Internal Organization Analysis Junichi Yamanoi 5/31/11 Chuo University
Transcription
Internal Organization Analysis Junichi Yamanoi 5/31/11 Chuo University
Internal Organization Analysis Junichi Yamanoi 5/31/11 Chuo University Special Lecture (Strategy, Policy, and Planning) Why do we analyze internal organizations? • According to the five forces model, five forces surrounding an industry determine industry attractiveness. • Check Walmart’s performance and compare it with competitors’ performance. • General merchandize industry: -Competitive rivalry: High because firms sell similar products and compete based on price. -Buyers’ bargaining power: High because buyers can easily switch to other stores. Even in the same industry, profitability varies among firms. Why?Resources and capabilities. Walmart: Supply chain management, distribution channels, market power, etc…. Resource-Based Model • The likelihood of achieving competitive advantage increases when it is based on resources, capabilities, and core competences. • Resources and capabilities are heterogeneous not homogenous across firms. • By analyzing resources and capabilities of a firm, the firm can identify what it can do. • Not all resources or capabilities provide sustainable competitive advantage for firms. Four criteria for sustainable competitive advantage: Valuable, rare, inimitable (costly-to-imitate), and nonsubstitutable. What Are Resources? • Inputs into a firm’s production process. • Resources are the source of a firm’s capabilities. • Tangible resources: Assets that can be observed and quantified. • Intangible resources: Assets that are rooted deeply in the firm’s history, accumulate over time, and are relatively difficult for competitors to analyze and imitate. Tangible Resources • Financial Resources: -The firm’s borrowing capacity -The firm’s ability to generate internal funds • Organizational Resources -The firm’s formal reporting structure and its formal planning, controlling, and coordinating systems • Physical Resources -Sophistication and location of a firm’s plant and equipment -Access to raw materials • Technological Resources -Stock of technology, such as patents, trademarks, copyrights, and trade secrets Intangible Resources • Human Resources -Knowledge -Trust -Managerial capabilities -Organizational routines • Innovation Resources -Ideas -Scientific capabilities -Capacity to innovate • Reputational Resources -Reputation with customers -Brand name -Perceptions of product quality, durability, and reliability -Reputation with suppliers -For efficient, effective, supportive, and mutually beneficial interactions and relationships What Are Capabilities? • Capabilities represent the capacity to deploy resources that have been purposely integrated to achieve a desired end state. • Capabilities emerge over time through complex interactions among tangible and intangible resources. • Capabilities are often developed in specific functional areas. Examples of Capabilities (p.81) • Distribution -Effective use of logistics management techniques • Human resources -Motivating, empowering, and retaining employees • Management Information Systems -Effective and efficient control of inventories through point-of-purchase data collection methods • Marketing -Effective promotion of brand-name products, Effective customer service, Innovative merchandising • Management -Ability to envision the future of clothing, Effective organizational structure • Manufacturing -Design and production skills yielding reliable products, Product and design quality, Miniaturization of components and products • Research & Development -Innovative technology -Development of sophisticated control systems -Rapid transformation of technology into new products and processes -Digital technology Core Competencies • Core competencies: Capabilities that serve as a source of competitive advantage for a firm over its rivals. • Core competencies distinguish a firm from its rivals in competition. • Next Question: What capabilities can be core competencies? Valuable, rare, costly-to-imitate, and nonsubstitutable capabilities. Valuable and Rare Resources and Capabilities • Valuable resources and capabilities: Resources and capabilities that allow the firm to exploit opportunities or neutralize threats in its external environment. • Rare resources and capabilities: Resources and capabilities that are possessed by few competitors. • If a resource or capability is not valuable, it is a source of competitive disadvantage. • If a resource or capability is only valuable (but not rare), it is a source of competitive parity. • If a resource or capability is valuable and rare, it is a source of temporary competitive advantage. Costly-to-Imitate Resource and Capabilities • Costly-to-imitate resources and capabilities: resources and capabilities that other firms cannot easily imitate. • Resources and capabilities are inimitable because of… 1. a firm’s