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Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
Lesson
9.27
LEVELS
OF STRATEGIES, PORTER'S MODEL
AND
STRATEGY
DEVELOPMENT (BCG) AND
IMPLEMENTATION
Level
of Strategies
Many
organizations develop strategies at three
different levels. These
three different and distinct
levels of
strategy
are corporate, business, and
functional:
Corporate-level
strategy is developed by
top-level management and the board of
directors. The
corporate-level
strategy seeks
to determine what businesses a
corporation should be in or wants to be
in.
Two
popular approaches for
answering the question of what business(es) should we
be in are the grand
strategies
framework and the corporate portfolio
matrix.
1.
These
strategies address
a.
What
business the organization will be coordinated to
strengthen the
organization's
competitive position.
b.
How
the strategies of those businesses
will be coordinated to strengthen
the
organization's competitive
position.
c.
How
resources will be allocated
among businesses.
2.
Business-level
strategy concentrates
on the best means of competing within a
particular business
while
also supporting the corporate-level
strategy.
a.
The
distinction between corporate-level and
business-level strategy
applies
only
to organizations with separate divisions
that compete in
different
industries.
b.
A
strategic
business unit (SBU) is a
distinct business, with its
own set
of
competitors that can be managed
reasonably independently of other
businesses
within the organization.
3.
Functional-level
strategy focuses
on action plans for managing a particular
functional area
within
a
business in a way that
supports the business-level
strategy.
a.
Functional
areas include operations, marketing,
finance, human
resources
management,
accounting, research and development,
and engineering.
b.
Functional
strategies are usually developed by
functional managers and
are
typically
reviewed by business unit
heads.
4.
Coordinating
strategies
across these three levels is
critical in maximizing strategic
impact.
The
role of competitive analysis in strategy
formulation and implementation
Porter's
Forces Model:
Michael
E. Porter, a noted strategy expert,
has devised the five
competitive forces model as an
approach
for
analyzing the external environment for
both the nature and the intensity of
competition in a given
industry
in terms of five major
forces.
1.
The
model provides an environmental assessment of
strategically significant
elements
of the organization's task
environment.
2.
Rivalry
is the extent to which competitors use
tactics to lower the profits of
their
competitors.
The
bargaining power of suppliers is the extent to which
suppliers can exert power
3.
over
business in an industry by threatening to
raise prices or reduce the
quality of
goods
and services they
provide.
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Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
4.
The
bargaining power of buyers depends on the
factors such as number of
customers
in the market, customer information,
and the availability of
substitute
which
determine the amount of influence that
buyers have in an
industry.
5.
The
threat of new entrants is the threat of a
price war if new competitors
can enter
the
market.
The
threat of substitute products or services is the
extent to which businesses in
6.
other
industries can offer
substitute products, thus
reducing the profit
potential
for
the industry.
The
competitive environment, in some
industries, may reach the
point of hyper
competition-a
state of
rapidly
escalating competition. When this
happens, environments may become upward
spirals of
uncertainty,
dynamism, and heterogeneity of players
making it difficult for any organization
to sustain
competitive
advantage.
An
organizational
assessment determines
how organizational factors in the
internal environment affect
the
competitive situation.
The
resource-based strategic view is a
useful approach to internal
assessment as it
1.
focuses
on competitive implications of several
sets of organizational resources
and
capabilities.
a.
Financial
resources include debt, equity, retained
earnings, and other
money
related matters.
b.
Physical
resources include buildings, machinery,
and other materials
to
operate.
c.
Human
resources include skills, abilities,
experience, and other
work
related
characteristics of those associated
with the organization.
d.
Organizational
resources include the history,
relationships, levels of trust,
and
other culture dimensions.
2.
Assessing
the competitive implications of these
resources and capabilities
relative
to
the environment involves answering
questions about four critical
factors.
a.
How
much value does any
resource or capability add?
b.
What,
if any, degree of rareness
does each resource or capability
have
among
competing firms?
What
is the degree of imitability by competitors of
each resource or
c.
capability?
Is
the organization of the firm's resources
and capabilities by the
formal
d.
reporting
relationships, the control and
reward systems, and other
factors
such
so as to achieve the best competitive
advantage?
3.
Achieving
sustained competitive advantage
requires both the development in
industries in which
competitive
forces are favorable and
upon the development of resources and
capabilities that are
valuable,
rare,
and are difficult to imitate.
When a firm has valuable,
rare, and difficult to imitate
resources and
capabilities,
it is said to have a distinctive
competence.
