Title: STRATEGY AND
1MODULE 5
- STRATEGY AND
- COMPETITIVE
- ADVANTAGE
2MODULE OUTLINE
- Five Generic Competitive Strategies
- Low-Cost Leadership Strategy
- Broad Differentiation Strategies
- Best-Cost Provider Strategies
- Focus Strategies Based on Low Cost
- Focus Strategies Based on Differentiation
- Offensive Strategies
- Defensive Strategies
- Vertical Integration Strategies
- First-Mover Advantages Disadvantages
3STRATEGY COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE exists when firm has an
edge in Defending against competitive forces
securing customer
KEY TO SUCCESS
Convince customers firms product/service offers
SUPERIOR VALUE Offer buyers a good product at
a lower price Use differentiation to provide a
better product buyers think is worth a premium
price
4COMPETITIVE STRATEGY PRINCCIPLE
- Successful companies invest
- Aggressively in creating sustainable
- Competitive advantage, for it is their
- Single most dependable contributor
- To above average ROI!
5WAYS TO WIN A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
- Become the low-cost producer
- Make the best-made product
- Provide customer more value for the money
- Save customer money
- Provide superior customer service
- Enhance performance buyer gets
- Provide more convenient locations
- Make a more reliable durable product
6COMPETITIVE STRATEGYDEFINITION
- COMPETITIVE STRATEGY consists of moves to
- Attract customers
- Withstand competitive pressures
- Strengthen firms market position
- OBJECTIVES
- Earn a COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
- Cultivate clientele LOYAL CUSTOMERS
- COMPETITIVE STRATEGY, narrower in scope than
business strategy, focuses on managements plan
to compete successfully
7THE FIVE GENERIC COMPETITIVESTRATEGIES
Type of Advantage Sought
Differentiation
Lower Cost
Broad Differentiation Strategy
Overall Low-Cost Leadership Strategy
Broad Range Of Buyers
Best-Cost Provider Strategy
Focused Differentiation Strategy
Focused Low-Cost Strategy
Buyer Segment Or Niche
MARKET TYPE
8THE FIVE GENERIC COMPETITIVE STRATEGIES
- Striving to be the overall low-cost provider in
industry - Striving to build customer loyalty by
- differentiating ones product offerings
- from rivals products
- Striving to give customers more value for the
- money by combining an emphasis on low cost with
an emphasis on upscale differentiation
9THE FIVE GENERIC COMPETITIVE STRATEGIES
- Concentrating on a narrow buyer segment, out
competing rivals on basis of lower cost - Offering niche members a products or service
customized to needs -
10LOW-COST LEADERSHIP
Objective
Open up a sustainable cost advantage over
rivals, using lower-cost edge as basis to
Under price rivals reap market share
gains or Earn higher profit margin selling
at going price
11LOW-COSY LEADERSHIP
Keys to Success
Make achievement of low-cost relative to rivals
the THEME Of firms business strategy Find ways
to drive cists out of business year after-year
Low Cost leadership means low OVERALL COSTS,
Not just low manufacturing or production costs!
12OPENING UP A COST ADVANTAGE OVER RIVALS
- Do better job of booting efficiency
- controlling costs along value chain by
- out-managing rivals regarding both
- structural exceptional cost drivers
- Revamp firms value chain to bypass some
cost-producing activities altogether - A combination of approaches 1 2
13OPENING UP A COST ADVANTAGE OVER RIVALS
- Successful low-cost producers aggressively
pursue cost savings throughout the value chain. -
- NO AREA IS OVERLOOKED !
- NO COST-SAVING OPPORTUNITY IS IGNORES!
14CONTROLLING STRUCTURALCOST DRIVERS
- Capture scales economies avoid scales
diseconomies. - Capture learning experience curve effects
consider linkages with other activities in chain - Find sharing opportunities with other business
units in enterprise - Compare benefits of vertical integration vs.
