PART 2:
STRATEGIC
ACTIONS:
STRATEGY
FORMULATION
CHAPTER 4:
BUSINESS-LEVEL
STRATEGY
Authored by:
Marta Szabo White, Ph.D
Georgia State University
THE STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
PROCESS
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KNOWLEDGE OBJECTIVES
● Define business-level strategy.
● Discuss the relationship between
customers and business-level strategies in
terms of who, what, and how.
● Explain the differences among businesslevel strategies.
● Use the five forces of competition model to
explain how above-average returns can be
earned through each business-level strategy.
● Describe the risks of using each of the
business-level strategies.
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OPENING CASE
MORNING JOE IN THE AFTERNOON IN CHINA, INDIA, & BEYOND:
THE NEW STARBUCKS
■ With the 2008 global financial crisis and
competitors, e.g., McDonald’s gaining market
share, consumers were less willing to pay the
high prices for premium coffee, leading to a
reduction in store sales for the first time in
Starbucks’ history.
■ Starbucks appeared to be unable to control the
quality of the “experience” and began losing its
differentiation advantage.
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OPENING CASE
MORNING JOE IN THE AFTERNOON IN CHINA, INDIA, & BEYOND:
THE NEW STARBUCKS (cont’d)
■ CEO Howard Schultz closed 900 poorly performing
stores in the United States and refocused on
innovation.
■ By 2011, with its 40th anniversary, a new logo,
innovation such as VIA and customers paying for
their purchases with their iPhones, environmental
consciousness, employee health insurance, and a
global focus on emerging markets such as China
and India, Starbucks was once again
differentiating itself.
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IMPORTANT DEFINITION
BUSINESS–LEVEL STRATEGY: HOW
TO COMPETE IN A SPECIFIC INDUSTRY
■ An integrated and coordinated set of
commitments and actions the firm uses to gain
a competitive advantage by exploiting core
competencies in specific product markets
■ It is the core strategy
■ Every firm must form and use a business-level
strategy for each one of its businesses
■ Business-level strategy choices matter because
long-term performance is linked to a firm’s
strategies
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BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGY
ONE
BUSINESSLEVEL
STRATEGY
SEVERAL
BUSINESSLEVEL
STRATEGIES
•A single-product market/single
geographic location firm employs
one business-level strategy and
one corporate-level strategy
identifying what or which industry
the firm will compete in
•A diversified firm employs a
separate business-level strategy
for each product market area in
which it competes and one or
more corporate-level strategies
dealing with product and/or
geographic diversity
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CORE COMPETENCIES AND
STRATEGY
Core
Competencies
Strategy
Business-level
Strategy
Resources and superior capabilities that
are sources of competitive advantage
over a firm’s rivals
An integrated and coordinated set of
actions taken to exploit core competencies
and gain competitive advantage
Providing value to customers and gaining
competitive advantage by exploiting core
competencies in individual product
markets
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CUSTOMERS: THEIR RELATIONSHIP
TO BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGIES
Who will be
served?
KEY ISSUES
in
BUSINESSLEVEL
STRATEGY
What needs will
be satisfied?
How will those
needs be satisfied?
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CUSTOMERS: THEIR RELATIONSHIP
TO BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGIES
EFFECTIVE
GLOBAL
COMPETITORS
Adept at identifying
customer needs across
cultures and geography
Quickly and successfully
adapt products/services
to meet those needs
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BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGIES
FIVE COMPETITIVE FORCES
GENERIC:
Applicable
to any
organization in
any
industry
VALUE CHAIN
ACTIVITIES
RISKS for each Strategy
Effective STRUCTURE
for each Strategy
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CUSTOMERS: THEIR RELATIONSHIP
TO BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGIES
SATISFYING CUSTOMERS IS THE
FOUNDATION OF SUCCESSFUL
BUSINESS STRATEGIES
• Managing relationships with customers
• Reach, richness, affiliation
• Who will be served
• What needs will be satisfied
• How those needs will be satisfied
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CUSTOMERS: THEIR RELATIONSHIP
TO BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGIES
REACH
EFFECTIVELY
MANAGING
RELATIONSHIPS
WITH
CUSTOMERS
Access and Connection
to Customers
RICHNESS
Depth and Detail of Two-Way Flow
of Information Between
the Firm and Customer
AFFILIATION
Facilitating Useful Interactions
With Customers
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WHO: DETERMINING THE
CUSTOMERS TO SERVE
MARKET SEGMENTATION
A PROCESS USED TO CLUSTER PEOPLE
WITH SIMILAR NEEDS INTO INDIVIDUAL
AND IDENTIFIABLE GROUPS
Consumer
Markets
Industrial
Markets
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MARKET SEGMENTATION:
CONSUMER MARKETS
1. DEMOGRAPHIC FACTORS
(age, income, sex, etc.)
