Strategic Use of Information Resources

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Strategic Use of Information

Resources

Managing and Using Information


Systems: A Strategic Approach

Introduction
This presentation enables a manager to
understand the link between business strategy
and information strategy.
The chapter looks at:
How the strategic use of information
resources has evolved.
Highlights the difference between simply
using IS and using IS strategically.
Looks at how information resources can be
used to support the strategic goals of an
organization.
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EVOLUTION OF INFORMATION
RESOURCES

IT Eras (Figure 4.1)


IT has evolved through 4 eras since the 1960s
Era I (1960s-70s) focused on using IT to
increase efficiency
Era II (1980s) focused on using IT to increase
worker productivity through the use of PCs
Era III (1990s) used client-server technologies
to improve the competitive position of the
organization
Era IV is about using IT to create value for the
corporation.
Era V (now) IT becomes a commodity

Fig. 4.1 Eras of information usage in organizations


1960s

1970s

1980s

2000

2010

Primary
Role of IT

Efficiency

Effectivene
ss

Strategic

Value
creation

Commodity

Justify IT
expenditure

ROI

Increasing
productivity
and decision
making

Competitive
position

Adding
Value

Maintaining
market
position

Target of
systems

Organizatio
n

Individual
manager/
Group

Business
processes

Customer,
supplier,
ecosystem

Collaborative
environment
s

Information
model

Application
specific

Data-driven

BusinessDriven

Knowledgedriven

Knowledgedriven

Dominant
technology

Mainframebased

Minicompute
r-based

Client-Server
distribution
intelligence

Internet
ubiquitous
intelligence

Mobile
intelligence
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INFORMATION RESOURCES AS
STRATEGIC TOOLS

Using Information resources


to create strategic advantage
Strategic advantage must be crafted by
combining all of the firms resources
including:
production resources,
human resources, and
Information resources
Information resources include not only
data, but also technology, people and
processes.
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Examples of information
resources available to a firm:
IS infrastructure
Information and knowledge
Proprietary technology
Technical skills of the IT staff
End users of the IS
Relationship between IT and business managers
Business processes

What advantages might an


information resource create?
A manager might consider the following to
understand the type of advantage the
information resource might create:
What makes the information resource valuable?
Who appropriates the value created by the
information resource?
Is the information resource equally distributed across
firms?
Is the information resource highly mobile?
How quickly does the information resource
depreciate?
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HOW CAN INFORMATION


RESOURCES BE USED
STRATEGICALLY?

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Aligning IS strategy with


business strategy
Using multiple approaches to evaluating the
strategic landscape is helpful in determining
strategic opportunities.
Here, we look at three such approaches:
Porters five forces model of the
competitive advantage of firms
Porters value chain model of internal
organizational operations
Wisemans theory of strategic thrusts
and strategic option generator
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Porters Five Forces Model of


Competitive Advantage (Fig. 4.2)
Porters Five Forces Model divides entities in the
competitive landscape into five groups as follows:
Threat of New Entrants: new firms that may enter
a companies market.
Bargaining Power of Buyers: the ability of buyers
to use their market power to decrease a firms
competitive position
Bargaining Power of Suppliers: the ability
suppliers of the inputs of a product or service to
lower a firms competitive position
Threat of Substitutes: providers of equivalent or
superior alternative products
Industry Competitors: current competitors for the
same product.
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Figure 4.2 Porters competitive forces with potential


strategic use of information
Strategic use
Cost effectiveness
Market access
Differentiation of
product or service

Bargaining
power of
suppliers
Strategic use
Selection of supplier
Threat of backward
integration

Potential threat
of new entrants

Strategic use
Switching costs
Access to distribution
channels
Economics of scale

Industry
competitors

Bargaining
power of buyers

Threat of substitutes
Strategic use
Redefine products and services
Improve price/performance

Strategic use
Buyer selection
Switching costs
Differentiation

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Porters Five Forces


Threat of New Entrants: can be lowered if
there are barriers to entry. Sometimes IS can be
used to create barriers to entry.
Bargaining Power of Buyers: can be high if
its easy to switch. Switching costs are increased
by giving buyers things they value in exchange
such as lower costs or useful information.
Bargaining Power of Suppliers: forces is
strongest when there are few firms to choose
from, quality is inputs is crucial or the volume of
purchases is insignificant to the supplier.
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Porters Five Forces (cont.)


Threat of Substitutes: depends on buyers
willingness to substitute and the level of
switching costs buyers face.
Industry Competitors: Rivalry is high when it
is expensive to leave and industry, the industrys
growth rate is declining, or products have lost
differentiation.

