Handouts

Corporate Strategy and Portfolio Analysis

-> OBJ: manage financial resources allocation to the portfolio of different Strategic Business Unit the overall company is made of.

-> Key Issue:

  1. Analyze and compare the competitive positioning of each business, and of the overall business portfolio;
  2. Suggest strategic orientation to each business (that will be further speified at a Business Strategy Level);
  3. Define criteria and priorities for financial resource allocation to each business (cash generating vs cash absorbing SBU) looking for an overall portfolio’s financial equilibrium.

-> SCOPE:

  • PRODUCT SCOPE -> product range: how specialize how company is in a rage of products;
  • GEOGRAPHICAL SCOPE -> geographical coverage: what is the optimal geographical of spread activities;
  • LEVEL OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION: another scope decision taken from the corporate level.

-> We can chose between:

  • DIVERSIFICATION (hierarchy);
  • BRAND FRANCHISING (market);

Diversification Strategy:

-> DEF: Choice of “hierarchy” that is internalizing a new business within the corporate portfolio.

  • Strategy aimed at entering new business areas which the corporation is not currently serving (and create new SBUs to serve such new business area);

-> Diversification is more favorable than other alternatives (e.g. brand franchising) when:

  • SCOPE ECONOMIES: scale economies applied to a wider range or family of activities performed;
  • 🔺 TRANSACTION COSTs: costs to bear to set up an agreement with the “market”;
History:

-> From the era of diversification (1950-80) to refocusing:

  • Emphasis on shareholders value;
  • Turbolene -> Specialization;
  • Sharing resources and capabilities as real source of advantage;
Creating value:
  • Attractiveness test (industry must be attractive);
  • The Cost-of-Entry test;
  • The betteroff test (is the combination the more profitability?);
🔗 Digital Era:
  • Industry boundariest are growingly fuzzy;
  • More and more business areas may be loosely related.

Portfolio Analysis:

-> The analysis depend on:

  • Business Area Attractiveness;
  • Competitive Positioning of the SBU;

-> It is a synthesis of external and internal strategy analysis.

-> OBJ:

  1. Analyze the competitive advantage coming from the managing of a SBU’s portfolio;
  2. To support the choich of a business portfolio;
  3. To provide some guidelines to SBUs;
  4. To analyze the corporate strategies of competitors;

Correlated VS Non-Correlated Portfolios:

-> Real portfolios are a mix of the two extreme solutions.

-> Type of corporate portfolios:

Correlated Portfolio:Non Correlated Portfolio:
✔ADVANTAGES: Operational Synergies; Sharing of resources and competencies; Similarities in markets and customers; ❌DISAVANTAGES: Higher risk (all markets are similar); High managerial complexity;✔ADVANTAGES: Risk diversification; Bank Effect: using the income from the best activity to finance others; Better use of top human resources; Sharing infrastructural activities; ❌DISAVANTAGES: Organizational complexity (different company need to speak the same languages); Cultural heterogeneity; Few operational heterogeneity; Few operational synergies. -> Levers that corporate managers should use: Operational synergies within correlated portfolios; Financial synergies within non-correlated portfolios (Bank Effect);

Matrixes:

-> Type of Portfolio matrixes:

  • BCG Matrix (Boston Consulting Group);
  • GE-McKinsey Matrix (McKinsey consultancy for General Electric)

-> IDEA: rapresent a diversified company’s BA in a simple graphical model to support Corporate Strategy definition.

Boston Consulting Group (BCG) Matrix:

-> DEF: Describe the portfolion with two factors:

  • BA Attractiveness (Market Growth Rate);
  • Competitive Positioning of the SBU (Relative Markets Share)
  • If > 1 => the SBU is the market leader;
  • If < 1 => the SBU is a follower;

-> HP:

  • Business Area attractiveness can be measured through “Market growth rate”:
    • Price wars are less likely
    • Customer base expands, and offer can catch up with demand
  • SBU competitive positioning can be measured through “Relative market share”:
    • SBU can benefit from cost advantages depending on size (for instance, economies of scale and experience, production capacity saturation, etc.)

