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Value Chain Analysis: Click To Edit Master Subtitle Style

The value chain is a concept that was popularized by Michael Porter in 1985 to analyze a business's primary and support activities. Primary activities directly involve creating and delivering a product, while support activities increase effectiveness. Value chain analysis identifies which activities are best for a business to undertake internally and which to outsource. It breaks a business into key activities in primary categories like operations, marketing, and service, and support categories like procurement, human resources, and infrastructure. The analysis then assesses where a business can gain cost advantages or differentiation and determines strategies focused on sustaining competitive advantages in those areas.

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Malvika Menon
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
497 views10 pages

Value Chain Analysis: Click To Edit Master Subtitle Style

The value chain is a concept that was popularized by Michael Porter in 1985 to analyze a business's primary and support activities. Primary activities directly involve creating and delivering a product, while support activities increase effectiveness. Value chain analysis identifies which activities are best for a business to undertake internally and which to outsource. It breaks a business into key activities in primary categories like operations, marketing, and service, and support categories like procurement, human resources, and infrastructure. The analysis then assesses where a business can gain cost advantages or differentiation and determines strategies focused on sustaining competitive advantages in those areas.

Uploaded by

Malvika Menon
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Value Chain Analysis

Click to edit Master subtitle style

4/9/12

4/9/12

The

value chain is a concept from business management that was first described and popularized by Michael Porter in his 1985 bestseller, Competitive Advantage: Creating and Sustaining Superior Performance.

4/9/12

4/9/12

Value Chain Analysis activities of a business could be grouped under two headings: (1) Primary Activities - those that are directly concerned with creating and delivering a product (e.g. component assembly); and (2) Support Activities, which whilst they are not directly involved in production, may increase effectiveness or efficiency (e.g. human resource management). It is rare for a business to undertake all primary and support activities. Value Chain Analysis is one way of identifying which 4/9/12 activities are best undertaken by a business and which

Primary Activities
Inbound logistics All those activities concerned with receiving and storing externally sourced materials Operations The manufacture of products and services - the way in which resource inputs (e.g. materials) are converted to outputs (e.g. products) Outbound logistics All those activities associated with getting finished goods and services to buyers Marketing and sales Essentially an information activity - informing buyers and consumers about products and services (benefits, use, price etc.) Service All those activities associated with maintaining product performance after the 4/9/12 product has been sold

Support Activities
Procurement This concerns how resources are acquired for a business (e.g. sourcing and negotiating with materials suppliers) Human Resource Management Those activities concerned with recruiting, developing, motivating and rewarding the workforce of a business Technology Development Activities concerned with managing information processing and the development and protection of "knowledge" in a business Infrastructure Concerned with a wide range of support systems and functions such as finance, planning, quality control and general senior management

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Steps in Value Chain Analysis


Value chain analysis can be broken down into a three sequential steps:

(1) Break down a market/organisation into its key activities under each of the major headings in the model; (2) Assess the potential for adding value via cost advantage or differentiation, or identify current activities where a business appears to be at a competitive disadvantage; (3) Determine strategies built around focusing on activities where competitive advantage can be sustained

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Utility of Value Chain Model

The value chain model is a useful analysis tool for defining a firm's core competencies and the activities in which it can pursue a competitive advantage as follows: Cost advantage: by better understanding costs and squeezing them out of the value-adding activities. Differentiation: by focusing on those activities associated with core competencies and capabilities in order to perform them better than do competitors.

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THANK YOU
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