case analysis
Preparing an effective case a nalysis W H A T T O E X P E C T F R O M I N - C L A S S C A S E D I S C U S S I O N S
As you will learn, classroom discussions of cases differ significantly from lectures. The case method calls for your instructor to guide the discussion and to solicit alternative views as a way of encouraging your active participation when analysing a case. When alternative views are not forthcoming, your instructor might take a position just to challenge you and your peers to respond thoughtfully as a way of generating still additional alternatives. Often, instructors will evaluate your work in terms of both the quantity and the quality of your contributions to in-class case discussions. The in-class discussions are important in that you can derive significant benefit by having your ideas and recommendations examined against those of your peers and by responding to thoughtful challenges by other class members and/or the instructor.
During case discussions, your instructor will likely listen, question and probe to extend the analysis of case issues. In the course of these actions, your peers and/ or your instructor may challenge an individual’s views and the validity of alternative perspectives that have been expressed. These challenges are offered in a constructive manner; their intent is to help all parties involved with analysing a case develop their analytical and communication skills. Developing these skills is important in that they will serve you well when working for all types of organisations. Commonly, instructors will encourage you and your peers to be innovative and original when developing and presenting ideas. Over the course of an individual discussion, you are likely to form a more complex view of the case as a result of listening to and thinking about the diverse inputs offered by your peers and instructor. Among other benefits, experience with multiple case discussions will increase your knowledge of the advantages and disadvantages of group decision- making processes.
Both your peers and instructor will value comments that contribute to identifying problems as well as solutions to them. To offer relevant contributions, you are encouraged to think independently and, through discussions with your peers outside of class, to refine your thinking. We also encourage you to avoid using ‘I think,’ ‘I believe,’ and ‘I feel’ to discuss your inputs to a case analysis process. Instead, consider using a less emotion-laden phrase, such as ‘My analysis shows…’. This highlights the logical nature of the approach you have taken to analyse a case. When preparing for an in-class case discussion, you should plan to use the case data to explain your assessment of the situation. Assume that your peers and instructor are familiar with the basic facts included in the case. In addition, it is good practice to prepare notes regarding your analysis of case facts before class discussions and use them when explaining your perspectives. Effective notes signal to classmates and the instructor that you are prepared to engage in a thorough discussion of a case.
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Moreover, comprehensive and detailed notes eliminate the need for you to memorise the facts and figures needed to successfully discuss a case.
The case analysis process described above will help prepare you effectively to discuss a case during class meetings. Using this process results in consideration of the issues required to identify a focal firm’s problems and to propose strategic actions through which the firm can increase the probability it will outperform its rivals. In some instances, your instructor may ask you to prepare either an oral or a written analysis of a particular case. Typically, such an assignment demands even more thorough study and analysis of the case contents. At your instructor’s discretion, oral and written analyses may be completed by individuals or by groups of three or more people. The information and insights gained by completing the six steps shown in Table 1 often are of value when developing an oral or a written analysis. However, when preparing an oral or written presentation, you must consider the overall framework in which your information and inputs will be presented. Such a framework is the focus of the next section.
P R E P A R I N G A N O R A L / W R I T T E N C A S E P R E S E N T A T I O N
Experience shows that two types of thinking (analysis and synthesis) are necessary to develop an effective oral or written presentation (see Exhibit 1). In the analysis stage, you should first analyse the general external environmental issues affecting the firm. Next, your environmental analysis should focus on the particular industry (or industries, in the case of a diversified company) in which a firm operates. Finally, you should examine companies against which the focal firm competes. By studying the three levels of the external environment (general, industry and competitor), you will be able to identify a firm’s opportunities and threats. Following the external environmental analysis is the analysis of the firm’s internal organisation. This analysis provides the insights needed to identify the firm’s strengths and weaknesses.
As noted in Exhibit 1, you must then change the focus from analysis to synthesis. Specifically, you must synthesise information gained from your analysis of the firm’s external environment and internal organisation. Synthesising information allows you to generate alternatives that can resolve the significant problems or challenges facing the focal firm. Once you identify a best alternative, from an evaluation based on predetermined criteria and goals, you must explore implementation actions.
In Table 2, we outline the sections that should be included in either an oral or a written presentation: strategic profile and case analysis purpose, situation analysis, statements of strengths/weaknesses and opportunities/threats, strategy formulation and strategy implementation. These sections are described in the following discussion. Familiarity with the contents of your book’s thirteen chapters is helpful because the general outline for an oral or a written presentation shown in Table 2 is based on an understanding of the strategic management process detailed in those chapters. We follow the discussions of the parts of Table 2 with a few comments about the ‘process’ to use to present the results of your case analysis in either a written or oral format.
