Title: Strategy Formulation Corporate strategy
1Strategy FormulationCorporate strategy
2Corporate Strategy
- is primarily about the choice of direction for
the firm as a whole (small one-product company
and a large multi business company) - is also about managing various product lines and
business units for maximum value (large multi
business company)
3Corporate Strategy
3 Key Issues The firms overall orientation
toward growth, stability or retrenchment
(directional strategy) The industries or markets
in which the firm competes through its products
and BU (portfolio strategy) The manner in which
management coordinates activities, transfer
resources, and cultivates capabilities among
product lines and BUs (parenting strategy)
4- Corporate Directional Strategy
- Orientation toward growth
- Expansion, contraction, status quo
- Concentration or diversification
- Internal development or acquisitions, mergers, or
alliances
5Corporate Directional Strategy
3 Grand Strategies
6Corporate Directional Strategy
1. Growth Strategies -- A corporation can
grow internally by expanding its operation both
globally and domestically, or it can grow
externally
7Corporate Directional Strategy
- 1. Growth Strategies --
- External mechanisms
- Mergers (Allied Corporation Signal Companies
Allied Signal) - Acquisitions (Procter Gamble acquisition of
Richardson-Vicks knowing for Oil of Olay and
Vidal Sassoon brands) - Strategic alliances
8Corporate Directional Strategy
- 1. Growth Strategies --
- Main advantages
- May mask flaws in a company
- Provide a big cushion for turnaround in case a
strategic error is made - Give more bargaining power
- Offer more opportunities for advancement,
promotion, and interesting jobs - 2 Basic forms
- Concentration
- Diversification
9Basic Concentration Strategies
- Vertical Growth --
- Vertical integration
- Full integration (100 suppliers controls
distributors) - Taper integration (lt50 supplies use own and
external distribution channels) - Quasi-integration (buy/sell from outside
suppliers/distributors that under its partial
control) - Long-term contract
- Backward integration
- Forward integration
- Is a logical strategy for a corporation or BU
with a strong competitive position in a highly
attractive industry
10Basic Concentration Strategies
- Horizontal Growth / Concentration --
- by expanding the firms products into other
geographic locations and/or by increasing the
range of products and services offered to current
markets. - Horizontal integration
- Full to partial ownership
- Long-term contracts
11Corporate Directional Strategy
- Basic Diversification Strategies
- Concentric Diversification when a firm has a
strong competitive position but industry
attractiveness is low - Growth into related industry
- Search for synergies
- Conglomerate diversification when industry is
unattractive and a firm lacks outstanding
abilities and skills - Growth into unrelated industry
- Concern with financial considerations
12Corporate Directional Strategy
- Growth into areas related to a companys
current product lines is generally more
successful than is growth in completely areas. - From successful growth projects
- 80 vertical growth
- 50 horizontal growth
- 35 concentric diversification
- 28 conglomerate diversification
13Corporate Directional Strategy
- International Entry Options --
- Exporting
- Licensing
- Franchising
- Joint Ventures
- Acquisitions
- Green-Field Development
- Production Sharing
- Turnkey Operation
- BOT Concept (Build, Operate, Transfer)
- Management Contracts
14Corporate Directional Strategy
- 2. Stability Strategies --
- Pause/proceed with caution (timeout before
continuing growth or retrenchment) - No change (to do nothing new)
- Profit strategies (to support profits by reducing
investments and short-term expenditures)
15Corporate Directional Strategy
- 3. Retrenchment Strategies --
- Turnaround
- Captive Company Strategy
- Selling out
- Divestment
- Bankruptcy
- Liquidation
16Corporate Strategy
- Portfolio Analysis --
- Resource commitment on best products to ensure
continued success - Resource commitment on new costly products high
risk
17BSG Matrix
18BSG Matrix
- Stars are high market share/high growth
businesses. The preferred strategy is growth. - Question marks are low market share/high growth
businesses. The preferred strategies are growth
for promising question marks and restructuring or
divestiture for the other question marks. - Cash cows are high market share/low growth
businesses. The preferred strategy is stability
or modest growth. - Dogs are low market share/low growth businesses.
The preferred strategy is retrenchment by
divestiture.
19BSG Matrix
- Limitations
- Too simplistic
- The link between market share and profitability
is questionable - Growth rate is only one aspect of industry
attractiveness - Product lines or business units are considered in
relation to the one market leader - Market share is only one aspect of overall
competitive position
20GE/McKinsey Matrix
21GE/McKinsey Matrix
- Business strengths reflect market share,
technological advantage, product quality,
operating costs, and price competitiveness. - Industry attractiveness reflects market size and
growth, capital requirements and competitive
intensity. - Both business strength and industry
attractiveness are categories as low, medium, and
high. - Combining the business strength and industry
attractiveness variables yields a nine-cell
matrix that identifies business units as
winners, question marks, average
businesses, profit producers, or losers.
22GE/McKinsey Matrix
- Limitations
- It can get quite complicated and cumbersome
- The numerical estimates of industry
attractiveness and business strength/competitive
position give the appearance of objectivity, but
they are in reality subjective judgments - It cannot effectively depict the positions or
business units in developing industries
23Portfolio Analysis
- Advantages of portfolio analysis
- It encourages top management to evaluate each of
the businesses individually and set objectives
and allocate resources for each. - It stimulates the use of externally oriented data
to supplement managements judgment. - It raises the issue of cash flow availability for
use in expansion and growth. - Its graphic depiction facilitates communication.
24Portfolio Analysis
- Limitations of portfolio analysis
- It is not easy to define product/market segments.
- It suggests the use of standard strategies that
can miss opportunities or be impractical. - It provides an illusion of scientific rigor when
in reality positions are based on subjective
judgments. - It is not always clear what makes an industry
attractive or where a product is in its life
cycle.
25Corporate Strategy
- Corporate Parenting Strategy --
- Strategic factors
- Performance improvement
- Analyze fit
26Corporate Parenting
- Value creation only occurs under three
conditions - the parent sees an opportunity for a business to
improve performance and a role for the parent in
helping to grasp the opportunity - the parent has the skills, resources and other
characteristics needed to fulfill the required
role - the parent has sufficient understanding of the
business and sufficient discipline to avoid other
value-destroying interventions.
27Corporate Parenting
- According to Campbell, Good and Alexander the
- developing a corporate parenting strategy
includes - 3 steps
- To examine each BU in terms of its strategic
factors. - To examine each BU in terms of areas in which
performance can be improved. - To analyze how well the parent corporation fits
with the BU.
28Corporate Parenting
- Heartland business has opportunity for
improvement by the parent and priority for all
corporate activities - Edge-of Heartland business has some parenting
characteristics fit the business, but others do
not - Ballast businesses fit very comfortably with the
parent corporation but contain very few
opportunities to be improved by the parent - Alien territory businesses have little
opportunity to be improved by the corporate
parent - Value trap businesses fit well with parenting
opportunities, but misfit with parents
understanding of the units strategic factors