- outsourcing
- Take advantage of vocational variables
15CONTROLLING EXECUTIONAL COST DRIVERS
- Capitalize on timing considerations associated
with-mover advantages disadvantages - Try to increase capacity utilization
- Consider cost impact of strategic choices
operating decisions
16REVAMPING THE VALUE CHAIN
- Simplify product design
- Offer basic, no-frills product/service
- Reengineer core business processes
- Shift to a simpler, less capita-intensive,
- or more streamlines technological process
- Use direct-to-end user sales marketing
approaches. - Relocate facilities closer to suppliers or
customers - Pursue more vertical integration relative to
rivals - Focus on limited product/service to meet special
needs of target segment
17CHARATERISTICS OF A LOW-COST PROVIDER
Cost conscious organizational culture Spartan
facilities Limited sparks frills for
executives Intolerance of waste Intensive
screening of budget requests Employee
participation in cost control efforts
Low-Cost producers champion FRUGALITY while
aggressively INVESTING in cost-saving
improvements!
18WHAT MANAGERS HAVE TO DO TO ACHIEVE LOW-COST
LEADERSHIP
- Scrutinize each-creating activity, identifying
cost drivers - Use knowledge about cost drivers to manage
- Costs of each activity down further ear after
year - Consider fundamentally reengineering how
activities are performed coordinated - Be entrepreneurial creative in cutting some
- Activities out of value chain system
19COMPETITIVE STRENGTHS OF A LOW-COST PROVIDER
STRATEGY
- Providers defenses against competitive forces
- RIVAL COMPETITORS- Better positioned to compete
offensively on basis of price - BUYERS-Better protected from negotiating power of
large customers - SUPPLIERS- More insulted than competitors from
powerful suppliers - POTENTIAL ENTRANTS- Low-cost providers pricing
power is a significant entry barrier - SUBSTITUTES- Better positioned to use low price
as a - Defense against substitutes
20WHEN A LOW-COST PROVIDERSTRATEGY WORKS BEST
- Price competition among rivals is dominant
competitive force - Industrys product is a commodity-type
- item readily available
- Few ways to achieve product differentiation
- that have value to buyers
- Most buyers have similar needs/requirements
- Buyers incur low switching costs changing
sellers - Buyers are large have signification bargaining
power
21DRAWBACKS TO A LOW-COSTPROVIDER STRATEGY
- Technical breakthroughs up cost reductions for
rivals, negating a low-cost providers efficiency
advantages - Rivals find it comparatively easy or inexpensive
to imitate leaders low cost methods - Low- cost provider becomes so fixated on cost
reduction it fails to respond to - Increased buyer desires for added quality
- or service features
- New developments in related products
- Declining buyer sensitivity to price
22DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGIES
Objective
Incorporate differentiating features to cause
buyers to prefer Firms product/service over
rivals brand
Key to Success
Find ways to differentiate to CREATE VALUE for
buyers that are NOT EASILY COPIED by rivals Not
spending more to differentiate than price premium
to be Charged.
23DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGIES
-
- Successful differentiation allows firm to
- Command a premium price
- and/or increase unit sales and/or build
brand loyalty
24APPROACHES TO DIFFERENTIATION
- Different taste Dr. Pepper
- Superior service Federal Express
- Spare parts availability caterpillar
- More for your money-McDonalds, Wal-Mart
- Engineering design performance- Mercedes
Prestige-Rolex - Quality-Honda automobiles
- Top-of-the-line image- Ralph Lauren
- Technological leadership-3M corporation
- Unconditional satisfaction-L.L. Bean
-
-
25Where to look for Differentiation Opportunities
- Purchasing procurement activities
- Product-oriented RD activities
- Production process-oriented RD activities
- Outbound logistics distribution activities
- Marketing, sales, service activities
26ACHIEVING A DIFFERENTIATION BASED COMPETITIVE
ADVANTAGE
Option 1
Incorporate product attributes user features
that lower buyers costs in using product
Option 2
Incorporate features that raise performance buyer
gets out Of product
Option 3
Incorporate features that raise performance buyer
satisfaction In non-economic/intangible ways.
