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Overview and Course Summary MGTO650Y: Strategic Management

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1 Overview and Course Summary MGTO650Y: Strategic Management
Dr. Theodore H. K. Clark, MBA, DBA Associate Professor, Department of Information & Systems Management The Hong Kong University of Science & Technology and Adjunct Associate Professor of Operations & Information Management (Information Economics and Strategy Group) The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania

2 What is Strategy? Strategy versus Tactics
Strategy is when you have time to plan Time is a luxury many firms may not have Planning helps firms avoid failures or inefficiency Doing the right things, not just solving the urgent crisis Goal of Strategy is to Gain Advantage Faster growth, higher margins, or both Alternative is More Work, Resources, or Luck But, a good strategy can beat superior forces

3 What is Competitive Advantage?
Comparable Advantage - Something you are better at than almost everyone else Circular slide rule example Swedish language example Competitive Advantage - A comparable advantage that MATTERS in your market Circular slide rule skills irrelevant; use calculator! Swedish MIGHT matter in some environments Would Cantonese be a competitive advantage?

4 Porter’s Five Competitive Forces that Drive Industry Profitability
Potential new entrants Bargaining power of suppliers Industry competitors Bargaining power of buyers Threats of substitute products or services

5 Three generic strategies
Strategic Advantage Uniqueness Low cost position Overall Cost Leadership Differentiation Industry Strategic Target Segment Only Focus “Determining the cost/value tradeoff you wish to offer consumers is the most critical decision” - Porter

6 Porter’s Generic Strategy # 1: Leadership Based on Lower Cost
Become low-cost producer in the industry Lowest total cost, not just low variable cost Often driven by economies of scale Must have parity quality or have lowest cost AFTER adjusting for quality differences Leveraging scale is common source of advantage in many industries

7 Porter’s Generic Strategy # 2: Differentiation and Segmentation
Differentiation means to make your product unique and (hopefully) more valuable Becoming hard to copy is critically important Avoid commodity competition based on price Differentiation must be worth more to customers than it costs to create Horizontal differentiation (segmentation) versus vertical differentiation (quality) Less competition with horizontal differentiation

8 Porter’s Generic Strategy # 3: Focus or Niche Target Market
Can be based on cost, differentiation or both By targeting a narrow market segment, you may be able to provide targeted products and services to that segment that are both low-cost and differentiated relative to less targeted firms Strategy is by design differentiated based on segment, as target market segment needs must be unique for focus strategy to work May be only option open for new entrants

9 Rethinking and Updating Porter’s Generic Strategies Today
Cost leadership and differentiation are often hard to separate or clearly distinguish Cost leadership adjusted for quality differences Differentiation relative to differentiation costs Market leaders generally achieve BOTH Information goods total cost leadership means highest volumes (or copying) Differentiation critical to achieving scale Pricing not uniform, so a new key variable

10 Attackers’ Advantage Large Business Operations Focus on Meeting the Needs of Traditional Customers New Products and Services Offer Small Revenues Cost of Redesigning Existing Processes is High New Entrants can Focus on Niche Markets Fast Growing Niche / New Customer Segments New Products with Higher Initial Cost and Value Rapid Growth Replaces Traditional Markets Ignoring New Markets can be VERY Costly!

11 Sustainable Advantage: Part 1
Economies of Scale and Network Externalities Economies of scale important for E-commerce (e.g., advertising, software development, etc.) However, network externalities can be even more powerful forces in online business (Metcalf’s Law) Value of network of relationships increases as a function of the number of people or systems in the network Fax machines, Telephones, VCRs, VCD, , Internet Learning effects of scale can also be hard to copy

12 Sustainable Advantage: Part 2
Access to Resources as Source of Advantage Access to either suppliers or channels of distribution can be a sustainable advantage Customer switching costs can provide a first mover advantage and can favor established firms Part of IBM’s continuing advantage is due to cost of software conversion which makes switching difficult Brand can be viewed as a form of switching cost, but may be overcome with intensive promotion Scarce expertise may provide lasting advantage

