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Business Level Strategy

Business Level Strategy. Bases of competitive advantage. Three Generic Strategies – Michael E Porter Overall cost leadership Differentiation Focus. Cost Leadership . In this strategy the ability to deliver the same goods/ services sold by rivals at a lower price

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Business Level Strategy

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  1. Business Level Strategy

  2. Bases of competitive advantage Three Generic Strategies – Michael E Porter • Overall cost leadership • Differentiation • Focus

  3. Cost Leadership • In this strategy the ability to deliver the same goods/ services sold by rivals at a lower price • Generally suitable for commodity products • Wal-Mart, Vanguard Group,

  4. Cost Leadership • Experience Curve Effect • Aggressive construction of efficient scale facilities • Vigorous pursuit of cost reduction • Tight cost control • Avoidance of marginal customer accounts

  5. Causes of Experience Curve Effects • Improved Productivity of labor • Increased specialization • Innovation in Production Methods • Value Engineering and Fine Tuning • Balancing Production line

  6. Price based strategies • Products / services are commodity like • Price sensitive customers • Buyers have high power / low switching costs • Small number of providers with similar market shares • Avoid major competitors

  7. Potential pitfalls of Low cost strategy • Margin reduction • Inability to reinvest • Low price strategy cannot be pursued without a low cost base • Price war

  8. Differentiation strategies • Clear identification of the strategic customer • Who are the competitors

  9. Need for Differentiation • To compete against rivals eg Southwest Airlines, eBay, • To create entry barriers for newcomers by building a unique product • To reduce threats arising out of substitutes • To develop a differentiation dvantage

  10. Types of Differentiation • Tangible Differentiation – design , package, style, quality, composition • Intangible Differentiation – Image, Brand, Company reputation , customer preferences.,

  11. Sources of Differentiation • Value Chain – Michael Porter • Uniqueness – as below. • Policy Choice – credit policy , ad spend • Links – within the value chain • Timing • Location – accessibility • Interrelationships – sales force in sister co

  12. Cost of Differentiation • Increased Expenditure on training • Increased ad spend to promote • Cost of hiring • Use of more expensive material

  13. Focus – a concept • It is segment based and has narrow competitive scope • Also known as niche strategy • Focus strategy has two variants – cost focus & differentiation focus • Cost Focus – firms seek cost advantage in the target segment • Differentiation Focus – firms seeks differentiation in target segment

  14. Focus strategy • Market segment large enough • Market segment has good growth potential • Focuser has efficient resources • Focuser able to choose from different segments • Market segment is not significant to the success of major competitors

  15. Risks of Generic Strategies

  16. Distinctive approach of two competitive strategies

  17. The Strategy Clock – D’Aveni • No frills • Low Price • Hybrid • Differentiated • Focused differentiation 6. Strategies destined for failure 7. Strategies destined for failure 8. Strategies destined for failure

  18. No Frills Low Price Hybrid Differentiation without price premium Differentiation with price premium Segment specific Risk of price war Low cost base Perceived added value by user Perceived added value sufficient to bear price premium Competitive Strategy options

  19. Focused Differentiation Increased price/ standard value Increased price / low value Low value/ standard price PAV to a segment warranting price premium Higher margins if competitors do not follow Feasible in monopoly situations Loss of market share Competitive Strategy options

  20. Failure Strategy • A Failure strategy is one that does not provide perceived value for money in terms of product features , price or both

  21. Sustaining competitive advantage • Sustaining price based advantage • Prepare to accept reduced margins • Sustain and win a price war • Organization specific capabilities eg excellent operation facilities, low raw material cost, low distribution cost etc • Focusing on market segments where low price is particularly valued

  22. Sustaining competitive advantage • Sustain differentiation based advantage • Create difficulties in imitation • Imperfect mobility of resources - Many intangible assets such as brand image reputation - Switching costs - Co specialization

  23. Competitive strategy in fragmented industry • Low overall entry barriers • Absence of economies of scale • High transportation costs • High inventory costs • No advantage in dealing with suppliers or buyers • High level of creative content • High product differentiation

  24. Strategy formulation in fragmented industry • Conduct industry wide analysis • Identify what causes fragmentation • Study causes of fragmentation • Assess new situation when industry overcomes fragmentation • Locate a defendable position and take advantage of industry consolidation

  25. Competitive strategy in emerging industry • Technological uncertainty • Strategic uncertainty • High initial cost but steep cost reduction • Embryonic companies and spin offs • First time buyers • Short time horizon • Subsidies

  26. Strategy formulation in fragmented industry • Shaping industry structure • Externalities in industry development • Changing roles of suppliers and channels • Shifting mobility barriers

  27. Competitive strategy in maturing industry • Slowing growth rates • Firms sell to experienced repeat buyers • Competition is concentrated on cost and service • International competition increase • Manufacturing , marketing , research , distribution often undergo change • Industry profits fall

  28. Strategy formulation in emerging industry • Sophisticated cost analysis • Rationalizing the product mix • Correct pricing • Process innovation • Competing internationally • Buy cheap assets • Increasing scope of purchases

  29. Competitive strategy in declining industry • Conditions of demand • Exit barriers • Volatility of rivalry

  30. Strategy formulation in declining industry • Leadership • Niche • Harvest • Quick divestment

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