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Diversification. Diversification is typically defined as a strategy which takes the organization away from its current markets or products or competencesRelated diversification is strategy development beyond current products and markets, but within the value system or industry" in which the compan
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1. Corporate Strategy Part II Prof. T.Voskanian
2. Diversification Diversification is typically defined as a strategy which takes the organization away from its current markets or products or competences
Related diversification is strategy development beyond current products and markets, but within the value system or “industry” in which the company operates
Unrelated diversification is an organization moving beyond its current value system or industry
3. Possible advantages of diversification Control of supplies
Quantity
Quality
Price
Control of markets
Access to information
Cost savings
Building on:
Core competences
Technology
Spreading risk
Resource utilization
Parenting
4. Corporate Diversity
5. Unrelated diversification Unrelated diversification is an organization moving beyond its current value system or industry
Diversification into quite new markets
Creation of new markets
Creation of new competences for new market opporuniries
6. Diversification and performance The target is to study the relationship between diversification and performance of the company
The balance of evidence is that relatedness of diversification is financially beneficial is so far as it allows an organization to build on and leverage common resources and competences
The cost of managing diversity could be considerable
Combination of diverse location and diverse business units again gives rise to level of complexity
Underutilization of physical resources or intangible resources is likely to encourage related developments, whereas excess financial resources may well be used to underwrite unrelated developments
7. Bases of strategic choice at the business level
8. The strategy clock: competitive strategy options
9. The strategy clock: competitive strategy options
10. Sustaining competitive advantage Sustaining low price advantage
Achieving and sustaining competitive advantage throuhg low price is dependent on low cost but that is difficult to sustain
Being a price leader (market share-economies of scale)
Low cost production (reduction through value chain: low cost materials through quantities purchased or efficiency achieved)Strategy may result in the customer perceiving a lower added value product or services
Sustaining differentiation-based strategy
Conditions to sustain differentiation:
Difficulties of imitation
Complexity
Causal ambiguity
Imperfect mobility
More intangible assets
Switching cost
The delta model and ‘lock-in’
11. Game Theory The general idea is that the strategist, has to anticipate the reaction of others competitors.
Simultaneous game – where the competitors make decisions or moves at the same time without knowing what each other is doing
Sequential games- try to thing through sequence of moves that competitors make make based on a reasonable assumption about what competitor desires as the outcome.
The importance of timing in strategic moves
The importance of careful weighing of risk
The importance of establishing credibility and commitment
Repeated games – presence of co-operation
12. Repeated games The presence or absence of implicit co-operation will be dependent upon a number of factors:
The number of competitors on the market
If there are small competitors competing with larger competitors
Where there are substantial differences between firms
If there is a lack of transparency on bases of competitors within the market
13. The ‘Prisoner’s Dilemma’
14. Dominant vs dominated The dominant strategy is one that outperfprms all other strategies whatever rivals choose
If a firm does not have a dominant strategy game theory suggests that it is important to identify if there are any non dominated strategy and; and if yes to eleiminate the possibility of the situation occuring.
Equilibrium is a situation
15. Competitive strategy in hyper competitive conditions Advantage base on price or differentiation
Seeking advantage through market-base strategic moves
First-mover advantage
Developing New Products and new markets
Seeking advantage by building barriers
Resource based advantage
Strongholds
The advantages of ‘deep pockets’
Scale of the operation
16. Escalation of bases of competition
17. Product-market expansion grid
18. Methods of Strategy development Internal Development
Acquisition
Joint Ventures
19. Internal development Internal development is where strategies are developed by building up an organization’s own resources base and competences
For product that are highly technical in design and manufacture, businesses may choose to develop new products themselves
Development of the new market by direct involvement
Process of knowledge creation
Cost of acquiring could be higher than internal development
20. Merger and acquisition Acquisition is where an organization develops its resources and competences by taking over another organization
Motives for acquisition & merger
Speed to enter the new markets and product position
Case of static market with reasonably stable market share of competitors
A lack of resources or competences
Cost efficiency
Value to shareholders
21. Making acquisition work Problems my arise:
Paid to much
Acquire may be unable to add value
Inability to integrate the new company into activities of the old
Problems of cultural fit
22. Making acquisition work There are three broad approaches to issues of post-merger cultural fit:
Assimilation
Hybrid
Separate (appropriate when the reason for acquisition Is more financial than strategic)
70% of acquisition end up with lower return to shareholders of both organization
23. Joint ventures A joint development is where two or more organization share resources and activities to pursue a strategy. Alliances may be formed either to exploit current resources and competences or ot exploit new possibilities
Motives for alliances:
The need for critical mass which alliances can achieve by co-operation of either competitors or providers of complementary products
Co-specialization – allowing each partner to concentrate on activities that best match their resources and competences. To enter new geographical markets.
