Weekly Reflection
COURTMCLARKE777
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LO1 Learn whether and when to pursue offensive or defensive strategic moves to improve a company’s market position.
LO2 Recognize when being a first mover or a fast follower or a late mover can lead to competitive advantage.
LO3 Become aware of the strategic benefits of expanding a company’s horizontal scope through merger and acquisitions.
LO5 Understand the conditions that favor farming out certain value chain activities to outside parties.
LO6 Gain an understanding of how strategic alliances and collaborative partnerships can bolster a company’s collection of resources and capabilities.
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Choosing Strategy Actions that Complement a Firm’s Competitive Approach
Decisions regarding the firm’s operating scope and how to best strengthen its market standing must be made:
Whether and when to go on the offensive and initiate aggressive strategic moves to improve the firm’s market position.
Whether and when to employ defensive strategies to protect the firm’s market position.
When to undertake strategic moves based upon whether it is advantageous to be a first mover or a fast follower or a late mover.
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Choosing Strategy Actions that Complement a Firm’s Competitive Approach (cont’d)
Decisions regarding the firm’s operating scope and how to best strengthen its market standing must be made:
Whether to integrate backward or forward into more stages of the industry value chain.
Which value chain activities, if any, should be outsourced.
Whether to enter into strategic alliances or partnership arrangements with other enterprises.
Whether to bolster the firm’s market position by merging with or acquiring another company in the same industry.
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Launching Strategic Offensives to Improve a Company’s Market Position
Aggressive strategic offensives are called for when a firm:
Spots opportunities to gain profitable market share at the expense of rivals
Has no choice but to try to whittle away at a strong rival’s competitive advantage
Can reap benefits of a competitive edge offers—a leading market share, excellent profit margins, and rapid growth.
The best offensives use a firm’s resource strengths to attack its rivals’ weaknesses.
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Choosing the Basis for Competitive Attack
Principal Offensive Strategy Options
Adopt and improving on good ideas of other firms
Attack profitable market segments of key rivals
Capture unoccupied or less contested markets
Attack the competitive weaknesses of rivals
Offer an equal or better product at a lower price
Pursue continuous product innovation
Leapfrog competitors to be the first to market
Use hit-and-run or guerrilla marketing tactics
Launch a preemptive strike on a market opportunity
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Principal Offensive Strategy Options
Attacking the competitive weaknesses of rivals
Offering an equally good or better product at lower price
Pursuing continuous product innovation
Leapfrogging competitors by being the first to market with next generation technology or products
Adopting and improving on the good ideas of other companies (rivals or otherwise)
Deliberately attacking those market segments where a key rival makes big profits
Maneuvering around competitors to capture unoccupied or less contested market territory
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Principal Offensive Strategy Options
Using hit-and-run or guerilla warfare tactics to grab sales and market share from complacent or distracted rivals
Launching a preemptive strike to capture a rare opportunity or secure an industry’s limited resources.
Secure the best distributors in a particular geographic region or country
Secure the most favorable retail locations
Tie up the most reliable, high-quality suppliers via exclusive partnerships, long-term contracts, or even acquisition
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Choosing Which Rivals to Attack
Small local and regional firms with limited capabilities.
Market leaders that are vulnerable.
Struggling enterprises that are on the verge of going under.
Runner-up firms with weaknesses in areas where the challenger is strong.
Best Targets for Offensive Attacks
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Blue Ocean Strategy— A Special Kind of Offensive
A firm seeks a large and lasting competitive advantage by abandoning existing markets and inventing an exclusive new industry or market segment (open competitive space) that makes former competitors irrelevant.
By “reinventing the circus”, Cirque du Soleil annually attracts an audience of millions of people who typically do not attend circus events.
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Blue ocean strategies offer growth in revenues and profits by discovering or inventing new industry segments that create altogether new demand.
CORE CONCEPT
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GILT GROUPE’S BLUE OCEAN STRATEGY IN THE U.S. FLASH SALE INDUSTRY
Concepts & Connections 6.1
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Using Defensive Strategies to Protect a Company’s Market Position and Competitive Advantage
Defensive strategies defend against competitive challenges by:
Lowering the risk of being attacked.
Weakening the impact of any attack that occurs.
Influencing challengers to aim their competitive efforts towards other rivals.
Good defensive strategies can help protect competitive advantage but rarely are the basis for creating it.
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Blocking the Avenues Open to Challengers
Maintain economy-priced models
Announce new products or price changes
Grant volume discounts or better financing terms
Defending a Competitive Position
Introduce new features
Add new models
Broaden product line to fill vacant niches
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Blocking the Avenues Open to Challengers
Introduce new features
Add new models
Broaden product line to fill vacant niches
Maintain economy-priced models
Make early announcements about upcoming new products or planned price changes
Grant volume discounts or better financing terms to dealers and distributors to discourage them from experimenting with other suppliers
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Signaling Challengers That Retaliation Is Likely
Making a strong counter response to weak competitor moves to enhance the firm’s image as a tough defender
Publicly announcing management’s strong commitment to maintain the firm’s present market share
Maintaining a war chest of cash and marketable securities
Publicly committing the firm to a policy of matching competitors’ terms or prices
Dissuading or diverting competitors
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Signaling Challengers That Retaliation Is Likely
Publicly announce management’s strong commitment to maintain the firm’s present market share.