Formulating
corporate-level strategy
A.
A
grand strategy (master
strategy) provides the basic strategic
direction at the corporate
level
of the organization. Four grand
strategies have been
identified.
1.
Growth
strategies are
grand strategies that
involve organizational expansion
along
some major dimension.
a.
Concentration
focuses
on effecting the growth of a single
product or
service
or a small number of closely related
products or services.
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Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
1)
Market
development is gaining a larger share of a current
market
or
expanding into new
ones.
Product
development is improving a basic product
or service or
2)
expanding
into closely related
products or services.
3)
Horizontal
integration is adding one or more
business that is
similar,
usually by purchasing such
business.
b.
Vertical
integration involves
effecting growth through the production
of
inputs
previously provided by suppliers or
through the replacement of a
customer
role (Such as that of a
distributor) by disposing of one's
own
outputs.
Backward
integration occurs when a business
grows by becoming
1)
its
own supplier
2)
Forward
integration occurs when
organizational growth
encompasses
a role previously fulfilled by a
customer.
Diversification
entails
effecting growth through the development of
new areas that are
clearly distinct from
current
businesses.
Conglomerate
diversification takes place
when an organization
1)
diversifies
into areas that are
unrelated to its current
business.
Concentric
diversification occurs when an organization
diversifies
2)
into
a related, but distinct,
business.
c.
These
growth strategies can be implemented
through a number of means:
1)
Internal
growth occurs as the organization expands
by building
on
its own internal
resources.
2)
An
acquisition
is the
purchase of all or part of one
organization
by
another.
3)
A
merger
is the
combining of two or more
companies into one
organization.
4)
A
joint venture occurs when two or
more organizations
provide
resources
to support a given project or product
offering.
2.
A
stability
strategy is a
second type of grand strategy
that involves maintaining
the
status quo or growing in a methodical,
but slow, manner.
a.
Small,
privately owned businesses are
most likely to adopt this
strategy.
b.
Some
of the reasons for adopting a
stability strategy are that
it
1)
Avoids
the risks or hassles of aggressive
growth.
2)
Provides
the opportunity to recover after a period
of accelerated
growth.
3)
Lets
the company hold on to current market
share.
4)
May
occur through default.
3.
Defensive
strategies, the
third class of grand
strategies, are sometimes
called
retrenchment
strategies. They tend to focus on the
desire or need to
reduce
organizational
operations usually through cost
reductions, such as cutting
back on
non-essential
expenditures and instituting
hiring freezes, and/or asset
reductions
such
as selling land, equipment, or the business
itself.
a.
Harvest
entails
minimizing investments while attempting
to maximize
short-run
profits and cash flow,
with the long-run intention of
existing
with
the market.
b.
A
turnaround
is
designed to reverse a negative
trend and restore the
organization
to appropriate levels of
profitability.
c.
A
divestiture
involves an
organization's selling or divesting of a
business
or
part of a business.
d.
A
bankruptcy
is a
means whereby an organization that is
unable to pay
its
debts can seek court
protection from creditors
and from certain
contract
obligations while it attempts to regain
financial stability.
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Principles
of Management MGT503
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e.
Liquidation
entails
selling or dissolving an entire organization.
B.
A
portfolio
strategy approach is a method of
analyzing an organization's mix of
businesses
in terms of both individual
and collective contributions to strategic
goals. Two
portfolio
approaches are used most
frequently. Each uses a two-dimensional
matrix, and
each
may apply to either the existing or to potential
strategic business units (SBUs).
The
portfolio
concept is analogous to an individual's
selecting a portfolio of stocks to
achieve
balance
in terms of risk, long-term
growth, etc.
The
Boston
Consulting Groups (BCG) growth-share
matrix compares
various businesses in an
organization's
portfolio on the basis of relative market
share and market growth
rate. The corporate
portfolio
matrix approach has been a
popular approach to determining corporate-level
strategy.
The
BCG
matrix, developed by the
Boston Consulting Group, is a strategy
tool to guide
resource
allocation
decisions based on market
share and growth of
SBUs.
a.
Relative
market share is determined by the ratio
of a business's market
share
compared to the market share of
its largest rival.
b.
Market
growth rate is the growth in the
market during the previous
year
relative
to growth in the economy as a
whole.
The
matrix defines four business
groups. SBUs plotted on the
BCG matrix can be
categorized:
The
Star
has a
high market share in a
rapidly growing
market.
1)
A
Question
Mark (problem
child) has a low market
share in a
2)
rapidly
growing market.