unique historical condition, -A unique and a valuable organizational culture or brand name, etc. 2. ambiguous causality between resources and capabilities and competitive advantage, and -Management by charismatic managers, R&D management, etc. 3. social complexity. -Interpersonal relationships, trust, and friendship among managers, suppliers, and customers. • If a resource or capability is inimitable, the competitive advantage derived from the capability would be sustainable. Non-substitutable resources and capabilities • Non-substitutable resources and capabilities: resources and capabilities that do not have strategic equivalents. • If competitors find a substitute of a firm’s valuable and rare resource or capability, its competitive advantage will disappear. • If a resource or capability is non-substitutable, the competitive advantage derived from the resource or capability would be sustainable. Outcomes from Combinations of the Four Criteria (p.85) Competitive Consequences Performance Implications No No No No Competitive Disadvantage Below Average Returns Yes No No Yes/ No Competitive Parity Average Returns Yes Yes No Yes/ No Temporary Competitive Advantage Above Average to Average Returns Yes Yes Yes Yes Sustainable Competitive Advantage Above Average Returns Group work • Let’s analyze the resources and capabilities of a company (How about Starbucks?). 1. Please name one resource or capability of the company. 2. Is the resource/capability you chose valuable? Is it rare? Compare the resources and capabilities with those of its competitors. 3. Is the resource/capability costly-to-imitate? Is it nonsubstitutable? Why? 4. In total, is the resource/capability a source of competitive advantage? If so, is it temporary or sustainable? Value Chain Analysis • Value chain: A template that firms use… - to analyze their cost positions, and -to identify multiple means that might be used to facilitate implementation of a chosen business-level strategy. • To be a source of competitive advantage, a resource or capability must allow the firm: ▫ To perform an activity in a manner that is superior to the way competitors perform it, or ▫ To perform a value-creating activity that competitors cannot perform. Value Chain Analysis Support Activities Firm Infrastructure Technological Development Human Resource Management Service Marketing & Sales Logistics Outbound Operations Logistics Inbound Procurement Primary Activities Primary and Support Activities • Primary activities involved with: -A product’s physical creation -A product’s sale and distribution to customers -The product’s service after the sale • Support activities provide the assistance necessary for the primary activities to take place. Primary Activities • Inbound Logistics -Activities used to receive, store, and disseminate inputs to a product. • Operations -Activities necessary to convert the inputs provided by inbound logistics into final product form. • Outbound Logistics -Activities involved with collecting, storing, and physically distributing the product to customers. • Marketing and Sales -Activities completed to provide the means through which customers can purchase products and to induce them to do so. • Service -Activities designed to enhance or maintain a product’s value. Support Activities • Procurement -Activities completed to purchase the inputs needed to produce a firm’s products. • Technological Development -Activities completed to improve a firm’s product and the processes used to manufacture it. • Human Resource Management -Activities involved with recruiting, hiring, training, developing, and compensating all personnel. • Firm Infrastructure -Activities that support the work of the entire value chain (general management, planning, finance, accounting, legal, government relations, etc.) Summary • By analyzing a firm’s resources and capabilities, the firm can identify what it can do (By analyzing a firm’s external environment, the firm can identify what it might choose to do). • Four criteria for sustainable competitive advantage: Valuable, rare, costly-to-imitate, and non-substitutable. Sample Questions for Writing Assignments • Please choose a firm and define its industry. Compared with the firm’s competitors in the same industry, is the firm’s profitability high or low? Please analyze the firm’s resources and capabilities and explain why the firm’s performance is high/low based on the resource-based model. • Please choose two highly profitable firms in the same industry. Please identify and analyze their core competencies. Do they have similar/different core competencies? Do you think that their high performance is sustainable? Why or why not? Sample Questions for Writing Assignments • Please analyze the value chain of a firm that you choose. What activity of the value chain the most creates the value? Compared with the firm’s competitors, is the activity rare, costly to imitate, and non-substitutable?