CHAPTER 6 Strategic Management

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GROUP 6 06.08.

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This chapter on Corporate-Level Strategy explains: Definition of corporate-level strategy and its importance to the diversified firm. The advantages and disadvantages of single-and dominant-business strategies. Firms move from single-and dominant-business strategies to more diversified strategies. Value creation by the diversified firms through sharing or transferring core competencies. Value creation by an unrelated diversification strategy. Incentives and resources that encourage diversification.

Business-level Strategy (Competitive)


Each business unit in a diversified firm chooses a business-level strategy as its means of competing in individual product markets

Corporate-level Strategy (Companywide)


Specifies actions taken by the firm to gain a competitive advantage by selecting and managing a group of different businesses competing in several industries and product markets

e.g. Wrigley Jr. Company

e.g. UPS United Parcel Service

e.g. Procter & Gamble

e.g. GE General Electric

e.g. Samsung

Related Diversification
Involves diversifying into businesses whose value chains possess competitively valuable strategic fits with value chain(s) of firms present business(es)

Unrelated Diversification
Involves diversifying into businesses with no deliberate effort to seek out businesses having strategic fit with firms present business(es)

Reap competitive advantage benefits of


Skills transfer Lower costs Common brand name usage Stronger competitive capabilities

` ` `

Spread investor risks over a broader base Preserves strategic unity in its business activities Achieve consolidated performance greater than the sum of what individual businesses can earn operating independently

Competitive advantage can result from related diversification if opportunities exist to


Transfer expertise/capabilities/technology Combine related activities into a single operation and reduce costs Leverage use of firms brand name reputation Conduct related value chain activities in a collaborative fashion to create valuable competitive capabilities

Market power ` Sell its products above the existing competitive level and/or Reduce the costs of its primary and support activities below the competitive level Multipoint Competition ` Two or more diversified firms simultaneously compete in the same product areas or geographic markets Vertical Integration ` Backward integrationa firm produces its own inputs ` Forward integrationa firm operates its own distribution system for delivering its outputs

Value is created from economies of scope is: i ) Operational relatedness in sharing activities ii)Corporate relatedness in transferring skills or corporate core competencies among units
`

The difference between sharing activities and transferring competencies is based on how the resources are jointly used to create economies of scope

Created by sharing either a primary activity such as inventory delivery systems, or a support activity such as purchasing Activity sharing requires sharing strategic control over business units Activity sharing may create risk because businessunit ties create links between outcomes

Eliminates resource duplication in the need to allocate resources for a second unit to develop a competence that already exists in another unit Provides intangible resources (resource intangibility) that are difficult for competitors to understand and imitate

Financial Economies ` Are cost savings realized through improved allocations of financial resources i) Based on investments inside or outside the firm ` Create value through two types of financial economies: i) Efficient internal capital allocations ii)Purchasing other corporations and restructuring their assets

Restructuring creates financial economies


i) A firm creates value by buying and selling other firms assets in the external market

Resource allocation decisions may become complex, so success often requires:


i) Focus on mature, low-technology businesses ii) Focus on businesses not reliant on a client orientation

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