Unit - 1: Strategy and Process: Part - A
Unit - 1: Strategy and Process: Part - A
Unit - 1: Strategy and Process: Part - A
PART – A
1. Define ‘Strategy’.
Strategy refers to the ideas, plans and support that firms employ to compete successfully
against their rivals. Each firm devises its own strategy that involves two key choices- the
customers a firm will serve and the competencies and strengths it will develop to serve
customers effectively. Strategy is designed to help firms achieve competitive advantage.
“A strategy is a pattern or plan that integrates an organization’s major goals, policies and
action sequences into a cohesive whole.” – Quinn.
Ex: Non-profit organizations such as colleges face numerous rivals eagerly seeking the
same students.
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6. Define (a) Mission (b) Vision (c) Objectives (d) Values (e) Goals (f) Policies (g)
Procedures (h) Budgets (i) Programs (j) Tactics (k) Targets (l) Rules (m) Business
Ethics (n) Code of Ethics.
(a) Mission: A mission is the fundamental, unique purpose and direction that sets an
organization apart from other firms of its type and identifies the scope of the
organization’s operations in terms of products or services offered and markets served. It
tells who we are and what we do. It promotes a sense of shared expectations in
employees and communicates a public image to important stakeholder groups in the
organization’s task environment.
Ex: Mission statement of ONGC Ltd., “To be a world-class Oil and Gas company
integrated in energy business with dominant Indian leadership and global presence”.
(d) Values: Values are those which are considered to be desirable by individuals.
A value is a view of life and a judgment of what is desirable and which is a part of
a person’s personality and a group’s morale. Values set the tone for organizational
operations by defining what is considered right and wrong in the organization and
what the members of the organization think is important -
1. Communicate how employees should behave;
2. Build team spirit; and
3. Influence marketing efforts.
Ex: Benign attitude to labour, Service-mindedness is values.
(e) Goals: Goal is an open-ended statement of what one wants to accomplish with no
quantification of what is to be achieved and no time criteria for completion. It indicates a
desired future state that a firm attempts to realize. It should be precise and measurable
and address important issues.
Ex: A simple statement of “Increased profitability” is a goal.
(f) Policies: A policy is a broad guideline for decision-making that links the formulation
of strategy with its implementation. Firms use policies to make sure that employees
throughout the firm make decisions and take actions that support the firm’s mission,
objectives and strategies.
Ex: Policy of GE – “GE must be number one or two wherever it competes”.
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done. They typically detail the various activities that must be carried out in order to
complete the firm’s programs.
Ex: Infosys uses PRIDE (Process Repository @ Infosys for Driving excellence), an
online resource for its SOPs.
(k) Targets: Targets are operational plans which contribute to the achievement of the
objectives of strategic plans. They are short-term plans devised to achieve the objective
of a firm.
Ex: Target for a salesman in a home appliances industry is Rs. 1 lakh per month.
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Ex: While working in a company the workers should not whistle blow the secrets of the
company.
(m) Business Ethics: Ethics is defined as the discipline dealing with good and bad and
with moral duty and obligations. Business ethics is concerned with truth, justice and a
variety of aspects such as the expectations of society, fair competition, advertising, public
relations, social responsibilities, consumer autonomy and corporate behaviour at home
country and abroad. It encompasses the morality of issues in business.
Ex: Incorporating ethics in employee training.
(n) Code of Ethics: Code of Ethics specifies how an organization expects its employees
to behave while on the job. It is a useful way to promote ethical behaviour among
employees. The importance of Code of Ethics is that it-
* clarifies company expectations of employee conduct in various situations and
* makes clear that the company expects its people to recognize the ethical
dimensions in decisions and actions.
Ex: Reebok International has developed a set of production standards for the
manufacturers that supply the company with its athletic shoes on a contract basis.
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typically handled by middle and lower level managers, except when drastic company-
wide changes are needed. It is reviewed by top management from time to time.
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14. What is an Intended or Deliberate strategy?
An Intended strategy is the strategy a firm thought it was going to pursue. It is a planned
strategy and put into action. Intended strategy is strategy as conceived by the top
management team. It is the result of a process of negotiation, bargaining and compromise,
involving many individuals and groups within the organization. It is the set of intentional
acts that is contemplated and planned to accomplish a goal. An intended strategy is also
sometimes called a deliberate strategy.
Ex: “Research cooperations in America”, are not explicitly stated on either of the intended
strategies for Ciba or Sandoz.
Unrealized strategy: Unrealized strategies are strategies that do not become realized.
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17. What are the three broad factors that influence the success of a company? (OR)
What are the determinants of a company’s performance?
An Enterprise’s success mainly depends on three broad factors
The industry (it belongs to) – Some industries are profitable than others due
to industry attractiveness.
Ex: In the last decade software industry was more profitable than the
pharmaceutical industry.
