Title: Strategic Management
1Strategic Management
2Dimensions of Strategic Decisions
- Strategic issues require top-management decisions
- Strategic issues require large amounts of the
firms resources - Strategic issues often affect the firms
long-term prosperity - Strategic issues are future oriented
- Strategic issues usually have multifunctional or
multibusiness consequences - Strategic issues require considering the firms
external environment
3Three Levels of Strategy
- Corporate level board of directors, CEO
administration Highest - Business level business and corporate managers
Middle - Functional level Product, geographic, and
functional area managers Lowest
4Characteristics of Strategic Management
Decisions Corporate
- Often carry greater risk, cost, and profit
potential - Greater need for flexibility
- Longer time horizons
- Choice of businesses, dividend policies, sources
of long-term financing, and priorities for growth
5Characteristics of Strategic Management
Decisions Business
- Help bridge decisions at the corporate and
functional levels - Less costly, risky, and potentially profitable
than corporate-level decisions - More costly, risky, and potentially profitable
than functional-level decisions - Include decisions on plant location, marketing
segmentation, and distribution
6Characteristics of Strategic Management
Decisions Functional
- Implement the overall strategy formulated at the
corporate and business levels - Involve action-oriented operational issues
- Relatively short range and low risk
- Modest costs depend upon available resources
- Relatively concrete and quantifiable
7Company Mission
8Four Essential Components
- Basic Product or Service
- Primary Market--WHO
- Where
- Financial position
-
9Primary Company Goals
- Survival A firm that cant survive cant
satisfy its stakeholders. (Often taken for
granted) - Profitability the mainstay goal of a business.
- Growth is tied to survival and profitability.
Broadly defined in terms of market share, etc.
10Company PhilosophyBULLETS
- Customers
- Employees
- Management
- Stockholders
- Suppliers
- Community
- Social responsibility
- Taxes
- Environmental protection
11Agency Theory
- Agency theory --based on the belief that the
separation of the ownership from management
creates a situation where managers will spend the
stockholders money in ways they would not spend
their own.
12 Agency Costs
- The cost of agency problems plus the cost of
actions taken to minimize agency problems are
collectively termed agency costs.
13How Agency Problems Occur
- Moral hazard problem--Executives have
disproportionate access to company information. - Adverse selection--a problem caused by the
limited ability of stockholders to determine the
competencies and priorities of executives they
hire.
14Problems Resulting from Agency
- Executives pursue growth in company size rather
than earnings - Executives attempt to diversify their corporate
risk - Executives avoid healthy risk
- Managers act to optimize their personal payoffs
- Executives protect their status
15Solutions to Agency Problem
- Owners pay executives a premium for their service
to increase loyalty - Executives receive back-loaded compensation.
- Creating teams of executives across different
units of a corporation can help to focus
performance measures on organizational rather
than personal goals.
16Aligning Executive Interests with Owner Interests
- Stock Option Plans
- Bonus plans
- Incentives for Long-Term Performance
17Corporate Social Responsibility and Business
Ethics
18Dynamics of Social Responsibility
- Inside vs. Outside Stakeholders
- Duty to serve society plus duty to serve
stockholders - Flexibility is key
- Firms differ along
- Competitive Position
- Industry
- Country
- Environmental Pressures
- Ecological Pressures
19Types of Social Responsibility
- Economic the duty of managers, as agents of the
company owners, to maximize stockholder wealth - Legal the firms obligations to comply with the
laws that regulate business activities - Ethical the companys notion of right and
proper business behavior. - Discretionary voluntarily assumed by a business
organization.
20Corporate Social Responsibility Profitability
- Corporate social responsibility (CSR), is the
idea that business has a duty to serve society in
general as well as the financial interests of
stockholders. - The dynamic between CSR and success (profit) is
complex. They are not mutually exclusive, and
they are not prerequisites of each other. - Better to view CSR as a component in the
decision-making process of business that must
determine, among other objectives, how to
maximize profits.
