Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Strategic Management
- Layers of the business environment:
- The macro-environment
Anmerkungen:
- broad environmental factors that impact to a greater or lesser extent on all organisations
- PESTLE
Anmerkungen:
- determine the key drivers of change in the strategic or business environment; these will determine how likely the company is to have a high impact on the success or failure of strategy
categorizes environmental influences into six main types. Provides comprehensive list of influences on the possible success or failure of particular strategies
- Advantages:
simple and easy
helps reduce the effect of future business threats.
enables projects to spot new opportunities and exploit them effectively.
Disadvantages:
over-simplify the data: possibility of missing out on important data
needs to be updated regularly to be effective
business environment is changing drastically: development is difficult to predict
- Political:
Anmerkungen:
- highlights role of government- -
internal politics and external politics. The internal politics like team jealousies, cohesive projects, and personal interests occur in all projects and must be considered and managed by stakeholders. The external politics refer to those which the stakeholders do not control. These events include all political events like employment laws, tax policies, trade restrictions, trade reforms, environmental regulations, political stability, tariffs, etc.
- Economic:
Anmerkungen:
- -factors such as exchange rates
The internal or micro-economic events relate to the project viability and internal soundness of the project. Financial models and accountanting techniques need to be used during the evaluation phase to ensue the viability. The external or macro-economic events include interstate taxes, embargoes, interest rates, economic growth, recession, inflation rate, exchange rate, minimum wage, wage rates, unemployment, cost of living, working hours, credit availability, financing availability, etc.
- Social:
Anmerkungen:
- -changing culture and demographics- ageing population in Western countries
The sociological factor takes into consideration all events that affect the market and community socially. Thus, the advantages and disadvantages to the people of the area in which the project is taking place also need to be considered. These events include cultural expectations, norms, population dynamics, healthy consciousness, career altitudes, global warming, etc.
- Technological
Anmerkungen:
- -innovations such as the internet, nano-technology or the rise of the new composite materials
Since technology often becomes outdated within a few months after it is launched, it is important to consider this (innovation). This factor could also take into consideration all barriers to entry in certain markets and changes to financial decisions.
- Legal
Anmerkungen:
- legislative constraints or changes eg. health and safety regulations or restrictions on company mergers and acquisitions
legal aspects like employment, quotas, taxation, resources, imports and exports, etc.
- Environmental
Anmerkungen:
- stands for 'environmental' issues eg. pollution, waste
ecological and environmental aspects that could be either economic or social in nature. These include temperature, monsoons, natural calamities, access by rail, air, and road, ground conditions, ground contamination, nearby water sources, and so forth.
- Industry or sector
Anmerkungen:
- Industry: a group of firms producing products and services that are essentially the same eg. airline industry
market: a group of customers for specific products or services that are essentially the same eg. a geographical market
- Porters five forces
Anmerkungen:
- helps identify attractiveness of an industry in terms of five competitive forces
Anlagen:
- Threat of entry
Anmerkungen:
- the greater the threat of entry the worse it is for new incumbents
-Barriers to entry: factors that need to be overcome by new entrants if they are to compete in an industry
eg. scale and experience: economies of scale in some industries eg- automobile; once companies have reached the large-scale production it is expensive for new entrants
-until new entrant has built up equivalent experience over time, it will tend to produce at higher cost
Access to supply of distribution channel: manufacturers can have control over supply--> direct ownership, customer/supplier loyalty; this can be overcome by bypassing retail distributers through e-commerce
Expected retaliation: an organisation might be considering entering an industry and therefore existing firm will try to prevent this
Legislation: legal restraints from patent protection through government actions eg. tariffs
Differentiation: providing a prodcut or service with higher perceived value than the competition; eg. quality, branding
- Threat of substitute
Anmerkungen:
- Substitutes: products or services that offer a similar benefit to n industry's products or services but by different process
-switching to alternatives
eg. trains and planes fares
-price/ performance ratio--> substitutes can be more expensive so long as they have better performance eg. aluminum is lighter yet more expensive than steel
- Power of buyers
Anmerkungen:
- buyers: organisation's immediate customers, not necessarily the ultimate consumers
-powerful buyers can demand cheap prices or insist on improvements
-concentrated buyers; few large customers account for the majority of sales, buyer power is increased
-low switching cost: buyers can easily switch between one supplier and another, strong negotiating position
-buyer competition threat: if buyer can supply itself it is powerful; when negotiating with the supplier it can raise the threat of doing the suppliers' job itself
- Power of supplier
Anmerkungen:
- supplier: those who supply the organization with what it needs to produce the product or service
supplier power will be high where there are:
concentrated suppliers: few producers dominate supply. suppliers have more power over buyers
high switching costs: if it is expensive to move from one supplier to another, the buyer will become dependent and weak
supplier competition threat: suppliers have increased power where they are able to cut out buyers who are acting as middlemen--> airlines and online booking vs.travel agencies
- Competitive rivalry
Anmerkungen:
- competitive rivals are organizations with similar products and services aimed at the same customer group
eg. European airline industry: Air France and British airways are rivals
competitor balance: competitors might be roughly equal size, this is when rivalrous behavior is intense as one tries to be more dominant; less rivalrous industries tend to have one or two dominant organizations
-industry growth rate, high fixed costs, high exit barriers, low differentiation
What is important here is the number and capability of your competitors. If you have many competitors, and they offer equally attractive products and services, then you'll most likely have little power in the situation, because suppliers and buyers will go elsewhere if they don't get a good deal from you. On the other hand, if no-one else can do what you do, then you can often have tremendous strength.
- Developmental stage
Anmerkungen:
- low rivalry: high differentiation; innovation is key
- Growth
Anmerkungen:
- Low rivalry: high growth and weak buyers; low barriers to entry
- Shake-out
Anmerkungen:
- increasing rivalry: slower growth and some exits
- Maturity
Anmerkungen:
- stronger buyers: low growth and standard products, higher entry barriers
market share and cost key
- Decline
Anmerkungen:
- Extreme rivalry: typically many exits and price competition; cost and commitment key
- Competitors and markets
- Strategic groups
Anmerkungen:
- these are within an industry or sector with similar strategic characteristics, following similar strategies or competing on similar bases
1.scope of an organisation's acitivities
2.resource commitment
-mapped on two-dimensional charts eg. one axis extent of product range and the other size of marketing spend or R&D and overseas focus
- These are useful to:
-understand competition-->managers focus on direct competitors withing their particular strategic group, rather than the whole industry
-analyze strategic opportunities
-analyze mobility barriers (obstacles to movement from one strategic group to another)
- Strategic groups
Anmerkungen:
- technique used to analyse and
compare competitors’ strategies by grouping firms operating within a single industry on the basis of similarities in their resources and strategies.
Anlagen:
- Levels of strategy
- corporate- level
Anmerkungen:
- concerned with the overall scope of an organization and how value is added to the constituent businesses of the organizational whole
-strategy includes geographical scope, diversity of products or services, acquisition of new businesses
- Business level
Anmerkungen:
- about how the individual businesses should compete in their particular markets
-strategy consists of issues such as innovation, appropriate scale and response to competitors' moves
- Operational level
Anmerkungen:
- concerned with how the components of an organization deliver effectively the corporate and business level strategies in terms of resources, processes and people
- Internal environment of the firm
- Defining firm and strategic capabilities
Anmerkungen:
- Firm comprises of a network of activities engaged in the transformation of resources into
outcomes.
Strategic capabilities means the capabilities of an organization that contribute to its long-term survival or competitive advantage. These lead to competitive advantage by:
1.adding value to what is done
2.effective configuration of resources and competencies
- Resources and competencies
Anmerkungen:
- What is a resource?
-tangible: buildings, machinery, manual skills, tools
-intangible: knowledge, culture, image
Competence: ability to use resources effectively- efficiently
Capability: availability of eadequate resources
threshold capabilities and dynamic capabilities
- Value
Anmerkungen:
- This represents the monetary worth.
This can be assessed using Porter's Value Chain
- Value Chain
Anmerkungen:
- This describes the categories of activities within an organization which, together, create a product or service.
Focuses upon how an enterprise adds value to what it does. Value chain comprised of nine generic activities.
Primary activities: directly concerned with the creation or delivery of a product or service, for example, for a manufacturing business.