2. SOCIOECONOMIC FACTORS
(social class, stage in the family life cycle)
3. GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS
(cultural, regional, and national differences)
4. PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS
(lifestyle, personality traits)
5. CONSUMPTION PATTERNS
(heavy, moderate, and light users)
6. PERCEPTUAL FACTORS
(benefit segmentation, perceptual mapping)
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MARKET SEGMENTATION:
INDUSTRIAL MARKETS
1. END-USE SEGMENTS
(identified by SIC code)
2. PRODUCT SEGMENTS
(based on technological differences or
production economics)
3. GEOGRAPHIC SEGMENTS
(defined by boundaries between countries
or by regional differences within them)
4. COMMON BUYING FACTOR SEGMENTS
(cut across product market and geographic
segments)
5. CUSTOMER SIZE SEGMENTS
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WHAT: DETERMINING WHICH
CUSTOMER NEEDS TO SATISFY
■ Customer needs are related to a
product’s benefits and features
■ Customer needs are neither right nor
wrong, good nor bad
■ Customer needs represent desires in
terms of features and performance
capabilities
■ Successful firms learn how to deliver to
customers what they want, when they want
it
Customers are the lifeblood of a firm
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HOW: DETERMINING CORE COMPETENCIES
NECESSARY TO SATISFY CUSTOMER NEEDS
■ Firms use core competencies to implement
value creating strategies that satisfy customers’
needs
■ Value means goods or services that provide
either low cost with acceptable features or highly
differentiated features with acceptable costs
■ Only firms with capacity to continuously improve,
innovate, and upgrade their competencies can
expect to meet and/or exceed customer
expectations across time
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CUSTOMERS:
HOW ● WHAT ● WHO
WHAT:
Satisfy Customer
Needs
WHO:
Target Group
of Customers
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BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGY
PURPOSE
BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGIES
are intended to create differences
between the firm’s position relative to
those of its rivals
To position itself, the firm must decide
whether it intends to:
● Perform activities differently, or
● Perform different activities as
compared to its rivals
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BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGY
PURPOSE
BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGY
is a deliberate choice about how the firm
will perform the value chain activities to
create unique value
Southwest’s Competitive Advantages
(rivals unable to imitate):
● Tight integration among activities
● Cost leadership strategy
● Unique culture and customer service
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BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGY
PURPOSE
FIGURE 4.1
Southwest
Airlines Activity
System
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SOURCES OF COMPETITIVE
ADVANTAGE
■ Achieving LOWER OVERALL COSTS than rivals
■ Performing activities differently (reducing
process costs)
■ Providing a low cost product that customers
deem as ACCEPTABLE
■ Possessing the capability TO DIFFERENTIATE
the firm’s product or service and command a
premium price
■ Performing MORE HIGHLY VALUED activities
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FIGURE 4.2
FIVE GENERIC BUSINESS-LEVEL
STRATEGIES
Five Business
Level
Strategies
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TARGET MARKETS
BROAD
NARROW
•Firms serving a broad market seek
to use their capabilities to create
value for customers on an
industry-wide basis; competing in
many customer segments
•A narrow market segment means
that the firm intends to serve the
needs of a narrow customer
group; tailoring its strategy to
serving them at the exclusion of
others
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BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGY
EFFECTIVENESS
■ None of the five business-level strategies is
inherently or universally superior to the others
■ The effectiveness of each strategy is
contingent upon:
● External opportunities/threats
● Internal strengths/weaknesses
■ KEY: A successful business-level strategy
must match external opportunities/threats
with internal strengths, i.e., its core
competencies
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COST LEADERSHIP STRATEGY
An integrated set of actions taken to
produce goods or services with features
that are acceptable to customers at the
lowest cost, relative to that of
competitors with features that are
acceptable to customers
■ Relatively standardized products
■ Features acceptable to many customers
■ Lowest competitive price
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COST LEADERSHIP STRATEGY:
VALUE CHAIN ACTIVITIES
■ Value chain analysis identifies the parts of a
firm’s operations that create value and those
that do not
■ A competitive advantage in logistics creates
more value for a cost leadership strategy than
for a differentiation strategy
 Inbound logistics [materials handling,
warehousing, and inventory control]
 Outbound logistics [collecting, storing, and
distribution]