21Factors Complicating a Cost-Benefit Analysis of
CSR
- Some CSR activities incur no dollar costs at all.
In fact, the benefits from philanthropy can be
huge. - Socially responsible behavior does not come at a
prohibitive cost. - Socially responsible practices may create
savings, and, as a result, increase profits. - Proponents argue that CSR costs are more than
offset in the long run by an improved company
image and increased community goodwill.
22Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
- CEO and CFO must certify every report containing
companys financial statements - Restricted corporate control of executives,
acting, firms, auditing committees, and attorneys - Specifies duties of registered public acting
firms that conduct audits - Composition of the audit committee and specific
responsibilities - Rules for attorney conduct
- Disclosure periods are stipulated
- Stricter penalties for violations
23New Corporate Governance Structure
- Restructuring governance structure in American
corporations - Heightened role of corporate internal auditors
- Auditors now routinely deal directly with top
corporate officials - CEO information provided directly by the
companys chief compliance and chief accounting
officers -
24Social Audit
- A social audit is an attempt to measure a
companys actual social performance against its
social objectives. - The social audit may be used for more than simply
monitoring and evaluating firm social
performance.
25Management Ethics
- The Nature of Ethics in Business
- Belief that managers will behave in an ethical
manner is central to CSR - Ethics the moral principles that reflect
societys beliefs about the actions of an
individual or a group that are right and wrong - Ethical standards reflect the end product of a
process of defining and clarifying the nature and
content of human interaction
263 BASIC Approaches to Questions of Ethics
- Utilitarian Approach
- Moral Rights Approach
- Social Justice Approach
27The External Environment
28External Environment
- The factors beyond the control of the firm that
influence its choice of direction and action,
organizational structure, and internal processes
29Remote Environment
- Economic Factors
- Social Factors
- Political Factors
- Technological Factors
- Ecological Factors
30Economic Factors
- Prime interest rates
- Inflation rates
- Trends in the growth of the gross national
product - Unemployment rates
- Globalization of the economy
- Outsourcing
31Social Factors
- Beliefs Values
- Attitudes Opinions
- Lifestyles
32Demographics
- Age
- Ethnic composition
- Gender
- Health considerations
- Religion
- Education
- Quality-of-life issues
33Political Factors
- Legal regulatory parameters
- Fair-trade Decisions
- Antitrust Laws
- Tax Programs
- Minimum Wage Legislation
- Pollution and Pricing Policies
- Administrative jawboning
- Obama care
34Technological Factors
- Speed of new developments
35Ecological Factors
- Ecology refers to the relationships among human
beings and other living things and the air, soil,
and water that supports them. - Threats to our life-supporting ecology caused
principally by human activities in an industrial
society are commonly referred to as pollution - Loss of habitat and biodiversity
- Environmental legislation
- Eco-efficiency
36International Environment
- Monitoring the international environment
- involves assessing each non-domestic market on
the same factors that are used in a domestic
assessment. - While the importance of factors will differ, the
same set of considerations can be used for each
country. - Economic, political, legal, and social factors
are used to assess international environments. - One complication to this process is that the
interplay among international markets must be
considered.