Preparing an effective case analysis
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Strategic Profile and Case Analysis Purpose You will use the strategic profile to briefly present the critical facts from the case that has affected the focal firm’s historical strategic direction and performance. The case facts should not be restated in the profile; rather, these comments should show how the critical facts lead to a particular focus for your analysis. This primary focus should be emphasised in this section’s conclusion. In addition, this section should state important assumptions about case facts on which your analyses are based.
Table 1 An Effective Case Analysis Process Step 1: Gaining familiarity a. In general—determine who, what, how, where, and when
(the critical facts of the case).
b. In detail—identify the places, persons, activities, and contexts of the situation.
c. Recognise the degree of certainty/uncertainty of acquired information.
Step 2: Recognising symptoms a. List all indicators (including stated ‘problems’) that something is not as expected or as desired.
b. Ensure that symptoms are not assumed to be the problem (symptoms should lead to identification of the problem).
Step 3: Identifying goals a. Identify critical statements by major parties (for example, people, groups, the work unit, and so on).
b. List all goals of the major parties that exist or can be reasonably inferred.
Step 4: Conducting the analysis a. Decide which ideas, models, and theories seem useful.
b. Apply these conceptual tools to the situation.
c. As new information is revealed, cycle back to sub-steps a and b.
Step 5: Making the diagnosis a. Identify predicaments (goal inconsistencies).
b. Identify problems (discrepancies between goals and performance).
c. Prioritise predicaments/problems regarding timing, importance, and so on.
Step 6: Doing the action planning a. Specify and prioritise the criteria used to choose action alternatives.
b. Discover or invent feasible action alternatives.
c. Examine the probable consequences of action alternatives.
d. Select a course of action.
e. Design an implementation plan/schedule.
f. Create a plan for assessing the action to be implemented.
Source: C. C. Lundberg and C. Enz, 1993, A framework for student case preparation, Case Research Journal, 13 (Summer): 144. Reprinted by permission of NACRA, North American Case Research Association.
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Exhibit 1 Types of Thinking in Case Preparation: Analysis and Synthesis
Situation Analysis As shown in Table 2, a general starting place for completing a situation analysis is the general environment.
Table 2 General Outline for an Oral or Written Presentation I. Strategic profile and case analysis purpose
II. Situation analysis
A. General environmental analysis
B. Industry analysis
C. Competitor analysis
D. Internal analysis
III. Identification of environmental opportunities and threats and firm strengths and weaknesses (SWOT analysis)
IV. Strategy formulation
A. Strategic alternatives
B. Alternative evaluation
C. Alternative choice
V. Strategic alternative implementation
A. Action items
B. Action plan
Preparing an effective case analysis
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General Environmental Analysis Your analysis of the general environment should focus on trends in the six segments of the general environment (see Table 3). Many of the segment issues shown in Table 3 for the six segments are explained more fully in Chapter 2 of your book. The objective you should have in evaluating these trends is to be able to predict the segments that you expect to have the most significant influence on your focal firm over the next several years (say three to five years) and to explain your reasoning for your predictions.
Table 3 Sample General Environmental Categories Technological trends
Information technology continues to become cheaper with more practical applications
Database technology enables organisation of complex data and distribution of information
Telecommunications technology and networks increasingly provide fast transmission of all sources of data, including voice, written communications, and video information
Computerised design and manufacturing technologies continue to facilitate quality and flexibility
Demographic trends
Regional changes in population due to migration
Changing ethnic composition of the population
Ageing of the population
Ageing of the ‘baby boom’ generation
Economic trends
Interest rates
Inflation rates
Savings rates
Exchange rates
Trade deficits
Budget deficits
Political/Legal trends
Antitrust enforcement
Tax policy changes
Environmental protection laws
Extent of regulation/deregulation
Privatising state monopolies
State-owned industries
Sociocultural trends
Women in the workforce
Awareness of health and fitness issues
Concern for the environment
Concern for customers
Global Trends
Currency exchange rates
Free-trade agreements
Trade deficits
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Industry Analysis Porter’s five force model is a useful tool for analysing the industry (or industries) in which your firm competes. We explain how to use this tool in Chapter 2. In this part of your analysis, you want to determine the attractiveness of an industry (or a segment of an industry) in which your firm is competing. As attractiveness increases, so does the possibility your firm will be able to earn profits by using its chosen strategies. After evaluating the power of the five forces relative to your firm, you should make a judgment as to how attractive the industry is in which your firm is competing.