27SIGNALS OF VALUE
- Buyers often judge value on basis of SIGNALS
- Price where it connotes quality
- How well known brand is said to be whether
seller has prestige customers - SIGNALS OF VALUE may be as important as
- ACTUAL VALUE when
- Differences among competing brands are
subjective - Buyers are making first-time purchases
- Repurchase is infrequent
- Buyers are unsophisticated
28COMPETITIVE STRENGTHS OF A DIFFERENTIATION
STRATEGY
- Provides defenses against competitive
- forces RIVAL COMPETITORS- Buyers
- develop loyalty to brand they like best
- BUYERS-Mitigates bargaining power of large
buyers since other products are less attractive
SUPPLIERS Seller may be in better position to
POTENTIAL ENTRANTS- Buyer loyalty acts as entry
barrier - SUBSTITUTES- Better positioned to fend off
threats of substitutes based on customers - attachment to differentiating attributes
29WHAT KIND OF DIFFERENTIATION TO PURSUE
Most appealing types of differentiation
strategies Those LEAST subject to
imitation Most likely to product an attractive,
longer-lasting Edge when its based on
Technical superiority Quality Giving
customers more support services Giving customers
more value for money Core competencies
30WHEN A DIFFERENTIATIONSTRATEGY WORKS BESTS
- There are many ways to differentiate
- product/service differences are perceived by
buyer to have value - Buyer needs uses of item are diverse
- Not many rivals are following a similar
- type of differentiation approach
Differentiation strategies are most powerful
when buyer needs preferences are too
diverse To be satisfied by a standardized product!
31PITFALLS OF A DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY
- Trying to differentiate on a feature buyers do
not perceive as lowering their - cost or enhancing their well-being
- Over-differentiating such that product
- features exceed buyers needs
- Charging a price premium that buyers perceive is
too high - Ignoring need to signal value, depending only
- on real bases of differentiation
- Not identifying what buyers will consider as
value
32COMPETITIVE STRATEGY PRINCIPLE
A low-cost producer strategy can defeat
a Differentiation strategy when buyers are
Satisfied with a standard product and do not
See extra attribution as worth paying Additional
money to obtain!
33BEST-COST PRODUCER STRATEGY
- Combines a strategic emphasis on
low-cost with a strategic emphasis on - differentiation
- Make an upscale product at a lower cost
- Give customers more value for the money
Objectives
Create superior value by MEETING EXCEEDING buyer
expectation On product attributes BEATING their
price expectations Be the low-cost producer of a
product with GOOD-TO-EXCELLENT Product
attributes, then use cost advantage to UNDERPRICE
Comparable brands
34BEST-COST PRODUCER STRATEGY
Keys to Success
Matching close rivals on key attributes beating
them on cost Expertise in incorporating upscale
product attributes at a lower Than
rivals Ability to contain costs by providing
buyers a BETTER product
35POWER OF BEST-COSTPRODUCER STRATEGY
- Competitive advantage comes from MATCHING close
rivals on key product attributes BEATING them
on price - Most successful best-cost producers have skills
to SIMUL TANEOUSLY manage costs down product
caliber upward - Best-cost producer can often out-compete both a
low-cost provider a differentiator where - Buyer diversity makes product
differentiation the norm and - Many buyers are price value sensitive
36COMPETITIVE STRATEGY PRINCIPLE
The most powerful competitive approach a company
Can pursue is striving relentlessly to become a
lower and lower cost producer of a higher and
higher caliber product, with the eventual intent
of becoming the Industrys absolute lowest cost
producer and, Simultaneously, the producer of
the industrys Overall best product!