37Ex. 4.8 Forces Driving Industry Competition
38Threats of Entry
- Economies of Scale
- Product Differentiation
- Capital Requirements
- Cost Disadvantages Independent of Size
- Access to Distribution Channels
- Government Policy
39Powerful Suppliers
- A supplier group is powerful if
- It is dominated by a few companies and is more
concentrated than the industry it sells to - Its product is unique or at least differentiated,
or if it has built-up switching costs - It is not obliged to contend with other products
for sale to the industry - It poses a credible threat of integrating forward
into the industrys business - The industry is not an important customer of the
supplier group
40Powerful Buyers
- A buyer group is powerful if
- It is concentrated or purchases in large volumes
- The products it purchases from the industry are
standard - The products it purchases from the industry form
a component of its product and represent a
significant fraction of its cost - It earns low profits
- The industrys product is unimportant to the
quality of the buyers products or services - The industrys product does not save the buyer
money - The buyers pose a credible threat of integrating
backward
41Substitute Products
- By placing a ceiling on the prices it can charge,
substitute products or services limit the
potential of an industry - Substitutes not only limit profits in normal
times but also reduce the bonanza an industry can
reap in boom times - Substitute products that deserve the most
attention strategically are those that are - subject to trends improving their
price-performance trade-off with the industrys
product or - produced by industries earning high profits
42Jockeying for Position
- Intense rivalry occurs when
- Competitors are numerous or are roughly equal
- Industry growth is slow, precipitating fights for
market share that involve expansion - The product or service lacks differentiation or
switching costs - Fixed costs are high or the product is
perishable, creating strong temptation to cut
prices - Capacity normally is augmented in large
increments - Exit barriers are high
- Rivals are diverse in strategy, origin, and
personality
43The Global Environment
44Globalization
- Globalization refers to the strategy of pursuing
opportunities anywhere in the world that enable a
firm to optimize its business functions in the
countries in which it operates.
45Why Firms Globalize?
- U.S. firms can reap benefits from industries and
technologies developed abroad. - Direct penetration of foreign markets can drain
vital cash flows from a foreign competitors
domestic operations. - The resulting lost opportunities, reduced income,
and limited production can impair the
competitors ability to invade U.S. markets. - Question Should firms be proactive or reactive?
46Reasons for Going Global
- PROACTIVE
- Additional resources
- Lowered costs
- Incentives
- New, expanded markets
- Exploitation of firm-specific advantages
- Taxes
- Economies of scale
- Synergy
- Power and prestige
- Protect home market
- REACTIVE
- Trade barriers
- International customers
- International competition
- Regulations
- Chance
474 Strategic Orientations of Global Firms
- Ethnocentric orientation
- When the values and priorities of the parent
organization guide the strategic decision making
of all its international operations
484 Strategic Orientations of Global Firms (contd.)
- Polycentric orientation
- When the culture of the country in which the
strategy is to be implemented is allowed to
dominate a companys international decision
making process
494 Strategic Orientations of Global Firms (contd.)
- Regiocentric orientation
- When a parent company blends its own
predisposition with those of its international
units to develop region-sensitive strategies.
504 Strategic Orientations of Global Firms (contd.)
- Geocentric orientation
- When an international firm adopts a systems
approach to strategic decision making that
emphasizes global integration.
51Competitive Strategies for Firms in Foreign
Markets
- Niche Market Exporting
- Licensing and Contract Manufacturing
- Franchising
- Joint Ventures
- Foreign Branching
- Acquisition
- Wholly Owned Subsidiary
- LOOK UP EACH OF THESE AND UNDERSTAND
52Internal Analysis
53SWOT Analysis
- A traditional approach to internal analysis
- SWOT is an acronym for the internal Strengths and
Weaknesses of a firm and the environmental
Opportunities and Threats facing that firm. - SWOT analysis is a historically popular technique
through which managers create a quick overview of
a companys strategic situation.
54SWOT Components
- An opportunity is a major favorable situation in
a firms environment - A threat is a major unfavorable situation in a
firms environment - A strength is a resource or capability relative
to its - A weakness is a limitation or deficiency in a
firms resources or capabilities relative to its
competitors
55S.W.O.T. Analysis
- S.W.O.T. information is only as important as the
analysis derived from it. - There is no magic number of strengths or
weaknesses compared to a magic number of
opportunities and threats. - Do you have the strengths to 1. Take advantage
of new opportunities? Or 2. Survive a threat?
Or 3. To compensate for your weaknesses? - To appropriately use the S.W.O.T. study the
following slide
56Ex. 6.2 SWOT Analysis Diagram
57Value Chain
- A perspective in which business is seen as a
chain of activities that transforms inputs into
outputs that customers value. - Examines the contributions of different
activities within the business that create
customer value - A process point of view
58Value Chain Analysis (contd.)
