Title: ACCA
1- ACCA
- Strategic Business Planning Development
- Lecture 7
- Strategic Options
2Learning Outcomes
At the end of this lecture, you will
- Understand the meaning of Corporate Appraisal
- Be able to identify the categories of strategic
choice using Porters generic strategies and
Ansoffs growth vector - Be able to distinguish between organic and other
methods of growth - Have been introduced to the marketing mix
3Corporate Appraisal
- A critical assessment of the strengths,
weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT
analysis) in relation to the internal and
environmental factors affecting an entity in
order to establish its condition prior to the
preparation of the long term plan
4SWOT Analysis
- Involves sizing-up a company's Internal
strengthsand weaknesses and its External
opportunities andthreats - Is an easy tool for getting a quick overview of
acompany's strategic position - Is the basis for matching strategy to the
firm'ssituation - to its internal strengths
and weaknesses - to its external threats and
opportunities
5SWOT Analysis
6SWOT Analysis
7Significance of a Company'sStrengths and
Weaknesses
- A company's strategy must be well-suited
tocompany strengths, weaknesses, and
competitivecapabilities - to serve as the cornerstone of strategy
- to help build competitive advantage
Company strengths have the potential
8Significance of a Companys Strengths and
Weaknesses
A good strategy aims at correcting weaknesses
which can
- make the company vulnerable
- disqualify the company from pursuing an
attractive opportunity - put the company at a competitive disadvantage
9Strategic Management Principle
Successful strategists seek to exploit what a
company does best
- Its expertise
- Its strengths
- Its core competences
- Its strongest competitive capabilities
They shun strategies that place heavy demands on
the areas where the company is weakest or has
unproven ability
10Strategic Issues
Having a penetrating understanding of the
strategic issues a company faces is a
precondition for effective strategy-makingUnti
l strategists have a clear fix on the issues,
they are not ready to craft a strategy
11Question for Discussion
- In your view, what are key strengths and
weaknesses of your organisation? - What opportunities/threats do you perceive in the
external environment?
12Gap Analysis
is a technique which attempts to analyse the
gap between the ultimate objective of the
entity and its extrapolated existing performance
by identifying the extent of the strategic tasks
and the ways in which the gap might be
closed The entitys strengths and weaknesses,
opportunities and threats are assessed and
possible actions, such as expansion of
production or other facilities, or the takeover
or merger with another corporate entity, are
reviewed
13Profit Gap and Product Market Strategy
Profit
Target profit
diversification
market penetration
product development
improve profits of current products, mkts
Projection
(forecast)
Year
14Gap Analysis
- ... is also used extensively in public sector
planning, although in a somewhat different way.
Here the strategic problem is often concerned
with whether the future demands on a public
service are likely to change to such an extent
that the current resource provision will prove
wholly inadequate - This is particularly important when
considering the statutory obligations of many
public services such as hospitals, education or
social services
15Categories of Strategic Choice
- How to compete
- Where to compete
- Method of growth
StrategicChoice
Directionof growth(Ansoff)(e.g.
withdraw,diversify)
How to compete(Porter)
Method ofgrowth(acquisitionvs. organic)
16Types of Competitive Advantage
Low Cost
CompetitiveAdvantage
Differentiation
17Generic Strategies
1. Overall Cost Leadership
2. Differentiation
3. Focus
18Porters Strategies
Strategic Advantage
Unique
Low Cost
Industry
Differentiation
CostLeadership
StrategicTarget
"Unique" Focus
"Low Cost" Focus
Segment
19Overall Cost Leadership
Low cost relative to competitors, through
- Construction of efficient-scale facilities
- Use of the latest technology
- Cost reductions from experience
- Tight cost and overhead control
- Avoidance of marginal customer accounts
- Cost minimisation in RD, service, sales force,
advertising etc.