37FOCUS/NICHE STRATEGIES
Objectives
Do a better job of serving buyers in target
market niche than rivals
Keys to Success
Choose a market niche where buyers have
distinctive preferences, Special requirements,
or unique needs Develop a unique ability to serve
needs of target buyer segment
38APPROACHES TO FOCUSING
Approach 1
Achieve LOWER COSTS than rivals in serving the
segment- A low-cost strategy
Approach 2
Offer niche buyers SOMETHING DIFFERENT from
rivals A differentiation strategy
39EXAMPLES FOCUS STRATEGIES
- Rolls Royce
- Luxury automobiles
- Apple Computer
- Desktop publishing
- Fort Howard Paper
- Paper products for industrial/commercial firms
- Commuter airlines
- Link major airports with small population
centers - Motel 6
- Caters to price-conscious travelers
40WHAT MAKE A SEGMENTATTRACTIVE FOR FOCUSING?
- Big enough to be profitable
- Good growth potential
- Not crucial to success of major competitors
- Focusing firm has resources to effectively serve
- segment
- Focusing can defend itself against
- Challengers via customer goodwill its superior
ability to serve buyers in segment
41POWER OF FOCUS STRATEGY
- Competitive power is greatest when industry has
fast-growing segments - Big enough to be profitable BUT
- Small enough to be of secondary interest to
large rivals - No other rivals are concentrating on segment
- Buyers in segment require
- Specialized expertise OR
- Customized product attributes
42COMPETITIVE STRENGTHSOF A FOCUS STRATEGY
- Provides defenses against competitive
- forces
- RIVAL COMPETITORS- Rivals do not have ability to
meet specialized needs of target clientele - POTENTIAL Entrants- Focusers core competence
can act as a barrier - SUBSTITUTES-Focusers core competence
- provides obstacle to sellers of substitutes
- BUYERS-Focusers unique ability to meet power of
largest niche buyers
43WHEN DOES A FOCUS STRATEGY WORK BEST?
- It is costly or difficult for multi-segment
rivals to serve specialized needs of target niche
- No other rivals are concentrating on same
segment - Firms resources do not permit it to go after a
wider portion of market - Industry has many different segments,
- creating more focusing opportunities
44RISKS OF A FOCUS STRATEGY
- Broad line competitors may find effective ways
to match focused firm in serving target market - Niche buyers preferences may move
- towards product attributes desired by market as
a whole - Segment may become so appealing it
- becomes crowded with aggressive rivals,
- causing segment profiles to be split many ways
45OFFENSIVE DEFENSIVE STRATEGIES
- Nearly always results in successful achievement
of competitive advantage - Can protect competitive advantage, but
- RARELY are the basis for achieving competitive
advantage
46The Building and Eroding of Competitive Advantage
Benefit Period
Erosion Period
Buildup Period
Size of Competitive Advantage Achieved
Strategic Move Produce Competitive Advantage
Moves by Rivals Reduce Competitive Advantage
TIME
Size of competitive Advantage
47BUILDING ERODING OF COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
- Offensive strategic moves succeed in producing a
competitive advantage - Ideally, buildup period is short
- Length is governed by how long it takes rivals to
respond effectively enough to close gap - Characterized by launch of counter offensives of
rivals to attack advantage whittle it away
48PRINCIPLE
- Any competitive advantage
- currently held Will eventually be
- eroded by the actions of
- competent, resourceful
- competitors!
49OPTION FOR MOUNTING STRATEGY OFFENSIVE
- Initiatives to match or exceed rivals
- Strengths
- Initiatives to capitalize on rivals weaknesses
- Simultaneous initiatives on many fronts End-run
offensives - Guerrilla warfare tactics
- Preemptive strikes
50Attacking competitorsstrengths
- Gain market share by out-matching strengths of
weaker rivals - Whittle away at a rivals competitive advantage
-
- Challenging strong competitors with a lower
price is foolhardy unless aggressor has a COST
ADVANTAGE or advantage of GREATER - FINANCIAL STRENGT!
51 ATTACKING COMPETITORSTRENGHS
- Under price rivals
- Boost advertising
- Introduce new features to appeal to rivals
customers. -
- Attack with equally good product lower price
- Develop low-cost edge, use it to under price
rivals.
