17 Nov Select three strategies and provide an interesting real-world example that has actually happened among companies for each
Lecture 8, Slides 20-39
Select three strategies and provide an interesting real-world example (that has actually happened among companies) for each. Do not use examples from the textbook or lecture.
Write down a 1-2 page report.
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LECTURE 8
Competitive Advantage
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
• Competitive advantage is anything that gives you a temporary head start over the competition.
• It is what you have better than your competitors
• A competitive advantage can ultimately decide whether a customer chooses you or your competitor.
• It can also help you get faster the market or get larger market share.
• But the competitive advantage is not permanent. It is a temporary thing that you can quickly lose
either by your own mistake, by the competition’s efforts or simply by the market situation.
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
Examples:
• Better product or better service
• Better customer support or customer services
• Faster response to the customer requests
• Faster go to market approach
• Cheaper product (usually cheaper at comparable competitive offer quality)
• Better distribution channels (how you offer or deliver to the customer)
• Better promotion and marketing
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
More Examples
• Better people, human resources – more helpful, motivated workers, smarter, and more educated,
• Better information flow, better communication
• More flexible business processes
• Better market information (about competition, trends) and the ability to adapt quickly
• More efficient business processes (leads to cheaper and faster processes)
• Better leadership, better strategic management
1- Provides value (Relative to competitors)
2- Unique to the Firm
3- Cannot be imitated or substituted by
competitors
SUSTAINABLE COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
SUSTAINABLE COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
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ROUTES TO COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
1- Achieving Cost Leadership
2- Achieving Differentiation
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ACHIEVING COST LEADERSHIP
1 Economies of Scale
2 Experience and Learning
3 Capacity Utilization
4 Linkages
5 Interrelationships
6 Degree of Integration
7 Timing
8 Policy Choices
9 Location and Institutional Factors
ACHIEVING COST LEADERSHIP
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1- Economies of Scale
• Doing things differently in volume or more efficiently
• The most effective way of reducing costs
• E.g. More production rate or less waste
• Usually there is an optimal size: very large production may increase complexity
ACHIEVING COST LEADERSHIP
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2- Experience and Learning
• Employees having performed the necessary tasks many times before.
• Possible in all aspects of business: manufacturing, marketing, advertising, selling, … .
• That’s why companies with larger market share have a cost advantage.
• Experience can also be achieved by hiring experts and training
ACHIEVING COST LEADERSHIP
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3- Optimal Capacity Utilization
• Planning production and inventory to minimize the impact of
seasonal demand fluctuations
4- Linkage
• Side internal/external activities (other than manufacturing and
marketing) that may affect costs:
• Quality control and inspection: The better product test and quality check,
the lower cost of product failure and return or warranty costs
• Distribution relationships: Just-in-Time (JIT) manufacturing and delivery by
getting customer data from retailers
• Supplier relationships: Lower cost of raw material, …
ACHIEVING COST LEADERSHIP
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5- Interrelationships
• With other SBUs (Small Business Units) in the corporate to share some activities such
as R&D and quality control in order to save costs. E.g., the line of iPhone and the line
of MacBook share a software quality control process.
6- Integration
• Which activities should the firm do itself (integrated into corporation)? Which ones
should be outsourced?
• Manufacturing: Make vs. buy decisions
• Contracting delivery or service
ACHIEVING COST LEADERSHIP
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7- Timing (of market entry or product introduction)
• Sometimes first mover may have cost advantage by
• Securing prime locations
• Cheap or good quality raw materials
• Technological leadership
• Sometimes second (late) mover may have cost advantage by
• Benefiting from market awareness
• Leaning from the mistakes of the first mover
.
ACHIEVING COST LEADERSHIP
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8- Policy Choices
• Example: Ryanair
• Reducing service levels and charging for all extras which enabled company
to offer low fares.
9- Location and institutional factors
• Better geographic location to take advantage in distribution, assembly, raw
materials, or energy costs
• Government regulations
• The sensitivity of government to lobbyists and pressure groups is important.
ACHIEVING DIFFERENTIATION
1 Product Differentiation
2 Distribution Differentiation
3 Price Differentiation
4 Promotional Differentiation
5 Brand Differentiation
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PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION
1- Differentiation the core and expected product
2- Augmenting the product
3 Quality
4 Packaging
5 Service
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PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION 1 Differentiation the core and expected product
• A new way, e.g. step-change in technology, of providing benefits.
2 Augmenting the product
• Offering more exciting features
3 Quality
• E.g. Durability of product, reliability of service
4 Packaging
• Storing, protecting, facilitating usage, creating image, and promoting the product
5 Service
• After-sales services and relationships with customers
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ACHIEVING DIFFERENTIATION 1 Product Differentiation
2 Distribution Differentiation
• Using a different network
• How internet has changed distribution?
3 Price Differentiation
• If you have cost advantages you can reduce prices and survive price wars
• If you have product/service differentiation you can charge premium prices
• If you address multiple customer segments you can offer a menu of prices
4 Promotional Differentiation
• Public Relations (PR): Creating relationships with media to get positive exposure.
• How social media has changed promotions and distributions?
