Assessing Internal Environments
3
Assessing the Internal Environment of the Firm
*
3 - *
Learning Objectives
- After reading this chapter, you should have a good understanding of:
- The benefits and limitations of SWOT analysis in conducting an internal analysis of the firm.
- The primary and support activities of a firm’s value chain.
- How value-chain analysis can help managers create value by investigating relationships among activities within the firm and between the firm and its customers and suppliers.
- The resource-based view of the firm and the different types of tangible and intangible resources, as well as organizational capabilities.
*
3 - *
Learning Objectives
- After reading this chapter, you should have a good understanding of:
- The four criteria that a firm’s resources must possess to maintain a sustainable advantage and how value created can be appropriated by employees.
- The usefulness of financial ratio analysis, its inherent limitations, and how to make meaningful comparisons of performance across firms.
- The value of recognizing how the interests of a variety of stakeholders can be interrelated.
- How firms are using Internet technologies to add value and achieve unique advantages. (Appendix)
*
3 - *
The Limitations of SWOT Analysis
- Strengths may not lead to an advantage
- SWOT’s focus on the external environment is too narrow
- SWOT gives a one-shot view of a moving target
- SWOT overemphasizes a single dimension of strategy
*
3 - *
Question
Which of the following is true regarding the SWOT analysis?
A) By itself, the SWOT analysis often helps a firm develop
competitive advantages that can be sustained over time.
B) The SWOT analysis's not the best starting point for creating
strategies.
C) The SWOT analysis simulates self-reflection and group
discussions on how to improve a firm and position it for
success.
D) The SWOT analysis is not a tried-and-true tool of strategic
analysis.
*
Answer: C
3 - *
Value-Chain Analysis
- Sequential process of value-creating activities
- The amount that buyers are willing to pay for what a firm provides them
- Value is measured by total revenue
- Firm is profitable to the extent the value it receives exceeds the total costs involved in creating its product or service
*
3 - *
Example
- IBM Electronics Value Chain Management helps companies save money by streamlining their value chain.
- The benefits of streamlining a business with value chain management include:
- Lower infrastructure costs associated with collaboration.
- Create commonality in parts and suppliers.
- Control inventory by getting the supply chain talking to the demand chain.
- Cut transaction costs by integrating with public and private exchanges.
- Deliver products to market faster while minimizing risk and capital investment.
Source: www.ibm.com
*
Example: Philips Consumer Electronics needed to quickly improve customer satisfaction and business profitability, therefore they engaged IBM to create a supply chain strategy focused on the future.
3 - *
The Value Chain
Adapted from Exhibit 3.1 The Value Chain: Primary and Support Activities
Source: Adapted with permission of The Free Press, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc., from Competitive Advantage:
Creating and Sustaining Superior Performance by Michael E. Porter.
*
3 - *
Primary Activity: Inbound Logistics
- Associated with receiving, storing and distributing inputs to the product
- Location of distribution facilities
- Material and inventory control systems
- Systems to reduce time to send “returns” to suppliers
- Warehouse layout and designs
*
3 - *
Primary Activity: Operations
- Associated with transforming inputs into the final product form
- Efficient plant operations
- Appropriate level of automation in manufacturing
- Quality production control systems
- Efficient plant layout and workflow design
*
3 - *
Primary Activity: Outbound Logistics
- Associated with collecting, storing, and distributing the product or service to buyers
- Effective shipping processes
- Efficient finished goods warehousing processes
- Shipping of goods in large lot sizes
- Quality material handling equipment
*
3 - *
Primary Activity: Marketing and Sales
- Associated with purchases of products and services by end users and the inducements used to get them to make purchases
- Highly motivated and competent sales force
- Innovative approaches to promotion and advertising
- Selection of most appropriate distribution channels
- Proper identification of customer segments and needs
- Effective pricing strategies
*
3 - *
Primary Activity: Service
- Associated with providing service to enhance or maintain the value of the product
- Effective use of procedures to solicit customer feedback and to act on information
- Quick response to customer needs and emergencies
- Ability to furnish replacement parts
- Effective management of parts and equipment inventory
- Quality of service personnel and ongoing training
- Warranty and guarantee policies
*
3 - *
Support Activity:
General Administration
- Typically supports the entire value chain and not individual activities
- Effective planning systems
- Ability of top management to anticipate and act on key environmental trends and events
- Ability to obtain low-cost funds for capital expenditures and working capital
- Excellent relationships with diverse stakeholder groups
- Ability to coordinate and integrate activities across the value chain
- Highly visible to inculcate organizational culture, reputation, and values
*
3 - *
Support Activity:
Human Resource Management
- Activities involved in the recruiting, hiring, training, development, and compensation of all types of personnel
- Effective recruiting, development, and retention mechanisms for employees
- Quality relations with trade unions
- Quality work environment to maximize overall employee performance and minimize absenteeism
- Reward and incentive programs to motivate all employees
*
3 - *
Support Activity:
Technology Development
- Related to a wide range of activities and those embodied in processes and equipment and the product itself
- Effective R&D activities for process and product initiatives