52ATTACKING COMPETOTOR WEAKNESSES
- Concentrate ones competitive strengths
resources directly against rivals weaknesses - Concentrate on geographic regions where
- has weak market share
- Go after more performance-conscious customers of
rivals who lag behind challenger - Attack rivals with weaker advertising brand
recognition. -
53Competitive Strategy Principle
Challenging rivals where they are most
vulnerable is more likely to succeed than
challenging them Where they are strongest
ESPECIALLY when Challenger possesses competitive
advantage in Areas where rivals are weak!
54LAUNCHING OFFENSIVEON MANY FRONTS
- Launch several major initiatives to
- Throw rival off-balance,
- Splinter its attention in many directions, and
force it to use substantial resources to defend
its position - A challenger with superior resources can
- Overpower a weaker rival by outspending it
across-the-board long enough to buy its way
into the market .
55END-RUN OFFENSIVES
- DODGE head-to-head confrontations that escalate
competitive intensity and RISK cutthroat
competition Attempt to - MANEUVER AROUND competition.
- Gain first-mover advantage in a new arena Force
competitors into playing catch up change rules of
competition in aggressors favor.
56END-RUN OFFENSIVESAPPROACHES
- Move aggressively into new geographic markets
- Where rivals have no market presence
- Introduce products with different attributes
- Features to better meet buyer needs
- Introduce next-generation technologies
- leapfrog rivals
- Come up with more support services for customers
57GUERRILLA OFFENSES
- Use principles of surprise hit-and-run
- To attack in locations at times where
conditions are most favorable to initiator - Well-suited to small challengers with limited
resources
58GUERRILLA OFFENESOPTIONS
- Focus on narrow target weakly defended by rivals
challenge rivals where they are overextended
when they are encountering problems - Make random scattered raids on leaders
- with tactics such as
- Occasional low-balling on price
- Intense bursts of promotional activity
- Legal actions charging antitrust violations,
- patent infringements, unfair advertising
59PREEMPTIVE STRIKES
-
- Involves moving first to secure an advantageous
position that rivals are - foreclosed or discouraged from duplicating !
-
60PREEMPTIVE STRIKES OPTIONS
- Expand capacity ahead of demand in hopes of
discouraging rivals from following suit - Tie up best or cheapest sources of essential raw
materials - Move to secure best geographic locations
- Obtain business of prestigious customers
- Build an image in buyers minds that is unique
hard to copy - Secure exclusive or dominant access to best
- distributors
- Acquire desirable, but struggling, competitor
-
61CHOOSING WHOM TO ATTACK
- Four types of firms at which to aim an offensive
- Market leaders
- Runner-up firms
- Struggling rivals on verge of going under
- Small local/regional firms not doing the job
62OFFENSIVE STRATEGY COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
- Competitive advantage areas offering strongest
basis for a STRATEGIC OFFENSIVE - Develop lower-cost product operations that
lower costs or enhance - differentiation
- Develop product features that deliver superior
- performance or lower users costs
- Give more responsive customer service
- Escalate marketing effort
- Pioneer new distribution channel
- Sell direct to end-users
-
63OFFENSIVE STRATEGY COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
Chances for strategic success are improved when
offensive is tied to what firm best Key
skill Strong function competence
64DEFENSIVE STRATEGY
- Lesson risk of being attacked
- Blunt impact of any attack that occurs
- Influence challengers to aim attacks at other
rivals - Strengthen firms present position
- Help sustain any competitive advantage held
65DEFENSIVE STRATEGIESAPPROACHES
- Block avenues challengers can take in
- mounting offensive attacks
- Make it clear any challenge will be met with
strong counterattack.
