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Strategic Group Map

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Resource-based view of the firm - the role of organizational resources and capabilities ... Using the resource-based view for internal analysis: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Strategic Group Map


1
Complementary components for successful strategic
management
  • Strategic leadership - the role of individual
    managers strategic choice, and influences on
    those choices
  • Industrial-organization (IO) economics - the role
    of the external environment
  • Resource-based view of the firm - the role of
    organizational resources and capabilities

2
Strategic Group Map (another tool to look at
the external environment, especially competition)
two-dimensional graphical depiction of
competitors in an industry showing. . . -
clusters of firms following similar strategies -
various competitive positions in the industry
3
Steps in the construction of strategic group maps
  • 1. Identify two important competitive
    characteristics that strategically differentiate
    firms in an industry from one another.
  • 2. Plot the firms on the two-variable map.
  • 3. Draw circles around the firms that are
    clustered together.
  • 4. Indicate potential movement of firms with
    arrows.

4
Pitfalls to avoid with strategic group maps
  • breaking one firm into product lines and placing
    it in several positions
  • mapping only one firm
  • using poorly chosen axes (unimportant dimensions
    output measures rather than strategic intent
    dimensions correlated axes)
  • keeping your thinking constrained to quantitative
    descriptors only

5
Value of strategic group maps
  • identification of major and indirect rivals
  • picturing the competitive playing field
  • identification of open niches
  • identification of competitor moves
  • improved understanding of differential effects of
    external trends
  • identification of better/worse positions

6
Limitations of strategic group maps
  • more useful in fragmented industries
  • often difficult to meaningfully use in
    consolidated industries
  • only two-dimensional
  • a macro view of competitive rivalry
  • role of mobility barriers (which restrict
    movement between groups) is unclear

7
Financial Ratio Analysis (another tools for
internal analysis)
  • Examine relevant growth rates
  • Examine various measures of profitability
  • Horizontal analysis - identify proportionate
    contributors to revenues, profits, costs
  • Financial ratios - activity, liquidity, leverage,
    stockholder-related
  • Examine trends over time
  • Compare to industry averages

8
Basic assumptions of the resource-based view of
the firm
  • firms bundles of productive resources and
    capabilities
  • these bundles are heterogeneous, and generally
    immobile
  • the sources of competitive advantage exist at a
    very micro-level in the organization

9
Using the resource-based view for internal
analysis
  • value chain - (see additional handout, and text
    pg. 118) a tool for more precise identification
    of strengths and weaknesses
  • vigilance for attributes that lead to lower costs
    or higher perceived value
  • keen attention to resources and capabilities that
    are valuable, rare, difficult to imitate, and
    organizationally exploitable by the firm

10
Mintzberg (R4.5)Generic Strategies
  • 1. Locating the core business
  • 2. Distinguishing the core business
  • 3. Elaborating the core business
  • 4. Extending the core business
  • 5. Re-conceiving the core business

11
1. Locating the core business
  • a - upstream strategies
  • b - midstream strategies
  • c - downstream strategies
  • raw
  • material - manufacturing - distribution - retail
    - service
  • a b c

12
2. Distinguishing the core business
  • Mintzbergs differentiation strategies
  • - image
  • - support
  • - quality
  • - design
  • - price
  • -undifferentiated
  • - scope

13
2. Distinguishing the core business
  • Porters generic strategies
  • business-level (division-level) strategies
  • - cost leadership
  • - differentiation
  • - focus or niche
  • - integrated low-cost/differentiation

14
Competitive advantage rests on creating value for
consumers!
Profit depends on - price - dependent on
perceived value or perceived
differentiation cost - dependent on
efficiency Sustained competitive advantage
above-average profits over a number of years.
15
Porters generic business-level strategies are
based on two decisions
  • 1. What basic competitive advantage to seek?
  • low costs? Or differentiation?
  • 2. How broad a target market will be targeted?
  • a broad swath of the entire market?
  • or only selected narrow market segments?