The nation (it is located) – The country also influences the competitiveness
of companies based within the nation.
Ex: The world’s most successful pharmaceutical companies are located in
U.S.A. and Switzerland.
Company’s resources, capabilities and strategies – are the strongest
reasons for the success or failure of the firm.
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A ‘Triggering event’ is something that acts as a stimulus for a change in strategy. Some
possible triggering events are:
New CEO
External Intervention of a customer or lender
Threat of change in ownership
Performance gap and
Change in customer’s values or customer’s preference.
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is designed t deliver sustainable value to society at large as well as to shareholders. The
CSR theories and related approaches are classified into four groups:
Instrumentation Theory – The Corporation is seen as only an instrument
for wealth creation and its social activities are only a means to achieve
economic results.
Political Theory – The firm, with the power of Corporations in society
responsibly uses this power in the political arena.
Integrative Theory – The firm is focused on the satisfaction of social
demands.
Ethical Theory – Based on ethical responsibilities of Corporations to
society.
25. What are the responsibilities of a business firm according to Milton Friedman and
Archie Carroll?
The concept of Social Responsibility proposes that a private corporation has
responsibilities to society that extend beyond making a profit.
Friedman’s traditional view of Business responsibility
Friedman referred to social responsibility of business as a ‘fundamentally subversive
doctrine’ and stated that: “There is one and only one social responsibility of business- to
use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it stays
within the rule of the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition
without deception or fraud”.
Carroll’s four responsibilities of business
Archie Carroll proposes that managers of business organizations have four
responsibilities:
Economic Responsibilities of a business firm’s management is to produce goods and
services of value to society;
Legal Responsibilities are defined by governments in laws that maangment is expected to
obey;
Ethical Responsibilities of a firm’s management are to follow the generally held beliefs
about behavior in a society; and
Discretionary Responsibilities are the purely voluntary obligations a corporation
assumes.
PART – B
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2. How do the terms mission, objectives, strategies, programs, budgets, procedures
differ in the true sense? – Explain.
Meaning and definition of mission, objectives, strategies, programs, budgets and
procedures with examples and differences to be explained.
3. What are the different modes of Strategic decision-making and explain the process
of strategic decision-making?
Definition of strategy, decision-making and strategic decision-making – modes of
strategic decision-making like entrepreneurial, adaptive, planning and logical
incrementalism – 8 steps in strategic decision-making process – benefits of strategic
decision-making – conclusion.
6. What is Corporate Governance? Indicate how and why companies are embracing
Corporate Governance practices.
Definition of Corporate governance (CG) – features of Corporate governance – reasons
for companies embracing CG with examples – benefits of CG – conclusion.
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UNIT – 2 : COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
PART – A
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5. What is environmental scanning?
Environmental scanning is the monitoring, evaluating, and disseminating of information
from the external and internal environments to key people within the organization. It is an
important ongoing activity because it helps managers understand and oversee potential
changes in market demand, industry rivalry patterns, the rise of potential substitute
products, and general macro environmental forces that may have long-term effects on the
firm. It plays a key role in strategy formulation by analyzing the strengths, weaknesses,
opportunities and threats in the environment. A firm uses this tool to avoid strategic
surprise and to ensure its long-term health. There are two types of environmental
scanning- internal and external environmental scanning.
9. What do you mean by (a) Societal environment and (b) Task environment?
Societal environment: The societal environment includes general forces that do
not directly touch on the short-run activities of the organization but that can,
often do, influence its long-run decisions. They comprise:-
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Economic forces that regulate the exchange of materials, money, energy
and information;
Technological forces that generate problem-solving inventions;
Political-legal forces that allocate power and provide constraining and
protecting laws and regulations; and
Socio-cultural forces that regulate the values, mores and customs of
society.
Task environment: The task environment includes those elements or groups that
directly affect the corporation and in turn are affected by it. These are
governments, local communities, suppliers, competitors, customers, creditors,
employees/labour unions, special interest groups and trade associations. A
corporation’s task environment is typically the industry within which that firm
operates.
For ex: At Procter & Gamble (P&G), people from each of the brand management teams
work with key people from the sales, market research and purchasing departments and
prepare necessary reports useful for strategic decision-making.
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Defenders are companies with a limited product line that focus on improving the
efficiency of their existing operations. This cost orientations makes them unlikely
to innovate in new areas.
Prospectors are companies with fairly broad product lines that focus on product
innovation and market opportunities. This sales orientation makes them
somewhat inefficient. They tend to emphasize creativity over efficiency.
Analyzers are corporations that operate at least two different product- market
areas, one stable and one variable. In the stable areas, efficiency is emphasized.
In variable areas, innovation is emphasized.
Reactors are corporations that lack a consistent strategy– structure-culture
relationship. Their (often ineffective) responses to environmental pressures tend
to be piecemeal strategic changes.
