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Strategy, Balanced Scorecard and Strategic Profitability Analysis. Strategy. Strategy specifies how an organization matches its own capabilities with the opportunities in the marketplace to accomplish its objectives
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Strategy, Balanced Scorecard and Strategic Profitability Analysis
Strategy • Strategy specifies how an organization matches its own capabilities with the opportunities in the marketplace to accomplish its objectives • A thorough understanding of the industry is critical to implementing a successful strategy
Five Aspects of Industry Analysis • Number and strength of competitors: Are there numerous competitors with advantages in quality, costs, and timing of products and services for customers? • Potential entrants to the market: What are the determining factors for entering this industry? For Example: Initial capital investment, Low or High Fixed Costs, Learning curve for industry, relationships with suppliers and vendors • Availability of equivalent products: Is there risk that equivalent products or substitute services on the market can replace your product or service? • Bargaining power of customers: Do customers have bargaining power? For example: Volume discounts for large quantity orders? • Bargaining power of input suppliers: Do suppliers have bargaining power for higher prices and wages? Due to the high demand for their quality of product and skilled employees
Basic Business Strategies • Product Differentiation– An organization’s ability to offer products or services perceived by its customers to be superior and unique relative to the products or services of its competitors • Leads to brand loyalty and the willingness of customers to pay high prices. For example: Mercedes Benz, Gucci, Sony Computers & TVs • Cost Leadership– An organization’s ability to achieve lower costs relative to competitors through productivity and efficiency improvements, elimination of waste, and tight cost control • Leads to lower selling prices. For example: Costco, Wal-Mart, Home Depot, Dell Computers
The Balanced Scorecard & Implementing Strategy • Many companies have introduced a Balanced Scorecard to manage the implementation of their overall strategies • The Balanced Scorecardtranslates an organization’s mission and overall strategy into a set of performance measures that provides the framework for implementation. • It is called theBalanced Scorecardbecause it balances the use of financial and nonfinancial performance measures to evaluate performance
Balanced Scorecard Perspectives • Financial Perspective • Customer Perspective • Internal Business Perspective • Learning and Growth Perspective
1- The Financial Perspective • Evaluates the profitability of the strategy • Uses the most objective measures in the scorecard. For example:Changes in Operating Income, due to growth in sales revenues (revenue growth), decreases in costs & prices, increases in productivity, management of capacity designed to measure overall increases in shareholder value. • The other three perspectives eventually feed back into this element of the balance scorecard
2- The Customer Perspective • Identifies targeted customer and market segments and measures the company’s success in these segments. • Retaining existing customers and developing new customers to increase market share • For example:Customer satisfaction with quality, costs, and timing (on-time deliveries and efficient shipping) of products and services.
3- The Internal Business Prospective • Focuses on improving internal operations (internal processes) to increase their ability to create additional value for customers, which in turn, furthers the company’s financial perspective by increasing shareholder value. • Includes Three Processes: • Innovation:Innovative products and technology (Such as: number of new patents) • Operations: Re-engineered efficient processes for ordering, manufacturing, and distribution that eliminate waste (Such as: defect rates). • Post-sales service:Customer service, recalls, warranties, and payments
The Learning and Growth Perspective • Identifies the capabilities the organization must excel at to achieve superior internal processes that create value for customers and shareholders • Includes Three Capabilities: • Employee Capabilities:Training and Education of employees in internal processes and quality management • Information System Capabilities: Computer Systems with efficient real-time feedback. Availability of the information system for employees. • Organizational Structure Capabilities: Communication structures for effective communication of goals and teamwork within the organization which will empower manufacturing and sales employees (line employees) to manage internal processes
The Learning and Growth Perspective • Includes Three Performance Measures: • Employee Retention:Decrease in employee turnover will increase years of average experienced employee, decrease inefficiencies and waste by employees, and increase recognition of employees by customers. • Employee Satisfaction: Increase in percentage of positive motivated employees will increase in-house promotions versus outside recruiting for management positions and increase ideas from employees to improve internal processes. • Employee Production:Increased quality output by employees will increase the company’s capacity for higher revenues and decrease in inefficiencies and waste in manufacturing or service processes.
Balanced Scorecard Implementation • To effectively implement the Balanced Scorecard: • It must have commitment and leadership from top management • It must be communicated to all employees
Features of a Good Balanced Scorecard • Tells the story of a firm’s strategy, articulating a sequence of cause-and-effect relationships: the links among the various perspectives that describe how a strategy will be implemented to reach the optimal desired results • Helps communicate the strategy to all members of the organization by translating the strategy into a coherent and linked set of understandable and measurable operational targets for an overall strategy to include all divisions and departments.
Features of a Good Balanced Scorecard • Must motivate managers to take actions that eventually result in improvements in financial performance • Limits the number of performance measures, identifying only the most critical ones • Highlights less-than-optimal tradeoffs that managers may make when they fail to consider operational and financial measures together. For example: The trade-off of meeting current short-run financial objectives over future long-term financial objectives or visa-versa. Such as: Research & development, product or service differentiation, innovation, or advertising.
Balanced Scorecard Implementation Pitfalls • Managers should not assume the cause-and-effect linkages are precise: they are merely hypotheses of desired results • Managers should not seek improvements across all of the measures all of the time • Managers should not use only objective measures. But they should include subjective measures that are important as well – such as: customer & employee satisfaction ratings
Balanced Scorecard Implementation Pitfalls • Managers must include both costs and benefits of initiatives placed in the balanced scorecard. Costs, such as: Information Technology and Research & development that are often overlooked to meet long-term strategic goals of the business • Managers should not ignore nonfinancial measures when evaluating managers and employees. Such as customer feedback, increased employee morale, or reduction in sick days • Managers should not use too many performance measures
Evaluating Strategy • Strategic Analysis of Operating Income – three parts: • Growth Component – Measures the change in operating income attributable solely to thechange in the quantity of output sold(Finished Good Units Sold – change in units sold affects revenues)between the current and prior periods • Price-Recovery Component – Measures the change in operating income attributable solely tochanges in prices of inputs (DM, DL, MOH- change in prices of inputs affects costs)and outputs(Selling prices of Finished Goods – changes in selling prices affects revenues)between the current and prior periods • Productivity Component – Measures the change in costs attributable to achange in the quantity of inputs(DM, DL, MOH – change in the quantity of materials or labor hours affects costs)between the current and prior periods