By : Darmadi D.. LOW INTENSITY COMPETITION MODERATE COMPETITION HIGH INTENSITY COMPETITION EXTREME...
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Transcript of By : Darmadi D.. LOW INTENSITY COMPETITION MODERATE COMPETITION HIGH INTENSITY COMPETITION EXTREME...

By : Darmadi D.

LOW INTENSITY COMPETITION
MODERATE COMPETITION
HIGH INTENSITYCOMPETITION
EXTREMECOMPETITION
HYPERCOMPETITION
COMPETITIONAVOIDANCE
NOCOMPETITION
PERFECTCOMPETITION
MONOPOLY
PERFECTCOMPETITION
SCHUMPETERIANCOMPETITION
(SEVERAL PLAYER)
PERFECTCOMPETITION
ABNORMAL PROFIT /
NO PROFIT /LOSS
INTERMITTENTOR
LOW PROFIT
SUSTAINABLEPROFIT
EXCESSIVEPROFIT
TYPES THE TREND
DIFFERENT LEVELS OF COMPETITION WITHIN AN INDUSTRY

CARA LAMA MELIHAT CA IALAH DALAM STATIC
VIEWS
4 KEY AREAS OF COMPETITION :
PRICE & QUALITY
TIMING & KNOW HOW
STRONGHOLDS
DEEP POCKETS

SIMPLES VIEW OF CA : FIRMS COMPETE ON EFFICIENCY (AFFECTING COSTS & REDUCING PRICE)
PROFITS ARE DERIVED FROM 2 SOURCES :
A. MINIMIZING COSTS OR INCREASING PRICE TO INCREASE MARGINS
B. INCREASING SALES VOLUME TO IMPROVE CAPACITY UTILIZATION & SPREAD F.C. OVER GREATER
VOLUME
P = COST LEADERSHIP
P QUALITY = PRODUCT DIFF

STATIC VIEW = FIRST ENTRY & TECHNOLOGY
DYNAMIC VIEW = PESAING MASUK DGN TECH YG
LEBIH MAJU
STATIC VIEW = MEMBATASI JUMLAH PESAING DALAM
DAERAH KEKUASAAN TERTENTU DGN
CREATE ENTRY BARRIER
HIGH
DYNAMIC VIEW = RUNTUH

STATIC VIEW : MENGGUNAKAN SUMBER DAYA YG LEBIH BANYAK
BANYAK PILIHAN MENJINAKKAN SMALL CO
DYNAMIC VIEW : KEUNGGULAN AKAN HILANG IF COMPETITORS
MEMBENTUK ALIANSI & MENGUMPULKAN RESOURCES
MELAWAN YG DEEP POCKETS

1. EVERY ADVANTAGE IS ERODED
LAUN
CH
EXPLOITATIONCOUNTERATTACK
PROFIT FROM SUSTAINED
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
TIME (YEARS) 10

2. SUSTAINING ADVANTAGE CAN BE A DEADLY DISTRACTION
TRYING TO SUSTAIN AN EXISTING ADVANTAGE
= HARVEST STRATEGY VS GROWTH STRATEGY
HANYA MEMANFAATKAN ASSET
TIDAK MENCARI ASSET BARU
MEMBERIKAN OPPORTUNITY TO COMPETITOR UTK
MEMPERKUAT DIRI & MENDAPATKAN NEW
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE

3. THE GOAL IS DISRUPTION, NOT SUSTAINING ADVANTAGE
THE PRIMARY GOAL = DISRUPTION OF THE STATUS
QUO, TO SEIZE THE INITIATIVE THROUGH CREATING
A SERIES OF TEMPORARY ADVANTAGES
ONE STEP AHEAD OF THEIR COMPETITOR
FROM ONE TEMPORARY ADV TO NEXT TEMPORARY
ADVANTAGE

4. SEIZING THE INITIATIVE WITH A SERIES OF SMALL STEPS
AS COMPETITIVE CYCLES HAVE SHORTENED, THE NEED TO RAPIDLY DEVELOP NEW ADVANTAGE HAS INCREASED
TIDAK MUNGKIN MEMIKIRKAN STRATEGI UTK 5 ATAU 10 YEARS
PENTING SERENTETAN LANGKAH-LANGKAH PENDEK YG AKAN DIAMBIL BERURUTAN

5 10 15
ETC
FIRM HAS ALREADY MOVED ON TO ADVANTAGE NO.2
A SERIES OF SHORT LIVED ACTIONS ADD UP TO A SUSTAINED
ADVANTAGE
PROFIT FROM A
SERIES OF REPLICABLE ACTIONS

PANDANGAN DINAMIS
KEUNTUNGAN YANG DIPEROLEH BAIK LEWAT HARGA / MUTU
BERTAHAN LAMA PESAING MUNCUL DENGAN PRODUK LEBIH BERMUTU
OR HARGA LEBIH RENDAH
≠

1. DYNAMIC STRATEGIC INTERACTIONS
AKSI INTERAKSI
LANGKAH COUNTERMOVE
LAMA-LAMA TOUGH COMPETITION

2. STRATEGY IS RELATIVE
B2
A
B1IS POSITION A
THE LOW-COST PRODUCERS ?
DEPENDS ON COMPETITOR
TIDAK ADA YANG MUTLAKHIGH
LOW
LOW
HIGH
PR
ICE
PERCEIVED QUALITY“STRATEGIC RELATIVISM”