66DEFENSIVE STRATEGIESAPPROACH1
- Broaden product line to fill gaps rivals may go
after - Keep prices low on models that match rivals
- Sign exclusive agreements distributors
- Offer free training buyers personnel
- Give better credit terms to buyers
- Reduce delivery times for spare parts
- Increase warranty overages
- Patent alternative technologies
- Sign exclusive contracts with best suppliers
- Protect proprietary know-how
67DEFENSIVE STRATEGIES APPROACH 2
- Publicly announce managements strong
- Commitment to maintain present market share
- Publicly announce plans to construct new
- production capacity to meet forecasted demand
- Give out advance information about new products,
technological breakthroughs, other moves - Publicly commit firm to policy of matching
terms offered by rivals - Maintain war chest of cash reserves
- Make occasional counter-responses to rivals
moves
68VERTICAL INTEGRATIONSTRATEGIES
- Vertical integration extends a firms competitive
- Scope within same industry
- BACKWARD into sources of supply
- FORWARD toward end-users of final product
-
- Moves to vertically integrate can aim becoming
- FULLY INTEGRATED
- PARTIALLY INTEGRATED
69COMPETITIVE STRATEGY PRINCIPLE
A vertical integration strategy has appeal ONLY
if it Significantly strengthens a firms
competitive Position!
70APPEAL OF BACKWARD INTEGRATION
- Generates cost savings only if volume
- Needed is big enough to capture efficiencies of
suppliers cost saving potential is strongest when
- Suppliers have sizable profit margins
- Item being supplied is a major cost component
- Necessary technical skills are easily mastered
- A differentiation-based competitive advantage
arises when firm ends up with a better quality
part spares firm uncertainty of depending on
suppliers of crucial raw materials -
-
71APPEAL OF FORWARDINTEGRATION
Advantageous for firm to set up its own wholesale
retail distribution network if Undependable
distribution channels Undermine into
distribution retailing may be cheaper than
going through independent distributors May help
achieve greater product differentiation, allowing
escape from price-oriented competition for
manufacturer, may provide better access to
ultimate consumer.
72STRATEGIC DISADVANTAGES OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION
- Boosts capital requirements
- Results accommodating buyer demands
- for product variety
- Extends firms scope of activity, locking it
deeper into industry - Poses problems of balancing capacity at
- each stage of value chain
- Requires radically different skills
capabilities - can reduce firms manufacturing flexibility,
- Lengthening design time ability to introduce
new products
73UNBUNDLING OUTSOURCINGSTRSTEGIES
Concept
Involves withdrawing from certain stages in value
chain System and relying on outside vendors to
perform needed Activities and services
74ADVANTAGES OF OUTSOURCING STRATEGIES
- Activity can be performed better or more cheaply
by outside specialists - Activity is not crucial to achieving competitive
advantage - Reduces firms risk exposure to changing
technology and/or changing buyer preference
streamlines firm operations in ways to - cut cycle time
- Speed decision-making
- Reduce coordination costs
- Allows firm to concentrate on its core business
75PROS CONS OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION
- Use of a vertical integration strategy
- depends on if it can enhance performance of
- strategy critical activities to EITHER
- Lower costs OR
- Increase differentiation impact on
- Investment costs
- Flexibility response times
- Administrative overhead of coordination
- if a competitive advantage can be created
76FIRST-MOVER ADVANTAGES
- WHEN to make a strategic move is often as
crucial as WHAT move to make - First-mover advantages arise WHEN
- Pioneering helps build firms image
- reputation
- Early commitments to raw material suppliers, new
technologies, distribution channels can produce
cost advantage - Loyalty of first time buyers is high
- Moving first can be a preemptive strike
77FIRST-MOVER DISADVANTAGES
- Arise WHEN
- Costs of pioneering are sizable loyalty of
first - time buyers is weak
- Rapid technological change allows followers to
Leapfrog pioneers - Skills know-how of pioneers are easily
- imitated by latecomers to crack market
78FIRST- MOVER DISADVANTAGES
- Arise WHEN
- Costs of pioneering are sizable loyalty of
first time buyers is weak - Rapid technological change allows followers to
leapfrog know-how of pioneers are easily
imitated by late movers - It is easy for latecomers to crack market