Top Banner
What is strategy? By: Michael E. Porter Interpreted By: Nilesh Kumar 10BSP0148 IBS-B.
40
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: What is strategy by Porter

What is strategy? By: Michael E. Porter

Interpreted By:Nilesh Kumar10BSP0148IBS-B.

Page 2: What is strategy by Porter

Your company is under severe loss due to competitor’s habit of imitating the same product with nearly same quality and extended warranty coverage but at a comparative lower price.

What will be your immediate step?

Situation:

Page 3: What is strategy by Porter

Do you think of: Launching a new product. You have the power. Take operational advantage. Use 6σ or JIT or Lean

Manufacturing etc. Provide feature modifications. Increased volume sales. Lower the price and (or)

increase warranty. Intensified promotional activities.

Develop a “STRATEGY” at the understanding of Strategic Positioning. You may use operational effectiveness for existing product or develop a new product all together.

Continued…

Page 4: What is strategy by Porter

To sustain and thrive for excellence and avoid the need for 2nd chance.

To define your VISION & MISSION and set achievable GOALS.

To understand your environment, within & out. To create uniqueness in your activities and

moves. To lead the way and demonstrate. Core

competencies. To obtain best allocation and usage of your

resources.

Need of strategy.

Page 5: What is strategy by Porter

To meet your objectives and align, if deviated. To satisfy those who expect advancement and

profits from you. It’s a 2 way process. Need fulfillment.

Remember, “STRATEGY” is understood and used by those who are foresighted. They have good assessment of “Right Time”, “Right

Place”, “Right Resources” and hence develop “Right Strategy” w.r.t. requirements.

To meet seen & unseen uncertainties and certainties. What to do and What not to do.

Continued…

Page 6: What is strategy by Porter

Operational Effectiveness vs. Strategy.

Keep In Mind And We Shall Find Out In The End.

Vs.

Page 7: What is strategy by Porter

In the presence of competition you may:Ask for FLEXIBILITY.Do the BENCHMARKING.Opt for OUTSOURCING.Nurture a few CORE COMPETENCIES.Go for POSITIONING.

Operational Effectiveness Is Not Strategy:

Page 8: What is strategy by Porter

Above beliefs are half-truths. What’s the consequence?

Self competition & hyper competition. Nothing’s stable in this dynamic world of competition.

Understand and realize the importance of flat world. Strive for productivity, quality & speed.

Root cause is ability to differentiate between Operational effectiveness & Business strategy.

Current Belief: Management Tools = Operational Strategy. Result is FRUSTRATION & LOSS. Reason?

Continued…

Page 9: What is strategy by Porter

Your example is “NOKIA”. Very flexible organization. Leveraging it’s employee for extra and

extensive sales activities. Benchmark it’s smart phone with Samsung. Outsourced developers for handset design

and applications. Apart from durability, it has also chosen

launch of a new handset very frequently. Extensive media ad & promotions.

Example..??

Page 10: What is strategy by Porter

What else can be done? They can make use of their strategic positioning,

i.e. Environment, Expectation & Purpose and Resources & Competitors.

May be launching a fewer but high quality and defect free usage smart phones and reap profits on them.

May be acquisitions. May be collaborations with Google & Android.

Industrial talk: Nokia may be acquired.

Continued…

Page 11: What is strategy by Porter

Difference with preservation.Greater value at lower cost.Cost & price. Slashing one slashes another.

Develop “Operational effectiveness” and also “Operational strategy” if necessary.

Operational Effectiveness: Necessary But Not

Sufficient.

Page 12: What is strategy by Porter

Whom are you going to benefit when you overtake your benchmark? Think...

Remember: operational effectiveness is necessary to compete but insufficient to win.

Reason: Imitation & competition end. Japan: Toyota: Luxury cars vs. Prius.

Use of strategic positioning.

Continued…

Page 13: What is strategy by Porter

Concept of Productivity Frontier.

E.g. Maruti. 800 Zen Esteem Baleno

.

.

. Vitara Swift Dzire SX4 Kizashi

Continued…

High Relative Cost Position Low

High

Low

Productivity Frontier

Page 14: What is strategy by Porter

Productivity frontier vs. technology Outwards. E.g. Companies that produced carburetors.