3.THE TREND IN THE 4 ARENA OF COMPETITION
TRAJECTORIES IN 4 ARENA
TIDAK HANYA RELATIF TERHADAP PESAING
TAPI JUGA DILIHAT DALAM KONTEKS SEJARAH INI INTERAKSI YG DILAKUKAN PARA PESAING
PESAING JUGA MAMPU MEMPROYEKSIKAN KECENDERUNGAN JK PANJANG UTK MEMAHAMI
ARAH PERSAINGAN
GOOD VS BAD
CLOSE VS DISTANT
STRONG VS WEAK

1. SUPERIOR STAKEHOLDER SATISFACTION
2. STRATEGIC SOOTHSAYING
* PROSES MENCARI PENGETAHUAN BARU UTK CREATE NEW
OPP 1 -2 = VISION SETTING
3. POSITIONING FOR SPEED
4. POSITONING FOR SURPRISE
5. SHIFTING THE RULES OF COMPETITION
6. SIGNALING STRATEGIC INTENT
7. SIMULTANEOUS & SEQUENTIAL STRATEGIC THRUSTS
TINDAKAN YANG SERENTAK & BERURUTAN

VISION FOR DISRUPTIONIdentifying & creating
opportunities for temporary advantage through
understanding
• Stakeholder satisfaction
• Strategic soothsaying
Directed at identifying new ways to serve existing
customers better or new customers that no one else
serves now
CAPABILITY FOR DISRUPTIONSustaining the momentum by
developing flexible capacities for :
• Speed
• Surprise
That can be applied across many actions to bulk a series of temporary
advantages
TACTICS FOR DISRUPTION
Seizing the initiative to gain advantage by
• Shifting the rules
• Signaling
• Simultaneous & sequential strategic thrusts
With actions that shape, mold, or influence the
direction or nature of the competitors’ responses
Market Disruption
DISRUPTING MARKETS & SEIZING THE
INITIATIVE

FIGURE 9 – 6
DYNAMIC 7-S ANALYSIS : SWATCH VS TIMEX
S-1 Stakeholder satisfaction
S-2 Strategic soothsaying
S-3 Speed
S-4 Surprise
S-5 Shifting the rules
Swatch redefined quality as a design variety, low cost, & excitement rather than Timex’s reliability.
Swatch seized the opp for increasing emphasis on fashion & defined fashion trends in the watch industry
Swatch process innovations allowed frequent new product changes
Swatch’s wide range of new products & constant creativity made the company extremely unpredictable, making it hard for competitors to keep up
Swatch shifted watch quality from timekeeping to fashion. It shifted distribution fro jewelers to department stores, where it went head-to-head with Timex & squeezed Timex out of some stores

S-6 Signaling
S-7 Simultaneous & sequential strategic thrusts
Swatch used product announcements & publicized shifts into new markets such as phone to emphasize its strategic intent & aggressiveness but to keep competitors guessing about its true intentions
Moving in several directions at once, Swatch-maker SMH has attacked through innovations at the high end (Omega) & low end at the same time. It has used a sequential strategy of building strength in watches & then applying its know-how & resources to other products – even automobiles. It ha also moved in so many different directions in its product line that it has been impossible for Timex to react or keep up

FIGURE 9 - 4
DYNAMIC 7-S ANALYSIS : seiko vs swiss watchmakers
S-1 Stakeholder satisfaction
S-2 Strategic soothsaying
S-3 Speed
Most Swiss watchmakers were convinced that customers wanted mechanical, handcrafted watches rather than highly accurate timepieces. Seiko & other quartz watchmakers understood that customers were more concerned about accurate time than internal works
Swiss watchmakers had the technology to move into quartz but not the vision to see that the future of watchmaking would be in quartz watches. But Seiko recognized quartz as the future of watchmaking & saw an opp to seize the initiative
The heavy investment & traditions of the Swiss made most of them slow to respond, even when it was clear quartz watches were a threat

S-4 Surprise
S-5 Shifting the rules
The innovativeness of Seiko & other quartz watch manufacturers caught the Swiss watchmakers by surprise. Also they didn’t expect their competition to come from Japan
The rules of competition shifted from handcraft, mechanical watchmaking to high-tech, mass-produced quartz watches
Seiko & other companies signaled their intent to move aggressively into the markets held by the Swiss
With the advent of quartz watches & nearly simultaneous introduction or digital watches, Swiss makers were hit by competition from 2 directions that may have further slowed their response
S-6 Signaling
S-7 Simultaneous & sequential strategic thrusts

TO SHIFT FOCUS TOWARD KNOWLEDGE & SKILLS RELEVANT TO :
1. Launching multiple unsustainable initiatives
2. Using them to “outmaneuver” the old competitive position of rivals by taking advantage of the dynamic & relativistic properties of strategic positioning
IMPLICATION FOR THEORY, MANAGEMENT, & POLICY
The Twilight of traditional strategic doctrines : Chivalry is dead