-> OBJ:

  • Verify the “bank effect
  • To shape a business portfolio that is well balanced from a financial point of view
  • To define a “virtuous circle” strategy
  • To analyse the strategies of competitors
The Matrix:
Description:

-> Talking about products…

STAR
High market share = High reveue;
MKT grow =  high investments
NCF = 0
QUESTION MARK
Low revenue;
High investmens;
NCF << 0
CASH COW
High revenues (Large customer base);
Low investments (Mkt maturity)
NCF >> 0
DOGGO
Low revenues;
Low investmets;
NCF = 0

products with high growth but low share.

-> They require large amounts of cash to mantain the market share and still larger amounts fo gain share.

  • Ex: Start Up
  • Lot of investment.
  • Not a mature market.

📌TIPS:

  • Think about the number of treshold.

Relative market share = your market share / your largest competitor’s market share.

  • Company’s MKT share = own revenue / industry’s total revenue (over fiscal period).
The Virtuous Circle

-> DEF: is the cycle that a SBU should do, when it’s born is a ?, then should become a star and in the end should be a cash cow… but even a dog :(.

⭐️:hold or buld share;
🐮:“milk” for cash;
❓:Buld Share or Divest;
🐶:Harvest or Divest.

The Balanced Portfolio:

-> All products become cash-cow or dogs!

-> VALUE of product depend upon obtaining the leading share of its market before the growth slows.

-> Balanced Portfolio HAS:

⭐️:🔺 shares & growth assure the future
🐮:That supply funds for that future growth
❓:To be converted into stars
🐶:They need a dedicated strategies!

📌Good Website to made a BCG Matrix.

GE-McKinsey Matrix:

Industry Attractiveness:Business Strenghts:
Weighting 
factor 
Market size 
Growth rate 
Profit margin potentials 
Competitive intensity 
Cyclical or seasonal sales 
Position on learning curve 
Rating 
Score 
(1-10) 
100%
-> On the basis of their relevance, the decision maker associate a weighting factor; -> After, the decision maker assign a rating between 1-10 to each of them; -> In the end calculate the final score multiplying the weighting factor for the rating.-> The SBU with desirable positioning are in the top left part; the one’s with undesirable are in the lower righ. SBU with an in between should be put in the diagonals positions.

⭐️We are not interest in positioning but in reasoning about the company.

PREMIUM INVEST/ GROW: -> 🎯 Investment; -> 💪 Strengths; -> 🔺 Returns on investment & CA; -> Are in the attractive market. -> Should receive financial/managerial support to maintain their strong position and long term profitability.SELECTIVE INVEST/GROW: -> Good Strength in industry loosing its attractiveness; -> Sholud be supported but may be self-supporting in cash flow terms.PROTECTIVE SELECTIVITY/EARNINGS: -> Strong business; -> Unattractive market; -> Cash generator; -> Investment -> keeping business in dominant position. ⚠Don’t over-invest!
CHALLENGE INVEST/GROW: -> Attractive industries; -> Average Strength; -> Invest => long-term competitive positionPRIME SELECTIVITY/EARNINGS: -> Average Strength; -> Creative segmentation and selective investment -> 🔺 position; -> Segment to differentiate and returns.RESTRUCTURED HARVEST/DIVEST: -> Average Sterngth; -> Unactractive MKT; -> Use strategy to prevent defeat and to upset competitors.
OPPORTUNISTIC SELECTIVE/EARNINGS: -> Attractive MKT; -> 🔻 Strength; -> No self-founding; -> Disinvest if business can’t improve strength.OPPORTUNISTIC HARVEST/DISINVEST: -> 🔻 Strength; -> Attractive industries; -> Exit or Disinvest; -> 🔺 MKT shares and business strengths could be expensive and must be donw qith coution.HARVEST/DIVEST: -> 🔻 Strength; -> 🔻 Attractive industry; -> Exited industry; -> Investments only after found exit.

Matrix Comparison:

-> BCG is simple, but simplistic;

-> GE-McKinesy is comprehensie but expensie and subjective (to decision maker).

-> We can combine both the matrix to create a corporate strategy.

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