Risks of Focused Strategies, Best-Cost Provider, Strategic Offensives, Defensive Strategies, Vertical Integration, Outsourcing, Strategic Alliances, International Strategies, Business Ethics, Corporate Social Responsibility
Gross Profit
Net sales - cost of goods sold
Shifting Preferences
Niche members' changing product attribute preferences
Best Cost Provider
Offering upscale attributes at a lower cost than rivals
Corporate Social Responsibility
Operating honorably, philanthropy, environment, employee well-being, diversity
Vertically Integrated Firm
Participates in multiple stages of an industry's value chain
Joint Venture
Partnership involving an independent corporate entity
Horizontal Scope
Product/service breadth, geographic presence, competitive footprint
Dimensions of Performance
Profit, people, planet
Defensive Strategies
Protecting market position and advantage
Reasons for Integrating Backwards
Reducing supplier power, input costs, ensuring supply, protecting know-how
First-Mover Advantages
Reputation, switching costs, property rights, learning curve, technical standard
Contribution Margin
Sales - Variable Costs
Net Profit
Sales revenue - COGS - SG&A - Interest - tax - other expenses
Operating Earnings
Sales revenue - COGS - SGA
Dumping
Selling goods in foreign markets below normal prices
Focused Low-Cost Strategy
Serving a specific niche with low-cost products
Focused Differentiation Strategy
Serving a specific niche with unique product attributes
Why M&A Sometimes Fails
Strategic and organizational issues
Cross-Market Subsidization
Supporting offensives with resources from other markets
Choosing Rivals to Attack
Targeting vulnerable, weak, struggling, or small competitors
Why Companies Enter Foreign Markets
Access to customers, lower costs, resources, core competencies
Integrating Backwards
Achieving scale economies, matching supplier efficiency
Signaling
Announcing commitment, matching terms/prices, strong counter-response
Broad Differentiation Strategy
Appealing to a large buyer group with unique products
Drivers of Outsourcing
Better/cheaper, focus on core competencies
Outsourcing Criteria
Better/cheaper, not crucial, flexibility, risk reduction, expertise, core focus
Strongest Assets
Brand name, efficient production, technology, reputation for quality
Strategic Offensive Principles
Building, attacking weaknesses, surprise, swift actions
Disadvantages of Vertical Integration
Business risk, slow adoption, inflexibility, capacity matching, channel conflict
Reasons for Dispersing Activities
Buyer-related, transportation costs, diseconomies, trade barriers, dispersion benefits
Building Competitive Advantage
Creating and sustaining a unique advantage over rivals
Blue-Ocean Strategy
Creating demand in an uncontested market
Drawbacks of Alliances and JVs
Culture clash, poor fit, dependence, protection of proprietary info
Business Case for CSR
Customer relationships, workforce satisfaction, cost savings, differentiation, reputation, investment
Best-Cost Provider Strategy
Delivering superior value on quality/service/features/performance and price
Home Country Advantage
Demand, strategy, structure, factor conditions, related industries
Complexity of Competing Across Borders
Different advantages, location-based value chain, government policies, currency exchange, buyer preferences
Channel Conflict
Disagreements among marketing channel members
Benefits of Increasing Horizontal Scope
Efficiency, access, bargaining power, reduced rivalry, flexibility
Vertical Integration Strategy
Expands activities backward or forward in the value chain
Strategic Options for Entering Foreign Markets
Export, license, franchise, own, alliance/JV
Drivers of Unethical Behavior
Faulty oversight, short-term pressure, weak ethical environment
Strategic Alliance
Formal agreement between separate companies to work together
Business Case for Ethical Strategy
Good business, shareholder interest, reputation, publicity, investment
Gross Profit Margin
Gross Profit/Sales
Vertical Integration Wisdom
Hidden factor knowledge, incentive to perform
Risks of Outsourcing
Hollowing out resources, loss of control, lack of investment, loss of proprietary info
Late-Mover Advantages
Imitation, better products, market uncertainties
Intensifying Rivalry
Increased competition and decreased segment profits
Strategic Offensive
Initiating actions to improve market position
Vertical Scope
Involvement in stages of an industry's value chain
Reasons for Integrating Forward
Lower costs, bargaining power, access to end users, brand strength, differentiation
Reasons for Concentrating Activities
Lower costs, scale economies, learning, superior resources
Principal Offensive Strategies
Lower price, first to market, product innovation, adopt good ideas, hit-and-run, preemptive strike
Purposes of Defensive Strategies
Lower risk, weaken impact, influence challengers
Making Alliances Work
Manage, trust, safeguards, commitments, learning
Profit Sanctuaries
Markets with substantial profits and protected positions
Horizontal M&A Strategies
Merger, acquisition to combine firms
Benefits of Alliances and JVs
Minimize problems, extend scope, reduce self-sufficiency, flexibility, high-tech industries
Equity
More expensive than debt
Moral Case for Ethical Strategy
Unethical strategy is morally wrong and reflects badly on personnel
Competitor Matching
Competitors imitating a focused firm's capabilities
Outsourcing
Contracting out value chain activities to outside vendors