International Business Strategy
International Business Strategy
International Business Strategy
Week 1
Session 1:
Intro to strategy
Strategy is the integrated set of choices that positions the business in its industry
so as to generate superior financial returns over the long run.
1. What Industry does DSC operate? How would you characterize it?
Consumer goods Personal Care Products (Oligopoly)
2. Has DSC outperformed its rivals? Why? Why not?
The word strategy comes from the Greek strategos; which referred to military
command.
Ex. DollarShave Club created a value proposition of: B2C + Membership Business
Model
Prior to the second half of the 19th century, companies were small, with limited
capital, and no power to significantly influence their markets. Two key factors
changed that: The expansion of railroads provided better access to distant
markets; and Improved financial services provided better access to capital. This
changed dramatically how companies could choose where and how to compete.
Economies of scale or economies of scope was created due to the large-scale
investments and large developments.
Frameworks mentioned:
SWOT (FODA): Matches a company’s strengths and weaknesses with its
opportunities and threats. Subsequent work focuses on defining a firm’s
distinctive competences and its translation to strategies.
The Five Forces (Porter): Evaluates factors focusing on how they influence
industry profitability. Porter assesses the nature of rivalry among those
firms. It considers the suppliers the firms use, the customers they serve, and
the relative power of each. And as threats he considers substitute products
and potential new entrants.
The sixth force: Compliments, goods or services that make those of another
firm more valuable. Co-opetition = Collaboration + Competition
Business Models
The firm decides how to compete with its business model = how it operates, and
how it creates and captures value
The value proposition and the target market are the two fundamental strategic
choices for a firm because they shape all the other aspects of the business model.
For a business model to work, the firm’s chosen activities need to demonstrate fit.
Simple consistency: Fit the firms value proposition and its target market.
Ex. BMW manufactures luxury automobiles, so they need to have high-
quality engineering and manufacturing to justify its premium price.
Mutually reinforcing
Optimization
Strategic positioning
A business model that is internally consistent, that fits with the realities of the
environment, and also is externally consistent. Finding and occupying these points
on landscape is strategic positioning.
Threats:
Imitation
Replication
Substitution
It occurs when demands shifts as a result of changes in technology or
customer needs.
Holdup
It occurs when the bargain power of a firm’s buyers, suppliers, or
complements increases, allowing them to capture more value.
Slack
Internal threat that comes from poor management and suboptimal
performance
The greater the firm’s economic contribution, the more likely it will gain a
competitive advantage.
Sources of Sustainability
Taste-Based Loyalty
o Customers loyalty allows the market leader to raise prices because
rivals find it more difficult to lure away customers.
o A key factor is the order of market entry.
o It provides a competitive advantage that can span for generations.
Uninformed Consumers
o A large responsible for the power of some brands is the lack of
information. If everyone was well informed, the market share of
some brands would fall by more than half.
o If no one bought name brands, the total expenditures for these
products would fall by almost 20%.
o Firms that can bias consumers’ perception of quality in their favor
are able to charge a premium.
Switching Costs
o Ex. Customers are unlikely to switch to a different bank because they
invested time to set up online accounts, passwords, etc. OR Airline
frequent flyer and other loyalty programs. OR For years, individual
cell phone numbers discouraged customers from switching between
telecom providers.
Network Effects
o In industries where network effects are present, the value of a
product or service increases with the number of people using it. They
contribute to enduring financial performance because, as we will see,
they limit the number of companies that can enter an industry.
o 3 Types of network effects:
Direct network effects: Ex. The leading US wireless carriers
benefit from strong network effects because calls are less
expensive for the carrier if the person being called is in the
same network.
Indirect network effects: They operate through the market for
complements, enhance the value of a product by increasing
the number or quality of complements for that product. Ex.
Electric cars increase in value as more people drive them
because more parking lots are likely to install recharging
stations.
Platform Businesses: Ex. Newspapers match readers and
advertisers OR Facebook creates value by matching consumers
and advertisers, it makes it more attractive to advertisers
(cross-side network effect = involves the relationship between
the two sides of the platform) OR As the number of advertisers
on Facebook increases, ads become more expensive, reducing
Facebook’s attractiveness to advertisers (same-side network
effects)
Learning
o This is particularly a powerful source of a lasting advantage to
industries which cost leadership is the key to profitability.