13 Sustainable Advantage: Part 3
Government, Politics, and Options Advantages Patents, copyright, and trademarks are Government granted Monopoly rights (potentially hard to copy) Franchises and Licenses, granted by Governments or by Large and Successful Firm, can be hard to copy Value of owning McDonald’s franchise right can be high Right to operate Star Ferry may valuable and hard to copy Government policies on antitrust or prohibitions of monopoly can be source of advantage or disadvantage Government “grants” may be source of advantage

14 Targeting the New Battleground
Pricing and Versioning can create NEW strategic options that can enable firms to overcome SIZE advantages of dominant firms Alternative to “Winner Takes All” is smartest firm using customer information most effectively gains competitive advantage. How can firm with higher operating costs (due to lower scale) WIN with lower prices?

15 Information-Based Pricing Strategy: Profit-Based Market Segmentation
Information about customers enables customized pricing of many services Pricing based on RISK (Insurance) Pricing based on VALUE (customized goods) Pricing based on SAVINGS (industrial goods) Differential pricing premiums (grocery, clothing, perfume, and many other goods) Pricing based on PROFITABILITY (targeting)

16 Power of Profitability Gradient
New Entrants Exploit Profitability Gradient Profitability of all customers is not the same Historical pricing is not adequately differentiated Information advantage can yield high profits 100 80 60 40 20 Percentage of Total Customers Percentage of Total Profits

17 Datamining: A Powerful Segmentation Tool, But …
Datamining can only tell you about possible correlation, not drivers of behavior Driven by past data; future might be different Correlation not same as causality (coincidence) Need to look for plausible justification for findings from datamining processes For example, datamining shows that CEOs are bad customers for credit card companies - WHY?

18 Information-Based Pricing Strategy
Information about customers behavior, preferences, cost-to-serve, and ability to pay can be extremely valuable for ALL products Datamining is ONE powerful tool that can be used to understand potential opportunities Correlation but not causality Data collection in online businesses can be much lower cost than for traditional firms Valuable and unused data as free byproducts

19 Information Alliances, Outsourcing, and Strategy
Information outsourcing is becoming increasingly common and popular Information alliances are becoming essential for competitive advantage, especially for network goods to achieve scale for success Vertical integration initially projected for the new economy is becoming virtual integration No firm can afford to own all elements of the value chain in today’s complex, global economy Virtual integration is both efficient and flexible

20 Information Based Organizational Transformation Implementation
Implementing Transformation Strategy Objective are often unclear or evolving over time Industry transformation is hard to do top down Risks and failures can be costly for innovators Radical Goals, Incremental Change Process Harvard study of successful Reengineering P&G channel transformation success case study Process R&D and Process Prototyping Needed Infrastructure more than systems; need skills too.

21 Risks and Benefits of Sharing Information
Sharing information even once can result in power shifts that last for years in a relationship (proceed with caution) However, successful partnerships based on shared information can yield strong mutual benefits and reduce channel inefficiencies P&G now selling more than 50% of volume using channel information sharing processes Intel and customers both benefit from shared information to improve efficiency and service

22 Developing Relationships of Trust
Establishing inter-organizational relationships based on trust requires management time and attention But, management time is one of the most scare assets any firm possesses, especially for senior management Thus, any firm has a limit on the number of close relationships based on trust which can be sustained

23 Evolution of Trust and Consolidation of Relationships
Limited number of relationships at a high level of trust results consolidation of vendor and customer relationships Tight partnerships for critical jointly interdependent activities (e.g., JIT) GM and other firms reducing suppliers Strategic supply networks and alliances Leaders in developing trust can gain sustainable competitive advantage

24 Value Chain - Activities
Inbound Logistics Operations Outbound Marketing & Sales Service Organization Human resources Technology Purchasing Support Activities Primary From: Porter & Miller, 1985 Idea: Break firm down into manageable pieces for analysis