- Positive collaborative relationships between R&D and other departments
- State-of-the art facilities and equipment
- Culture to enhance creativity and innovation
- Excellent professional qualifications of personnel
- Ability to meet critical deadlines
*
3 - *
Support Activity: Procurement
- Function of purchasing inputs used in the firm’s value chain
- Procurement of raw material inputs
- Development of collaborative “win-win” relationships with suppliers
- Effective procedures to purchase advertising and media services
- Analysis and selection of alternate sources of inputs to minimize dependence on one supplier
- Ability to make proper lease versus buy decisions
*
3 - *
Interrelationships among Value-Chain Activities within and across Organizations
- Importance of relationships among value activities
- Interrelationships among activities within the firm
- Relationships among activities within the firm and with other organization (e.g., customers and suppliers)
*
3 - *
Resource-Based View of the Firm
- Two perspectives
- The internal analysis of phenomena within a company
- An external analysis of the industry and its competitive environment
- Three key types of resources
- Tangible resources
- Intangible resources
- Organizational capabilities
*
3 - *
Types of Resources:
Tangible Resources
- Relatively easy to identify, and include physical and financial assets used to create value for customers
- Financial resources
- Firm’s cash accounts
- Firm’s capacity to raise equity
- Firm’s borrowing capacity
- Physical resources
- Modern plant and facilities
- Favorable manufacturing locations
- State-of-the-art machinery and equipment
*
3 - *
Types of Resources:
Tangible Resources
- Technological resources
- Trade secrets
- Innovative production processes
- Patents, copyrights, trademarks
- Organizational resources
- Effective strategic planning processes
- Excellent evaluation and control systems
*
3 - *
Types of Resources:
Intangible Resources
- Difficult for competitors (and the firm itself) to account for or imitate, typically embedded in unique routines and practices that have evolved over time
- Human
- Experience and capabilities of employees
- Trust
- Managerial skills
- Firm-specific practices and procedures
*
3 - *
Types of Resources:
Intangible Resources
- Innovation and creativity
- Technical and scientific skills
- Innovation capacities
- Reputation
- Brand name
- Reputation with customers
- Reputation with suppliers
*
3 - *
Types of Resources:
Organizational Capabilities
- Competencies or skills that a firm employs to transform inputs to outputs, and capacity to combine tangible and intangible resources to attain desired end
- Outstanding customer service
- Excellent product development capabilities
- Innovativeness of products and services
- Ability to hire, motivate, and retain human capital
*
3 - *
Firm Resources and
Sustainable Competitive Advantages
Is the resource or capability…
Valuable
Rare
Difficult to imitate
Difficult to substitute
Implications
- Neutralize threats and exploit opportunities
- Not many firms possess
- Physically unique
- Path dependency
- Causal ambiguity
- Social complexity
- No equivalent strategic resources or capabilities
Adapted from Exhibit 3.7 Four Criteria for Assessing Sustainability of Resources and Capabilities
*
3 - *
Question
In the bookseller industry, can different firm resources become strategic substitutes for Amazon.com?
*
Internet bookseller, Amazon.com, compete as substitutes for bricks-and-mortar bookstores such as Walden Books. The result is that resources such as premier retail locations become less valuable.
3 - *
Criteria for Sustainable Competitive Advantage and Strategic Implications
Exhibit 3.8 Criteria for Sustainable Competitive Advantage and Strategic Implications
Source; Adapted from J. Barney, “Firm Resources a Sustained Competitive Advantage,
‘ Journal of Management 17 (1991), pp. 99-120.
*
3 - *
Evaluating Firm Performance
- Two approaches for evaluating firm performance
- Financial ratio analysis
- Balance sheet
- Income statement
- Historical comparison
- Comparison with industry norms
- Comparison with key competitors
- Balanced scorecard (stakeholder perspective)
- Employees
- Customers
- Owners
*
3 - *
Financial Ratio Analysis
- Five types of financial ratios
- Short-term solvency or liquidity
- Long-term solvency measures
- Asset management (or turnover)
- Profitability
- Market value
- Meaningful ratio analysis must include
- Analysis of how ratios change over time
- How ratios are interrelated
*
3 - *
The Balance Scorecard
- Provides a meaningful integration of many issues that come into evaluating a firm’s performance
- Four key perspectives
- How do customers see us? (customer perspective)
- What must we excel at? (internal perspective)
- Can we continue to improve and create value? (innovation and learning perspective)
- How do we look to shareholders? (financial perspective)
*
3 - *
Customer Perspective
- Time
- Quality
- Performance and service
- Cost
*
3 - *
Internal Business Perspective
- Processes
- Cycle time
- Quality
- Employee Skills
- Productivity
- Decisions
- Actions
- Coordination
- Resources and capabilities
*
3 - *
Innovation and Learning Perspective
- Introduction of new products and services
- Greater value for customers
- Increased operating efficiencies
*
3 - *
Example
- The world’s 10 most innovative companies, according to Business Week in 2007 are:
- Apple
- Toyota Motor
- General Electric
- Microsoft
- Proctor & Gamble
- 3M
- Walt Disney Co.
- IBM
- Sony
Source: www.businessweek.com
*
3 - *
Financial Perspective
- Profitability
- Growth
- Shareholder value
- Increased market share
- Reduced operating expenses
- Higher asset turnover
*
3 - *
Potential Limitations of the
Balanced Scorecard
- Lack of a clear strategy
- Limited or ineffective executive sponsorship
- Too much emphasis on financial measures rather than nonfinancial measures
- Poor data on actual performance
- Inappropriate links to scorecard measures to compensation
- Inconsistent or inappropriate Terminology
*
3
Assessing the Internal Environment of the Firm
*