This classification helps the managers to monitor the effectiveness of certain strategic
orientations and also to develop scenarios of future industry development.
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within that industry. They are usually determined by the economic and technological
characteristics of the industry and by the competitive weapons on which the firms in the
industry have built their strategies.
Ex: In the major home appliance industry, a firm must achieve low cost, typically by
building large manufacturing facilities dedicated to making multiple versions of one type
of appliance, such as washing machines.
19. Define (a) Resource (b) Competency (c) Capability (d) Core competence
(e) Distinctive competence.
(a) Resource: A Resource is an asset, competency, process, skill, or knowledge
controlled by the operation. A resource is strength if it provides a company with a
competitive advantage. It is something the firm does or has the potential to do
particularly well relative to the abilities of existing or potential competitors. A resource is
a weakness if it is something the corporation does poorly or doesn’t have the capacity to
do although its competitors have that capacity.
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Resources may be classified as:
Tangible resources such as land, buildings, plant & machinery, etc., and
Intangible resources such as brand names, reputation, patents, know-how, R&D,
etc.
(b) Competency: Competencies are those measurable or observable knowledge, skills,
abilities and other behaviors critical to success in a key job role or function.
By providing a more holistic view of all the important attributes for success of an
organization, a competency approach will improve the understanding of what it
really takes to perform well. Using competencies can create a foundation for high-
performance of the firm’s programs to attract, develop and retain the talent
needed to succeed in achieving a competitive advantage.
Ex: Reliance Industries competencies are its project management skills.
(c) Capability: Capabilities are skills which bring together resources and put
them to purposeful use. The organization’s structure and control system gives rise
to capabilities which are intangible. Capabilities are by-products of internal
operations and decision-making process of a company and it is difficult for
competitors to comprehend it. Capabilities are invisible to outsiders and rather
difficult to imitate.
Ex: General Motors investments in large sized cars served as a setback in shifting
their massive investments for low cost small sized cars made by Japanese
competitors.
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The focus of value chain analysis is to examine the corporation in the context of the
overall chain of value-creating activities, of which the firm may be only a small part.
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Differentiation strategies and
Focus strategies.
PART – B
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3. If your organization could get accurate answers to 12 questions about its
competitive environment, what questions would it ask?
Definition of environment – competitive environment – questions based on opportunities
and threats – answers through the organization’s strengths and weaknesses – conclusion.
10. Explain the impact of the Product life cycle on sources of competitive advantage.
Definition of competitive advantage – relationship between product life cycle and
competitive advantage with reference to each of the stage in product life cycle – merits
and demerits – conclusion.
UNIT – 3 : STRATEGIES
PART – A
1. Define (a) Functional Strategy (b) Business Strategy (c) Corporate Strategy (d)
Global Strategy (e) Marketing Strategy (f) Financial Strategy (g) R&D Strategy (h)
Operations Strategy (i) Purchasing Strategy (j) Logistics Strategy (k) HRM Strategy
(l) IS Strategy (m) Low-Cost Strategy (n) Differentiation Strategy (o) Focus Strategy
(p) Directional Strategy (q) Growth Strategy (r) Stability Strategy (s) Retrenchment
Strategy (t) Competitive strategy (u) Cooperative strategy.
(a) Functional Strategy: Functional strategy is the approach a functional area takes to
achieve corporate and business unit objectives and strategies by maximizing resource
productivity. It is concerned with developing and nurturing a distinctive competence to
provide a company or business unit with a competitive advantage. Each business unit has
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its own set of departments, each with its own functional strategy.
Ex: A business unit following a competitive strategy of differentiation through high-
quality needs a manufacturing functional strategy that emphasizes expensive, quality
assurance process over cheaper, high volume production; a human resource functional
strategy that emphasizes the hiring and training of a high skilled, but costly, workforce;
and a marketing functional strategy that emphasizes distribution channel “pull” using
advertising to increase consumer demand over “push” using promotional allowances to
retailers.
(b) Business Strategy: The plans and actions that firms devise to compete in a
given product/market scope or setting and asks the question “How do we compete
within an industry?” is a business strategy. It focuses on improving the
competitive position of a company’s business unit’s products or services within
the specific industry or market segment that the company or business unit serves.
It can be:
Competitive – battling against all competitors for advantage which includes Low-
cost leadership, Differentiation and Focus strategies; and/or
Cooperative – working with one or more competitors to gain advantage against
other competitors which includes Collusion and Strategic alliances.
Ex: Wet grinder companies like Shantha and Sowbhagya seeks differentiation in a
targeted market segment.