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COST LEADERSHIP STRATEGY:
COST SAVING ACTIONS
■ Employing process innovations that facilitate
efficient production and distribution methods
■ Building efficient scale facilities
■ Tightly controlling production costs and overhead
■ Minimizing costs of sales, R&D, and service
■ Building efficient manufacturing facilities
■ Monitoring costs of activities provided by outsiders
■ Simplifying production processes
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COST LEADERSHIP STRATEGY:
VALUE CHAIN ACTIVITIES
FIGURE 4.3
Examples of
Value-Creating
Activities
Associated
with the CostLeadership
Strategy
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VALUE-CREATING ACTIVITIES FOR
COST LEADERSHIP
RECONFIGURE THE VALUE CHAIN FOR COST ADVANTAGE
•
Cost-effective MIS
•
Monitor suppliers’ performances
•
Few management layers
•
•
Simplified planning
Link suppliers’ products to
production processes
•
Consistent policies
•
Economies of scale
•
Effecting training
•
Efficient-scale facilities
•
Easy-to-use manufacturing
technologies
•
Effective delivery schedules
•
Low-cost transportation
•
Investments in technologies
•
Highly trained sales force
•
Finding low cost raw materials
•
Proper pricing
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VALUE-CREATING ACTIVITIES FOR
COST LEADERSHIP
 Alter production process
 New raw material
 Change in automation
 Forward integration
 New distribution channel
 Backward integration
 Change location relative to
suppliers or buyers
 New advertising media
 Direct sales in place of
indirect sales
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COST LEADERSHIP STRATEGY:
STRATEGIC FOCUS
WALMART, DOLLAR STORES, AND AMAZON:
WHO IS BUYING WHOSE LUNCH?
■ Walmart deviated from its cost-leadership strategy
designed to take market share away from Target by
introducing organic foods, remodeling some stores,
and reducing the variety of products offered, thereby
increasing prices on some goods.
■ Recognizing its mistake, Walmart has re-focused on
low costs and prices, increased its product diversity,
and is opening 40 new express stores.
■ Will Walmart will be able to recapture its cost
leadership position in the market after giving it up to
rivals?
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COST LEADERSHIP STRATEGY:
COMPETITORS
RIVALRY WITH
EXISTING
COMPETITORS
Threat of
substitute
products
– Rivals hesitate to compete
on basis of price
– Lack of price competition
leads to greater profits
Threat of new
entrants
Rivalry
among
competing firms
• Due to cost leader’s
advantageous position:
Bargaining
power of
suppliers
Bargaining
power of
buyers
– Rivalry may be based on
factors such as size,
resources, location,
market dependence, and
prior competitive
interactions
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COST LEADERSHIP STRATEGY:
BUYERS (CUSTOMERS)
BARGAINING
POWER OF
BUYERS
• Can mitigate buyers’ power
by:
Threat of new
entrants
Rivalry
among
competing firms
Threat of
substitute
products
Bargaining
power of
suppliers
Bargaining
power of
buyers
– Driving prices far below
competitors, causing them
to exit, thus shifting power
away from buyers back to
the firm
– Powerful customers can
force a cost leader to reduce
its prices, but not below the
level where the next-mostefficient industry competitor
can earn average returns
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COST LEADERSHIP STRATEGY:
SUPPLIERS
BARGAINING
POWER OF
SUPPLIERS
• Can mitigate suppliers’ power
by:
– Being able to absorb cost
increases due to low cost
position
Threat of new
entrants
Rivalry
among
competing firms
Threat of
substitute
products
Bargaining
power of
suppliers
Bargaining
power of
buyers
– Being able to make very large
purchases, reducing chance
of supplier using power
– Outsourcing, to reduce costs
may also require relationshipbuilding (Guanxi), particularly
to a foreign supplier
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COST LEADERSHIP STRATEGY:
NEW ENTRANTS
• Barriers to potential
entrants:
THREAT OF
POTENTIAL
ENTRANTS
– Their need to enter on a large
scale in order to be cost
competitive
Threat of new
entrants
Rivalry
among
competing firms
Threat of
substitute
products
Bargaining
power of
suppliers
Bargaining
power of
buyers
– The time it takes to move up
the learning curve
– Efficiency of cost leaders
through continuous efforts to
reduce costs enhances profit
margins and serves as a
significant entry barrier
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COST LEADERSHIP STRATEGY:
SUBSTITUTES
• Cost leader is well
positioned to:
PRODUCT
SUBSTITUTES
– Make investments to be
first to create substitutes
Threat of new
entrants
Rivalry
among
competing firms
Threat of
substitute
products
Bargaining
power of
suppliers
Bargaining
power of
buyers
– Buy patents developed by
potential substitutes
– Lower prices in order to
maintain value position
– Be more flexible than its
differentiated competitors
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COST LEADERSHIP STRATEGY:
RISKS
• COMPETITIVE RISKS
– OBSOLESCENCE: processes used to produce
and distribute goods/services may become
obsolete due to competitors’ innovations
– COST REDUCTIONS: too much focus on cost
reductions may occur at expense of customers’