Competitor Analysis Firms also need to analyse each of their primary competitors. This analysis should identify competitors’ current strategies, strategic intent, strategic mission, capabilities, core competencies and a competitive response profile (see Chapter 2). This information is useful to the focal firm in formulating an appropriate strategy and in predicting competitors’ probable responses. Sources that can be used to gather information about an industry and companies with whom the focal firm competes are listed in Appendix I. Included in this list is a wide range of publications, such as periodicals, newspapers, bibliographies, directories of companies, industry ratios, forecasts, rankings/ratings, and other valuable statistics.
Internal Analysis Assessing a firm’s strengths and weaknesses through a value chain analysis facilitates moving from the external environment to the internal organisation. Analysis of the primary and support activities of the value chain provides opportunities to understand how external environmental trends affect the specific activities of a firm. Such analysis helps highlight strengths and weaknesses (see Chapter 3 for an explanation and use of the value chain).
For purposes of preparing an oral or a written presentation, it is important to note that strengths are internal resources and capabilities that have the potential to be core competencies. Weaknesses, on the other hand, are internal resources and capabilities that have the potential to place a firm at a competitive disadvantage relative to its rivals. Thus, some of a firm’s resources and capabilities are strengths; others are weaknesses.
When evaluating the internal characteristics of the firm, your analysis of the functional activities emphasised is critical. For instance, if the strategy of the firm is primarily technology driven, it is important to evaluate the firm’s R&D activities. If the strategy is market driven, marketing functional activities are of paramount importance. If a firm has financial difficulties, critical financial ratios would require careful evaluation. In fact, because of the importance of financial health, most cases require financial analyses. Appendix II lists and operationally defines several common financial ratios. Included are tables describing profitability, liquidity, leverage, activity, and shareholders’ return ratios. Leadership, organisational culture, structure, and control systems are other characteristics of firms you should examine to fully understand the ‘internal’ part of your firm.
Preparing an effective case analysis
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Identification of Environmental Opportunities and Threats and Firm Strengths and Weaknesses (SWOT Analysis) The outcome of the situation analysis is the identification of a firm’s strengths and weaknesses and its environmental threats and opportunities. The next step requires that you analyse the strengths and weaknesses and the opportunities and threats for configurations that benefit or do not benefit your firm’s efforts to perform well. Case analysts and organisational strategists as well seek to match a firm’s strengths with its opportunities. In addition, strengths are chosen to prevent any serious environmental threat from negatively affecting the firm’s performance. The key objective of conducting a SWOT analysis is to determine how to position the firm so it can take advantage of opportunities, while simultaneously avoiding or minimising environmental threats. Results from a SWOT analysis yield valuable insights into the selection of a firm’s strategies. The analysis of a case should not be overemphasised relative to the synthesis of results gained from your analytical efforts. There may be a temptation to spend most of your oral or written case analysis on results from the analysis. It is important, however, that you make an equal effort to develop and evaluate alternatives and to design implementation of the chosen strategy.
Strategy Formulation—Strategic Alternatives, Alternative Evaluation and Alternative Choice Developing alternatives is often one of the most difficult steps in preparing an oral or a written presentation. Developing three to four alternative strategies is common (see Chapter 4 for business-level strategy alternatives and Chapter 6 for corporate- level strategy alternatives). Each alternative should be feasible (i.e., it should match the firm’s strengths, capabilities, and especially core competencies), and feasibility should be demonstrated. In addition, you should show how each alternative takes advantage of the environmental opportunity or avoids/ buffers against environmental threats. Developing carefully thought out alternatives requires synthesis of your analyses’ results and creates greater credibility in oral and written case presentations.
Once you develop strong alternatives, you must evaluate the set to choose the best one. Your choice should be defensible and provide benefits over the other alternatives. Thus, it is important that both alternative development and evaluation of alternatives be thorough. The choice of the best alternative should be explained and defended.
Strategic Alternative Implementation–Action Items and Action Plan After selecting the most appropriate strategy (that is, the strategy with the highest probability of helping your firm in its efforts to earn profits), implementation issues require attention. Effective synthesis is important to ensure that you have considered and evaluated all critical implementation issues. Issues you might consider include the structural changes necessary to implement the new strategy. In addition, leadership changes and new controls or incentives may be necessary to implement strategic actions. The implementation actions you recommend should be explicit and thoroughly explained. Occasionally, careful evaluation of implementation actions may show the strategy to be less favourable than you thought originally. A strategy is only as good as the firm’s ability to implement it.
Hanson 6e – Case Analysis
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Process Issues You should ensure that your presentation (either oral or written) has logical consistency throughout. For example, if your presentation identifies one purpose, but your analysis focuses on issues that differ from the stated purpose, the logical inconsistency will be apparent. Likewise, your alternatives should flow from the configuration of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats you identified by analysing your firm’s external environment and internal organisation.
