Title: Business Structures and Business Development Strategies
1Business Structures and Business Development
Strategies
- Dr. William Y. Jiang
- Professor and Chair
- Department of Organization Management
- San José State University
- Tel 408-924-3551
- Email william.jiang_at_sjsu.edu
2Legal Business Structures
- Sole Proprietorship
- Partnership
- general partnerships
- limited partnerships
- Corporation
3Legal Business Structures
- Sole Proprietorship
- Easy to form with few regulations
- The owner is the business (same legal entity).
- No double tax
- Owner has unlimited liability
- Limited life
- Difficult to raise money
4Legal Business Structures
- Partnership
- Shared System (funding and liability)
- Shared Management
- Inexpensive and easy to form
- No double tax
- Difficult to raise money
5Legal Business Structures
- Corporation
- Independent legal entity and independent life
- More complicated to form (bylaws, Charters, etc.)
- Three sets of distinct stakeholders
shareholders, directors and manager - Ownership can be readily transferable
- Limited liability
- Unlimited life
- Possibility of fund raising
6Organizational Structure and Controls
- Organizational Structure
- Formal reporting relationships
- Authority and decision-making hierarchy
- It is critical to match organizational structure
to the firms strategy.
7Organizational Structure
- Effective structures provide
- Stability and Flexibility
- Structural stability provides
- Capacity to consistently and predictably manage
daily work routines
8Organizational Structure
- Structural flexibility provides
- The opportunity to explore competitive
possibilities - The allocation of resources to activities that
shape needed competitive advantages
9Relationships between Strategy and Structure
- Strategy and structure have a reciprocal
relationship - Structure flows from or follows the selection of
the firms strategy but - Once in place, structure can influence current
strategic actions as well as choices about future
strategies.
10Simple Structure
- Owner-manager
- Makes all major decisions directly.
- Monitors all activities.
- Matched with focus strategies and business-level
strategies - Commonly complete by offering a single product
line in a single geographic market.
11Simple Structure
- Growth creates complexity and structural
challenges - Owner-managers
- Commonly lack organizational skills and
experience. - Become ineffective in managing the specialized
and complex tasks in multiple organizational
functions.
12Functional Structure
- Chief Executive Officer (CEO)
- Limited corporate staff
- Functional line managers in dominant functional
areas - Production ?Marketing ?Engineering
- Accounting ?RD ?Human resources
13Multidivisional Structure
- Strategic Control
- Operating divisions function as separate
businesses or profit centers - Top corporate officer delegates responsibilities
to division managers - For day-to-day operations
- For business-unit strategy
- Appropriate as firm grows through diversification
14Multidivisional Structure (contd)
- Three Major Benefits
- Corporate officers are able to more accurately
monitor the performance of each business, which
simplifies the problem of control. - Facilitates comparisons between divisions, which
improves the resource allocation process. - Stimulates managers of poorly performing
divisions to look for ways of improving
performance.
15Matching Strategy and Functional Structure
- Different forms of the functional organizational
structure are matched to - Cost leadership strategy
- Differentiation strategy
- Integrated cost leadership/differentiation
strategy
16The External Environment
17General Environment
- Dimensions in the broader society that influence
an industry and the firms - Demographic
- Economic
- Political-legal
- Socio-cultural
- Technological
- Global
18Industry Environment
- The set of factors influencing a firm and its
competitive actions and competitive responses - Threat of new entrants
- Power of suppliers
- Power of buyers
- Threat of product substitutes
- Intensity of rivalry among competitors
19Five Forces Model
20Threat of New Entrants Barriers to Entry
- Economies of scale
- Product differentiation
- Capital requirements
- Switching costs
- Access to distribution channels
- Cost disadvantages independent of scale
- Government policy
- Expected retaliation
21Bargaining Power of Suppliers
- Supplier power increases when
- Suppliers are large and few in number
- Suitable substitute products not available
- Individual buyers are not large customer
- Suppliers goods are critical to the buyers
- Suppliers products has high switching costs
- Suppliers pose a threat to integrate forward
22Bargaining Power of Buyers
- Buyer power increases when
- Buyers are large and few in number
- Buyers purchase a large portion of an industrys
total output - Buyers switching costs are low.
- Buyers can pose threat to integrate backward
23Threat of Substitute Products
- The threat of substitute products increases
- Buyers face low switching costs
- The substitute product price is low.
- Substitute products quality and performance are
equal to or greater - Differentiated industry products that are valued
by customers reduce this threat
24Intensity of Rivalry Among Competitors
- Industry rivalry increases when
- Numerous competitors with equal balance
- Industry growth slows or declines
- High fixed costs
- Lack of differentiation or low switching costs
- High strategic stakes
- High exit barriers
25Interpreting Industry Analyses
Low entry barriers
Suppliers and buyers have strong positions
Strong threats from substitute products
Intense rivalry among competitors
Low profit potential
26Interpreting Industry Analyses
High entry barriers
Suppliers and buyers have weak positions
Few threats from substitute products
Moderate rivalry among competitors
High profit potential
27Business-Level Strategy
- An integrated and coordinated set of commitments
and actions the firm uses to gain a competitive
advantage by exploiting core competencies in
specific product markets.
28The Purpose of a Business-Level Strategy
- Business-Level Strategies
- create differences between the firms position
relative to those of its rivals - Perform activities differently or
- Perform different activities as compared to its
rivals
29Types of Potential Competitive Advantage
- Lower overall costs than rivals
- Differentiate the firms product or service and
command a premium price
30Competitive Scope
- Broad Scope
- The firm competes in many customer segments.
- Narrow Scope
- The firm selects a segment or group of segments
in the industry and tailors its strategy to
serving them at the exclusion of others.
31Types of Business-Level Strategies
Competitive Advantage
Cost
Uniqueness
Broad Target
Competitive Scope
Narrow Target