Title: WHAT IS STRATEGY
1WHAT IS STRATEGY ?
- Article overview
- Kodak Case Study
- Pillsbury Case Review
- Strengths and Weaknesses
Middat Yildiz
2What is Strategy ?Michael Porter, Harvard
Business Review, Nov/Dec., 1996
- Strategy is not operational effectiveness
- Operational effectiveness (OE) is performing
activities better than rivals perform them. - OE is achieved by reengineering, TQM,
Benchmarking, and outsourcing. - That is simply a strategic necessity that needs
to be performed on a regular basis to survive. - Positioning which is too static
- However, OE can create sustainable advantages
3Foundation for Strategy
- Unique set of activities - OE
- Southwest Airlines has a set of activities that
it excels in such as, - Low cost and minimal food
- Point-to-point service and frequent departures
- No inter-line baggage checking, no assigned seats
- Continental tried to imitate ... butit failed.
4Foundation for Strategy
- Strategic positioning
- Variety based Producing subset of industry
products - Example Vanguards low cost fund management
approach - Needs based Satisfying all the needs of the
customer - Example Bessemer Trust banking for 5M
customers - Trade-offs are needed to create sustainability
- In consistency in image / reputation
- Lack of uniform activity requirements
- Limits on internal coordination and control
5Strategy
- Strategy is the creation of a unique and valuable
position, involving a different set of
activities. - Strategy is making trade-offs in competing.
- Strategy is about combining activities and
achieving a fit in terms of - consistency of activities overall strategy
- reinforcing of activities
- optimization of effort
6Where do you get this?
- By reconsidering the basics
- Identifying new emerging businesses
- Environmental / economic change
- By finding overlooked opportunities in existing
industries
7Pitfalls
- Managers fail to choose
- Organizational realities
- dealing with the hard questions
- The Growth Trap
- A lack of business discipline and poor
communication
8Summary
CUSTOMER BASE
STRATEGICALLY POSITIONED PRODUCTS
UNIQUE SET OF OPTIMIZED ACTIVITIES
9Eastman Kodak
- A case of restructuring unfinished!
10Late 80s / Early 90s
- Running scared of new digital technology
- 5 separate restructurings
- 40,000 jobs cut
- USD10Bn spent on diversification
- Debt/Equity ratio at historic high levels
- New Chairman/CEO (G Fisher) appointed
11What was said...
Turning the company around would require one of
the greatest feats in business annals
Glazer
Fisher has no interest in implementing a cut,
slash and burn operation. He is going to take his
time to think, reconfigure, readapt, reposition
and grow the company
Prahalad
12The new vision strategy
The Vision
To be the world leader in one business - IMAGING
The Strategy
- Rededicate Kodak to historic core strength -
taking making pictures - Broadened focus to take advantage of new digital
technology - Divest of all non-core businesses
- Develop new markets for growth
Plus
Improve quality through adoption of six-sigma
standard
13The good news..
- Reconnected to strategy by going back-to-basics
- Repositioning of company took advantage of new
technology - Sought needs based positioning
- Sought competitive advantage sustainability
through fit - consistency between activities strategy
- activities are reinforcing
- Long term view
14The bad news...
- Fell into growth trap - took eye off key home
market - Suffered organisational failure
- corporate culture not realigned to new strategy
- mind-set of previous generation remained in place
- New strategy not supported by given of OE
- excessive costs remained imbedded in Kodak
The result
- Major losses in 2nd half of 1997
- Lost 5 percentage points in market share in US
15The reaction..
Cut, slash burn
- USD1.2Bn restructuring charge in FY 1997
- USD1Bn overhead cost cut
- 16,000 workers cut
- 200 senior middle management positions
eliminated
The result
- Profits up 39 in first half of 1998 versus 1997
16Conclusion
- Got the strategy right
- Positioned itself for sustainable competitive
advantage - BUT
- Failed to take the HARD decisions
- Took OE as a given when it did not exist
Porters proposal will not work in parts but only
as a whole
17PillsburyCustomer Driven Reengineering
-
- We entered our Customer Driven Reengineering
initiative expecting to achieve levels of cost
reduction and efficiency. To our delight, we also
discovered a new way to compete. - Paul S Walsh
- CEO, The Pillsbury Company
18Pillsbury in the late 1980s
- Divest unrelated activities
-
- Focus on core businesses - food and beverages
Strong brands
Directly marketed products
Loose relationship with retailers
19 Pillsbury Changing Environment
- Competition
- Consumer preferences
- Brand Awareness
- Purchasing decisions Shelf Availability Price
- Technology
- Ads
- Partnership with retailers
20New Strategy
- HOW to create a new and sustainable competitive
advantage? HOW to be the best in providing the
freshest product and the lowest cost?
21Pillsbury No New Strategy
- Porter
- Trade-offs
- Fit and reinforcement
- Unique positioning
- Pillsbury
- No trade-offs
- Poor reinforcement
- Focus on OE
22Conclusion Pillsbury
- Mind-set
- Cost reduction story
- Focus on OE
- No uniqueness
- Not sustainable
23Critique
- Strengths
- This is a good model to envision the leap in
mature businesses and restructuring situations - It offers an integrated solution because it has
an strategic and implementation orientation - It makes common sense
24Critique
- Weaknesses
- This model is not universal (not applicable for
growth industries) - Porter makes the effort sound too easy
- Not everybody can do this - leadership question
25Challenge
- Everyone knows the words of the new song but few
can hold the tune.