3)
The
Cash
Cow has a
high market share in a slowly
growing
market.
A
Dog
has a
low market share in an area
of low growth.
4)
c.
Strategies
are suggested by the SBU's
position on the matrix.
1)
Use
funds from cash cows to duns
stars and possibly
question
marks.
2)
Divest
dogs and less desirable
question mark.
1.
The
product/market
evolution matrix (sometimes
called the life-cycle portfolio
matrix)
is a 15-cell matrix in which
business is plotted according to the
business
unit's
business strengths or competitive
position, and the industry's stage in
the
evolutionary
product/market life
cycle.
a.
While
the BCG matrix measures
market growth rate the
product/market
evolution
matrix shows the industry's stage in the
evolutionary life
cycle.
b.
The
maturity and saturation stage is
particularly important because it
may
last
for an extended period of time
and is a stage that presents
special
challenges
to preserve market share
while facing the prospect of
the
decline
stage.
2.
In
assessing
these portfolio matrixes remember
that each model offers a
somewhat
different perspective. Portfolio
matrices do not provide
advice about
specific
business within the organization-such
specifics are derived at the
business
level.
The
BCG matrix (and the
portfolio concept) has lost
much of its merit
because:
a.
Not
every organization has found
that increased market share
leads to lower costs.
b.
The
portfolio concept assumes
that an organization's businesses can be
divided into a
reasonable
number
of independent units.
c.
Contrary
to predictions, many so-called dogs
have shown consistently higher
levels of profitability
than
their growing competitors with
dominant market
shares.
d.
Given
the rate at which the economy
has been growing and the
fact that a market can have
only
one
leader, well over half of
all businesses by definition
fall into the dog
category.
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Principles
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e.
Strategic
implications of the BCG matrix are:
"milk" the cash cows; invest
resources in the stars;
liquidate
or sell the dogs; and sell
off or invest in the question
marks.
Formulating
Business-level strategy
A.
Business-level
strategies provide advice about
specific strategies for
various businesses.
B.
Michael
E. Porter has developed three
business-level strategies that
are generic, i.e.,
widely
applicable
to a variety of situations.
1.
A
cost
leadership strategy involves
emphasizing organizational efficiency so
that
the
overall costs of providing products
and services are lower
than those of
competitors.
a.
The
business should have a cost
advantage that is not easily
or
inexpensively
imitated.
b.
Managers
should consider making those product or
service innovations
that
are most important to
customers.
2.
A
differentiation
strategy involves attempting
to develop products and services
that
are viewed as unique in the
industry.
a.
Differentiation
may occur in brand image, technology,
customer service,
features,
quality, and election.
b.
Costs
are not as important as
product or service
uniqueness.
3.
A
focus
strategy entails
specializing by establishing a position
of overall cost
leadership,
differentiation, or both, but
only within a particular portion,
or
segment,
or an entire market.
Formulating
functional-level strategy
A.
Strategies
at the functional level are important in
supporting a business-level
strategy.
B.
Functional
areas develop the distinctive competencies
that lead to potential
competitive
advantages.
Strategy
Implementation
Strategies
at the functional level
are important in
supporting a business-level
strategy.
Functional
areas develop the distinctive competencies
that lead to potential
competitive advantages.
Strategy
implementation includes
the various management activities that
are necessary to put the
strategy
in
motion, institute strategic controls
that monitor progress, and
ultimately achieve organizational
goals.
A.
Managers
need to synchronize major factors
within an organization needed to put a
chosen
strategy
into action.
1.
Technology
is the knowledge,
tool, equipment, and work technique
used by an
organization
in delivering its product or
service.
2.
Human
resources are
the individuals who are
members of the organization.
3.
Reward
systems include
bonuses, awards, or promotions
provided by others, as
well
as rewards related to internal
experiences, such as feeling of
achievement and
challenge.
4.
Decision
processes include the
means of resolving questions and
problems that
occur
in organizations.
5.
Organization
structure is the
formal pattern of interactions and
coordination
designed
by management to link the tasks of
individuals and groups in
achieving
organizational
goals.
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Principles
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B.
Managers
need to be able to monitor
progress through strategic
control.
1.
Strategic
control involves monitoring critical
environmental factors that
could
affect
the viability of strategic plans,
assessing the effects of
organizational
strategic
actions, and ensuring that
strategic plans are implemented as
intended.
Strategic
control systems include information
systems that provide
feedback on the implementation
and
effectiveness
of strategic plans
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