Publicly commit firm to policy of matching rivals’ terms or prices.
Maintain a war chest of cash reserves.
Make occasional strong counter-response to moves of weaker rivals.
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Timing a Company’s Offensive and Defensive Strategic Moves
When to make a strategic move is often as crucial as what move to make.
First-movers can earn big payoffs when:
Pioneering helps build a firm’s image and reputation with buyers.
Early commitments to new ways produce an absolute cost advantage over rivals.
First-time customers remain strongly loyal in making repeat purchases.
Moving first constitutes a preemptive strike, making imitation extra hard or unlikely.
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Because of first-mover advantages and disadvantages, competitive advantage can spring from when a move is made as well as from what move is made.
CORE CONCEPT
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The Potential for Late-Mover Advantages or First-Mover Disadvantages
Late-mover advantages (or first-mover disadvantages) arise in four instances:
When pioneering leadership is more costly than imitation.
When innovators’ products are primitive, and do not living up to buyer expectations.
When potential buyers are skeptical about the benefits of a first-mover’s new technology/product.
When rapid market and technology changes allow fast followers and late movers to leapfrog pioneers.
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Deciding Whether to Be an Early Mover or Late Mover
Key Issue:
Is the race to market leadership a marathon or a sprint?
The decision to seek first-mover competitive advantage requires asking:
Does market takeoff depend on development of complementary products or services not currently available?
Is new infrastructure required before buyer demand can surge?
Will buyers need to learn new skills or adopt new behaviors? Will buyers encounter high switching costs?
Are there influential competitors in a position to delay or derail the efforts of a first-mover?
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Strengthening a Company’s Market Position Via its Scope of Operations
Scope of a Firm’s Operations
Describes the breadth and strength of its activities and the extent of its reach into geographic, product and service market segments.
Dimensions of a Firm’s Scope
Breadth of its product and service offerings
The range of activities it performs internally
The extent of its geographic market presence
Its mix of businesses
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The scope of the firm refers to the range of activities the firm performs internally, the breadth of its product and service offerings, the extent of its geographic market presence, and its mix of businesses.
CORE CONCEPT
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Horizontal scope is the range of product and service segments that a firm serves within its focal market.
Vertical scope is the extent to which a firm’s internal activities encompass one, some, many, or all of the activities that make up an industry’s entire value chain system, ranging from raw- material production to final sales and service activities.
CORE CONCEPT
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Horizontal Merger and Acquisition Strategies
A strategic option that strengthens a firm’s market position by achieving operating scale and scope economies, gaining complementary competencies, and extending current and new market and product opportunities:
Merger
The combining of two or more firms into a single entity, with the newly created firm often taking on a new name
Acquisition
The combination in which one firm, the acquirer, purchases and absorbs the operations of another, the acquired firm
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Strategic Objectives of Mergers and Acquisitions
Extend the firm’s business into new product categories.
Create a more cost-efficient operation out of the combined firms.
Expand the firm’s geographic coverage.
Gain quick access to new technologies or complementary resources and capabilities.
Lead the convergence of industries whose boundaries are being blurred by changing technologies and new market opportunities.
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BRISTOL-MYERS SQUIBB’S “STRING-OF-PEARLS” HORIZONTAL ACQUISITION STRATEGY
Concepts & Connections 6.2
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Why Mergers and Acquisitions May Fail to Produce Anticipated Results
Cost savings are smaller than expected.
Gains in competitive capabilities take much longer to realize or may never materialize.
Efforts to mesh the corporate cultures stall because of resistance from organization members.
Managers and employees at the acquired continue to do things as they were done prior to the acquisition.
Dissatisfied key employees of the acquired firm leave.
Mistakes are made in deciding which activities to leave alone and which activities to meld into the acquiring firm’s own operations and systems.
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Vertical Integration Strategies
Involve extending a firm’s competitive and operating scope within the same industry
Backward into sources of supply
Forward toward end-users of final product
Can aim at either full or partial integration
Suppliers
End-Users
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A vertically integrated firm is one that performs value chain activities along more than one stage of an industry’s overall value chain.
A vertical integration strategy has appeal only if it significantly strengthens a firm’s competitive position and/or boosts its profitability
CORE CONCEPT
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The Advantages of a Vertical Integration Strategy
The two best reasons for vertically integrating into more value chain segments:
Strengthen the firm’s competitive position
Boost profitability
Suppliers
End-Users
Profits
Competitive Advantage
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Backward integration involves performing industry value chain activities previously performed by suppliers or other enterprises engaged in earlier stages of the industry value chain; forward integration involves performing industry value chain activities closer to the end user.
CORE CONCEPT
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Integrating Backward to Achieve Greater Competitiveness
For backward integration to boost profitability a firm must be able to:
Achieve the same scale economies as outside suppliers.
