Ratewal
Ratewal
Ratewal
Business-level strategy: an
integrated and coordinated set
of commitments and actions the
firm uses to gain a competitive
advantage by exploiting core
competencies in specific product
markets
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Strategy
Business-level
strategy
Strategy
Fundamental constraints
Scope
What good or service to offer, to which
customers
Value chain
How and where to create the good or
service
How to distribute the good or service in the
marketplace(s)
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creation model
Costs
Costs represent
represent
specific
specific investment
investment
choices
choices that
that
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generate
value
generate
value
Broad
Broad or
or narrow
narrow scope?
scope?
Consumer Markets
Demographic
Per.
Dem.
Consumer
Con.
Soc.
Markets
Psy.
Geo.
Socioeconomic
Geographic
Psychological
Consumption patterns
Perceptual factors
Implications
Implications for
for configuration
configuration of
of
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value chain??
Broad
Broad or
or narrow
narrow scope?
scope?
Business Markets
End-use
Product segments
Size
End
Industrial
MarketsPro.
Buy.
Geo.
Geog segments
Implications
Implications for
for configuration
configuration of
of
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value chain??
Source of competitive
advantage - Value chains
Strategies create differences between the
firms position and its rivals
Sources of differences? - perform activities
differently; perform different activities
Two value-adding configurations (Porter,
1985)
Low cost
Differentiated
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Broad
target
Narrow
target
Competitive Scope
Cost
Cost Leader
Uniqueness
Differentiator
Integrated
Cost
Leader/
Differentiator
Focused
Cost
Focused
Differentiator
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Cost Drivers
Major Cost Drivers
Economies of scale
Learning/Spillovers
Capacity utilization
Integration
Vertical Linkages
Timing
Location
Political/regulatory
Interrelationships
(corporate)
Discretionary decisions
Product features,
performance
Mix & variety of
products
Service levels
Small vs. large buyers
Process technology
Wage levels
Product features
Hiring, training,
motivation
Implications?
Implications?
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Value-Chain example:
Cost Leader
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Questions Leading to
Lower Costs
1. How can an activity be performed
differently, eliminated, externalized?
2. How can linked value activities be
regrouped or reordered?
3. How can upstream/downstream
collaboration lower costs?
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Implementation Pitfalls
Exclusive focus on Mfg
Misunderstand drivers (ABC useful)
Failure to recognize/exploit
linkages (e.g., across the board cost
reductions)
Contradictions
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Differentiation Strategy
An integrated set of actions designed by a
firm to produce or deliver goods or
services that customers perceive as
adding value
Multiple features
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Themes
Prestige
Rolex
Technological leadership
3M Corporation, Intel
Top-of-the-line image
Ralph Lauren, Kiton
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Differentiation Strategy
Add downstream value
lower buyer cost
raise buyer performance
Cost
Add value to buyers value: reduce
downstream processing time, search time,
transaction costs, defect rates, direct costs,
learning curves, labor, space, installation,
etc. (e.g., CRM software)
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Differentiation Strategy
Some differentiation actions required by
this strategy:
develop new systems and processes
signal and shape buyer perceptions
quality focus
capability in R&D
Implication - maximize human capital
contributions
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Firm
infrastructure
Procurement
Excellent applications
engineering support
Purchase of high-quality
components to enhance
product image
Superior
material
handling
operations
to minimize
damage
Quick
transfer of
inputs to
manufacturing process
Flexibility
and speed in
responding
to changes
in manufacturing
specs
Low defect
rates to
improve
quality
Value-Chain example:
Differentiation
Inbound
logistics
Operations
Outbound
logistics
Rapid response
to customer
service
requests
Complete
inventory of
replacement
parts and
supplies
Marketing 23Service
and sales
Pitfalls of Differentiation
Strategies
Differentiating on characteristics not
valued by buyers (e.g., HP)
Over-differentiating
Price premium is too high
Failing to signal value
Focusing on product instead of entire
value chain
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Focused Business-Level
Strategies
A focus strategy must exploit a narrow
targets differences from the balance of
the industry by:
isolating a particular buyer group
isolating a unique segment of a
product line
concentrating on a particular
geographic market
finding their niche
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Factors Driving
Focus Strategies
Large firms overlook small niches
Firm may lack resources to compete in
the broader market
May be able to serve a narrow market
segment more effectively than can
larger industry-wide competitors
Focus may allow the firm to direct
resources to certain value chain
activities to build competitive advantage
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Advantages of Integrated
Strategy
A firm that successfully uses an integrated
cost leadership/differentiation strategy should
be in a better position to:
adapt quickly to environmental changes
learn new skills and technologies more
quickly
effectively leverage its core competencies
while competing against its rivals
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Benefits of Integrated
Strategy
Successful firms using this strategy
have above-average returns
Firm offers two types of values to
customers
some differentiated features (but less
than a true differentiated firm)
relatively low cost (but now as low as
the cost leaders price)
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Summary:
Summary: Industry
Industry and
and Firm
Firm
Effects
Effects on
on Profit
Profit
Patents
Brands
Retaliatory
capability
Barriers to Entry
Industry
Attractiveness
Rate of Profit
in Excess of the
Competitive Level
Rivalry
Substitutability
Firm size
Financial resources
Vertical Power
(buyer/seller)
Cost
Advantage
Process technology
Plant size
Low-cost inputs
Differentiation
Advantage
Brands
Product technology
Marketing
capabilities
Competitive
Advantage
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