Chapter 4 - Introduction To Business Strategy
Chapter 4 - Introduction To Business Strategy
INTRODUCTION TO
BUSINESS STRATEGY
Functional
(Operational) Main functions: productions, IT, etc and how
201053_Ch4_Introduction to business strategy
these deliver the strategies effectively
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2. What is strategic management?
Strategic management: management of resources of a business in
order to achieve its goals and objectives
Organizations need to plan if they are not to drift. Strategic
management involves:
- Decisions about the scope of activities
- Long-terms direction of the business
- Allocation of resources
- Involves an entire cycle of planning and control ➔ called strategic
planning.
Implementatio
Strategic Strategic Review and
n of chosen
analysis choice control
choices
After the process, the business should have three types of strategy:
- Competitive strategy: It determines how it competes
- Product/market strategy: determines where it competes and the
direction of growth
- Institutional strategy: method of growth (acquisition)
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Strategy Implementation
S S S S
• Static • Single • Simple • Safe
Environment Single Low-tech Because
changes product/ change is
slowly market slow and
predictable
D D D D
• Dynamic • Diverse • Difficult • Dangerous
• Environment • Multiproduct, • Analyzing • Ignoring the
changes various environment environment
rapidly and markets, is challenging may have
complicatedl internationall serious
y y consequences
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Analyzing the general environment:
PESTEL analysis
P • Political
E • Economical
S • Social
T • Technological
E • Ecological
L • Legal
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Analyzing the general environment:
PESTEL analysis
Political vs. Legal factors
Political factors: elements of politics, including
things such as government tax policies, social
welfare policies, trade policies, and the stability of the
government itself
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Analyzing the general environment:
PESTEL analysis
Economic factors: the economic environment is an
important influence at the local and national levels,
including the followings:
Local economic trends: types of industry, labor & house
prices
National economic trends: GDP, inflation, interest rates,
tax levels, government spending, business cycle,
productivity.
Social factors: growth of population, age, geography
distribution, household and family structure, social
structure, employment, wealth, lifestyle changes, etc
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Analyzing the general environment:
PESTEL analysis
Technological factors: technology change rapidly, and businesses
must adapt to it.
• Government investment and R&D policy
• New discoveries: products and methods of production
• Speed of technology transfer
• Level of R&D spending by competitors
• Developments in other industries
• New development: big data, data analytics, and cyber security
• Opportunities and cost of failing to keep up
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Analyzing the general environment:
PESTEL analysis
Ecological factors: related to the followings:
• Sustainability issues: energy and natural
resources
• Pollution
• Green issues
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Analyzing the competitive (task) environment
Porter’s five forces analysis
Distinguish between a market and an
industry:
Market: comprises the customers and/or
potential customers
Industry:comprises those businesses
which use a particular competence,
technology, product, or service to satisfy
customer needs
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Analyzing the competitive (task) environment
Porter’s five forces analysis
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Analyzing the competitive (task) environment
Competitor analysis
Types of competitors
Brand Industry Generic Form
competitors competitors competitors competitors
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Analyzing the competitive (task) environment
Competitor analysis
➢ Thelaid-back competitor does not respond
to moves by its competitors
➢ The tiger competitor responds aggressively
to all opposing moves
➢ Theselective competitor reacts to some
threats in some markets but not to all
➢ The stochastic competitor is unpredictable
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5. Analyzing the business
Introduction: Internal analysis involve the analysis of the
business’s resources and competencies, value chain,
supply chain, and products/markets.
- Resources and competencies by using position and resource
audit
- Value chain: primary and secondary/support activities
- Supply chain: all suppliers and partners working together to
produce goods and services for customers
- Products and markets by using product life cycle and
Boston Consulting Group (BCG) matrix
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Internal analysis- resources and
competences
The position audit
Position audit: part of the planning process which examines the current
state of the entity in respect of:
✓ Resources of tangible and intangible assets and finance
✓ Its competencies, that is what it has the ability to do well
✓ Products, brands, and markets
✓ Operating systems such as production and distribution
✓ Internal organization
✓ Current results
✓ Returns to shareholders
Sustainability of business
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✓
Internal analysis- resources and
competences
The resource audit – 9 Ms model
Resource Example
Machinery Age, condition, cost, technological update?
Men and women Number, skills, wage cost, efficiency, labor turnover
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Porter’s value chain
- Activities (Value activities): the means by which a business
creates value in its products (from taking inputs from the
environment, processing them, and selling them at a price
greater than the costs)
- Value drivers: Elements of a product or service and
activities that increase the value consumers place on it.
They are means of differentiating the products and services
from others. For example branding, customer services, etc
- Cost drivers: any activity that affects the cost of a product
or service
The margin is the excess the customer is prepared to pay over the cost to
the business of obtaining the resource input and providing value activities.
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Analyzing products and markets-
Product life cycle
Product life cycle: how a product demonstrates different
characteristics of profit and investment over time =>
examine the portfolio of goods/services. The product life
cycle is an attempt to recognize distinct stages in a the
product’s history.
Mazda 3
(hatchback)
Hatchback cars
Toyota yaris
(hatchback)
Car
Mazda 3 (sedan)
Toyota yaris
Sedans
(sedan)
Honda civic
(sedan) 37
Product life cycle
A new product takes If the new product Sale growth slows Sales begin to
time to find gains market down and the decline so there is
acceptable, resulting acceptance, then product reaches an over-capacity of
in slow growth in the product starts to maturity. Most production in the
sales. have profit, resulting products on the industry. Fierce
Unit costs are high in increased sales market will be at the competition, profit
because of low and production and mature stage of their falls, and some
output and decreased unit cost. life. producers may leave
expensive sales Competitors are the market.
promotion attracted.
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Product life cycle
In the strategic analysis process, the planner should
assess:
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Planning products and markets:
The BCG matrix
Another way to look at the products/services the
business is engaged in and the markets it services is to
analyze them using the Boston Consulting Group (BCG)
matrix.
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The BCG matrix
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SWOT analysis
Corporate appraisal: a ‘critical assessment of the strengths and
weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT analysis) in relation
to the internal and environmental factors affecting an entity in
order to establish its condition prior to the preparation of the long-
term plan’
(CIMA Official Terminology)
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Strengths and weaknesses
1. Marketing Counter
2. Products and brands
3. Distribution/logistics
Internal 4. R&D Shortcomings
5. Finance
appraisal:
6. Plant and equipment/
-Skills production
7. Raw materials and Strengths
-Resources
finished inventory
8. Management and staff
9. Business
management and Exploit
organization
10. Technology
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Opportunities and threats
Defend
For opportunities:
- What opportunities
are out there?
External - Capability of
competitors? Threats
appraisal:
- The company’s
-PESTEL comparative
performance? Opportunities
-Porter’s 5
For threats:
forces - What threats may
arise?
- How will competitors
be affected?
Exploit
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Combining elements of SWOT analysis
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Stakeholder analysis
- Stakeholders’ goals and objectives are balanced
in order to determine the business’s goals and
objectives
- The needs of objectives of each set of
stakeholders are not always congruent, but often
conflict
- The business’s objectives follow the most
dominant stakeholders
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Stakeholder analysis
Stakeholder mapping: power and interest
Low LEVEL OF INTEREST High
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Choosing a corporate strategy
Ansoff: product/market strategies
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9. Implementing the strategy
Breaking the strategy down