Economies of Scale
o Average costs decline as production volume increases
Intellectual Property Rights
o Innovations that can be protected with the help of intellectual
property (IP) rights-patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade
secrets – are more difficult to imitate.
External Analysis
Strategy Tripod
A firm’s external environment consists of all factors outside the firm that can
affect its potential to gain and sustain a competitive advantage.
Political Factors:
Economic Factors: Growth rates, Levels of employment, Interest rates,
Price stability (inflation and deflation), Currency exchange rates.
Social Factors: Society’s cultures, norms, values, health-conscious, age,
gender, family size, ethnicity, sexual orientation, religion, socioeconomic
class.
Technological Factors: Lean manufacturing, Six Sigma quality,
biotechnology, nanotechnology, product innovations, artificial intelligence
Environment Factors: Natural environment, global warming, sustainable
economic growth.
Legal Factors: laws, mandates, regulations, court decisions
The Threat of Substitutes: The idea that products or services available from
outside the given industry will come close to meeting the needs of current
customers. Is high when:
o The substitute offers an attractive price-performance trade-off. Ex.
Rental movies vs. buying DVD’s
o The buyers cost of switching to the substitute is low
competency that adds value when used with the original product.
o Complements increase demand for the primary product
o Enhances the profit potential for the industry and the firm
Session 3
A firm’s ability to gain and sustain competitive advantage is partly driven by core
competencies, they allow a firm to 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.
Unique strengths rooted deep whitin a firm, that are critical to gaining and
sustaining competitive advantage.
Core Competencies allow a firm to differentiate its products and services from
those of its rivals, creating higher valuer for the customer or offering products and
services of comparable value at lower cost.
Resource-Based View
This model systematically aids in identifying core competencies.
The model sees certain types of resources as key to superior firm performance, it
includes any assets as well as any capabilities and competencies that a firm can
draw upon when formulating and implementing strategy
Critical Assumptions:
If the answer is “yes” four times to the attributes listed in the decision tree, only
then is the resource in question a core competency that supports a firm’s
sustainable competitive advantage.
The value chain describes the internal activities a firm engages in when
transforming inputs into outputs: each activity adds incremental value
Primary Activities add value directly as the firm transforms inputs into outputs
Supply Chain Management
Operations
Distribution
Marketing and Sales
After-sales service
Support Activities add value indirectly
R&D
Information Systems
Human Resources
Accounting and Finance
VALUE CHAIN
Session 4
Strategy Tripod
Organizational Capabilities
Diagnosis:
Strategic
Challenge
Business
Opportunity
Sweet Spot
Sweet Spot
Session 5
Differentiation
Seeks to create higher value for customers than the value that competition
creates, by delivering products or services with unique features.
Value drivers:
Product Features
Customer service: Ex. Two-way free shipping
Complements: Ex. Smartphones and cellular services
Cost-leadership
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
lower prices to its customers.
Cost drivers:
Cost of input factors: Ex. Raw materials, capital, labor and regulations
Economies of scale
Learning-curve effects: Underlying technology remain constant while
only cumulative output increased.
Experience-curve effects: Underlying technology changes while
holding cumulative output constant.
Blue Ocean Strategy = Differentiation + Cost Leadership
Eliminate (to lower costs): Which of the factors that the industry takes
for granted should be eliminated?
Reduce (to lower costs): Which of the factors should be reduced well
below the industry’s standard?
Raise (to increase perceived consumer benefits): Which of the factors
should be raised well above the industry’s standard?
Create (to increase consumer benefits): Which factor should be
created that the industry has never offered?
The value curve is the basic component of the strategy canvas. It graphically
depicts a company’s relative performance across its industry’s factors of
competition.
It allows to see all the factors an industry competes on and invests in, what
buyers receive, and what the strategic profiles of the major players are
Horizontal axis: The range of factors that an industry competes on and
invests in.
Vertical axis: The offering level that buyers receive across all of these key
competing factors.
Value curve or strategic profile: The graphic depiction of a company’s
relative performance across its industry’s factors of competition.
Session 6
Session 7
Advantages
Disadvantages
1) Liability of foreignness
2) Loss of reputation (Alstom)
3) Loss of intellectual property (Microsoft in China)
CAGE Framework
Cultural
Administrative and Political
Geographic
Economic
Foreign Market Entries
Integration-Responsiveness Framework
International Companies:
Global Standization:
M