20Differentiation
Creating something that is perceived industry
wide as being unique Products can be
breakthrough, improved or competitive Approaches
include
- Design or brand image
- Technology
- Features
- Customer service
21Focus
On a particular buyer group, segment of the
product line, or geographic market
- Built around serving a particular target very
well - Each functional policy is developed with this in
mind - Firm is thus able to serve its narrow strategic
target more effectively or efficiently than
competitors who are competing more broadly
22Activity
Using Porters Generic Strategy framework, plot
the position of some of the key players in the
N.I. food retailing industry, i.e. Marks and
Spencer Tesco Sainsbury Dunnes Supervalu Spar Mac
e A small local grocers shop
23Other Requirements
GenericStrategy
Commonly RequiredSkills and Resources
Common OrganisationalRequirements
Tight cost control
Sustained capitalinvestment andaccess to capital
OverallCostLeadership
Frequent, detailedcontrol reports
Process engineeringskills
Structured org.and responsibilities
Intense supervisionof labour
Incentives basedon meeting strictquantitative
targets
Products designedfor ease in manufacture
Low-cost distributionsystem
24Other Requirements
GenericStrategy
Common OrganisationlRequirements
Commonly RequiredSkills and Resources
Strong marketing abilities
Differentiation
Strong coordinationamong functions inRD,
product develop-ment, and marketing
Product engineering
Creative flair
Strong capability inbasic research
Subjective measurementand incentives insteadof
quantitative measures
Corp. reputation forquality or
technologicalleadership
Long tradition in theindustry or unique
combination of skillsdrawn from otherbusinesses
Amenities to attracthighly skilled
labour,scientists, or creativepeople
Strong cooperationfrom channels
25Other Requirements
GenericStrategy
Commonly RequiredSkills and Resources
Common OrganisationalRequirements
Focus
Combination of theprevious policiesdirected at
theparticular strategictarget
Combination of theprevious policiesdirected at
theparticular strategictarget
26Stuck in the Middle
- Low Profitability
- Blurred corporate culture
- Conflicting organisational arrangements,motivatio
n system
27Criticisms of the Generic Strategies
- Cost leadership
- Internal focus
- Only one firm
- Higher margins can be used for differentiation
- Differentiation
- Not always sold at a higher price
- Choice of competitor
- Source of differentiation
28PIMS - Market Position Boosts Profitability
50
45
40
33
35
30
25
21
25
18
ROI ()
20
13
15
10
31
91
5
0
16
31
51
91
Relative Market Share ()
Profit Impact of Marketing Strategies
29Ansoff's Growth Vector
Products
Existing
New
MarketPenetration
Product Development
Existing
Markets
MarketDevelopment
New
Diversification
30Products
Existing
New
Market Penetration(for growth)Consolidation(mai
ntain position)withdrawal
Product Development
Existing
Markets
MarketDevelopment
Diversification
New
Product-Market areas
Related
Unrelated
(conglomeratediversification)
(vertical or horizontalintegration)
Financialreasons
Spreadrisk
Other
31Related Diversification
Development beyond the present product market,
but still within the broad confines of the
industry......it..therefore builds on the
assets or activities which the firm has
developed.
- Horizontal integration competitive or directly
complementary activities e.g. a milk producer
might acquire a - bakery
- Vertical integration company becomes its own
supplier (backward) or its own distributor
(forward)
32 Related Diversification Options for a
Manufacturer
BACKWARD INTEGRATION
Raw materials manufacture
Components manufacture
Machinery manufacture
Product/process research/design
Raw materials supply
Components supply
Machinery supply
Financing
Transport
HORIZONTAL INTEGRATION
Competitive products
Manufacturer
By-products
Complimentary products
FORWARD INTEGRATION
Repairs and servicing
Marketing information
Distribution outlets
Transport
Note Some companies will manufacture components
or semi-finished items. In those cases there
will be additional integration opportunities into
assembly or finished product manufacture.
33Some Reasons for Related Diversification
- Control of supplies (quantity, quality, price)
- Control of markets
- Access to information
- Cost savings
- Share of profits
- Building on core competences, technology
- Spreading risk
- Resource utilisation
- Creation of barriers to entry
34Unrelated (Conglomerate) Diversification
- Development beyond the present industry
- into products/markets which, at face value,
- may bear no close relation to the present
- product/market.
