiation benefits with power of buyers

protection against decrease in sales prices, because well-differentiated products or services are not perfect imitations

cost leadership benefits with power of buyers

protection against decrease in sales prices, which can be absorbed

cost leadership benefits with threat of entry

protection against entry due to economies of scale

Differentiation benefits with threat of energy

protection against entry due to intangible resources such as a reputation for innovation, quality, or customer service

cost leadership benefits with power of suppliers

protection against increase in input prices, which can be absorbed

Differentiation benefits with power of suppliers

protection against increase in input prices, which can be passed on to customers

cost leadership benefits with rivalry among existing competitors

protection against price wars because lowest-cost firm will win

Differentiation benefits with threat of substitutes

protection against substitute products due to differential appeal

cost leadership benefits with threat of substitutes

protection against substitute products through further lowering of prices

The goal of a cost-leadership strategy is to...

reduce the firm's cost below that of its competitors while offering adequate value

cost leadership risks with threat of substitutes

replacement, especially faced with innovation

Differentiation risks with threat of substitutes

replacement, especially when faced with innovation

differentiation strategy

seeks to create higher value for customers than the value that competitors create, by delivering products or services with unique features while keeping costs at the same or similar levels, allowing the firms to charge higher prices to its customers

cost-leadership strategy

seeks to create the same or 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

If a firm's cost advantage is due to economies of scale as opposed to economies of learning, what should managers be focused on?

should be concerned about drops in production runs as opposed to employee turnover

The average per-unit cost curve is a reflection of...

the underlying production function, which is determined by technology and other factors


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