Chapter Eight - California State University,...
Transcript of Chapter Eight - California State University,...
1/16/2009
1
Slide content created by Charlie Cook, The University of West Alabama
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Chapter Eight
Managing Strategy
and Strategic
Planning
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–2
Learning ObjectivesAfter studying this chapter, you should be able to:
1. Discuss the components of strategy, types of strategic alternatives, and the distinction between strategy formulation and strategy implementation.
2. Describe how to use SWOT analysis in formulating strategy.
3. Identify and describe various alternative approaches to business-level strategy formulation.
4. Describe how business-level strategies are implemented.
5. Identify and describe various alternative approaches to corporate-level strategy formulation.
6. Describe how corporate-level strategies are implemented.
7. Discuss international and global strategies.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–3
The Nature of Strategic
Management• Strategy
– A comprehensive plan for accomplishing an organization’s goals.
• Strategic Management
– A way of approaching business opportunities and challenges aimed at formulating and implementing effective strategies.
• Effective Strategies
– Strategies that promote a superior alignment between the organization and its environment and the achievement of its goals.
1/16/2009
2
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–4
Components of Strategy
• Distinctive Competence
– Something an organization does exceptionally well.
• Scope
– Range of markets in which an organization will compete.
• Resource Deployment
– How an organization will distribute its resources across the areas in which it competes.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–5
Types of Strategic Alternatives
• Business-Level Strategy
– The set of strategic alternatives that an
organization chooses from as it conducts business
in a particular industry or a particular market.
• Corporate-Level Strategy
– The set of strategic alternatives that an
organization chooses from as it manages its
operations simultaneously across several
industries and several markets.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–6
Strategy Formulation and
Implementation
• Strategy Formulation
– The set of processes involved in creating or
determining the organization’s strategies; it
focuses on the content of strategies.
• Strategy Implementation
– The methods by which strategies are
operationalized or executed within the
organization; it focuses on the processes through
which strategies are achieved.
1/16/2009
3
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–7
Strategy Formulation and
Implementation (cont’d)
• Deliberate Strategy
– A plan, chosen and implemented to support specific goals, that is the result of a rational, systematic, and planned process of strategy formulation and implementation.
• Emergent Strategy
– A pattern of action that develops over time in the absence of goals or missions, or despite goals and missions.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–8
Figure 8.1: SWOT ANALYSIS
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–9
Using SWOT Analysis to
Formulate Strategy• Evaluating Organizational Strengths
– Organizational strengths• are skills and abilities enabling an organization to
conceive of and implement strategies.
– Common organizational strengths• are organizational capabilities possessed by numerous
competing firms.
– Distinctive competencies• are useful for competitive advantage and superior
performance.
– Imitation of distinctive competencies• is duplicating another firm’s distinctive competence.
1/16/2009
4
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–10
Using SWOT Analysis to
Formulate Strategy (cont’d)• Evaluating Organizational Strengths (cont’d)
– Sustained competitive advantage• occurs when a distinctive competence cannot be easily
duplicated.
• is what remains after all attempts at strategic imitations have ceased.
– Strategic imitation is difficult when:• Distinctive competence is based on unique historical
circumstances.
• Competitors do not understand the nature or character of a firm’s competence.
• The competence is based on a complex phenomenon, such as organizational culture.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–11
Using SWOT Analysis to
Formulate Strategy (cont’d)• Evaluating Organizational Weaknesses
– Organizational weaknesses• Skills and capabilities that do not enable an organization
to choose and implement strategies that support its mission.
– Weaknesses can be overcome by:• investments to obtain the strengths needed.
• modification of the organization’s mission so it can be accomplished with the current workforce.
– Competitive disadvantage• A situation in which an organization fails to implement
strategies being implemented by competitors.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–12
Using SWOT Analysis to
Formulate Strategy (cont’d)
• Evaluating an Organization’s
Opportunities and Threats
– Organizational opportunities
• Areas in the organization’s environment that
may generate high performance.
