Title: Chapter 6 DEFINING THE ORGANIZATION
1Strategic Management of Technological Innovation
Melissa Schilling
- Chapter 6DEFINING THE ORGANIZATIONS STRATEGIC
DIRECTION
2Genzymes Focus on Orphan Drugs
- Genzyme was founded in 1981 by scientists
studying genetically inherited enzyme diseases - Adopted a very unusual strategy of developing
drugs for rare diseases rather than blockbuster
drugs. - Developing a drug takes 10-14 years at an average
cost of 800 million to perform the research, run
the clinical trials, get FDA approval and bring
the drug to market - Blockbuster drugs earn revenues of 1 billion or
more and are sold to millions of people with
chronic illnesses - Genzyme concentrated on the orphan drug market
that had a market of only a few thousand people - Requires smaller clinical trials, less
advertising, smaller sales force, less
competition - Insurance companies would be willing to cover the
drugs due to the severity of the diseases and a
limited number of patients for the drug
3Genzymes Focus on Orphan Drugs
- In 1983, the FDA established the Orphan Drug
Act, giving seven years market exclusivity to
developers of drugs for rare (lt200,000 patients)
diseases. - Also chose unusual strategy of doing its own
manufacturing and sales rather than licensing to
a large pharmaceutical company. - Diversified into side businesses to fund its RD
- Chemical supplies
- Genetic counseling
- Diagnostic testing
- The company went public in 1986, raising 27
million - Their first drug, Cerezyme, was sold to 4,500
patients at a yearly cost of 170,000 (annual
revenue of 800 million). The drug is required to
be taken for the lifetime of the patient. - By 2006, Genzyme was the worlds third largest
biotech company proving that a profitable
business could be built around small disease
populations
4Overview
- A coherent technological innovation strategy
leverages the firms existing competitive
position and provides direction for future
development of the firm. - Formulating this strategy requires
- Appraising the firms environment,
- Appraising the firms strengths, weaknesses,
competitive advantages, and core competencies - Articulating an ambitious strategic intent.
- Determining the key resources and capabilities
the firm needs to develop or acquire to meet its
long-term objectives
5Assessing the Firms Current Position
- External Analysis
- Two common methods are Porters Five-Force Model
and Stakeholder Analysis. - Porters Five-Force Model
- Has been used to analyze whether a particular
industry as a whole will be profitable or to
determine an individual firms chances for
success via a vis its competitors - Discount retail industry as a whole is very
competitive and thus unattractive for new
entrants but an individual entrant such as
Wal-Mart could be profitable because of its
scale, use of advanced technology, location
strategies, etc. - Degree of existing rivalry. Determined by number
of firms, relative size, degree of
differentiation between firms, demand conditions,
exit barriers (for firm to leave the market) - Threat of potential entrants. Determined by
attractiveness of industry, height of entry
barriers (e.g., start-up costs, brand loyalty,
regulation, etc.) - Bargaining power of suppliers. Determined by
number of suppliers and their degree of
differentiation, the portion of a firms inputs
obtained from a particular supplier, the portion
of a suppliers sales sold to a particular firm,
switching costs, and potential for backward
vertical integration - firm produce its own
supplies
6Assessing the Firms Current Position
- Bargaining power of buyers. Determined by number
of buyers, the firms degree of differentiation,
the portion of a firms inputs sold to a
particular buyer, the portion of a buyers
purchases bought from a particular firm,
switching costs, and potential for forward
vertical integration - supplier enters firms
business - Threat of substitutes. Determined by number of
potential substitutes, their closeness in
function and relative price. - Substitutes are not competitive products but can
fulfill a strategically equivalent role for the
customer - Other coffeehouses are competitors to Starbucks
but bars, restaurants, beer, soft drinks are
substitutes - Buses are substitutes for airlines
7Assessing the Firms Current Position
- Recently Porter has acknowledged the role of
complements. - The availability, quality and price of
complements will influence the threats and
opportunities posed by the industry - Must consider
- how important complements are in the industry,
- whether complements are differentially available
for the products of various rivals (impacting the
attractiveness of their goods), and - who captures the value offered by the
complements. - The ink cartridge market is extremely profitable
to desktop printer manufacturers and thus the
cartridge of one company is incompatible with the
printer of another company - The market is so profitable that third-party
vendors produce clones or refill the empty
cartridge with ink
6-7
8Assessing the Firms Current Position
9Assessing the Firms Current Position
- Who are the stakeholders?