New system: Order processing & after sales service. E.g. Forbes.

Productivity frontier + continuous improvement + empowerment + change management + learning organization = Healthy organization.

Continued…

Page 15: What is strategy by Porter

Race of productivity factor races parallel between companies and this becomes endless such that no one wins. E.g. P&G and HUL.

Recent trend: Merger & acquisition. E.g. Infosys.

The companies with strategic vision stand still and stand apart. E.g. Bosch.

Continued…

Page 16: What is strategy by Porter

What is strategic positioning & how does it helps? Environment, Expectation & purpose and

Resources & competencies. Perform different activities from “rivals” and/or

perform similar activities in a different way. It helps in preserving “Distinctiveness” of the

company.

Strategic Positioning & It’s 3 Principles: The Idea In

Practice.

Page 17: What is strategy by Porter

The 3 Principles:1. Strategy is the creation of a unique and

valuable position involving a different set of activities.

2. Strategy requires you to trade-offs in competing- to choose what not to do. E.g.

3. Strategy involves creating “fit” among a company’s activities.

Continued…

Page 18: What is strategy by Porter

1. Strategy is the creation of a unique and valuable position involving a different set of activities.

The 3 distinct sources:1. Few needs, many customers a.k.a. variety based

positioning. E.g. Internet service providers like Tata Photon.

2. Broad needs, few customers a.k.a. need based positioning. E.g. Wealth management services like Bessemer.

3. Broad needs, many customers a.k.a. access based positioning. E.g. Telecom services like Tata Docomo.

Continued…

Page 19: What is strategy by Porter

Tata Photon (+): ISP Market: New and developing at rapid pace. Uniqueness: USB Modem with high speed. Convenient packages –

Post/pre paid. Strategy: Partially Blue Ocean in ISP and Blue Ocean in USB

modems. Observation: 1.Tata Photon 2.Tata Photon+3.Tata Photon TV

1. Testing and shaping the market.2. Capturing the market.3. Extending the market.

Strategic Positioning Game Played By Tata Photon:

Logical Increment.

New Service Launch.

Page 20: What is strategy by Porter

2. Strategy requires you to trade-offs in competing- to choose what not to do.

Incompatibility of competitive activities. E.g. Maruti vs. Toyota.

Trade-offs are necessary. E.g. Blackberry mobiles.

Continued…

Page 21: What is strategy by Porter

3. Strategy involves creating “fit” among a company’s activities.

To examine whether the practice applied fits into the organization. E.g. Design excellence fits Apple but may not fit with Samsung or Nokia.

Design uniqueness has given Apple the competitive advantage as well as core competency with sustainability.

Continued…

Page 22: What is strategy by Porter

How do you feel you are different from the one sitting next to you? It’s your uniqueness and that turns out to be your

competitive strategy. It may be your knowledge, skill set, leadership, hard work

& smart work etc. The placement which you will acquire through college will

be based on this unique competitive strategy, but you may not acknowledge it with the term “strategy” now.

Situation:

Page 23: What is strategy by Porter

How do you tailor your activities? Understanding the need:

Environment Customer’s requirement Affordability & accessibility

May be then you can develop a suitable uniqueness that can be your competitive advantage and hence strategic positioning.

Differentiation strategy: Deliberate selection of set of activities to deliver unique mix of values. May be price or product features.

Alleviates strategic positioning.

Strategy Rests On Unique Activities:

Page 24: What is strategy by Porter

Dell: Customization along with online ordering along with high responsiveness along with JIT inventory and affordable prices.

Southwest Airlines: Uniqueness of connectivity service, price, small airports and frequency of flights. This uniqueness became their strategy.

Continued…

Page 25: What is strategy by Porter

Continental Lite vs. Southwest Airlines. Points of parity: Low cost on some routes &

full service on others. Tradeoffs are essential to strategy. They

create the need for choice and purposefully limit what a company offers. Remembering that a valuable position will

attract copycats.

A Sustainable Strategic Position Requires Trade-

Offs:

Page 26: What is strategy by Porter

Can’t be all things to all people. Be best at doing a few things.Then expand on those core

competencies. E.g. Apple, Google.Competitors follow either “repositioning”

or “straddling” method to overtake.Positioning not only selects but highlights

the interdependencies between them.