– Organizational threats
• Are areas in the organization’s environment
that make it difficult for the organization to
achieve high performance.
1/16/2009
5
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–13
Formulating
Business-Level Strategies• Porter’s Generic Strategies
– Differentiation strategy• An organization seeks to distinguish itself from
competitors through the quality of its products or services.
– Overall cost leadership strategy• An organization attempts to gain competitive advantage
by reducing its costs below the costs of competing firms.
– Focus strategy• An organization concentrates on a specific regional
market, product line, or group of buyers.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–14
Table 8.1: Porter’s
Generic Strategies
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–15
Table 8.2: The Miles
and Snow Typology
1/16/2009
6
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–16
Figure 8.2: The
Product Life Cycle
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–17
Implementing Business-Level
Strategies (cont’d)• Implementing Miles and Snow’s Strategies
– Prospector• Encourage creativity to seek out new market
opportunities and to take risks.
• Develop the flexibility to meet changing market conditions by decentralizing its organizational structure.
– Defender• Focus on defending its current markets by lowering its
costs and/or improving the performance of current products.
– Analyzer• Incorporate elements of both the prospector and the
defender strategies maintain business and to be somewhat innovative.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–18
Implementing Business-Level
Strategies (cont’d)• Implementing Porter’s Generic Strategies
– Differentiation• Marketing and sales must emphasize high-quality, high-
value image of the organization’s products or services.
– Overall Cost Leadership• Marketing and sales focus on simple product attributes
and how these product attributes meet customer needs in a low-cost and effective manner.
– Focus• Either differentiation or cost leadership, depending on
which one is the proper basis for competing in or for a specific market segment, product category, or group buyers.
1/16/2009
7
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–19
Formulating Corporate-Level
Strategies
• Strategic Business Units
– Each business or group of businesses within an
organization is engaged in serving the same
markets, customers, or products.
• Diversification
– The number of businesses an organization is
engaged in and the extent to which these
businesses are related to one another
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–20
Formulating Corporate-Level
Strategies (cont’d)
• Single-Product Strategy
– An organization manufactures one product or
service and sells it in a single geographic market.
• Related Diversification
– A strategy in which an organization operates in
several different businesses, industries, or
markets that are somehow linked.
– Avoids the disadvantages and risks of a single-
product strategy.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–21
Table 8.3: Bases of
Relatedness in Implementing
Related Diversification
1/16/2009
8
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–22
Formulating Corporate-Level
Strategies (cont’d)• Advantages of Related Diversification
– Reduces an organization’s dependence on any one of its business activities and thus reduces economic risk.
– Reduces overhead costs associated with managing any one business through economies of scale and economies of scope.
– Allows an organization to exploit its strengths and capabilities in more than one business.
– Synergy exists among a set of businesses when the businesses’ value together is greater than their economic value separately.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–23
Formulating Corporate-Level
Strategies (cont’d)• Unrelated Diversification
– An organization operates multiple businesses that are not logically associated with one another.
– Advantages• Stable of performance over time due to business cycle
differences among the multiple businesses.
• Allocation of resources to areas with the highest return potentials to maximize corporate performance.
– Disadvantages• Poor performance due to the complexity of managing a
diversity of businesses.
• Failing to exploit key synergies puts the firm at a competitive disadvantage to firms with related diversification strategies.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–24
Implementing Corporate-Level
Strategies• Becoming a Diversified Firm
– Internal development of new products• Developing products and services within the boundaries
of traditional business operations.
– Replacement of suppliers and customers• Backward vertical integration
– Beginning a business that furnishes resources previously handled by a supplier.
• Forward vertical integration
– Beginning a business previously handled by an intermediary and selling more directly to customers.
1/16/2009
9
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–25
Implementing Corporate-Level
Strategies (cont’d)• Becoming a Diversified Firm (cont’d)
– Merger• Purchase of one firm by another firm of approximately
the same size.