- Primary Activities
- The activities in a firm of those involved in the
physical creation of the product, marketing and
transfer to the buyer, and after-sales support - Support Activities
- The activities in a firm that assist the firm as
a whole by providing infrastructure or inputs
that allow the primary activities to take place
on an ongoing basis
59Ex. 6.3 The Value Chain
60Resource-Based View (RBV)
- RBV is a method of analyzing and identifying a
firms strategic advantages based on examining
its distinct combination of assets, skills,
capabilities, and intangibles - The RBVs underlying premise is that firms differ
in fundamental ways because each firm possesses a
unique bundle of resources - Each firm develops competencies from these
resources, and these become the source of the
firms competitive advantages
61Three Basic TYPES of Resources
- Tangible assets are the easiest resources to
identify and are often found on a firms balance
sheet - Intangible assets are resources such as brand
names, company reputation, organizational morale,
technical knowledge, patents and trademarks, and
accumulated experience - Organizational capabilities are not specific
inputs. They are the skills that a company uses
to transform inputs into outputs
62What makes a resource VALUABLE?
- 4 Guidelines
- Is the resource or skill critical to fulfilling a
customers need better than that of the firms
competitors? - Is the resource scarce? Is it in short supply or
not easily substituted for or imitated? - Appropriability Who actually gets the profit
created by a resource? - Durability How rapidly will the resource
depreciate?
63Elements of Scarcity
- Short Supply
- Availability of Substitutes
- Imitation
- Isolating Mechanisms
- Physically Unique Resources
- Path-Dependent Resources
- Casual Ambiguity
- Economic Deterrence
64Using RBV in Internal Analysis
- It is helpful to
- Disaggregate resources
- Utilize a functional perspective
- Look at organizational processes
- Use the value chain approach
65Long-Term Objectives and Strategies
66Long-Term Objectives
- Strategic managers recognize that short-run
profit maximization is rarely the best approach
to achieving sustained corporate growth and
profitability - To achieve long-term prosperity, strategic
planners commonly establish long-term objectives
in seven areas - Profitability Productivity
- Competitive Position Employee Development
- Employee Relations -- Tech Leadership
- Public Responsibility
67Qualities of Long-Term Objectives S.M.A.R.T.
- There are five criteria that should be used in
preparing long-term objectives - Specificclear about outcomes desired
- Measurableable to quantify
- Attainableable to achieve with current resources
- Realistically challengingprovide stimulation to
achieve - Timedstating the time frame in which the
objective will be accomplished
68The Balanced Scorecard
- The balanced scorecard is a set of four measures
that are directly linked to the companys
strategy - allows managers to evaluate the company from four
perspectives - financial performance
- customer knowledge
- internal business processes
- learning and growth
69Generic Strategies
- A long-term or grand strategy must be based on a
core idea about how the firm can best compete in
the marketplace. The popular term for this core
idea is generic strategy.