- What does each stakeholder want?
- What resources do they contribute to the
organization? - What claims are they likely to make on the
organization?
10Assessing the Firms Current Position
- Internal Analysis
- Identify the firms strengths and weaknesses. In
Porters model of a value chain, activities are
divided into primary activities and support
activities - Primary activities are those directly related to
the product or service provided by the firm - Support activities are those indirectly related
to the main business of the firm - Each activity can then be considered from the
view of how it contributes to the overall value
produced by the firm and what the firms
strengths and weaknesses are in that activity
11Assessing the Firms Current Position
6-11
12Value-Chain Analysis for Take2 Interactive
Software
- Take2 Interactive Software
- Produces Grand Theft Auto video game
- RD is considered a primary activity, but the
support activity of the technology development is
not considered - Because all the game manufacturing is performed
by the console producers rather than by Take2,
its primary technology activities center on
design and games which is part of RD
13Value-Chain Analysis for Take2 Interactive
Software
14Value-Chain Analysis for Take2 Interactive
Software
15Assessing the Firms Current Position
- Once the key strengths and weaknesses are
identified, the firm can assess which strengths
have potential to be a source of sustainable
competitive advantage to implement its strategic
intent for the future - To be a source of sustainable competitive
advantage, resources must be Rare, Valuable,
Durable and Inimitable - Rare and valuable resources may yield a
competitive advantage, but that advantage will
not be sustainable if the firm is incapable of
keeping the resources or if other firms can
imitate them - A positive brand image can be a rare and valuable
resource, but it requires ongoing investment to
sustain it or else it will erode - Technological advances are reverse-engineered,
skillful marketing campaigns are copied,
innovative HR practices copied, etc.
16Assessing the Firms Current Position
- Resources are difficult (or impossible) to
imitate when they are - Tacit resources of an intangible nature, such
as knowledge, that can not be readily codified in
written form - Path dependent dependent on a particular
historical sequence of events - Socially complex they arise through the
interaction of multiple people - Causally ambiguous the relationship between a
resource and the outcome it produces is poorly
understood - Talent is considered to be a tacit and causally
ambiguous resource an inherent trait that can
not be trained and the methods by which
individuals acquire it or tap into it is poorly
understood - A first-mover advantage is a path-dependent
advantage that can not be copied only one firm
can be first
6-16
17Identifying Core Competencies and Capabilities
- Once a baseline internal analysis has been
established, a firm can move on to identifying
its core competencies and formulate its strategic
intent - Core Competencies A set of integrated and
harmonized abilities that distinguish the firm in
the marketplace. - Competencies typically combine multiple kinds of
abilities e.g., - Managing the market interface
- Building and managing an effective infrastructure
- Technological abilities
- Several core competencies may underlie a business
unit and several business units may draw from
same competency. - The organizations structure and incentives must
encourage cooperation and exchange of resources
across strategic business unit boundaries - Core competencies should
- Be a significant source of competitive
differentiation - Cover a range of businesses
- Be hard for competitors to imitate
- Sonys core competency is miniaturization which
arises from harmonizing multiple technologies
(liquid crystal displays, semiconductors, etc.)
and is leveraged into multiple markets (TVs,
radios, PDAs, etc.)
