-> REFERS TO: company values, goals, organizational structure, systems and activities, resources and competences.
-> OBJ: Cost and values differentiation and define Strength and Weaknesses;
- Assess the SBU CA concerning Cost and Value.
-> PROSPECTIVE: internal to the company.
-> METHOD:
- Porter’s Value Chain Model.
- Core Resources and Competencies approach.
Value Chain Model:
-> DEF: method to support the internal strategy analysis process;
- Mcheal Porter, Competitve Advantage 1985.
-> IDEA: we don’t have to consider the company as a black box.
⚠S and W are lead by company’s structure.
-> A company’s source of cost/value competitive advantages depend on:
- The overall system of activities (boundary);
- The single significant activities;
- The links between activities.
-> The value chain is referred to a specific SBU.
-> Index:
- Three levels;
- Competitive Advantage:
- Activities;
- Principles;
- Model’s Limitation;
- Generic Strategy.
The Three levels to act:
- Signle activities;
- Links between external and internal activities;
- Overall system of activities (Vertical Integration);
-> Focus on:
- Single Activities:
- Cost Drivern or
- Value Driven;
- Link Between Activities
- System of Activities > Vertical Integration.
-> Going Deeper.
Competitive Advantage:
-> We focus on:
- COST competitive advantage;
- VALUE competitive advantage;
COST competitive advantage:
-> Cost CA and Economic value:
-> Divide in:
- Specific Activities;
- Links Between Activities;
- Overall system of activities;
Specific Activities:
-> CA may depend on the way companies runs the acitivies.
-> Analysis’ steps:
- Identification of activities considered “significant” for what concerns costs:
- High impact on overall costs;
- Different causes;
- Different behaviour of competitors;
- Evalutation of specific activities’ costs, benchmark to competitors.
-> Main problems:
- Cost accounting registrations not consistent;
- Shared activities;
- Identification of the costs’ specific determinants;
-> Each activity has specific cost structure => hence its costs’ determinants may be different⚠
-> Example determinants of costs:
- Economies of scale;
- Economies of learning;
- Degree of saturation of the production capacity;
- Localisation;
- Preferential access to distribution;
- Institutional factors;
- Product/process design;
Links Between Activities:
-> CA depend on the way the company manages the links between:
- its activities (internal links);
- its activities and those of customers and suppliers (external links);
-> Ttechniques as JIT, concurrent engineering and design for manufacturing optimized both internal and external links.
Overall system of activities:
-> CA depends on make or buy choices
VALUE competitive advantage:
-> OBJ: making the product/service unique for the customer.
- Quality: product’s nominal performances, but also effective performances
- Time: both for what concerns delivery time and time to market
- Service: both incorporated with the product or complementary
- Variety/customisation: fullness of the array of products and level of personalisation
- Reputation: both of the firm and of the brand
-> Value CA and Economic Value:
-> It depends on:
- Single activities;
- Links between activities;
- Overall system of activities;
Activities:
- PRIMARY ACTIVITY: create value for the customers, transforming directly the input in output.
- SUPPORT ACTIVITY: have no direct impact in the transformation of the input in output, but they are crosscutting and enabling process.
Principles:
- COMPANY-SPECIFIC MODEL: the VC is specific for the company analyzed;
- INDUSTRY-SPECIFIC: refers to a specific strategic business unit working in a specific BA;
- FLEXIBLE: can be adopted to other services => Primary and Support Activity can be remodel.
-> When remodeling a VC remember that the following features have to be true:
- Extenction Primary and Support Activity;
- Looking for a Cost and Value differential;
- Identify Positive and Negative differenthial throught the three levels of analysis (before discussed);
Model’s Limitations:
-> The VC has some limitations:
❌LIMITATION | ✔SOLUTION |
Manufactoring oridented | Adjusting and costumize the model (for the specific company); |
Linear vision of company’s activities, B2B relationship; | Value network analysis; |
Little focus on international resources and competences; | Resource-based view of the firm; |
Generic Strategies:
-> Micheal Porter propoese an alternative to SWOT: the Generic Compeititive Strategies;
-> They can be distigued by:
- Type of Advantage: Cost Advantage (Efficiency) or Uniqueness & Value (Effectiveness)
- Competitive Scope: Overall Market or Target Segmentation;
-> Cost leadership strategy is the union of the type of advantage and competitive scope.
FOCUS STRATEGY: if we find clusters of customers.
-> Porter trhought that these strategy can not be pursued at the same time.
-> Using the Porter’s Generic Strategies and the Strategic Alternatives we can create the BUSINESS MODEL.
Resource and Competence-Based View:
A critique of Positioning School:
-> Positioning School focus on:
- Spotting most attractive BA (external analysis) and…
- Shaping the right competitive positioning in such BA (internal analysis).
-> However:
- CA does not come only from competitive positioning;
- The focus strategy cannot be placed outside of the company’s boundaries (outside-in approach);
- PS leads to a distorted vision of company’s organizational structure (SBUs are separated and fully devoted to cover BAs, “Tyranny or the SBUs” (Hamel, Prahalad, 1990))
=>
Resource & Competence-Based View
-> DEF: Model that define the company as a unique pool of, tangible or intangible, resources and competences.
- If the resource doesn’t produce enought value for the customers is not a resource.
- The possession of the distinctive assets constitutes the basis of a company’s competitive advantage.
- Alternative for internal analysis;
CORE RESOURCE or COMPETENCE: area of specialiser expertise within the company, resulting from specific the harmonisation of complex technology streams and working activities, and which:
- Offers benefits to custumer;
- Is hardly imitable by competitors;
- You can leverage in a multitude of products and/ or markets.
-> Forms of Valuable Resources:
- Tangible, physical assets;
- Intangible asset;
- Derive from an organizational skill resident in the firm’s routines, processes or culture.
-> Instead of a portfolio of products, a company should seen as portfolio of competencies.
-> Those that (R & C) that influence the achievement of competitive advantage & determine how efficiently and effectively a company carries out its funcional activities.
RCBV Approach > 5 core test:
-> DEF: test to find out if a resource is core or not.
- Collins, Montgomery, 1995):
- Help a company to identify core resources and competencies
- Inimitability: hard to copy, thanks to physical uniqueness, path
dependency, causal ambiguity and economic deterrence
- Durability: slowly depreciating
- Appropriability: creating value that is easily captured by the firm
- Non-substitution: not replaceable by alternative resources satisfying
the same need
- Competitive superiority: performing better than competitors’ resources
-> “Does this resource create an impact value for my customers?”
-> Competences should be in a very high level in company.
-> We can divide in tangible and tangible assets:
Strategic Business Unit vs Core Resource & Competence:
- Positioning School > CA: right strategic positioning of the company and on the chain of activities it performs (POV privilegs external analysis);
- RCBV > CA: stemming from the pool of distinctive core resources and competencies that the company developed, (POV internal analysis);
-> if Positioning School looks within a company’s boundary to identify strengths and weaknesses in the value chain => is looking for core resources and competencies;
-> if RCBV has little significance if deprived of link with external environment > Resources & Competencies can not be assessed if they are isolated.
-> Resource is valuable in a bicen BA and in a given timeframe.
VRIO Analysis
-> DEF: tool to find competitive edge by assessing businesses’ value resources & capabilities.
- value, Rarity, Imitability, Organization are the key success indicators for a business