(c) Corporate Strategy: Plans and actions that firms need to formulate and
implement when managing a portfolio of businesses is a corporate strategy. It is
especially a critical issue when firms seek to diversify from their initial activities
or operations into new areas. It deals with three key issues facing the corporation
as a whole:-
The firm’s overall orientation growth, stability or retrenchment – Directional
strategy;
The industries or markets in which the firm competes through its products
and business units – Portfolio strategy;
The manner in which the management coordinates the activities, transfers
resources and cultivates capabilities among product lines and business units –
Parenting strategy.
Ex: In the textile industry, Arvind Mills and Raymonds have started investing big
money to strengthen their design and brand capabilities as a directional strategy.
(d) Global Strategy: is a strategy that seeks to achieve a high level of consistency
and standardization of products, processes and operations around the world;
coordination of the firm’s subsidiaries to achieve high interdependence and mutual
support. The key characteristics of a global strategy are:
Standardized products;
Global economies of scale in key components and activities;
Leverage technology across many markets; and
Global coordination of marketing and sales system wide.
Ex: IBM (Big Blue) develops and manufactures all of the computers in the world .
(e) Marketing Strategy: Marketing strategy defines how a firm can communicate with
the market efficiently in order to sell its products and services. It deals with four
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components, viz, product, price, place and promotion. These strategies help to determine
who will sell what, where, when, to whom, in what quantity and how.
Ex: For advertising and promotion, a firm can choose either a “push” or a “pull”
marketing strategy.
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DIVIDEND AND WORKING Dividend-payout ratio
CAPITAL MANAGEMENT Stability of dividends
Cash flow requirements
Credit policies
Credit limits, terms of repayment and
collection procedures
Payment timing and procedure
(g) R&D Strategy: R&D strategy deals with product and process innovation and
improvement. It also deals with the appropriate mix of different types of R&D (basic,
product or process) and with the question of how new technology should be accessed-
internal development, external acquisition or through strategic alliances. One of the R&D
choices is to be either a technological leader in which one pioneers an innovation or a
technological follower in which one imitates the products of competitors.
Ex: Nike Inc. spends more than most in the industry on R&D to differentiate the
performance of its athletic shoes from that of its competitors.
(h) Operations Strategy: Operations strategy determines how and where a product or
service is to be manufactured, the level of vertical integration in the production process,
and the deployment of physical resources. It should also deal with the optimum level of
technology the firm should use in its operations processes. The differences in national
conditions can lead to differences in product design and manufacturing facilities from one
country to another.
Ex: “Personal Pair” system introduced by Levi Strauss to combat the growing
competition from private label jeans is an example of mass customization.
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Job specialization
Plant safety
(i) Purchasing Strategy: Purchasing strategy deals with obtaining the raw materials,
parts and supplies needed to perform the operation function. The basic purchasing
choices are-
Multiple sourcing – the purchasing company orders a particular part from several
vendors;
Sole sourcing – the purchasing company orders a particular part from only one
supplier; and
Parallel sourcing – two suppliers are the sole suppliers of two different parts, but
they are also backup suppliers for other parts.
Key purchasing strategies are:-
Sources
Selection of suppliers and managing relations and
Acceptable forward buying level.
Ex: Hewlett-Packard enables its employees to buy office supplies from a standard set of
suppliers.
(j) Logistics Strategy: Logistics strategy deals with the flow of products into and out of
the manufacturing process. Three trends are evident-
Centralization – the headquarters group of a firm contains specialists with
expertise in different transportation modes such as rail, trucking or shipping.
They work across the entire firm to gain better contracts with transporters.
Ex: Union Carbide.
Outsourcing – Many firms are outsourcing logistics operations to reduce
costs and improve delivery time. Ex: HP contracted with Roadway logistics
to manage its inbound raw materials warehousing.
Internet – Many firms are using the internet to simplify their logistical
system. Ex: Ace Hardware created an online system for its retailers and
suppliers.
(k) HRM Strategy: HRM strategy addresses the issue of whether a company or business
unit should
hire a large number of low-skilled employees who receive low pay, perform
repetitive jobs, and most likely quit after a short-time or
hire skilled employees who receive relatively high pay and are cross-trained
to participate in self-managing work teams.
Business firms are experimenting with different category of workers, namely,
Part-time workers
Temporary employees and
Leasing of employees.
Companies are finding that having a diverse workforce can be a competitive advantage.
Ex: Avon was able to turn around its unprofitable inner-city markets by putting African
American and Hispanic managers in charge of marketing in these markets.
(l) IS Strategy: Information System strategies provide business units with competitive
advantage. Many companies are attempting to use information systems to form closer
relationships with both their customers and suppliers through sophisticated extranets.
Instant translation software enables workers to have online communication with
coworkers in other countries who use a different language. By practicing follow-the-sun
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management the project team members living in one country can pass their work to team
members in another country in which the work day is just beginning.
Ex: General Electric’s Trading Process Network allows suppliers to communicate with
GE purchasing managers.