70The 4 GENERIC Strategies
- Striving for overall low-cost leadership in the
industry. - Striving to create and market unique products for
varied customer groups through differentiation. - Striving to have special appeal to one or more
groups of consumers or industrial buyers, focus
on their cost or differentiation concerns. - SPEED rapid response to customer requests or
market and technological changes
71GRAND Strategies
- Grand strategy
- A master long-term plan that provides basic
direction for major actions for achieving
long-term business objectives
72Grand Strategies
- Concentrated growth the strategy that directs
resources to the growth of a dominant product, in
a dominant market, with a dominant technology - Market development consists of marketing present
products to customers in related market areas by
adding channels of distribution or by changing
the content of advertising or promotion - Product development substantial modification of
existing products or the creation of new but
related products that can be marketed to current
customers through established channels
73Grand Strategies
- Innovation companies seek high profits associated
with customer acceptance of a new or greatly
improved productsearch for other original or
novel ideasseek to create a new product life
cycle and make similar existing products obsolete
- Horizontal acquisitiongrowth through the
acquisition of one or more similar firms
operating at the same stage of the
production-marketing chain
74Grand Strategies
- Vertical acquisitionBACKWARDacquire firms that
supply it with inputs (such as raw materials) or
FORWARDare customers for its outputs (such as
warehouses for finished products) - Concentric diversification involves the
acquisition of businesses that are related to the
acquiring firm in terms of technology, markets,
or products - Conglomerate diversificationgives little concern
to creating product-market synergy with existing
businesses
75Grand Strategies
- TurnaroundCost reductionAsset reduction
- Divestiture strategy the sale of a firm or a
major component of a firm - Liquidation the firm typically is sold in parts
for its tangible asset value and not as a going
concern
76Bankruptcy
- Chapter 7 Liquidation bankruptcyagreeing to a
complete distribution of firm assets to
creditors, most of whom receive a small fraction
of the amount they are owed - Chapter 11 Reorganization bankruptcythe
managers believe the firm can remain viable
through reorganizationmanagement runs the
day-to-day business operations but all
significant business decisions must be approved
by a bankruptcy court.
77Grand Strategies
- Joint ventures relationship between two or more
parties to pursue a set of agreed upon goals or
to meet a critical business need while remaining
independent organizations - Strategic alliances is a business agreement in
which parties agree to develop, for a finite
time, a new entity and new assets by contributing
equity - Company A B form Company C
78Business Strategy
79Sustainable Low-Cost Activities
- Some low-cost advantages reduce the likelihood of
buyers pricing pressure - Truly sustained low-cost advantages may push
rivals into other areas - New entrants competing on price must face an
entrenched cost leader - Low-cost advantages should lessen the
attractiveness of substitute products - Higher margins allow low-cost producers to
withstand supplier cost increases
80Risks of a Cost Leadership Strategy
- Many cost-saving activities are easily duplicated
- Exclusive cost leadership can be a trap
- Obsessive cost cutting can shrink other
competitive advantages - Cost differences often decline over time
81Ex. 8.2 Evaluating a Businesss Cost Leadership
Opportunities
82Evaluating Differentiation
- Differentiation requires that the business have
sustainable advantages that allow it to provide
buyers with something uniquely valuable to them - Differentiation usually arises from one or more
activities in the value chain that create a
unique value important to buyers
83risks associated with A differentiation strategy
- Competitors may be able to imitate the unique
features, - Customers may lose interest in the unique
features, or - Low cost competitors may be able to undercut
prices erode brand loyalty.
84Ex. 8.3 Evaluating a Businesss Differentiation
Opportunities
85Evaluating Speed as a Competitive Advantage
- Speed-based strategies, or rapid response to
customer requests or market and technological
changes, have become a major source of
competitive advantage for numerous firms in
todays intensely competitive global economy
86Risks of Speed-based Strategy
- Speeding up activities that havent been
conducted in a fashion that prioritizes rapid
response should only be done after considerable
attention to training, reorganization, and/or
reengineering - Some industries may not offer much advantage to
the firm that introduces some forms of rapid
response - Customers in such settings may prefer the slower
pace or the lower costs currently available, or
they may have long time frames in purchasing
87Ex. 8.5 Evaluating a Businesss Rapid Response
(Speed) Opportunities
88Evaluating Market Focus as a Way to Competitive
Advantage
- Market focus the extent to which a business
concentrates on a narrowly defined market - Small companies, at least the better ones,
usually thrive because they serve narrow market
niches - Market focus allows some businesses to compete on
the basis of low cost, differentiation, and rapid
response against much larger businesses with
greater resources
89Risks of Market Focus
- The risk of focus is that you attract major
competitors who have waited for your business to
prove the market - Publicly traded companies built around focus
strategies become takeover targets for large
firms seeking to fill out a product portfolio - Slipping into the illusion that it is focus
itself, and not low cost, etc. that is creating
the businesss success.