18Identifying Core Competencies and Capabilities
- Prahalad Hamel compare competencies to roots
from which grow core products such as major
components or subassemblies - Core products, in turn give rise to business
units, whose fruits are the various end products
of the company - Individuals in the corporation should be viewed
as corporate assets that can be redeployed across
the organization and not wed to a particular
business unit
19Identifying Core Competencies and Capabilities
- Prahalad Hamel offer the following tests to
identify the firms core competencies - Is it a significant source of competitive
differentiation? Does it provide a unique
signature to the organization? Does it make a
significant contribution to the value a customer
perceives in the end product? - For example, Sonys skills in miniaturization
have an immediate impact on the utility customers
reap from its portable products. - Does it transcend a single business? Does it
cover a range of businesses, both current and
new? - For example, Hondas core competence in engines
enables the company to be successful in
businesses as diverse as automobiles,
motorcycles, lawn mowers, and generators. - Is it hard for competitors to imitate? In
general, competencies that arise from the complex
harmonization of multiple technologies will be
difficult to imitate. The competence may have
taken years (or decades) to build. This
combination of resources and embedded skills will
be difficult for other firms to acquire or
duplicate. - According to Prahalad and Hamel, few firms are
likely to be leaders in more than five or six
core competencies. If a company has compiled a
list of 20 to 30 capabilities, it probably has
not yet identified its true core competencies. - By viewing the business as a portfolio of core
competencies, managers are better able to focus
on value creation and meaningful new business
development, rather than cost cutting or
opportunistic expansion
20Research Brief Identifying the Firms Core
Competencies
- Gallon, Stillman and Coates offer a step-by-step
program for identifying core competencies. - Module 1 -- Assemble a steering committee,
appoint a program manager, and communicate the
overall goals of the project to all members of
the firm. An exhaustive inventory of capabilities
should be compiled. - Module 2 -- Constructing an inventory of
capabilities categorized by type. Assess their
strength, importance, and criticality. - Module 3 Organize capabilities by both their
criticality and the current level of expertise
within the firm for each. - Module 4 Distill competencies into possible
candidates for the firm to focus on. No options
should be thrown out yet. - Module 5 -- Testing the candidate core
competencies against Prahalad and Hamel's
original criteria. - Module 6 -- Evaluate the firms position in the
core competency vis a vis the competition. The
firm can now identify any areas in which it needs
to develop or acquire missing pieces of a
particular competency.
21Risk of Core Rigidities
- When firms excel at an activity, they can become
over committed to it and rigid. - Incentives and culture may reward current
competencies while thwarting development of new
competencies. - Dynamic capabilities are competencies that enable
the firm to quickly respond to change, emerging
markets and major technological discontinuities - e.g., firm may develop a set of abilities that
enable it to rapidly deploy new product
development teams for a new opportunity firm may
develop competency in working with alliance
partners to gain needed resources quickly. - Corning has made its own evolvability one of its
most important core competencies - Invests heavily in research areas likely to
provide scientific breakthroughs - Develops pilot plants to experiment with new
products and production processes - Manages its relationships with alliance partners
as an integrative and flexible system of
capabilities that extend the firms boundaries not
as individual relationships focused on particular
projects
22Strategic Intent
- Strategic Intent
- A firms purpose is to create value not just by
cutting costs or improving operations but by
developing new businesses and markets and
leveraging corporate resources - Strategic intent is a long-term goal that is
ambitious, builds upon and stretches firms core
competencies, and draws from all levels of the
organization. - Canons obsession with overtaking Xerox, Apples
mission of ensuring that everyone has a personal
computer and Yahoos goal of becoming the worlds
largest Internet shopping mall (Hamel Prahalad) - Typically looks 10-20 years ahead, establishes
clear milestones for employees to target - Without it, firms follow their customers instead
of leading them - Firm should identify resources and capabilities
needed to close gap between strategic intent and
current position.
23The Balanced Scorecard
- Kaplan and Norton point out that a firms methods
of measuring performance will strongly influence
whether and how the firm pursues its strategic
objectives - They argue that effective performance measurement
is more than just reliance on financial
indicators. It should incorporate - Financial perspective
- Goals meet shareholders expectations, double
corporate value in 7 years - Measures return on capital, net cash flow,
earnings growth - Customer perspective
- Goals improve customer loyalty, offer
best-in-class customer service - Measures market share, percent of repeat
purchases, customer satisfaction surveys
24Theory In Action
- Internal perspective
- Goals reduce internal safety incidents, build
best-in-class franchise teams, improve inventory
management - Measures number of safety incidents per month,
franchise quality rating, inventory costs - Innovation and learning perspective
- Goals accelerate and improve new product
development, improve employee skills - Measures percentage of sales from products
developed within the past 5 years, average length
of the new product development cycle, employee
training targets - The scorecard may have to be adapted to fit
different markets and businesses, but a 2002
survey found that approximately 50 of Fortune
1,000 companies in the US and 40 in Europe use
some version of the balanced scorecard
25Theory In Action