35Some Reasons for Unrelated Diversification
- Need to use excess cash or safeguard profits
- Better access to capital markets
- Exploiting underutilised resources/competences
- Escape from present business
- Spreading risk
- Even out cyclical effects in a given sector
- Benefit from synergistic effects
- No other way to grow
- Obtain cash
- Use of image and reputation
36Diversification and Synergy
Synergy 225
- Marketing synergy
- Operating synergy
- Investment synergy
- Management synergy
- Start-up synergy
37Conglomerate Diversification- Limitations
- Dilution of shareholders' earnings
- No synergy no competitive advantage
- Greater exposure to recession
- Interference by acquiring management
- Lack of common identity and purpose
- Total failure due to one business
- Lack of management experience in the
- business area
38Method of Growth
- Organic
- Acquisition
- Merger
- Joint ventures
- Strategic alliances
- Franchising
39Organic Growth
- Reasons
- Learning
- Innovation
- No suitable target for acquisition
- Can be planned more carefully
- More convenient
- Same style of management and corporate culture
maintained - Hidden or unforeseen losses less likely
- Economies of scale possible
40Problems with Organic Growth
- Time
- Barriers to entry
- Need to acquire resources independently
- May be too slow for dynamics of market
41Mergers and Acquisitions
- Merger joining of two separate companies to
form a - single company
- Acquisition purchase of a controlling interest
in another - company
- Reasons for Acquisition(which should be valid in
terms of the strategic - plan)
- Marketing advantages
- Production advantages
- Finance and management
- Riskspreading
- To retain independence
- Overcome barriers to entry
42Activity
Identify the reasons for acquisition/merger
between one or more national private companies
43Problems with Acquisitions and Mergers
- Cost
- Customers
- Incompatibility
- Asymmetric information
- Driven by personal goals
- Corporate financiers and banks
- Poor success record of acquisitions
- Organisations rarely take non-financial factors
into account
44Joint Ventures and Alliances
- Joint venture - definition
- Attractive to small or risk-averse organisations
- Alliance - definition
- Long-term strategic alliances
- IS based alliances
- Licensing agreements - definition
45Joint Ventures/Alliances
- Advantages
- Share costs
- Cut risk
- Benefit from all sources of profit
- Close control
- Local knowledge (overseas joint venture
- Synergies
- Learning
- Technology
- Generates innovations
- Tests core competences
- Disadvantages
- Conflicts of interest
- Disagreements
- Withdrawal
46Making Alliances Work
- Proactive attitudes
- Trust
- Cultural sensitivity
- Inter-personal relationships
- Clear organisational arrangements
- Desire to learn (not substitute)
- Allow evolution
47Franchising
- Granting other firms the right to use systems and
name - Franchiser provides support including
- Management/staff training
- Procedures/instructions for service supply
- Central marketing
- Materials or products to sell on
- Examples of franchises?
48Advantages of Franchising
- Quicker business expansion
- Reduced risk as capital is provided by franchisee
- Control over activities of franchisee
- Reduced costs - franchise manager responsible for
finance, staffing etc.
49Disadvantages of Franchising
- Franchisee pays for use of name/brand
- Reduced profits (shared with franchisee)
- Monitoring of franchisees service
- Risk of poor performance harming parent brand
name/image - Problems of protecting intellectual capital -
franchisee may become competitor later - Search for competent candidates
- Control issues
50Alternatives to Growth
- Nongrowth
- De (dirigistie) growth (particularly relevant
- to public sector and nationalised industries)
- Divestment rationalization get back
to "core" business - Demerger "unbundling
- Survival
51Strategy and Market Position
- Strategies for market leaders
- Strategies for market challengers
- Strategies for market followers
- Strategies for market nichers
52Marketing - The Four Ps
- Product
- Price
- Place
- Promotion
53Marketing Mix - Product
- Design
- Features
- Quality and reliability
- After-sales service
- Packaging
- Range - width and depth
54Marketing Mix - Place
- Channel
- Direct to customer
- Through an agent
- Through a wholesaler
- Through a retailer
- Logistics - product push
- - customer pull
- Direct distribution or the use of intermediaries?
55Marketing Mix - Price
- Economic influences
- Competitors prices
- Quality positioning
- Discounts
- Payment terms
- Trade-in allowances
- Product life cycle stage
56Pricing - Strategies
- As low as possible
- Premium pricing
- Follow the leader
- Discriminatory pricing
- Product-line pricing
- New product launch
- Penetration pricing
- Price skimming
57Marketing Mix - Promotion
- The AIDA principle
- Arouse Attention
- Generate Interest
- Inspire Desire
- Initiate Action
58The Promotional Mix
- Advertising
- Sales promotion
- Public relations
- Personal selling
59The Extended Marketing Mix
- People
- Processes
- Physical evidence