25 Organizational Planning Given Future Uncertainty and Change
“One thing you can be sure of is that there’s nothing to be sure of” What about Death and taxes? Well, maybe not even these, at least in timing Business implications of new innovations Consumer behavior and future customer needs almost impossible to predict Pace of innovation MAY be predictable, but not the fit between innovations and market needs Copying cheaper than innovating (fast follower wins!) Getting timing right and moving fast is critical

26 Investments in Business Planning as Future Decision Automation
Traditional business planning process requires firms to make many decisions in advance Detailed plans and high level approvals Plan the work, then work the plan Limits future decisions, which can save time later However, traditional planning approaches are often criticized as being too inflexible Automation of management decisions - low cost and better planned, but not responsive to change

27 Benefits and Costs of Investing in Flexibility for Manufacturing
Flexible manufacturing versus Automation Fast Responsiveness at Low Cost (Goal) Flexible manufacturing delivers both, but at COST Automation is low cost at less investment Manual process is flexible, but high cost Why not pick either Manual or Automation, depending on what your business needs? Investments in Flexible Manufacturing can be viewed as creating an option on the future.

28 Investment in Flexible Business Planning: Scenario Planning
Similar to flexible manufacturing, scenario planning creates option value for the future Traditional planning => factory automation Entrepreneurial management => manual labor Scenario planning => flexible manufacturing This is an INVESTMENT which has a COST Senior management time required for planning Management time as a scarce resource Low probability of high payoff (option investment)

29 Scenario Planning as Strategic Advantage: Shell Oil Example
In mid-1970s, we had lots of data on oil prices, with price always declining over time However, there were indications of change on the horizon which could change this trend Most firms thought about this as a risk which was not quantifiable, but did little to plan for possible changes in their environment Shell Oil created a Scenario Planning model to enable fast response to external change

30 The Scenario Planning Process
Brainstorm to determine most critical dimensions of future uncertainty Unknown and unknowable uncertainties (consulting study will not help us to resolve this uncertainty) Important (affect our decisions or ability to succeed) Limit of two is important due to practical planning limits (but can be relaxed if using for computer simulation models) Develop scenarios using these dimensions, and develop consistent future model for each scenario Brainstorm about implications for strategy and investment Develop ROUGH strategy plans for each scenario Look for low cost, high payoff investment opportunities

31 Scenario Planning and Simulation can “Create” Value as “Real Options”
Scenario planning for organizations, and the computer extended simulation versions of this for portfolio investments, can create new value Like options, the investments only pay off occasionally, but can have high payoffs when rapid change occurs Can be used to enable large firms to react faster, like smaller entrepreneurial firms, to environmental change Modest investments appropriate, but should not replace traditional processes or tools Unlike to be marketed by consultants, so may be a source of competitive advantage for firms that become good at using these capabilities

32 Strategic Planning and Change
Strategic planning is generally only needed if there is change or uncertainty in the future Existing plans are probably adequate if no change Change is more likely in the future than stability Key Challenge is Planning with Uncertainty Predictable change is easier than uncertainty Changes can be both important and uncertain Scenario Planning Developed for Uncertainty Addressing future importance and uncertainty

33 First Step in Change Management is Identifying What to Change
Vision or direction is the starting point for implementing change management Unfortunately, it may NOT be clear HOW the future will change, so goals are uncertain Leading change with uncertain goals is difficult and hard to build internal support Scenarios can be useful ways of identifying areas where new skills may be needed

34 First Step in Scenario Planning is Identifying Key Uncertainties
Look for change areas that are both: Unknown and unknowable uncertainties (consulting study will not help us to resolve this uncertainty) Important (affect our decisions or ability to succeed) Evaluate the level of importance and uncertainty for each area of uncertainty or change identified Brainstorm to identify as many areas of uncertainties or change as possible at first Prioritize your list into top 4 themes using above criteria Consider different challenges for different “businesses”

35 Breakout Session: Small Groups Discuss & Identify Uncertainties
Groups Designed to Encourage Discussion Not people you work with every day on the job Not all same level within groups No HIERARCHY in GROUP, but DEMOCRACY Not necessarily in group related to current job Brainstorming ideas used to drive later decision making and models for each group Build consensus on group discussion focus


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