Inbound logistics: activities concerned with receiving, storing and distributing inputs to the product or service including materials handling, transport
Operations: transform these inputs into the final product or service: machining, packaging, assembly
Outbound logistics: collect, store and distribute the product to customers; for example, warehousing, materials handling, distribution
Marketing and sales: provide the means whereby consumers or users are made aware of the product or service and are able to purchase it. This includes sales administration, advertising and selling
Service: includes those activities that enhance or maintain the value of a product or service, such as installation, repair, training and spares
These primary activities are linked to support activities:
Procurement: acquiring the various resources inputs to the primary activities. Can be important in achieving scale advantages
eg. large consumer goods companies with multiple businesses none the less produce advertising centrally
Technology development: all value activities have a 'technology' even if it is just know-how. May be concerned with a product (R&D) or with processes or with resources
Human resource management: this transcends all primary activities and is concerned with recruiting, managing, training, developing and rewarding people within the organisation
- How does the value chain work?
1.Identify organizations activities. Can help managers understand which activities the business is especially good at
2.Assign activities to one of the generic activities and establish links
3.Establish where value is added – what attribute is affected
3.Determine how technology “enables”
4.Establish where improvements can be made
Strengths: simple, systematic; activity emphasis; focuses attention upon where its competitive advantage is
Weaknesses: oversimplifies assumptions about primary activities and support; is structural, ignores intangible issues
- SWOT
Anmerkungen:
- Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats
Used to summarize what has become evident through the value chain and the resources/ competencies
- Business level strategy
- SBU
Anmerkungen:
- Ansoff matrix
Anmerkungen:
- provides a simple way of generating four basic alternative directions for strategic development.
considers growth options
FIFTH OPTION: consolidation: involves protecting existing products and existing markets and therefore belongs in box A.
- Box A: Market penetration
Anmerkungen:
- where an organization gains market share with its existing product range
-greater market share= increased power of buyers and suppliers, greater economies of scale and experience curve benefits
Constraints: retaliation from competitors: likely to cause market rivalry as other competitors in the market defend share; increased rivalry= price wars or expensive marketing battles which may cost more than any market share gains are actually worth
-in low growth or declining markets it can be more effective simply to acquire competitors
legal constraints: greater market penetration can raise concerns from official competition regulators concerning excessive market power
-most countries have regulators with the power to restrain powerful companies or prevent mergers and acquisitions that would create such excessive power
eg. European Commision has power to determine actions of european companies
- Box A: Consolidation
Anmerkungen:
- where organizations focus defensively on their current markets with current products
-is not oriented to growth
Two forms:
1.Defending market share: aggressive competitors will lead to having to defend what one has
2.DOwnsizing or divestment: when size of market is declining the size of the business should be reduces through closing capacity. Other option is divesting (selling) some activities to other businesses
- Box B: Product development
Anmerkungen:
- this is where organizations deliver modified or new products to existing markets
-greater degree of innovation
Product development is high risk because:
1. product development involves mastering new technologies that may be unfamiliar to the organization. success depends on a willingness to acquire new technological and marketing capabilities
2.Project management risk: even with familiar domains, product development causes risk of delays and increases costs due to project complexity and changing project specifications over time
- Box C: Market development
Anmerkungen:
- where existing products are offered in new markets
-this is when product development is expensive.
-it can take in three forms:
1.new segments: eg. night schools
2.new users: aluminium used not just for cutlery but also aerospace
3. new geographies: internationalization---> or spread of small retailer into new towns
- Box D: Diversification
Anmerkungen:
- defined as a strategy that takes an organization away from both its existing markets and its existing products
Reasons to create diversification:
-efficiency gains can be made by applying the organization's existing resources/ capabilities to new markets and products
-increasing market power resulting from having diverse range of businesses
-response to market declinem
- Stakeholders
Anmerkungen:
- those with an interest in the firm
Market perspective: Suppliers, Competitors, Distributors, Customers
Social-political perspective: Government agencies, NGOs, Community
Technology perspective: Owners of competing
technologies
Performance perspective: Employees
First: identify stakeholders (existing / potential)
2.establish
3.nature of interests (explicit / hidden) EXPECTATIONS 4.manner of impact upon interests (mutual / conflict)
5.level of impact upon interests (large / small)
6.power to influence
7.need to consult
Finally, inform, persuade
- VRIN
- Porter's generic strategies