Operations Strategy and Competitive Priorities OPERATIONS & TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
Dec 31, 2015
Understanding Customer Wants and Needs
Dissatisfiers: requirements that are expected in a good or service. If these features are not present,
the customer is dissatisfied, sometimes very dissatisfied.
Satisfiers: requirements that customers say they want.
Exciters/delighters: new or innovative good or service features that customers do not expect.
Examples?
Understanding Customer Wants and Needs
Basic customer expectations - dissatisfiers and satisfiers – are generally considered the minimum performance level required to stay in business and
are often called order qualifier.
Order winners are goods and service features and performance characteristics that differentiate one
customer benefit package from another, and win the customer's business.
Understanding Customer Wants and Needs
Search attributes are those that a customer can determine prior to purchasing the goods
and/or services. These attributes include things like color, price, freshness, style, fit,
feel, hardness, and smell.
Goods such as supermarket food, furniture, clothing, automobiles, and houses are high
in search attributes.
Understanding Customer Wants and Needs
Experience attributes are those that can only be discerned after purchase or during
consumption or use.
Examples of these attributes are friendliness, taste, wearability, safety, fun,
and customer satisfaction.
Understanding Customer Wants and Needs
Credence attributes are any aspects of a good or service that the customer must believe in, but cannot personally evaluate even after purchase
and consumption.
Examples would include the expertise of a surgeon or mechanic, the knowledge of a tax
advisor, or the accuracy of tax preparation software.
Competitive Priorities
Competitive advantage denotes a firm’s ability to achieve market and financial
superiority over its competitors.
Competitive priorities represent the strategic emphasis that a firm places on
certain performance measures and operational capabilities within a value chain.
Competitive Priorities
Every organization is concerned with building and sustaining a competitive advantage in its
markets.
A strong competitive advantage is driven by customer needs and aligns the organization's
resources with its business opportunities.
A strong competitive advantage is difficult to copy, often because of a firm’s culture, habits, or
sunk costs.
Competitive Priority – Quality
Competitive strategies often led to tradeoffs between quality and cost; some company strategies are willing to
sacrifice quality in orderto develop a low cost advantage.
Competitive Priority -- Time
Time is perhaps the most important source of competitive advantage.
Customers demand quick response, short waiting times, and consistency in performance.
Many firms use time as a competitive weapon to create and deliver superior goods and services such
as Charles Schwab, Clarke American Checks, CNN, Dell, FedEx, and Wal-Mart.
Competitive Priority -- Time
Reductions in processing (flow) time serve two purposes.
First, they speed up work processes so that
customer response is improved. Deliveries can be made faster, and more often on-time.
Second, reductions in processing time can only be accomplished by streamlining and simplifying
processes and value chains to eliminate non-value-added steps such as rework and waiting
time.
Competitive Priority -- Time
Processing (flow) time reductions often drive simultaneous
improvements in quality, cost, and productivity.
Competitive Priority -- Flexibility
Mass customization requires companies to align their activities around differentiated customer segments and design goods,
services, and operations around flexibility.
High-levels of flexibility might require special strategies such as modular designs,
interchangeable components, and postponement strategies.
Competitive Priority -- Flexibility
Flexible operations require sharing manufacturing lines and specialized training for employees.
Flexible operations may also require attention to
outsourcing decisions, agreements with key suppliers, and innovative partnering arrangements, because delayed shipments and a complex supply
chain can hinder flexibility.
Competitive Priority -- Flexibility
Mass customization is being able to make whatever goods and services the customer wants, at any volume, at any
time for anybody, and for a global organization, from any place in the world.
Competitive Priority -- Innovation
Innovation is the discovery and practical application or
commercialization of a device, method, or idea that differs from existing norms.
Innovations in all forms encapsulate
human knowledge.
Competitive Priority -- Innovation
Innovations take many forms such as:
Physical goods such as telephones, automobiles, refrigerators, computers, optical fiber, satellites, and cell phones.
