Unit 1.3
Unit 1.3
What is strategy>
Strategic management
- A strategy is a broad idea and is more than just plans, actions and
initiatives
- A strategy is how the company’s objectives are achieved and not
the objectives themselves, strategy therefore depends on clearly
defined objectives
- Each company will have different objectives and therefore should
have a unique strategy and there should be no generic strategy that
a company can follow.
- Strategy
o What is the company trying to do to create or maintain a
competitive advantage vs competition
- Strategic decisions
o Long term decisions
o Significant effect
o Internal and external element
Involves:
Strategy formation
Vision
Mission
Values
Vision
Note:
- No specific targets
- Broad description of value the company wants to add
Mission
Values
The vision and mission state where the organization is going and what it
will do to get there
Companies with strong values follow their values when it is easier (or
cheaper) not to
Lesson 2b
Formulating a strategy
Situation analysis
SWOT analysis
- Strengths
o Core competences: areas where the business excels
- Weaknesses
o Areas that need improvement, placing the company at a
disadvantage
- Opportunities
o Favourable factors with the potential to improve current
positioning
- Threats
o Factors arising in the external environment that have the
potential to hurt a firms business
PESTEL
Political
- Bureaucracy
- Corruption
- Freedom of the press
- Political stability/change
- Trade restrictions/tariffs
- Tax policy (progression etc)
Economic
Technological
- R&D activity
- Access to telecommunications (internet/cell phones)
- Automation
- Technological incentives
- Rate of technology change
- Industry focus on technology
- Life cycle of technologies
- Changes in IT usage
- Changes in internet usage
- Changes in mobile technology
Environmental
- Environmental regulations
- Global warming
- Waste and pollution
Legal
- Competitive law
- Employment law
- Health and safety law
- Corporate law
- Tax law
- Protective and ownership rights (land claims)
- Enforceability of legal rights
Porters 5 forces
Customers
- Buyer v0olume
- Buyer information
- Brand identity
- Price sensitivity
- Threat of backward integration
- Product differentiation
- Substitutes available
Suppliers
- Supplier concentration
- Importance of volume to supplier
- Special inputs
- Impact of inputs on cost differentiation
- Switching costs of firms in the industry
- Presence of substitute inputs
- Threat of forward integration
- Cost relative to total purchases in industry
New entrants
Substitutes
- Switching costs
- Buyer inclination to substitute
- Price performance trade off of substitutes
Internal rivalry
- Industry concentration
- Industry growth
- Intermittent overcapacity
- Product differences
- Brand identity
Lesson 2c – Determining the strategy
2. Determine strategy
o Determine the vision, mission and values
o Determine strategic positioning
Be aware of current strategic position
Future valuable strategic positions
And how to achieve them
o Determine strategic goals
Long term and short term
Include completion dates
o Develop implementation plans/projects
i.e., how to achieve strategic goals
Michael Porters (HBS) competitive strategy framework
Cost leadership
- Standardise products
o No frills, no customisation or personalisation
o Use fewer components/standardised components
o Limit to number of models and variations
- Pay low wages or automate manufacturing
- Move to low rent areas (countries)
- Requires a continuous seach for low costs
- Promote low cost item with certain features
- Bulk buying
- Squeezing suppliers on price
- Institute competitive bidding for supply contracts
- Use JIT inventory management
- Preferential access to raw materials
Differentiation
- Uniqueness is a perception
o Brand image
- Works well when
o Customer is not price sensitive
o Market is competitive or saturated
o Customers have specific needs not met
o Company has unique resources
Tech skills/design skills/patents/brand
- Example
o Apple products
o Adidas products
o Pink lady apples
o Pepperdews
Niche
- Refers to differentiating in a narrow market
o Servicing a specific segmnent with specific needs not served
o Highly customised product and marketing
- Example
o Bottled water
o Luxury yachts
Suitability
Is the strategic option suitable? Does it align with the companies strategic
intent (mission, vision and goals)
Acceptability
Feasibility
Balanced scorecard
Balanced
Role as a scorecard
- Objectives
o Key outcomes to implement strategy
- Measures
o A way of measuring outcome
- Targets
o The goal we want our measures to reach
- Initiatives
o What we will do to move the measure
Balanced scorecard
Remember that you need to consider choosing objectives from all the
perspectives to ensure a well implemented strategy namely:
- Financial
- Customer
- Internal business processes
- Learning and growth
- Risk is the chance that what actually happens differs to what you
expected to happen
- No risk is certainty. Certainty is what actually happens will be
exactly what you expected to happen.
- Identify risks
- Measure risks
o Analyse and evaluate risks
o Determine the impact of risks
- Manage risks
o Deal with risks according to entities strategy and risk appetite
- Monitor the risks
- Report on the risks
Business risk
- Risks specially taken in order to add value
- E.g., marketing a new peoduct in order to obtain sales
Non-business risks
Financial risk
Risk identification
- Core risks are the necessary risks that the company must take as
part of it sbusiness to succeed and grow
o E.g., the risk associated with developing and marketing a new
product – this is core to normal business
- Non-core risk are not necessary to and can be minimised or elimited
completely
o E.g., the risk of theft of your company delivery vehicle – this is
non-core and can be removed using insurance