(m) Low-Cost Strategy: is the ability of a company or a business unit to design, produce
and market a comparable product more efficiently than its competitors. It is a competitive
strategy based on the firm’s ability to provide products or services at lower cost than its
rivals. It is formulated to acquire a substantial cost advantage over other competitors that
can be passed on to consumers to gain a large market share. As a result the firm can earn
a higher profit margin that result from selling products at current market prices.
Ex: Whirlpool has successfully used a low-cost leadership strategy to build competitive
advantage.
(n) Differentiation Strategy: is the ability to provide unique and superior value to the
buyer in terms of product quality, special features or after-sale service. It is a competitive
strategy based on providing buyers with something special or unique that makes the
firm’s product or service distinctive. The customers are willing to pay a higher price for a
product that is distinct in some special way. Superior value is created because the product
is of higher quality and technically superior which builds competitive advantage by
making customers more loyal and less-price sensitive to a given firm’s product or service
Ex: Mercedes and BMW have successfully pursued differentiation strategies.
(o) Focus Strategy: is designed to help a firm target a specific niche within an industry.
Unlike both low-cost leadership and differentiation strategies that are designed to target a
broader or industry-wide market, focus strategies aim at a specific and typically small
niche. These niches could be a particular buyer group, a narrow segment of a given
product line, a geographic or regional market, or a niche with distinctive special tastes
and preferences.
Ex: Solectron is a highly specialized manufacturer of circuit boards used in PCs and other
electronic devices which has adopted a well-defined focus strategy.
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Ex: Motorola Inc. is spending large sums on product development to ensure future
returns.
(r) Stability Strategy: is a strategy chosen by a corporation to continue with its current
activities without any significant change in direction. It can be appropriate for a
successful corporation operating in a reasonably predictable environment. They are very
popular with small business owners who found a niche and are happy with success and
the manageable size of the firms. Stability strategies may be useful in the short run, but
they can be dangerous if followed for too long. Some of the stability strategies are-
Pause/Proceed with caution strategy is a decision to make only incremental
improvements;
No change strategy is a decision to do nothing new and continue with current
operations and policies for the foreseeable future; and
Profit strategy is a decision to artificially support profits by reducing
investment and other expenditures.
(t) Competitive strategy: is a business strategy which battles against all competitors on
the basis of low-cost or differentiate the products or services. Competitive strategies are
called generic strategies because they can be pursued by any type or size of business firm,
even by not-for-profit organizations, namely-
Low-cost strategy – is the ability of a company or business units to design,
produce and market a comparable product more efficiently than its
competitors;
Differentiation strategy – is the ability to provide unique and superior value
to the buyer in terms of product quality, special features or after-sale service;
Focus strategy – is designed to help a firm target a specific niche within an
industry.
(u) Cooperative strategy: is a business strategy by which a firm can work with one or
more competitors to gain advantage against other competitors within an industry. The
two general types of cooperative strategies are-
Collusion – active cooperation of firms within an industry to reduce output
and raise prices in order to get around the normal economic law of supply
and demand; and
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Strategic alliance – is a partnership of two or more corporations or business
units to achieve strategically significant objectives that are mutually
beneficial.
2. What is Outsourcing?
Outsourcing is purchasing from someone else a product or service that had been
previously provided internally. It is becoming an increasingly important part of strategic
decision-making and an important way to increase efficiency and often quality. The key
to outsourcing is to purchase from outside only those activities that are not key to the
company’s distinctive competencies. A firm should consider outsourcing any activity or
function that has low potential for competitive advantage.
Ex: DuPont outsourced project engineering and design to Morrison Knudsen.
3. What do you mean (a) Merger (b) Acquisition (c) Joint Venture (d) Vertical
Integration (e) Horizontal Integration (f) Concentric Diversification (g)
Conglomerate Diversification (h) Bankruptcy/Liquidation (i) Horizontal strategy (j)
Corporate Parenting Strategy (k)Horizontal growth (l) Vertical growth (m)
Turnkey operations (n) Takeover.
(a) Merger: is defined as any transaction through which two or more firms integrate
their operations on a relatively co-equal basis in which stock is exchanged, but from
which only one firm survives. It refers to any transaction that forms one economic unit
from two or more previous ones. Mergers can be classified as-
Horizontal merger – is a merger between two or more firms involved in the same
kind of business activity. Ex: Merger between oil giants Exxon and Mobil.
Vertical merger – takes place when one firm acquires another firm that is in the
same industry but at a different stage of production. Ex: Merger between Pharma
company Merck & Co and the drug distributor, Medco Containment Services.
Conglomerate merger – takes place when two firms from unrelated business
activities merge. Ex: Merger of Tenneco and Textron. Conglomerate mergers may
be-
Product-extension merger – two firms in a related business activity merge to
broaden the product line of firms;
Geographic extension merger – two firms operating in non-overlapping
geographic areas merge;
Pure conglomerate merger – two firms from unrelated business activities merge.
