Title: More tools to use in the Harvard approach
1CHAPTER 4
- More tools to use in the Harvard approach
- to strategic management
- basic industry facts
- Porters five-forces of competition (R4.1)
- competitive intelligence (R4.4)
- evaluation of industry attractiveness
- role of core competencies in creating sustainable
competitive advantage (R4.2)
2The (multi-layered) External Environment
Figure 2.1
3 Basic industry facts
- Main competitive arena for the industry
- local? regional? national? global?
- Stage of industry life cycle ?
- Industry growth rate ?
- Market structure
- fragmented? consolidated?
- Average industry profit margin ?
4Basic industry facts where to get??? -
5Michael Porter (R4.1)How Competitive Forces
Shape Strategy
- The essence of strategy formulation is coping
with competition. - Competitive forces go beyond established rivals
look at five types of competition. - A strong set of competitive forces reduces profit
potential. - Seek a position of power over (or reduced
vulnerability to) competitive forces.
6Porters five forces analysis
- WHO might be a threat in each of the five
categories of competition? - HOW STRONG is each of the five competitive
forces? - WHAT CAN THE FIRM DO ABOUT IT? - use defensive
and/or offensive actions.
71. New entrants . . .
- can increase competition by adding new capacity
and aggressively pursuing (stealing) market
share. - are discouraged by entry barriers, or obstacles
to enter the industry. - existing players want ______entry barriers.
8Common entry barriers
- economies of scale
- proprietary product differences
- brand identity/brand loyalty
- switching costs
- capital requirements
- distribution channels
- government or regulatory policies
- expected retaliation
- low industry profits
9To analyze threat of entry
- you MUST analyze relevant entry barriers.
- also consider possible entry by established
players from other industries.
102. Substitutes . . .
- are products offering a different way of
satisfying a similar need or want. - often are provided by firms in a different
industry. - are NOT THE SAME as rivals
- Burger King vs. McDonalds rivals
- Burger King vs. grocery store substitutes.
11To analyze threat from substitutes
- consider the price-performance tradeoff of
switching to the substitute. - consider consumer switching costs.
- consider relevant environmental trends.
123. Supplier power is high when
- supplies are crucial to product success and hard
to get. - very few suppliers exist.
- one supplier is relied upon.
- switching costs for the purchasing firm are high.
- suppliers might integrate forward.
134. Buyer power increases with . .
- consumer bargaining leverage, from
- - institutional buyers
- - informed buyers
- - many choices
- - low switching costs
- - backward integration
- high levels of price sensitivity
- low levels of brand loyalty
145. Rivalry
- is usually the strongest of the five competitive
forces. - is especially strong when
- - the industry is mature, with slow growth.
- - industry over-capacity exists.
- - consumers lack loyalty.
- - high exit barriers (economic, strategic,
- and/or emotional) are present.
15Advice from Porter
- Navigate the industry structure defined by
basic industry facts and the five forces of
competition via - - selection of competitive position,
- - influencing the competitive forces,
- - exploiting industry change.
16Competitive intelligence
- Learn as much as possible about youre your close
rivals. - Understand their current strategy, strengths and
weaknesses, future goals, assumptions, and
leadership attributes. - Anticipate likely competitive responses.
- WHY??? HOW??? WHEN???
17 Framework for analyzing direct rivals
- Future goals Current strategies
- ? ?
- Competitors
- Response
- Profile
- ? ?
- Assumptions Capabilities
-
18Henderson (R4.4)Competitive Maneuvering
- Involves business power games
- Strategy ploy
- Main point
- Behavior of business is not always logical.
- A critical (and often overlooked) factor is
individual/organizational emotion.
19Useful ideas from Henderson
- Know rivals stakes, character, attitudes,
motives, and habits. - Provide little information about your firm.
- Always assess perceptions - you of them, them of
you. - Dont arouse rivals emotions.
- Avoid use of overwhelming force.
- Value friendly competition.