Continued…

Page 27: What is strategy by Porter

3 reasons support this. Let’s see how.

Mark the trade-off: Service industry to OEM. A confusion to customers and danger of brand

reputation. So they need to trade-off to avoid inconsistencies in

image or reputation. First reason.

Why Does Trade-Offs Arises?

+

Page 28: What is strategy by Porter

Difference in activity. Here R&D will have to be kept aside then.

Different positioning requires a different set of management, control, employee, market etc. Second reason.

Continued…

Designer and unique

+ =

+ = ?

Page 29: What is strategy by Porter

Limit on internal co-ordination and control, i.e. make organizational priorities clear, transparent and visible. Third reason. E.g. Aston Martin for James Bond & car fans. Competency is robust design & engine efficiency.

Aston Martin will not go down to produce small segment vehicles, not at least in near future.

So with all the 3 reasons in mind, the creation of need for choices is purposefully limited to what a company offers.

Continued…

&

Page 30: What is strategy by Porter

Fit locks out imitators by creating a chain that is as strong as it’s strongest link. What if “FIT” becomes “UNFIT?”

Many strategies fit into an organization. It’s how do we combine them with relevance. E.g. Southwest Airlines.

Fit Drives Both: Competitive Advantage & Sustainability.

Page 31: What is strategy by Porter

Types of fit:1. First order fit – simple consistency.

MakeMYTrip – No brick models till now to book tickets.

2. Second order fit – activities are reinforcing. MakeMytrip – Extensive promotions and internet ads.

3. Third order fit – optimization of effort. MakeMytrip – With tie up among various airlines and

real time data.

The 3 fits collectively help in strategy formulation.

Continued…

Page 32: What is strategy by Porter

Fit & sustainability. It is harder to imitate greater set of activities

performed strategically and uniquely. The more you account for 2nd and 3rd fit, better

sustainability of advantages is achieved. A simple game of probability multiplication.

Fit creates pressure which ultimately induces operational effectiveness. Hence imitation is harder.

Continued…

Page 33: What is strategy by Porter

The role of top management in an organization is: Leadership. Defining an organization’s position, activities

and strategy. Making trade-offs between activities and

positioning. Innovation.

This is what we learnt in Chinese Toy industry case but at a macro level.

Continued…

Page 34: What is strategy by Porter

Inefficient managers fail to distinguish between operational effectiveness and strategy.

Strategy is affected by external competition & environment and within the organization. Deviation from actual strategy.

Desire to grow (growth trap) leads to rapid change of strategies without watching or realizing their post implementation effects.

Inability to recognize appropriate strategy and hence misguided activities and irrelevant trade-offs.

Rediscovering Strategy:

Page 35: What is strategy by Porter

In order to grow rapidly, focus on deepening the strategic positioning, i.e. Environment, Expectation & purpose and Resource & competency.

Deepening position helps in – Distinctiveness, Strengthening fit and Communicating the strategy to customers.

Globalizing often helps in consistency with strategy but at a wider level.

Continued…

Page 36: What is strategy by Porter

Strategy is leaded by a leader. Leader –

Defines and communicates company’s position. Makes trade-offs. Forges fit among activities. Maintains company’s distinctiveness. Setting limits so as what to do and what not to

do.

A company have to change it’s strategy if there’s major industrial change.

Continued…

Page 37: What is strategy by Porter

Need of alignment with: New practice Set appropriate activity & trade-offs Understand the requirement - Customer’s &

stakeholder’s perspective Best usage of it’s available resources Coordinate among organizing structure.

Continued…

Page 38: What is strategy by Porter

Creation of unique and valuable position. Involve a different set of activities. Positioning of strategic positioning in a company. Essence of trade-offs, in other words “What not

to do.” About integrating and coordinating activities and

creating a fit among them.

Now we can answer “What is strategy?”

Page 39: What is strategy by Porter

The Strategy Focused Organization

Mission:“Why we exist”

Core Values:“What we believe in”

Vision: “What we want to be”

Strategy: “Our game plan (how to win)”

Goals For Implementing Strategy (Metrics):“What we need to do”

OUTCOMES

SatisfiedShareholders

DelightedCustomers

EffectiveProcess

Motivated andPreparedWorkforce

Page 40: What is strategy by Porter