(c) Joint Venture: is a cooperative business activity, formed by two or more separate
organizations for strategic purposes, that creates an independent business entity and
allocates ownership, operational responsibilities and financial risks and rewards to each
member, while preserving their separate identity/autonomy. It involves collaboration
rather than mere exchange and it creates value by bringing in money, skill and expertise.
Ex: Ford with Mahindra & Mahindra.
(d) Vertical Integration: is the degree to which a firm operates vertically in multiple
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locations on an industry’s value chain from extracting raw materials to
manufacturing to retailing. More specifically, assuming a function previously
provided by a supplier is called Backward integration.
Ex: Purchase of Pentasia Chemicals by Asian Paints Ltd. for the chemicals required for
the manufacturing of paints.
Assuming a function previously provided by a distributor is labeled Forward integration.
Ex: Arvind Mills expanded its business to make and market its own branded
pants and shirts.
(g) Conglomerate Diversification: is a strategy that expands the firm’s operations into
industries and markets that are not similar or related to the firm’s initial base of
functional or skill-based interrelationship. It does not involve sharing the firm’s
distinctive competence across different lines of business.
Ex: Intel’s moves to establish a web-hosting business.
(h) Bankruptcy/Liquidation:
Bankruptcy is a retrenchment strategy that involves giving up management of the firm to
the courts in return for some settlement of the corporation’s obligations. Top
management
hopes that once the court decides the claims of the company, the company will be
stronger and better able to compete in a more attractive industry.
Ex: Global Trust Bank (GTB) became in 2004 and was merged with a public sector bank,
Oriental Bank of Commerce.
Liquidation is the termination of the firm. Because the industry is unattractive and the
company too weak to be sold as a going concern, management may choose to convert as
many saleable assets as possible to cash, which is then distributed to the shareholders
after all obligations are paid. The benefit of liquidation over bankruptcy is that the board
of directors, as representatives of the shareholders, together with top management make
the decisions instead of turning them over to the court, which may choose to ignore
shareholders completely.
Ex: Precision Thermoforming & Packaging (PTP) was a successful company whose
prospective customer was America Online (AOL). When AOL failed to pay the amount
for its order placed with PTP, PTP went out of its business as it could not pay the debtors
and awaited the result of the lawsuit.
(i) Horizontal strategy: is a corporate strategy that cuts across business unit boundaries
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to build synergy across business units and to improve the competitive position of one or
more business units. When used to build synergy, it acts like a parenting strategy. When
used to improve the competitive position of one or more business units, it can be thought
of as a corporate competitive strategy. It is developed to coordinate the various goals and
strategies of related business units.
Ex: P&G, HLL and Nirma compete with one another in the consumer soap products.
Nirma competes with the high-share lux brand of HLL and inturn HLL competes with the
low-share brand of Nirma. Once Nirma had perceived HLL’s response, it might choose to
stop challenging lux so that HLL stops challenging Nirma’s detergent soap.
(j) Corporate Parenting Strategy: is a corporate strategy that views a firm in terms
of resources and capabilities that can be used to build business unit as well as generate
synergies across business units. It focuses on the core competencies of the parent
corporation and on the value created from the relationship between the parent and its
businesses. If there is a good fit between the parent’s skills and resources and the needs
and opportunities of the business units, the corporation is likely to create value. If
however there is not a good fit, the corporation is likely to destroy value. This approach
to corporate strategy is useful not only in deciding what new businesses to acquire, but
also in choosing how each business unit should be managed.
Ex: Success of GE is by imposing tough standards of profitability around GE’s empire.
(k)Horizontal growth: can be achieved by expanding the firm’s products into other
geographic locations and/or by increasing the range of products and services offered
to current markets. The company expands sideways at the same location on the industry’s
value chain.
Ex: Ranbaxy Labs followed this strategy to extend its pharmaceutical business to Europe
and to USA.
(l) Vertical growth: can be achieved by taking over a function previously provided
by a supplier or by a distributor. The company grows by making its own supplies
and/or by distributing its own products. This growth can be achieved either by internally
by expanding current operations or externally through acquisitions.
Ex: Cisco systems, maker of internet hardware chose to vertical growth by purchasing
Radiata Inc., a maker of chip sets for wireless networks.
(m) Turnkey operations: are typically contracts for the construction of operating
facilities in exchange for a fee. The facilities are transferred to the host country or firm
when they are complete. The customer is usually a government agency that has decreed
that a particular product must be locally produced and under its control.
Ex: ECC (an L&T Company) built a urea prilling tower and storage silo for State
Fertilizer Manufacturing Corporation of Sri Lanka.
(n) Takeover: refers to the acquisition of a certain block of paid-up equity capital of
a company with the intention of acquiring control over the affairs of the company. It is
used as a method for expansion. If the management accepts the takeover, it is considered
a smooth or friendly takeover. If the management resists it, it is considered a hostile
takeover.