20More advice from Henderson
- Make sure rivals know benefits of cooperating and
costs of not cooperating. - Use diplomacy - the art of being unreasonable
without arousing resentment. - Be arbitrary - to a point. The less arbitrary
you seem, the more arbitrary you can be. - If youre not willing to accept punishment, and
your opponents know it, youll almost certainly
be punished!
21Drawing conclusions about industry
attractiveness, using your overall external
analysis Consider -
- opportunities vs. threats?
- major uncertainties/risks?
- intersecting general environment trends?
- average industry growth rate?
- average industry profit margins?
- power of the five competitive forces?
22Two levels of analysis involved in Harvard
method of strategy formulation
- 1. Industry level - the external environment.
- - look for opportunities and threats tools
general environment analysis, basic industry
facts, Porters five-forces of competition,
competitive intelligence, key success factors - 2. Company level - the internal environment. -
look for strengths and weaknesses tools
resource/capability assessment, financial
analysis, value chain analysis, distinctive
(core) competencies . . .
23Use of INTERNAL ANALYSIS
- Identify important resources (tangible and
intangible - what you have) and capabilities
(what you can do) - Andrews considers financial,
managerial, functional, and organizational
dimensions - Fig. 2, pg. 79 - Understand the organizations specific strengths
and weaknesses - Utilize unique strengths to develop strategies
that provide sustainable competitive advantage - Improve weak areas that are vulnerabilities
24Distinctive competencies . . .
- are especially instrumental for attaining
competitive advantage - consist of resources and capabilities that are
unique, and set the organization apart from their
competition - advice is to base competitive strategy off ones
distinctive competencies
25Jay Barney (R4.2) Looking Inside for
Competitive Advantage
- Attractive external environment is not the only
explanation for success. - Utilizing a firms distinctive competence has a
huge role in strong performance. - Use of internal characteristics are more
influential for strong performance than playing
the external context.
264 attributes of core competencies that create
competitive advantage
- Core competencies should be
- 1. valuable - to the marketplace
- 2. rare - not prevalent in the marketplace.
- 3. difficult to imitate - use of intangible
resources, historical advantages, ambiguous
and/or complex competency development. - 4. organizationally accessible - can be used!
271. Assessing resource/capability value
- Consider extent to which specific resources
and/or capabilities reduce costs or add to
perceived value. - If resources or capabilities increase costs or
reduce perceived value, they might be
organizational weaknesses!
282. Assessing rareness of resource/capability
- Examine prevalence in the marketplace.
- But dont ignore resources/capabilities that are
not rare they might be necessary regardless
(maybe complementary resources or capabilities,
or maybe they are key success factors).
293. Assessing if resources/capabilities can be
easily imitated
- Work towards utmost use of any advantages from
proprietary resources, intangible resources,
image and reputation, unique historical
conditions, path dependence, causal ambiguity,
social complexity, tacit knowledge, embedded
organizational routines, shared values, . . .
304. Assessing organizational accessibility of
important resources/capabilities
- Is the firm organized in such a way that its
vital resources and capabilities can be exploited
in its strategic actions? - Need appropriate complementary structures,
processes, and systems to deploy the resources
and capabilities that exist.
31Are resources/capabilities
- 1. valuable? - if no, a competitive disadvantage
below normal performance likely. - 2. valuable but not rare? - average to below
average performance expected intense competitive
battles likely. - 3. valuable, rare, but not difficult to imitate?
- temporary competitive advantage possible. - 4. valuable, rare, difficult to imitate, but not
organizationally accessible? - competitive
advantage can be sustained over time, but
difficult to leverage into the future.
32A paradox of distinctive competencies . .
- strategies that are difficult for other firms to
replicate seem easy to implement due to the
specific distinctive competencies - this can lead to an underestimation of the value
of core competencies, and attempts to do
something harder or something else, which is
often unwise
33Financial Assessment
- examines trends in financial performance over
time (gt 2 years) - analyzes the entries in the financial statements
growth rates relevant s - calculates a rich set of financial ratios
- interprets the numbers
- provides a defensible conclusion about overall
financial situation