16
2 main business-level strategies
  • Cost leadership
  • broad, mass market (unsegmented)
  • standardized products, few features
  • efficiency-related skill
  • Differentiation
  • broad market, multiple segments
  • customized products, more features
  • marketing skill

17
Cost leadership strategy
  • Intent is to reduce the firms economic costs
    below all of its competitors, while maintaining
    product desirability.
  • Successful firms practice sustained (relentless?)
    attention to cost reduction throughout their
    value chain activities.

18
Steps to develop cost leadership strategy
  • examine value chain for cost saving areas
  • pay attention to cost drivers
  • no stone is left unturned!
  • no sacred cows!
  • look both inside and outside the firm for cost
    savings
  • reconfigure the value chain as needed

19
Implementation of cost leadership - structure
  • few layers of management
  • simple reporting relationships
  • small corporate staff
  • hands on leadership
  • focus on narrow range of business functions

20
Implementation of cost leadership - control
systems
  • tight cost control systems
  • quantitative cost goals
  • close supervision of labor, supplies, inventory,
    waste, other costs
  • embedded cost-leadership philosophy

21
Implementation ofcost leadership - compensation
  • rewards for cost reduction
  • incentives for all employees to be involved
  • fewer perks and amenities

22
Differentiation strategy
  • Intent is to increase perceived value of products
    or services relative to competitors while
    maintaining acceptable costs.
  • Successful firms respond to environmental
    opportunities and attempt to create a structure
    of monopolistic competition.

23
Steps to develop differentiation strategy
  • identify the target market, the real buyer and
    other influential persons
  • determine important buyer purchasing criteria
    throughout the value chain understand buyers
    purchase process
  • develop relevant sources of uniqueness - as long
    as reasonable in terms of cost
  • lower costs elsewhere if possible

24
Implementation of differentiation strategy -
structure
  • multi-disciplinary product development teams
  • exploration of new structures to exploit new
    opportunities
  • isolated pockets of intense creative efforts
  • elaborated marketing functions

25
Implementation of differentiation strategy -
control
  • broad decision-making guidelines
  • freedom/autonomy within the guidelines
  • organizational slack
  • policy of experimentation

26
Implementation of differentiation strategy -
compensation
  • rewards for risk-taking
  • rewards for creative flair
  • multi-dimensional performance measures
  • attractive perks and amenities

27
Focus (niche) strategy
  • Intent is to concentrate on one or two attractive
    market segments.
  • A firm can choose either low-cost or
    differentiation approaches implementation is to
    be consistent with the approach taken.

28
Integrated low-cost differentiation strategy
  • simultaneously being different and better, with
    the lowest costs
  • extremely difficult to successfully implement
  • result is often getting stuck-in-the-middle,
    lacking either low cost or differentiation
    advantage

29
Advice for business-level strategy
  • understand your resources and capabilities
  • be true to your distinctive competence - base
    strategies on strengths
  • be as good as possible at activities not primary
    to your strategy - without cutting into your
    competitive advantages
  • remember - strategies must be implemented through
    value chain activities

30
3. Elaborating the core business
  • market penetration
  • market development
  • product development
  • diversification

31
4. Extending the core business
  • diversification
  • - related unrelated
  • vertical integration
  • - forward backward
  • (These are corporate-level strategies.)

32
5. Reconceiving the core business
  • business redefinition
  • business recombination
  • core relocation

33
Mintzbergs (R4.6)Guide to Strategic
Positioning
  • Types of misfit (pg. 135) - beware!
  • capacity misfit
  • competence misfit
  • design misfit
  • sunk misfit
  • myopic misfit
  • location misfit

34
  • Misfits and/or evolving forces in the
    environment create strategic windows that
    invite contestability
  • with a variety of strategies (pp. 137-138)
  • frontal attack
  • indirect or flanking attack
  • battering
  • guerrilla attacks
  • market signaling
  • collaborative strategies

35
  • THE TARGET (markets)
  • mass market
  • fragmented market
  • segmented market
  • thin market
  • THE FIT (strategic positions)
  • commodity strategy
  • niche strategy
  • segmentation strategy
  • customization strategy
  • (Pp. 131-134)
  • Fit can be natural, forced, or vulnerable.
  • Fit can be improved via reinforcing mechanisms
    (resource/skill enchancements)
  • Fit can be protected via isolating mechanisms
    (entry/mobility barriers).
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