perceptions of differentiation
– IMITATION: competitors, using their own core
competencies, may successfully imitate the cost
leader’s strategy
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DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY
An integrated set of actions taken to
produce goods or services (at an
acceptable cost) that customers perceive
as being different in ways that are
important to them
■ Focus is on non-standardized products
■ Appropriate when customers value
differentiated features more than they value
low cost
■ Firms must still be able to produce
differentiated products at competitive costs
to reduce upward pressure on the price that
customers pay
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DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY:
DISTINCTIVE ACTIONS
Firms seek to be different from competitors on as
many dimensions as possible
Differentiation approaches
■ Unusual features
■ Responsive customer service
■ Rapid product innovations
■ Technological leadership
■ Perceived prestige and status
■ Different tastes
■ Engineering design and performance
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FIGURE 4.4
DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY:
VALUE CHAIN ACTIVITIES
Examples of
Value-Creating
Activities
Associated
with the
Differentiation
Strategy
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VALUE-CREATING ACTIVITIES FOR
DIFFERENTIATION
•
Highly developed MIS
•
High quality replacement parts
•
Emphasis on quality
•
•
Worker compensation for
creativity/productivity
Superior handling of incoming
raw materials
•
Attractive products
•
Use of subjective
performance measures
•
Rapid response to customer
specifications
•
Basic research capability
•
Order-processing procedures
•
Technology
•
Customer credit
•
High quality raw materials
•
Personal relationships
•
Delivery of products
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VALUE-CREATING ACTIVITIES FOR
DIFFERENTIATION
RECONFIGURE THE VALUE CHAIN FOR DISTINCTIVENESS
 Whereas cost leadership targets a specific industry,
differentiation creates value by distinguishing
products/services
 A firm must consistently upgrade differentiated features
that customers value and/or create new valuable features
(innovate) without significant cost increases
 Create sustainability through:
 Customer perceptions of distinctiveness
 Customer reluctance to switch to non-distinctive
products
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DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY:
COMPETITORS
RIVALRY WITH
EXISTING
COMPETITORS
Threat of new
entrants
Rivalry
among
competing firms
Threat of
substitute
products
Bargaining
power of
suppliers
Bargaining
power of
buyers
• The relationship
between brand loyalty
and price sensitivity
insulates a firm from
competitive rivalry
• Reputation can also
sustain the competitive
advantage of firms
following a
differentiation strategy
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DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY:
BUYERS (CUSTOMERS)
BARGAINING
POWER OF
BUYERS
• Can mitigate buyers’ power
because well differentiated
products reduce customer
sensitivity to price increases
Threat of new
entrants
• Customers are willing to
accept a price increase
when a product satisfies
their perceived unique
needs, as long as they do
not think that an acceptable
product alternative exists
Rivalry
among
competing firms
Threat of
substitute
products
Bargaining
power of
suppliers
Bargaining
power of
buyers
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DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY:
SUPPLIERS
• Can mitigate suppliers’ power
by:
BARGAINING
POWER OF
SUPPLIERS
– Absorbing price increases
due to higher margins from
high-quality components
Threat of new
entrants
Rivalry
among
competing firms
Threat of
substitute
products
Bargaining
power of
suppliers
Bargaining
power of
buyers
– Alternatively, considering
buyers’ relative
insensitivity to price
increases and their brand
loyalty, firms may pass
along higher supplier
prices to the buyer
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DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY: NEW
ENTRANTS
• Substantial barriers to
potential entrants:
THREAT OF
POTENTIAL
ENTRANTS
– Customer loyalty and the
need to overcome the
uniqueness of a
differentiated product
Threat of new
entrants
Rivalry
among
competing firms
Threat of
substitute
products
Bargaining
power of
suppliers
Bargaining
power of
buyers
– New products must surpass
proven products
– New products must be at
least equal to the
performance of proven
products, but offered at
lower prices
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DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY:
SUBSTITUTES
PRODUCT
SUBSTITUTES
Threat of new
entrants
Rivalry
among
competing firms
Threat of
substitute
products
Bargaining
power of
suppliers
• Well-positioned relative to
substitutes because:
– Brand loyalty to a
differentiated product
tends to reduce:
– customers’ testing of
new products
– switching brands
Bargaining
power of
buyers
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permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.
DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY:
RISKS
• COMPETITIVE RISKS
– PRICE DIFFERENTIAL: between the differentiator’s
and the cost leader’s products becomes too large
– VALUE DIMINISHED: Differentiation ceases to
provide value for which customers are willing to
pay
– EXPERIENCE: narrows customers’ perceptions of
the value of differentiated features
– COUNTERFEIT: goods replicate differentiated
features of the firm’s products
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permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.
FOCUSED STRATEGIES
An integrated set of actions taken to
produce goods or services that serve the
needs of a particular competitive segment
Target markets include:
■ Particular buyer group (e.g., youths or
senior citizens)
a
■ Different segment of a product line (e.g.,
products for professional painters or the do-ityourself group)
■ Different geographic market (e.g., northern
or southern Italy by using a foreign subsidiary)
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FOCUSED STRATEGIES
Types of focused strategies:
■ Focused cost leadership strategy
■ Focused differentiation strategy
To implement a focus strategy,
firms must be able to:
Complete various value chain activities in a
competitively superior manner in order to
develop and sustain a competitive advantage
and earn above-average returns
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FACTORS THAT DRIVE
FOCUSED STRATEGIES
■ Large firms may overlook small niches
■ A firm may lack the resources needed to
compete in the broader market
■ A firm is able to serve a narrow market
segment more effectively than its larger
industry-wide competitors can
■ Focusing allows the firm to direct its
resources to certain value chain activities
to build competitive advantage
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FOCUSED COST LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY
A firm focuses on a niche market,
adding value by leveraging value
chain activities that allow valuecreation through the cost
leadership strategy
■ Competitive advantage: low-cost
■ Competitive scope: narrow industry
segment
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permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.
FOCUSED DIFFERENTIATION
STRATEGY
The value chain may be analyzed to
determine if a firm is able to link the
activities required to create value by
using the focused differentiation
strategy
■ Competitive advantage: differentiation
■ Competitive scope: narrow industry
segment
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FOCUS STRATEGIES: RISKS
• COMPETITIVE RISKS
– OUTFOCUSED: a focusing firm may be
“outfocused” by its competitors
– COMPETITION: a large competitor may
decide that the market segment served by
the focus strategy firm is attractive and
worthy of competitive pursuit
– CHANGING PREFERENCES: customer
preferences in the niche market may
change to more closely resemble those of
the broader market
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INTEGRATED COST LEADERSHIP/
DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY
Efficiently produce products with differentiated attributes:
• EFFICIENCY: SOURCES OF LOW COST
• DIFFERENTIATION: SOURCE OF UNIQUE VALUE
■ Readily adapts to external environmental changes
■ Concentrates simultaneously on TWO sources of
competitive advantage: cost and differentiation
■ Competence and flexibility required in several value chain
activities
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INTEGRATED COST LEADERSHIP/
DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY
Three sources of flexibility useful
for this strategy:
■ Flexible manufacturing systems (FMS)
■ Information networks
■ Total quality management (TQM) systems
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permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.
FLEXIBLE MANUFACTURING
SYSTEMS
Computer-controlled processes used to
produce a variety of products in
moderate, flexible quantities with a
minimum of manual intervention
■ Goal is to eliminate the “low cost versus
wide product variety” tradeoff
■ Allows firms to produce large variety of
products at relatively low costs
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INFORMATION NETWORKS
Links companies electronically with their
suppliers, distributors, and customers
■ Facilitates efforts to satisfy customer
expectations in terms of product quality and
delivery speed
■ Improves flow of work among employees in
the firm and their counterpart suppliers and
distributors
■ Requires customer relationship management
(CRM)
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TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT
[TQM] SYSTEMS
Emphasize total commitment to the customer
through continuous improvement using:
■ Problem-solving approaches based on
employee empowerment
Benefits
■ Increased customer satisfaction
■ Lower costs
■ Reduced time-to-market for innovative products
TQM systems help firms maintain competitive
parity, but by itself, rarely will it lead to a
competitive advantage
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permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.
INTEGRATED COST LEADERSHIP/
DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY: RISKS
“STUCK in the MIDDLE”
Strategy is gaining in popularity… but is
RISKY
Products do not offer sufficient value in
terms of either low cost or differentiation
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INTEGRATED COST LEADERSHIP/
DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY: RISKS
“STUCK in the MIDDLE”
Cost structure is not low enough for
attractive pricing of products; products not
sufficiently differentiated to create value for
target customer
RESULT: DO NOT EARN ABOVE-AVERAGE
RETURNS
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permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.