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The Five Forces Model and IS


The Five Forces Model provides a way to think
about how information resources can create
competitive advantage.
Using Porters Model, General Managers can:
Identify key sources of competition they face.
Identify uses of information resources to
enhance their competitive position against
competitive threats
Consider likely changes in competitive threats
over time
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Porters Value Chain Model


Porters Value Chain Model looks at increasing
competitive advantage by reorganizing the
activities related to create, support and deliver a
firms product or service.
These activities can be divided into two broad
categories (See Figure 4.3):
Primary activities that relate directly to how value
is created for a product or service.
Support activities that make the primary activities
possible and that manage the coordinate of different
activities.
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Figure 4.3 Value Chain of the Firm

Firm Infrastructure
Human Resource Management

Support
Activities

Technology Development
Procurement
Inbound
Logistics
Materials
handling
delivery

Operations Outbound Marketing Service


Logistics & Sales
Product
Customer
Mfg. &
Order
service
assembly
processing Pricing
Shipping Promotion Repair
Place

Primary
Activities
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Gaining competitive value


The Value Chain model suggest that competition
can come from two sources:
Lowering the cost to perform an activity and
Adding value to a product or service so buyers
will be willing to pay more.

Lowering costs only achieves competitive


advantage if the firm possesses information on
the competitors costs
Adding value is a strategic advantage if a firm
possesses accurate information regarding its
customer such as: which products are valued?
Where can improvements be made?
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The Value System (Fig 4.4)


The model can be extended by linking many
value chains into a value system.
Much of the advantage of supply chain
management comes from understanding how
information is used within each value chain of
the system.
This can lead to the formation of entire new
businesses designed to change the information
component of value-added activities.
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Figure 4.4 The value system: interconnecting


Relationships between organizations

Suppliers
value
chain

Firms
value
chain

Channels
value chains

Buyers
value
chains21

The Value System and


Strategic Alliances
Many industries are experiencing the growth of
strategic alliances that are directly linked to
sharing information resources across existing
value systems.
An alliance between American Airlines, Marriott
and Budget Rent-A-Car called AMRIS provides
travelers with a single point of contact.
Thus, electronically pooling information services
of several companies can create competitive
advantage by saving customers time.
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Wisemans Strategic
Options Generator
Wisemans theory of strategic thrusts helps
identify how a firms information resources can
be used for competitive advantage.
Wiseman asks three questions to refine the
process of identifying strategic opportunities:
What is the mode of the thrust?
What is the direction of the thrust?
What is the strategic target of the thrust?

The heart of Wisemans model is built around


five strategic thrusts organizations use to gain
competitive advantage (see next slide).
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Types of Strategic Thrusts


Differentiation Thrusts: focus resources on
unfilled product or service gaps.
Cost Thrusts: focus is on reducing costs or
increasing competitors costs
Innovation Thrusts: focus on creating new
products or new ways to sell, create, produce
or deliver products.
Growth Thrusts: focus on increasing size of
the market size or adding more value adding
activities in the value chain
Alliance Thrusts: combine with other groups
to create a more competitive position.

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What is the Mode?


A firm has two choices for the mode of a
a strategic thrust:
The firm can act offensively to improve its
competitive advantage -- or
A firm can act defensively to reduce the
opportunities available to competitors.

For example, a firm can innovate


offensively to gain product leadership in a
market, while others use innovation
defensively to imitate the product leader.
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What is the Direction?


A firm also has two choices for the direction of
a a strategic thrust:
The firm can use the information system to create
competitive advantage -- or
A firm can provide the system to its chosen strategic
target.

Many firms have done both: developed systems


for internal use and then offered them to
customers or suppliers.

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What is the Strategic


Target? (Figure 4.5)
Wiseman describes three targets on
which the firm can focus its strategic
thrusts (see Figure 4.5):
Suppliers
Customers
Competitors

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Figure 4.5 Example of strategic


targets
Suppliers:
Raw materials
Information
Labor
Capital
Insurance
Utilities
Transportation

Customers:
Channel
distributors
Consumers
Industrial
Reseller
Government
International

Competitors:
Direct
Potential
Substitute

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Strategic Options Generator


Wiseman combined the questions of mode,
direction and strategic thrust into a strategic
options generator (Figure 4.6).
Example: Dell computers initial thrust:
Strategic Target: (direct market to) the customer
Mode: Offensive
Direction: Use IS to gain advantage

Second thrust: provide customer information to


suppliers
Third thrust: let customers auto-configure
systems directly via the Internet.
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Figure 4.6 Strategic option


generator
What is the strategic target?
Supplier

Customer

Competitor

What is the strategic market?


Differentiation

Cost Innovation

Growth Alliance

What is the mode?


Offensive

Defensive

What is the direction?


Use

Provide

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FOOD FOR THOUGHT: TIME-BASED


COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE

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Time-Based Competitive
Advantage
The Internet is increasing the pace of
technological change by refocusing competitive
efforts towards creating time-based competitive
advantage.
Information resources are the key to creating
those advantages.
For example, Dells direct strategy has been to
build and deliver computers in as little as 5 days.
Thus, the speed at which an organization adapts
its business processes will the true measure of
its ability to maintain competitive advantage.
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End

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