Match or beat suppliers’ production efficiency with no decline in quality.
Suppliers
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When Backward Vertical Integration Becomes a Consideration
When powerful suppliers are inclined to raise prices at every opportunity
When suppliers have large profit margins
When the requisite technological skills are easily mastered or acquired
When the item being supplied is a major cost component
Favorable Backward Vertical Integration Situations
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When Backward Vertical Integration Becomes a Consideration
Potential situations that create opportunities for cost reduction through backward vertical integration:
When suppliers have large profit margins
Where the item being supplied is a major cost component
Where the requisite technological skills are easily mastered or acquired
When powerful suppliers are inclined to raise prices at every opportunity
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Integrating Forward to Enhance Competitiveness
Gain better access to end users
Improve market visibility
Include the purchasing experience as a differentiating feature
End-Users
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Forward Vertical Integration and Internet Retailing
Direct selling and Internet retailing is appealing when:
It lowers distribution costs
It produces a relative cost advantage over rivals
It produces higher profit margins
It allows lower prices to be charged to end users.
Numbers of buyers prefer to make online purchases
However, competing against directly against distribution allies can create channel conflict and signal a weak commitment to dealers.
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Disadvantages of a Vertical Integration Strategy
Increases a firm’s specialized capital investments in its industry.
Increases a firm’s overall business risk if industry growth slows and profitability declines.
Increases resistance by vertically integrated firms using aging technologies and facilities to technical advances and efficiencies
Results in less flexibility in accommodating shifting buyer preferences when a new product design doesn’t include parts and components that the firm makes in-house.
Creates capacity-matching problems among integrated in-house component manufacturing units.
May require development of new and different skills and business capabilities.
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Outsourcing Strategies: Narrowing the Scope of Operations
Outsourcing an activity should be considered when:
It can be performed better or more cheaply by outside specialists.
It is not crucial to achieving a sustainable competitive advantage and won’t hollow out capabilities, core competencies, or technical know-how of the firm.
It improves organizational flexibility and speeds time to market.
It reduces a firm’s risk exposure to changing technology and/or buyer preferences.
It allows a firm to concentrate on its core business, leverage its key resources and core competencies, and do even better what it already does best.
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Outsourcing involves contracting out certain value chain activities to outside specialists and strategic allies.
CORE CONCEPT
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Outsourcing Strategies: Narrowing the Scope of Operations (cont’d)
The Big Risk of Outsourcing:
Farming out the wrong types of activities and thereby hollowing out strategically-important capabilities that ultimately leads to reduction of the firm’s strategic competitiveness and long-run success in the marketplace.
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AMERICAN APPAREL’S VERTICAL INTEGRATION STRATEGY
Concepts & Connections 6.3
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Strategic Alliances and Partnerships
Strategic Alliance
Is a formal contractual agreement in which two or more firms collaborate to achieve mutually beneficial strategic outcomes based on:
Strategically relevant collaboration
Joint contribution of resources
Shared risk
Shared control
Mutual dependence
Allows firms to complementarily bundle resources and competencies to increase their competitive effects and value.
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A strategic alliance is a formal agreement between two or more companies to work cooperatively toward some common objective.
A joint venture is a type of strategic alliance that involves the establishment of an independent corporate entity that is jointly owned and controlled by the two partners.
CORE CONCEPT
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Reasons for Firms to Enter Into Strategic Alliances
Improve supply chain efficiency
Gain economies of scale in production and/or marketing
Acquire or improve market access via joint marketing agreements
Reasons for Alliances
Expedite development of new technologies or products
Overcome technical or manufacturing expertise deficits
Bring together personnel to create new skill sets and capabilities
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Reasons for Firms to Enter Into Strategic Alliances
To expedite development of new technologies or products
To overcome deficits in technical or manufacturing expertise
To bring together personnel of each partner to create new skill sets and capabilities
To improve supply chain efficiency
To gain economies of scale in production and/or marketing
To acquire or improve market access through joint marketing agreements
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Reasons for Firms to Continue In Strategic Alliances
Alliances are likely to be long-lasting when:
They involve collaboration with partners that do not compete directly.
A trusting relationship has been established.
Both parties conclude that continued collaboration is in their mutual interest.
Experience indicates that:
Alliances may help in reducing a firm’s competitive disadvantage but seldom result in a firm attaining a durable competitive edge over its rivals.
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Failed Strategic Alliances and Cooperative Partnerships
Common causes for the failure of 60–70% of alliances each year:
Diverging objectives and priorities.
An inability to work well together.
Changing conditions that make the purpose of the alliance obsolete.
The emergence of more attractive technological paths.
Marketplace rivalry between one or more allies.
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The Strategic Dangers of Relying on Alliances for Essential Resources And Capabilities
The Achilles’ heel of alliances and cooperative partnerships is becoming dependent on other companies for essential expertise and capabilities.
Ultimately, a firm must develop its own resources and capabilities to protect its competitiveness and capabilities to build and maintain its competitive advantage.
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