Ex: HLL’s takeover of TOMCO is a smooth takeover.
India Cement’s effort to takeover Raasi Cements is a hostile takeover.
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4. What is Strategic alliance?
A Strategic alliance is a partnership of two or more corporations or business units to
achieve strategically significant objectives that are mutually beneficial. It may take the
form of formal joint venture or short-term contractual agreement with equity participation
or issue-based participation. It is a cooperative agreement between potential or actual
competitors.
Ex: strategic alliance between General Motors and Toyota to assemble automobiles.
6. What is SBU?
Some firms find it difficult in controlling their divisional operations because of the
increase in diversity, size and number of divisional units. So, it becomes a tough task for
the corporate management to evaluate and control its numerous units, to improve strategy
implementation, promote synergy and gain greater control the diverse business interests,
it may become essential to add another layer of management when corporate
management finds difficulty managing the organization. This can be successfully
achieved by grouping various divisions in terms of common strategic elements. These
groups are commonly called Strategic Business Units (SBUs) and are usually structure
based on the independent segments of the product or market served by the firm. An SBU
may be of any size or level, but it must have
A unique mission
Identifiable competitors
An external market focus and
Control of its business functions.
Ex: General Electric faced with massive sales growth divided its 48 divisions into 6
SBUs.
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Internal business perspective and
Innovation and learning perspective.
(b) Vertical expansion: is the degree to which a firm operates vertically in multiple
locations on an industry’s value chain from extracting raw materials to manufacturing to
retailing. More specifically, assuming a function previously provided by a supplier is
called Backward integration.
Ex: Purchase of Pentasia
Chemicals by Asian Paints Ltd. for the chemicals required for the manufacturing of
paints.
Assuming a function previously provided by a distributor is labeled Forward integration.
Ex: Arvind Mills expanded its business to make and market its own branded
pants and shirts.
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considered a hostile takeover.
Ex: India Cement’s effort to takeover Raasi Cements is a hostile takeover.
18. Define (a) Embryonic industry (b) Growth industry (c) Shakeout industry (d)
Mature industry (e) Declining industry.
(a) Embryonic industry:
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(b) Growth industry:
(c) Shakeout industry:
(d) Mature industry:
(e) Declining industry:
PART – B
1. Business units have a choice of three generic strategies. Explain these strategies.
Definition of generic strategy – types of generic strategies – merits and demerits of each
of low cost, differentiation and focus strategies – conclusion.
3. “Joint Ventures are emerging as the best tool for reaching new markets”. -
Comment.
Definition of joint venture – entry approach to new markets – reasons for choosing joint
ventures – merits and demerits of JVs – conclusion.
PART – A
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Strategy implementation is the sum total of the activities and choices required for the
execution of a strategic plan. It is the process by which strategies and policies are put into
action through the development of programs, budgets and procedures. To begin the
implementation process three aspects are to be considered:
People who will carry out the strategic plan;
The alignment of the company’s operations in the new intended direction; and
Everyone is going to work together to do what is needed.
Ex: Arvind mills showed how a good strategy can result in disaster through poor strategy
implementation.
(b) Integration: Integration is the means by which a firm tries to coordinate people
and functions to accomplish organizational tasks. In order to promote coordination
between functions and divisions, integration and control systems are established.
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regarding span of control. Span of control means the number of subordinates controlled
by
a manager effectively. Two types of structure emanates from span of control-
Flat structure – few hierarchical levels
Tall structure – too many levels.
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Signs,
Socialization symbols and Rites and Norms and Organizational
tactics stories ceremonies values rewards
Organizational Culture
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Ex: This structure is used in construction, aerospace and high-tech industries.
16. Define (a) Behavior control (b) Input control (c) Output control.
(a) Behavior control: Controls can be established to focus on actual performance
results (output), the activities that generate the performance (behavior), or on
resources that are used in performance (input). Behavior controls (such as following
company procedures, making sales calls to potential customers, and getting to work on
time) specify how something is to be done through policies, rules, standard operating
procedures and orders from a superior. They are most appropriate when performance
results are hard to measure but the cause-effect connection between activities and results
is clear.
Ex: ISO 9000 standards series on quality management and assurance.
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(b) Input control: Controls can be established to focus on actual performance
results (output), the activities that generate the performance (behavior), or on
resources that are used in performance (input). Input controls (such as number of years of
education and experience) focus on resources such as knowledge, skills, abilities, values
and motives of employees. They are most appropriate when output is difficult to measure
and there is no clear cause-effect relationship between behavior and performance.
Ex: College teaching.
17. What is (a) Shareholder value (b) Economic Value Added (EVA) (c) Market Value
Added (MVA)?
