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Chapter 4 Business-Level Strategy

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Studying this chapter should provide you with the strategic management knowledge needed to:

Learning Objectives

Define business-level strategy.

Discuss the relationship between customers and business-level strategies in terms of who, what, and how.

Explain the differences among business-level strategies.

Use the five forces of competition model to explain how above-average returns can be earned through each business-level strategy.

Describe the risks of using each of the business-level strategies.

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Business-Level Strategy (Defined)

An integrated and coordinated set of commitments and actions the firm uses to gain a competitive advantage by exploiting core competencies in specific product markets.

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Core Competencies and Strategy

Resources and superior capabilities that are sources of competitive advantage over a firm’s rivals

Providing value to customers and gaining competitive advantage by exploiting core competencies in individual product markets

Core Competencies

Strategy

Business-level Strategy

An integrated and coordinated set of actions taken to exploit core competencies and gain competitive advantage

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Customers: Their Relationship with Business-Level Strategies

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Key Issues in Business-level

Strategy

Who will be served?

What needs will be satisfied?

How will those needs be satisfied?

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Effectively Managing Relationships with Customers

Firms must manage all aspects of their relationship with customers.

Reach: firm’s access and connection to customers

Richness: depth and detail of two-way flow of information between the firm and the customer

Affiliation: facilitation of useful interactions with customers

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Who: Determining the Customers to Serve

Market segmentation

A process used to cluster people with similar needs into individual and identifiable groups.

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All Customers

Industrial

Markets

Consumer

Markets

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Market Segmentation

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Consumer Markets

Demographic factors

Socioeconomic factors

Geographic factors

Psychological factors

Consumption patterns

Perceptual factors

Industrial Markets

End-use segments

Product segments

Geographic segments

Common buying factor segments

Customer size segments

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Market Segmentation (cont’d)

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What: Determining Which Customer Needs to Satisfy

Customer needs are related to a product’s benefits and features.

Customer needs are neither right nor wrong, good nor bad.

Customer needs represent desires in terms of features and performance capabilities.

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How: Determining Core Competencies Necessary to Satisfy Customer Needs

Firms must decide:

who to serve, what customer needs to meet, and how to use core competencies to implement value creating strategies that satisfy target customers’ needs.

Only firms with capacity to continuously improve, innovate and upgrade their competencies can expect to meet and/or exceed customer expectations across time.

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The Purpose of a Business-Level Strategy

Business-Level Strategies:

are intended to create differences between the firm’s competitive position and those of its competitors.

To position itself, the firm must decide whether it intends to:

perform activities differently or

perform different activities as compared to its rivals.

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Types of Potential Competitive Advantage

Achieving lower overall costs than rivals

Performing activities differently (reducing process costs)

Possessing the capability to differentiate the firm’s product or service and command a premium price

Performing different (more highly valued) activities.

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Competitive Scope

Broad Scope

The firm competes in many customer segments.

Narrow Scope

The firm selects a segment or group of segments in the industry and tailors its strategy to serving them at the exclusion of others.

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Business Level Strategies

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Cost Leadership Strategy

An integrated set of actions taken to produce goods or services with features that are acceptable to customers at the lowest cost, relative to that of competitors.

Product Characteristics

Relatively standardized (commoditized) products

Features broadly acceptable to many customers

Lowest competitive price

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Cost Leadership Strategy

Cost saving actions required by this strategy

Building efficient scale facilities

Tightly controlling production costs and overhead

Minimizing costs of sales, R&D and service

Building efficient manufacturing facilities

Monitoring costs of activities provided by outsiders

Simplifying production processes

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How to Obtain a Cost Advantage

Determine and control Cost Drivers

Reconfigure Value Chain if needed

Alter production process

Change in automation

New distribution channel

New advertising media

Direct sales in place of indirect sales

New raw material

Forward integration

Backward integration

Change location relative to suppliers or buyers

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Value-Creating Activities for Cost Leadership

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Value-Creating Activities for Cost Leadership

Cost-effective MIS

Few management layers

Simplified planning

Consistent policies

Effecting training

Easy-to-use manufacturing technologies

Investments in technologies

Finding low-cost raw materials

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Monitor suppliers’ performances

Link suppliers’ products to production processes

Economies of scale

Efficient-scale facilities

Effective delivery schedules

Low-cost transportation

Highly trained sales force

Proper pricing

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Cost Leadership Strategy: Competitors

Due to cost leader’s advantageous position:

rivals hesitate to compete on basis of price.

lack of price competition leads to greater profits.