Learning from partners and developing competences that may be more widely exploited elsewhere.
24. Form of alliances Joint ventures are through of as arrangements where organizations remain independent but set up a newly created organization jointly owned by parents
Consortia – typically more focused on a particular venture
Opportunistic alliances might be organized around particular project without any formality.
Network – work through a mechanism of mutual advantages and trust
Franchising, Licensing, sub-contracting,
25. Factors influencing the form of alliances Business environment dictates the need to create alliance
Resource reason – scale economies, desire to learn from partner, new countries, new technologies
Some organizations will operate in situations where there are expectations that alliances should be preferred development method: spread of financial risk, political climate, fashionable in some industries
26. Ingredients of successful alliances Trust
Competence based
Character based
Senior Management support
Clear goals and organizational arrangements
Compatibility at the operational level
27. Success criteria Suitability is concerned with whether a strategy addresses the circumstances in which an organization is operating – the strategic position
Exploiting opportunities
Capitalizing on an organizational strengths
addressing expectations
Acceptability is concerned with the expected performance outcomes of a strategy
Feasibility is concerned with whether an organization has the resources and competences to deliver a strategy
28. Why strategy can be unsuitable There could be other strategies more suitable.
Rank strategies
Decision trees
Scenarios
Absence of internal consistency – the competitive strategy, the development directions and development methods need to be consistent
29. Acceptability Approaches to measure return
Profitability analysis
ROCE
Payback period
Discount Cash Flow Analysis
Cost benefits – suggests that a money value can be put on all the costs and benefits of a strategy, including tangible and intangible returns
Real options based approach
Shareholder Value Analysis
30. Acceptability Risk – can be particularly high for the organizations with majot long-term programmes of innovation or where high level of uncertainty exist about key issues in the environment.
Financial rations
Capital structure
Liquidity
Sensitivity analysis – what if?
Stakeholder reactions
Issue of new shares is necessary for the new strategy
Plans to merge could be necessary
E-commerce model may cut out channels
Attempt to gain market share can be resulted in price war
31. Feasibility Financial feasibility
Fund flow forecasting
Resource deployment
32. Organizing for success An organization’s configuration consists of the structures, processes relationship and boundaries through which the organization operates
33. Structural Types The simple structure
The functional structure
The multidivisional structure
The holding company structure
The matrix structure
The team-based structure
The project-based structure
Intermediate structures
34. Functional
35. Divisional
36. Type of organizational structure
37. Other structures A holding company is an investment company consisting of shareholdings in a variety of separate business operations
A team-based structure attempts to combine both horizontal and vertical coordination through structuring people into cross-functional teams
A project-based structure is one where teams are created, undertake the work and are then dissolved
38. Processes - Excluding Direct supervision
Planning and control systems
Performance targets
Market mechanism
Social/cultural processes
Self-control (personal behavior and motivation)
39. Processes Excluding Direct supervision is the direct control of strategic decisions by one or a few individuals
Planning and control is where successful implementation of strategies is achieved through systems that plan and control the allocation of resources and monitor their utilization
Performance targets relate to the outputs of an organization such as product quality , prices, or its outcomes such as profit -PIs
Balance scorecards combine both qualitative and quantitative measures, acknowledge the expectations of different stakeholders and relate to assessment of performance to choice of strategy
40. The balance scorecards Excluding
41. Processes Excluding Market mechanisms involve some formalized system of ‘contracting’ for resources
Social/cultural processes are concerned with organizational culture and standardization of norms
Knowledge integration occurs through the taken-for-granted assumption of the organization
Process of self-control achieve the integration of knowledge and co-ordination of activities by the direct interaction of individuals without supervision
Channel to interact
Credibility of manager
42. Types of change Excluding
43. Types of change. Balogun and hope Hiley Excluding
44. Types of change Excluding Adaptation is change which can be accommodated within current paradigm and occurs incrementally.
Reconstruction is the type of change which may be rapid and could involve a good deal of upheaval in an organization, but which does not fundamentally change the paradigm
Evolution is a change in strategy which requires paradigm change, but over time
Revolution is change, which requires rapid and major strategic and paradigm change, perhaps in circumstances where such drift has resulted in circumstances where pressure for change are extreme