3010 Strategic Management
3010 Strategic Management
3010 Strategic Management
Strategy dictated by the external environments of the firm (what opportunities exist in these
environments?)
Firm develops internal skills required by external environment (what can the firm do about
the opportunities?)
6. Four Assumptions of the I/O Model
a. The external environment is assumed to possess pressures and constraints that determine the
strategies that would result in above-average returns
b. Most firms competing within a particular or within a certain segment of it are assumed to
control similar strategically relevant resources and to pursue similar strategies in light of
those resources
c. Resources used to implement strategies are highly mobile across firms
d. Organizational decision makers are assumed to be rational and committed to acting in the
firm’s best interests, as shown by their profit-maximizing behaviors
7. I/O Model of Above-Average Returns
a) Study the external environment, especially the industry environment
The External Environment
economies of scale
barriers to market entry
diversification
product differentiation
degree of concentration of firms in the industry
b) Locate an attractive industry with a high potential for above-average returns.
An Attractive Industry
An Attractive industry: one whose structural characteristics suggest above-average
returns
c) Identify the strategy called for by the attractive industry to earn above-average returns
Strategy Formulation
Strategy formulation: selection of a strategy linked with above-average returns in a
particular industry
d) Develop or acquire assets and skills needed to implement the strategy
Assets and Skills
Assets and skills: those assets and skills required to implement a chosen strategy
e) Use the firm’s strengths (its developed or acquired assets and skills) to implement the
strategy
Strategy Implementation
Strategy implementation: select strategic actions linked with effective implementation
of the chosen strategy
Superior Returns: Superior returns: earning of above-average returns
8. Resources are inputs into a firm’s production process, such as capital equipment, the skills of
individual employees, patents, finances, and talented managers. In general, a firm’s resources
are classified into three categories: physical, human, and organizational capital. Described
fully in resources are either tangible or intangible in nature.
Note: A capability is the capacity for a set of resources to perform a task or an activity in an
integrative manner.
Four Attributes of Resources and Capabilities (Competitive Advantage)
Valuable: allow the firm to exploit opportunities or neutralize threats in its external
environment
Rare: possessed by few, if any, current and potential competitors
Costly to imitate: when other firms cannot obtain them or must obtain them at a much
higher cost
No substitutable: the firm is organized appropriately to obtain the full benefits of the
resources in order to realize a competitive advantage
Core Competencies are the basis for a firm’s: Competitive advantage, Strategic
competitiveness, Ability to earn above-average returns
9. Resource-based Model of above Average Returns: The resource-based model of above-
average returns assumes that each organization is a collection of unique resources and
capabilities. The uniqueness of its resources and capabilities is the basis of a firm’s strategy
and its ability to earn above-average returns.
Strategy dictated by unique resources and capabilities of the firm (what can the firm
do best?)
Find an environment in which to exploit these assets (where are the best
opportunities?)
a. Identify the firm’s resources-- strengths and weaknesses compared with competitors
Resources
Resources: inputs into a firm’s production process
b. Determine the firm’s capabilities--what it can do better than its competitors
Capability
Capability: capacity of an integrated set of resources to interactively perform a task or
activity
c. Determine the potential of the firm’s resources and capabilities in terms of a
competitive advantage
Competitive Advantage
Competitive advantage: ability of a firm to outperform its rivals
d. Locate an attractive industry
An Attractive Industry
An attractive industry: an industry with opportunities that can be exploited by the
firm’s resources and capabilities
e. Select a strategy that best allows the firm to utilize its resources and capabilities relative
to opportunities in the external environment
Strategy Form/Impl
Strategy formulation and implementation: strategic actions taken to earn above
average returns
Superior Returns: Superior returns: earning of above-average returns
10. Strategic Intent & Mission
a. Vision: Vision is a picture of what the firm wants to be and, in broad terms, what it wants to
ultimately achieve. Thus, a vision statement articulates the ideal description of an
organization and gives shape to its intended future. In other words, a vision statement points
the firm in the direction of where it would like to be in the years to come.
It is also important to recognize that vision statements reflect a firm’s values and aspirations
and are intended to capture the heart and mind of each employee and, hopefully, many of its
other stakeholders. A firm’s vision tends to be enduring while its mission can change with
new environmental conditions. A vision statement tends to be relatively short and concise,
making it easily remembered.
b. Mission: The vision is the foundation for the firm’s mission. A mission specifies the
businesses in which the film intends to compete and the customer it intends to serve. The
firm’s mission is more concrete than its vision. However, similar to the vision, a mission
should establish a firm’s individuality and should be inspiring and relevant to all
stakeholders. Together, the vision and mission provide the foundation that the firm needs to
choose and implement one or more strategies. The probability of forming an effective
mission increases when employees have a strong sense of the ethical standards that guide
their behaviors as they work to help the firm reach its vision. Thus, business ethics are a vital
part of the firm’s discussions to decide what it wants to become (its vision) as well as who it
intends to serve and how it desires to serve those individuals and groups (its mission).