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Threat of new entrants

Bargaining power of suppliers

Rivalry among competing firms

Bargaining power of buyers

Threat of substitute products

Rivalry with Existing Competitors

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Cost Leadership Strategy: Buyers

Can mitigate buyers’ power by:

driving prices far below competitors, causing them to exit, thus shifting power with buyers (customers) back to the firm.

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Threat of new entrants

Bargaining power of suppliers

Rivalry among competing firms

Bargaining power of buyers

Threat of substitute products

Bargaining Power of Buyers

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Cost Leadership Strategy: Suppliers

Can mitigate suppliers’ power by:

being able to absorb cost increases due to low cost position.

being able to make very large purchases, reducing chance of supplier using power.

© 2017 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.

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Threat of new entrants

Bargaining power of suppliers

Rivalry among competing firms

Bargaining power of buyers

Threat of substitute products

Bargaining Power of Suppliers

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Cost Leadership Strategy: New Entrants

Can frighten off new entrants due to:

their need to enter on a large scale in order to be cost competitive.

the time it takes to move down the industry learning curve.

Threat of new entrants

Bargaining power of suppliers

Rivalry among competing firms

Bargaining power of buyers

Threat of substitute products

The Threat of Potential Entrants

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Cost Leadership Strategy: Substitutes

Cost leader is well positioned to:

lower prices in order to maintain its value position.

make investments to add features unavailable in substitutes.

buy intellectual property and patents developed by potential substitutes.

Threat of new entrants

Bargaining power of suppliers

Rivalry among competing firms

Bargaining power of buyers

Threat of substitute products

Product Substitutes

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Cost Leadership Strategy (cont’d)

Competitive Risks

Processes used to produce and distribute good or service may become obsolete due to competitors’ innovations.

Too much focus on cost reductions may occur at expense of customers’ perceptions of differentiation.

Competitors, using their own core competencies, may successfully imitate the cost leader’s strategy.

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Differentiation Strategy

An integrated set of actions taken to produce goods or services (at an acceptable cost) that customers perceive as being different in ways that are important to them.

Focus is on non-standardized products

Appropriate when customers value differentiated features more than they value low cost

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How to Obtain a Differentiation Advantage

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Control Cost Drivers if needed

Reconfigure Value Chain to maximize

Lower buyers’ costs

Raise performance of product or service

Create sustainability through:

customer perceptions of uniqueness

customer reluctance to switch to non-unique product or service

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Value-Creating Activities and Differentiation

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Value-Creating Activities and Differentiation

Highly developed MIS

Emphasis on quality

Worker compensation for creativity/productivity

Use of subjective performance measures

Basic research capability

Technology

High quality raw materials

Delivery of products

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High quality replacement parts

Superior handling of incoming raw materials

Attractive products

Rapid response to customer specifications

Order-processing procedures

Customer credit

Personal relationships

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Differentiation Strategy: Competitors

Defends against competitors because customer’s brand loyalty to differentiated product offsets price competition.

Threat of new entrants

Bargaining power of suppliers

Rivalry among competing firms

Bargaining power of buyers

Threat of substitute products

Rivalry with Existing Competitors

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Differentiation Strategy: Buyers

Can mitigate buyers’ power because well differentiated products reduce customer sensitivity to price increases.

Bargaining Power of Buyers

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Threat of new entrants

Bargaining power of suppliers

Rivalry among competing firms

Bargaining power of buyers

Threat of substitute products

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Differentiation Strategy: Suppliers

Can mitigate suppliers’ power by:

absorbing price increases due to higher margins.

passing along higher supplier prices because buyers are loyal to a differentiated brand.