Services such as self-service, all-suite hotels, health maintenance organizations, and Internet banking
Manufacturing such as computer-aided design, robotic automation, and smart tags.
Management practices such as customer satisfaction surveys, quantitative decision models, and Six Sigma.
Strategic Planning
Strategy is a pattern or plan that integrates an organization’s major goals, policies, and action sequences into a cohesive whole.
Effective strategies develop around a few key competitive priorities - such as low cost or fast
service time - which provide a focus for the entire organization, and exploit an
organization’s core competencies - the strengths unique to that organization.
Strategic Planning
Most large organizations have three levels of strategy:
A Corporate strategy is necessary to define the businesses in which the corporation will participate and develop plans for the acquisition and
allocation of resources among those businesses.
A Business strategy defines the focus for SBUs. The major decisions involve which markets to pursue and how best to compete in those markets; that is, what competitive priorities the firm should pursue
A Functional strategy is the set of decisions that each functional area - marketing, finance, operations, research and development, engineering,
and so on - develops to support its particular business strategy.
Strategic Planning
The operations strategy is how an organization’s processes are designed and organized to produce the
type of goods and services to support the corporate and business strategies.
Managers recognize that the value (supply) chain can be leveraged to provide a distinct competitive
advantage, and that operations is a core competency for the organization.
Whoever has superior operational capability over the long term is the odds-on-favorite to win the industry
shakeout
Strategic Planning Process
Strategy development refers to a company's approach, formal or informal, for making key long-term business decisions. The process typically takes into account customer and market requirements, the competitive environment, industry structure and non-industry competitors, financial and societal risks, human resource capabilities and needs, technological capabilities, and supplier capabilities.
Strategic Planning Process
The major steps are as follows:
Step 1 - Gather and Analyze Strategic Performance Data Step 2 - Review/Analyze Existing Strategic Directions and Documents Step 3 - Revise/Develop StrategyStep 4 - Deploy Objectives and Action Plans Step 5 - Review Progress and Results Step 6 - Continually Evaluate and Improve
The next step is to translate business strategy into operations strategy, policies, and resource allocation plans
Strategic Planning Process
The strategic mission of a firm defines its reason for existence.The strategic vision (SV) describes where the organization is headed and what it intends to be. Example Strategic Vision:
Values are attitudes and policies for all employees to follow that direct the journey to
achieving the organization’s vision.
Values are reinforced through conscious and subconscious behavior at all levels of the
organization
Operations Strategy
An operations strategy defines how an organization will execute its chosen business strategies.
Developing an operations strategy involves translating competitive priorities into operational capabilities by making a variety of choices
and trade-offs for design and operating decisions.
Operating decisions must be aligned with achieving the desired competitive priorities.
For example, if corporate objectives are to be the low cost and
mass market producer of a good then adopting an assembly line type of process is how operations can help achieve this corporate
objective.
• Professor Terry Hill’s Strategy Development Framework
• Operations design choices are the decisions management must make as to what type of process structure is best suited to produce goods or create services.
Types of processes and alternative designs Supply chain integration and outsourcing Technology Capacity and Facilities (size, timing, location) Inventory Trade-off Analysis
Operations Strategy and Competitive Priorities
• Hill’s Strategy Development Framework
• Infrastructure focuses on the non-process• features and capabilities of the organization and
includes the workforce, operating plans and control systems, quality control, organizational structure, compensation systems, learning and innovation systems, and support services.
Operations Strategy and Competitive Priorities
• Hill’s Strategy Framework Applied to McDonald’s
• McDonald's vision is to be the world's best quick service restaurant experience. Being the best means providing outstanding quality, service, cleanliness and value, so that we make every customer in every restaurant smile. To achieve our vision, we focus on three worldwide strategies:
» (1) Be The Best Employer» (2) Deliver Operational Excellence» (3) Achieve Enduring Profitable
Growth
• Customer Benefit Package Design and Strategy• Strategy Development for McDonald’s
Operations Strategy and Competitive Priorities