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McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Presentation on theme: "McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved."— Presentation transcript:

1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

2 Business-Level Strategy
Chapter 6 Business-Level Strategy

3 Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability
Three generic strategies Overall cost leadership Low-cost-position relative to a firm’s peers Manage relationships throughout the entire value chain 6-3

4 Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability
Differentiation Create products and/or services that are unique and valued Non-price attributes for which customers will pay a premium Focus strategy Narrow product lines, buyer segments, or targeted geographic markets Attain advantages either through differentiation or cost leadership 6-4

5 Three Generic Strategies
6-5

6 Overall Cost Leadership
Integrated tactics Aggressive construction of efficient-scale facilities Vigorous pursuit of cost reductions from experience Tight cost and overhead control Avoidance of marginal customer accounts Cost minimization in all activities in the firm’s value chain, such as R&D, service, sales force, and advertising 6-6

7 Overall Cost Leadership
Experience Curve How business “learns” to lower costs as it gains experience with production processes With experience, unit costs of production decline as output increases in most industries 6-7

8 Overall Cost Leadership
A firm following an overall cost leadership position: Must attain competitive parity on the basis of differentiation relative to competitors Competitive parity on the basis of differentiation Permits a cost leader to translate cost advantages directly into higher profits than competitors Allows firm to earn above-average profits 6-8

9 Overall Cost Leadership: Improving Competitive Position vis-à-vis the Five Forces
An overall low-cost position Protects a firm against rivalry from competitors Protects a firm against powerful buyers Provides more flexibility to cope with demands from powerful suppliers for input cost increases Provides substantial entry barriers from economies of scale and cost advantages Puts the firm in a favorable position with respect to substitute products 6-9

10 Pitfalls of Overall Cost Leadership Strategies
Too much focus on one or a few value-chain activities Too often managers make big cuts in operating expenses, but don’t question year-to-year spending on capital projects Should explore all value-chain activities as candidates for cost reductions All rivals share a common input or raw material Vulnerable to price increases 6-10

11 Differentiation Differentiation can take many forms
Prestige or brand image Technology Innovation Features Customer service Dealer network 6-11

12 Differentiation Firms may differentiate along several dimensions at once Firms achieve and sustain differentiation and above-average profits when price premiums exceed extra costs of being unique Requires integration with all parts of a firm’s value chain Important aspect is speed or quick response 6-12

13 Differentiation: Improving Competitive Position vis-à-vis the Five Forces
Avoids need for low-cost position by increasing a firm’s margins Creates higher entry barriers due to customer loyalty and uniqueness in its products or services Provides higher margins that enable the firm to deal with supplier power 6-13

14 Differentiation: Improving Competitive Position vis-à-vis the Five Forces
Reduces buyer power because buyers lack suitable alternative Reduces supplier power due to prestige associated with supplying to highly differentiated products Establishes customer loyalty and hence less threat from substitutes 6-14

15 Potential Pitfalls of Differentiation Strategies
Uniqueness that is not valuable Must be unique and possess high customer value Too much differentiation Firms may strive for too much quality Too high a price premium Customers may desire product, but repelled by price 6-15

16 Focus Focus is based on the choice of a narrow competitive scope within an industry Firm selects a segment or group of segments (niche) and tailors its strategy to serve them Firm achieves competitive advantages by dedicating itself to these segments exclusively 6-16

17 Focus Two variants Cost focus Differentiation focus
Strives to create a cost advantage in its target segment Differentiation focus Seeks differentiate in target market Both rely on providing better service than broad-based competitors who are trying to serve the focuser’s target segment 6-17

18 Focus: Improving Competitive Position vis-à-vis the Five Forces
Creates barriers of either cost leadership or differentiation, or both Used to select niches that are least vulnerable to substitutes or where competitors are weakest 6-18

19 Pitfalls of Focus Strategies
Erosion of cost advantages within the narrow segment Focused products and services still subject to competition from new entrants and from imitation Focusers can become too focused to satisfy buyer needs 6-19

20 Combination Strategies: Integrating Overall Low Cost and Differentiation
Primary benefit of successful integration of low-cost and differentiation strategies is difficulty it poses for competitors to duplicate or imitate strategy Goal of combination strategy is to provide unique value in an efficient manner 6-20

21 Three Combination Approaches
Automated and flexible manufacturing systems Firms are able to manufacture unique products, in small quantities, with lower prices Known as “Mass Customization” Technology advances in CAD/CAM 6-21

22 Three Combination Approaches
Exploiting the profit pool concept for competitive advantage Profit pool is the total profits in an industry at all points along the industry’s value-chain Structure can be complex Pattern of profit is different from pattern of revenue generation 6-22

23 Combination Strategies: Improving Competitive Position vis-à-vis the Five Forces
Obtain advantages of competition from both approaches High entry barriers Bargaining power over suppliers Reduces power of buyers (fewer competitors) Value position reduces threat from substitute products Reduces the possibility of head-to-head rivalry 6-23

24 Pitfalls of Combination Strategies
Firms that fail to attain both strategies may end up with neither and become “stuck in the middle” Underestimating the challenges and expenses associated with coordinating value-creating activities in the extended value chain Miscalculating sources of revenue and profit pools in the firm’s industry 6-24


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