Bargaining Power of Suppliers

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Threat of new entrants

Bargaining power of suppliers

Rivalry among competing firms

Bargaining power of buyers

Threat of substitute products

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Differentiation Strategy: New Entrants

Can defend against new entrants because:

new products must surpass proven products.

new products must be at least equal to performance of proven products, but offered at lower prices.

The Threat of Potential Entrants

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Threat of new entrants

Bargaining power of suppliers

Rivalry among competing firms

Bargaining power of buyers

Threat of substitute products

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Differentiation Strategy: Substitutes

Well-positioned relative to substitutes because:

brand loyalty to a differentiated product tends to reduce customers’ testing of new products or switching brands.

Product Substitutes

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Threat of new entrants

Bargaining power of suppliers

Rivalry among competing firms

Bargaining power of buyers

Threat of substitute products

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Competitive Risks of Differentiation

The price differential between the differentiator’s product and the cost leader’s product becomes too large.

Differentiation ceases to provide value for which customers are willing to pay.

Experience narrows customers’ perceptions of the value of differentiated features.

Counterfeit goods replicate the differentiated features of the firm’s products.

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Focus Strategies

An integrated set of actions taken to produce goods or services that serve the needs of a particular competitive segment.

Particular buyer group—youths or senior citizens

Different segment of a product line—professional craftsmen versus do-it-yourselfers

Different geographic markets—east coast versus west coast

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Focus Strategies (cont’d)

Types of focused strategies

Focused cost leadership strategy

Focused differentiation strategy

To implement a focus strategy, firms must be able to:

complete various primary and support activities in a competitively superior manner, in order to develop and sustain a competitive advantage and earn above-average returns.

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Factors That Drive Focused Strategies

Large firms may overlook small niches.

A firm may lack the resources needed to compete in the broader market.

A firm is able to serve a narrow market segment more effectively than can its larger industry-wide competitors.

Focusing allows the firm to direct its resources to certain value chain activities to build competitive advantage.

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Competitive Risks of Focus Strategies

A focusing firm may be “out focused” by its competitors.

A large competitor may set its sights on a firm’s niche market.

Customer preferences in a niche market may change to more closely resemble those of the broader market.

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Integrated Cost Leadership/ Differentiation Strategy

A firm that successfully uses an integrated cost leadership/differentiation strategy should be in a better position to:

adapt quickly to environmental changes.

learn new skills and technologies more quickly.

effectively leverage its core competencies while competing against its rivals.

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Integrated Cost Leadership/ Differentiation Strategy (cont’d)

Commitment to strategic flexibility is necessary for implementation of integrated cost leadership/ differentiation strategy.

Flexible manufacturing systems (FMS)

Information networks (CRM)

Total quality management (TQM) systems

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Flexible Manufacturing Systems

Computer-controlled processes used to produce a variety of products in moderate, flexible quantities with a minimum of manual intervention.

Goal is to eliminate the “low-cost-versus-wide product-variety” tradeoff

Allows firms to produce large variety of products at relatively low costs

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Information Networks

Link companies electronically with their suppliers, distributors, and customers.

Facilitate efforts to satisfy customer expectations in terms of product quality and delivery speed

Improve flow of work among employees in the firm and their counterparts at suppliers and distributors

Customer relationship management (CRM)

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Total Quality Management (TQM) Systems

Emphasize total commitment to the customer through continuous improvement using:

data-driven, problem-solving approaches.

empowerment of employee groups and teams.

Benefits

Increased customer satisfaction

Lower input and operating process costs

Reduced time-to-market for innovative products

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Risks of an Integrated Cost Leadership/ Differentiation Strategy

Often involves compromises

Becoming neither the lowest cost nor the most differentiated firm

Becoming “stuck in the middle”

Lacking the strong commitment and expertise that accompanies firms following either a cost leadership or a differentiated strategy

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