– Acquisition• Purchase of a firm by another firm that is considerably
larger.
– Purposes of mergers and acquisitions• To diversify through vertical integration.
• To acquire complementary products or services linked by a common technology and common customers.
• To create or exploit synergies that reduce the combined organizations’ costs of doing business to increase revenues.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–26
Managing Diversification
• Major Tools for Managing Diversification
– Organization structure• A detailed discussion of organization structure is
contained inChapter 12.
– Portfolio management techniques• Methods that diversified organizations use to make
decisions about what businesses to engage in and how to manage these multiple businesses to maximize corporate performance.
– Two important portfolio management techniques• The BCG Matrix
• The GE Business Screen
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–27
Managing Diversification
(cont’d)• BCG Matrix
– A method of evaluating businesses relative to the growth rate of their market and the organization’s share of the market.
– The matrix classifies the types of businesses that a diversified organization can engage as:
• ―Dogs‖ have small market shares and no growth prospects.
• ―Cash cows‖ have large shares of mature markets.
• ―Question marks‖ have small market shares in quickly growing markets.
• ―Stars‖ have large shares of rapidly growing markets.
1/16/2009
10
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–28
Figure 8.3: The BCG Matrix
Source: Perspectives, No. 66, ―The Product Portfolio.‖ Adapted by permission from The Boston Consulting Group, Inc., 1970.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–29
Managing Diversification
• GE Business Screen
– A method of evaluating business in a diversified portfolio along two dimensions, each of which contains multiple factors:
• Industry attractiveness.
• Competitive position (strength) of each firm in the portfolio.
– In general, the more attractive the industry and the more competitive a business is, the more resources an organization should invest in that business.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–30
Figure 8.4: The GE
Business Screen
1/16/2009
11
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–31
International and
Global Strategies• Developing International and Global
Strategies
– Global efficiencies• Location efficiencies—seeking lower input cost locations
• Economies of scale—larger facilities result in lower costs
• Economies of scope—broadening pro
– Multimarket flexibility• International businesses may respond to a change in one
country by implementing a change in another country.
– Worldwide learning• The diverse operating environments of multinational
corporations (MNCs) contribute to organizational learning that can be transferred to other operating environments.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–32
Strategic Alternatives for
International Business
• Home Replication
– Utilizing a core competency or firm specific
advantage developed at home as a main
competitive weapon in foreign markets.
• Multi-Domestic Strategy
– Managing a corporation as a collection of
independent operating subsidiaries frees it to
customize its products, its marketing campaigns,
and operating techniques to meet local customer
needs.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–33
Strategic Alternatives for
International Business (cont’d)• Global Strategy
– Viewing the world as a single marketplace and having as a primary goal the creation of standardized goods and services that will address the needs of customers worldwide.
• Transnational Strategy– Attempting to combine the benefits of scale
efficiencies pursued by a global corporation, with the benefits and advantages of local responsiveness of a multi-domestic corporation.
1/16/2009
12
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–34
Key Terms
• strategy
• strategic management
• distinctive competence
• scope
• resource deployment
• business-level strategy
• corporate-level strategy
• strategy formulation
• strategy implementation
• deliberate strategy
• emergent strategy
• SWOT
• organizational strength
• common strength
• strategic imitation
• sustained competitive advantage
• organizational weaknesses
• competitive disadvantage
• organizational threat
• organizational opportunity
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8–35
Key Terms (cont’d)• differentiation strategy
• overall cost leadership strategy
• focus strategy
• prospector strategy
• defender strategy
• analyzer strategy
• reactor strategy
• product life cycle
• diversification
• single-product strategy
• related diversification
• unrelated diversification
• backward vertical integration
• forward vertical integration
• merger
• acquisition
• BCG matrix
• GE Business Screen
• home replication strategy
• multidomestic strategy
• global strategy
• transnational strategy