Thoroughness and clarity also are critical to an effective presentation. Thoroughness is represented by the comprehensiveness of the analysis and alternative generation. Furthermore, clarity in the results of the analyses, selection of the best alternative strategy, and design of implementation actions are important. For example, your statement of the strengths and weaknesses should flow clearly and logically from your analysis of your firm’s internal organisation.
Presentations (oral or written) that show logical consistency, thoroughness, and clarity of purpose, effective analyses, and feasible recommendations (strategy and implementation) are more effective and are likely to be more positively received by your instructor and peers. Furthermore, developing the skills necessary to make such presentations will enhance your future job performance and career success.
Appendix I Sources for Industry and Competitor Analyses
Periodicals ABI/Inform
Business Periodicals Index
InfoTrac Custom Journals
InfoTrac Custom Newspapers
InfoTrac OneFile
EBSCO Business Source Premiere
Lexis/Nexis Academic
Public Affairs Information Service Bulletin (PAIS)
Reader’s Guide to Periodical Literature
Newspapers NewsBank—Foreign Broadcast Information
NewsBank-Global NewsBank
New York Times Index
Wall Street Journal Index
Wall Street Journal/Barron’s Index
Washington Post Index
Bibliographies Encyclopedia of Business Information Sources
Preparing an effective case analysis
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Directories
Companies—General America’s Corporate Families and International Affiliates
Hoover’s Online: The Business Network www.hoovers.com/free
D&B Million Dollar Directory (databases: http://www.dnbmdd.com)
Standard & Poor’s Corporation Records
Standard & Poor’s Register of Corporations, Directors, and Executives
(http://www.netadvantage.standardandpoors.com for all of Standard & Poor’s)
Ward’s Business Directory of Largest U.S. Companies
Companies—International America’s Corporate Families and International Affiliates
Business Asia
Business China
Business Eastern Europe
Business Europe
Business International
Business International Money Report
Business Latin America
Directory of American Firms Operating in Foreign Countries
Directory of Foreign Firms Operating in the United States
Hoover’s Handbook of World Business
International Directory of Company Histories
Mergent’s International Manual
Mergent Online (http://www.fisonline.com—for ‘Business and Financial Information’ Connection to the World”)
Who Owns Whom
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Companies—Manufacturers Thomas Register of American Manufacturers
U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Executive Office of the President,
Standard Industrial Classification Manual
U.S. Manufacturer’s Directory, Manufacturing & Distribution, USA
Companies—Private D&B Million Dollar Directory
Ward’s Business Directory of Largest U.S. Companies
Companies—Public Annual Reports and 10-K Reports
Disclosure (corporate reports) Q-File
Securities and Exchange Commission Filings & Forms (EDGAR)
http://www.sec.gov/edgar.shtml
Mergent’s Manuals:
Mergent’s Bank and Finance Manual
Mergent’s Industrial Manual
Mergent’s International Manual
Mergent’s Municipal and Government Manual
Mergent’s OTC Industrial Manual
Mergent’s OTC Unlisted Manual
Mergent’s Public Utility Manual
Mergent’s Transportation Manual
Standard & Poor’s Corporation, Standard Corporation Descriptions:
http://www.netadvantage.standardandpoors.com
Standard & Poor’s Analyst Handbook
Standard & Poor’s Industry Surveys
Standard & Poor’s Statistical Service
Preparing an effective case analysis
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Companies—Subsidiaries and Affiliates America’s Corporate Families and International Affiliates
Ward’s Directory
Who Owns Whom
Mergent’s Industry Review
Standard & Poor’s Analyst’s Handbook
Standard & Poor’s Industry Surveys (2 volumes)
U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Industrial Outlook
Industry Ratios Dun & Bradstreet, Industry Norms and Key Business Ratios
RMA’s Annual Statement Studies
Troy Almanac of Business and Industrial Financial Ratios
Industry Forecasts International Trade Administration, U.S. Industry & Trade Outlook
Rankings & Ratings Annual Report on American Industry in Forbes
Business Rankings Annual
Mergent’s Industry Review http://www.worldcatlibraries.org
Standard & Poor’s Industry Report Service http://www.netadvantage.standardandpoors.com
Value Line Investment Survey
Ward’s Business Directory of Largest U.S. Companies
Statistics American Statistics Index (ASI) Bureau of the Census, U.S. Department of Commerce, Economic Census Publications
Bureau of the Census, U.S. Department of Commerce, Statistical Abstract of the United States
Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, Survey of Current Business
Internal Revenue Service, U.S. Treasury Department, Statistics of Income: Corporation Income Tax Returns
Statistical Reference Index (SRI)