Strategic Intent: Winning competitive battles through deciding how to leverage internal
resources, capabilities, and core competencies
Strategic Mission: An application of strategic intent in terms of products to be offered
and markets to be served
11. The Firm and Its Stakeholders
Stakeholders: Stakeholders are the individuals, groups, and organizations that can affect the
firm’s vision and mission, are affected by the strategic outcomes achieved, and have
enforceable claims on the firm’s performance
The firm must maintain performance at an adequate level in order to retain the participation
of key stakeholders
a. Capital Market Stakeholders: Shareholders Major suppliers of capital
Capital-market stakeholders are groups that affect the availability or cost of capital—
shareholders, venture capitalists, banks, and other financial intermediaries. Product-market
stakeholders include parties with whom the firm shares its industry, including suppliers and
customers
Banks
Private lenders
Venture capitalists
b. Product Market Stakeholders:
Product-market stakeholders include parties with whom the firm shares its industry,
including suppliers and customers. Not all stakeholders are affected equally by strategic
decisions. Some effects may be rather mild, and any positive or negative effects may be
secondary and of minimal impact.
Primary customers
Suppliers
Host communities
Unions
c. Organizational Stakeholders
Organizational stakeholders refer to parties who have an interest in the company’s
performance. And they are directly affected by the company’s practices. They include
employees, managers, and staff.
Employees
Managers
Nonmanagers
12. Stakeholder Involvement: Two issues affect the extent of stakeholder involvement in the
firm
How do you divide the returns to keep stakeholders involved
How do you increase the returns so everyone has more to share?
a. Scanning: Scanning entails the study of all segments in the general environment.
Although challenging, scanning is critically important to the firms’ efforts to understand
trends in the general environment and to predict their implications. This is particularly the
case for companies competing in highly volatile environments
b. Monitoring: When monitoring, analysts observe environmental changes to see if an
important trend is emerging from among those spotted through scanning.20 Critical to
successful monitoring is the firm’s ability to detect meaning in environmental events and
trends
c. Forecasting: Scanning and monitoring are concerned with events and trends in the
general environment at a point in time. When forecasting, analysts develop feasible
projections of what might happen, and how quickly, as a result of the events and trends
detected through scanning and monitoring
d. Assessing: When assessing, the objective is to determine the timing and significance of
the effects of environmental changes and trends that have been identified. Through
scanning, monitoring, and forecasting, analysts are able to understand the general
environment.
Additionally, the intent of assessment is to specify the implications of that understanding.
Without assessment, the firm has data that may be interesting but of unknown
competitive relevance. Even if formal assessment is inadequate, the appropriate
interpretation of that information is important.
6. States in the top 10 of those that are trying to transform themselves to the realities and
needs of a digital economy may experience an influx of high-tech companies and skilled
workers as well as increases in tax revenues
Top 10 U.S. States Moving Toward Digital Economy
8. Competitor Analysis: The competitor environment is the final part of the external
environment requiring study. Competitor analysis focuses on each company against which a
firm competes directly. The Coca-Cola Company and PepsiCo, Home Depot and Lowe’s,
Carrefour SA and Tesco PLC, and Amazon and Google are examples of competitors that are
keenly interested in understanding each other’s objectives, strategies, assumptions, and
capabilities. Indeed, intense rivalry creates a strong need to understand competitors. In a
competitor analysis, the firm seeks to understand the following:
What drives the competitor, as shown by its future objectives?
What the competitor is doing and can do, as revealed by its current strategy.
What the competitor believes about the industry, as shown by its assumptions.
What the competitor’s capabilities are, as shown by its strengths and weaknesses
Knowledge about these four dimensions helps the firm prepare an anticipated response profile
for each competitor The results of an effective competitor analysis help a firm understand,
interpret, and predict its competitors’ actions and responses. Understanding competitors’ actions
and responses clearly contributes to the firm’s ability to compete successfully within the
industry. Interestingly, research suggests that executives often fail to analyze competitors’
possible reactions to competitive actions their firm takes, placing their firm at a potential
competitive disadvantage as a result
Critical to an effective competitor analysis is gathering data and information that can help the
firm understand its competitors’ intentions and the strategic implications resulting from them.129
Useful data and information combine to form competitor intelligence which is the set of data and
information the firm gathers to better understand and anticipate competitors’ objectives,
strategies, assumptions, and capabilities. In competitor analysis, the firm gathers intelligence not
only about its competitors, but also regarding public policies in countries around the world. Such
intelligence facilitates an understanding of the strategic posture of foreign competitors. Through
effective competitive and public policy intelligence, the firm gains the insights needed to make
effective strategic decisions regarding how to compete against rivals..