(a) Shareholder value: can be defined as the present value of the anticipated future
stream of cash flows from the business plus the value of the company if liquidated.
Shareholder value analysis concentrates on cash flow as the key measure of performance.
The value of the corporation is thus the value of its cash flows discounted back to their
present value, using the business’s cost of capital as the discount rate. As long as the
returns from a business exceed its cost of capital, the business will create value and be
worth more than the capital invested in it.
(b) Economic Value Added (EVA): has become an extremely popular shareholder value
method of measuring corporate and divisional performance and may be on its way to
replacing ROI (Return On Investment) as the standard performance measure. EVA
measures the difference between the pre-strategy and post-strategy value for the business.
EVA is after-tax operating income minus the total annual cost of capital and is given by-
EVA = After-tax operating income – (Investment in assets (+ or -) Weighted average cost
of capital)
(c) Market Value Added (MVA): is the difference between market value of a
corporation and the capital contributed by shareholders and lenders. Like net present
value, it measures the stock market’s estimate of the net present value of a firm’s past and
expected capital investment projects. MVA is the present value of future EVA. To
calculate MVA:
Add all the capital – Shareholders, bondholders and retained earnings.
Firm’s total capital is the actually investments in future earnings.
Using the current stock price, total the value of all outstanding stock, adding it to the
company’s debt. This is the company’s market value.
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expenses) to produce a service or a product (measured in terms of volume or revenues).
There are five major types of responsibility centers namely,
Standard cost centers
Revenue centers
Expense centers
Profit centers and
Investment centers.
PART – B
4. How can a corporate keep sliding into the decline stage of the organizational life
cycle?
Definition of organization, organization life cycle – stages of organization life cycle –
emphasis on decline stage of organization life cycle with an example – conclusion.
5. Explain the steps in control process and various types of control system.
Definition of strategic control – types of control – steps in control process – explain with
suitable examples – conclusion.
6. What are some ways to implement a retrenchment strategy without creating a lot of
resentment and conflict with Labour unions?
Definition of retrenchment strategy – reasons for implementing this strategy – employees
to be made known about the outcome of this strategy – resolution of conflict with labour
unions – conclusion.
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Definition of generic competitive strategy, strategy formulation and strategy
implementation – types of generic competitive strategies – meaning of conflict and
politics – how strategies are affected by conflict and politics – conclusion.
PART – A
5. Define Reengineering.
Reengineering is the radical redesign of business processes to achieve major gains in
cost, service or time. It is not in itself a type of structure, but it is an effective way to
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implement a turnaround strategy. It strives to break away from the old rules and
procedures and become ingrained in every organization over the years. These may be a
combination of policies, rules and procedures that have never been seriously questioned
because they were established years earlier. These rules of organization and work design
were based on assumptions about technology, people and organizational goals that may
no longer be relevant.
Ex: Mossville Engine center, a business unit of Caterpillar Inc., used reengineering to
decrease process cycle times by 50%.
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Ex: Northern Telecom purchase Bay networks and formed Nortel networks that produced
shortened product life cycles and innovative new products.
14. What are the characteristics of an Entrepreneur? (OR) What are the
entrepreneurial characteristics to new venture’s success?
An entrepreneur is a strategist as he plans, organizes and manages a business undertaking
and takes risks for the sake of survival and growth. The success of an enterprise is closely
related to the entrepreneurial traits of a businessman. The characteristics of an
entrepreneur or successful entrepreneurial characteristics to new venture’s success are:
Ability to identify potential venture opportunities
High need for achievement
Detailed knowledge about key functions to success in the industry and
Network with outsiders to supplement their skills, knowledge and abilities.
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themselves or are adapted to meet ends other than those for which they are intended. Two
types of goal displacement are:
Behaviour substitution – refers to a phenomenon when people substitute activities that do
not lead to goal accomplishment for activities that do lead to goal accomplishment
because the wrong activities are being rewarded.
Suboptimization – refers to a phenomenon when a unit optimizes its goal accomplishment
to the detriment of the organization as a whole.
PART – B
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2. How should a small entrepreneurial company engage in environmental scanning?
To what aspects of the environment should management pay most attention?
Definition of a small entrepreneurial company – environmental scanning (internal and
external environments) – entrepreneur’s characteristics affect the survival and growth –
conclusion.
5. How can a company develop Corporate Entrepreneurship culture? (OR) How can a
company develop an Entrepreneurial culture?
Definition of corporate entrepreneurship, corporate entrepreneurship culture – how a
company develops entrepreneurial culture – merits and demerits – conclusion.
7. What is technology research and how does it differ from market research?
Definition of technology research, market research – differences between technology and
market research – give examples – conclusion.
8. In terms of Strategic Management, how does a new venture’s situation differ from
that of an ongoing small company?
Definition of a small company and entrepreneurial venture – differences between small
company and entrepreneurial venture – conclusion.
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