5 Brand Differentiation
• Changing images, social status, and emotions connected to your brand
OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE COMPETITIVE STRATEGIES
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1 Build (growth) strategies
2 Hold (maintenance) and defensive strategies,
3 Niche Market (focus) strategies
4 Harvest (reaping) strategies
5 Deletion (divestment) strategies
OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE COMPETITIVE STRATEGIES
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1 Build (growth) strategies
• In growing markets by market expansion:
• New Users
• New uses
• Increased frequency of use
• In non-growing markets by stealing shares from weak
competitors
BUILD STRATEGIES: STEALING FROM COMPETITORS
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1 Frontal attack
2 Flanking attack
3 Encirclement attack
4 Bypass strategy
5 Guerilla tactics
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BUILD STRATEGIES: STEALING FROM COMPETITORS
1- Frontal attack
• Attacking competitor where it is strong
• When you are superior on at least one key area
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BUILD STRATEGIES: STEALING FROM COMPETITORS
2- Flanking attack
• Attacking where the competitor is weak
Example:
• Attacking geographical regions or customer
segments underserved by the defender
Key factors:
• Identification of the competitor’s weaknesses
and its inability to serve particular segments
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BUILD STRATEGIES: STEALING FROM COMPETITORS
3- Encirclement attack
• Cutting the competitor from critical
resources, and access to suppliers or
customers
• Example:
• Isolate the competitor from the
supply of raw material
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BUILD STRATEGIES: STEALING FROM COMPETITORS
4- Bypass strategy
• Avoid competing where the competitor is strong: leapfrogging by
a new technology or trade model
• Remember core offer: coming up with a totally new way of
satisfying needs, e.g. iPod replacing cd players.
• Don’t try to imitate resources of the competitor, achieve new ones.
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BUILD STRATEGIES: STEALING FROM COMPETITORS
5- Guerilla tactics
• Are employed primarily as ‘spoiling’ activities
to weaken the competition.
• Often used by a weaker attacker on a stronger
defender.
Example
• Selective price cuts, especially during a
competitor’s new product testing or launch
• Executive raids and legal maneuvers
DEFENSIVE STRATEGIES
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• Good for market leaders operating in mature or declining markets
• Specially in cash generator markets
• Even in growing markets when potential rewards of expansion is outweighed by
its costs
Examples:
• Price cutting when you have cost advantage by economies of scale or
experience
• Guarding of technological expertise
DEFENSIVE STRATEGIES
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Types:
1 Position defense
2 Flanking defense
3 Pre-emptive strike
4 Counter-offensive
5 Mobile defense
6 Contraction defense
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DEFENSIVE STRATEGIES
1- Position defense
• Erecting barriers to copy and/or
entry by:
• Differentiation on non-copyable
grounds (e.g. distinctive skills,
competencies and marketing assets)
• Brand name and reputation
• Higher quality
• Lower prices
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DEFENSIVE STRATEGIES
2- Flanking defense
• Against a flanking attack
• Identify where the attacker is going to strike
your weaknesses and work on those weaknesses
• Concerns:
• New position weakens the company on the core
position
• It may be hard to defend the new position
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DEFENSIVE STRATEGIES
3- Pre-emptive strike
• Attacking the competitor before it can mount at
attack
• Or merely signal an intention to attack
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DEFENSIVE STRATEGIES
4- Counter-offensive
• Attacking the competitor right after it attacked you
• Most effective where the aggressor is vulnerable
through overstretching resources.
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COUNTER-OFFENSIVE EXAMPLE
• When Xerox attempted to break into the mainframe computer market against the
established market leader, IBM launched a classic counter-offensive in Xerox’s bread-and-
butter business (copiers). The middle-range copiers were the major cash generators of
Xerox operations and were, indeed, creating the funds to allow Xerox to attack in the
mainframe computer market. The IBM counter was a limited range of low-priced copiers
directly competing with Xerox’s middle-range products, with leasing options that were
particularly attractive to smaller customers.
• The counter-offensive had the effect of causing Xerox to abandon the attack on the
computer market (it sold its interests to Honeywell) to concentrate on defending its copiers.
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DEFENSIVE STRATEGIES
5- Mobile defense
• continuously update and improve the company’s offerings to the marketplace
• keep the product in line with changing customer requirements.
• Persil going through many reformulations as washing habits have changed and evolved.
• Good for markets where technology and/or customer wants and needs are
changing rapidly.
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DEFENSIVE STRATEGIES
6- Contraction defense
• Giving up untenable ground to reduce overstretching and allow concentration on
the core business that can be defended against attack
• Necessary where the company has diversified too far away from the core skills
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MARKET NICHE STRATEGIES
• To identify new and potential niches not yet exploited by
major competitors.
• Focusing effort (not blindly pursue any potential customer)
• An ability to segment the market
• Efficient use of R&D resources
• Concentrating not on pioneering work but on improvements to
existing technologies
• Thinking small
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HARVESTING STRATEGIES
• Obtaining maximum returns from the product before its eventual death or withdrawal from the market
• Since no long-term future could be imagined for them because of major changes in customer
requirements or technology
• For products which are obsolete or do not generate cash
• Cutting expenses:
• Marketing support
• Advertising
• Sales support
• R&D
• Reducing production and increasing prices
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DIVESTMENT/DELETION STRATEGIES
