1 / 15

Operational Effectiveness (OE) is not Strategy ?

Operational Effectiveness (OE) is not Strategy ?. OE and Strategy are both essential to obtain superior performance, but a company can outperform rivals only if it can establish a difference that it can preserve.

reba
Télécharger la présentation

Operational Effectiveness (OE) is not Strategy ?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Operational Effectiveness (OE) is not Strategy ? • OE and Strategy are both essential to obtain superior performance, but a company can outperform rivals only if it can establish a difference that it can preserve. • Managers have been preoccupied with improving operational effectiveness through programs such as: • TQM • Time based competition • Benchmarking Results in the short run: ↓costs + ↑ prices = ↑ profitability

  2. OE is necessary but not sufficient: Weaknesses • Competitors can quickly imitate management techniques, technologies, input improvements and superior ways to meet customer’s needs. • Eg: Japanese companies (1970-1990) enjoyed substantial cost & quality advantages (productivity frontier). Now they need to learn strategy. • Competitive Convergence: The more the rivals outsource activities, the more generic those activities. • Rivals can quickly copy any market position. • Competitive advantage is temporary. • Rivals imitate the improvements in quality, cycle times or supplier partnerships.

  3. OE is necessary but not sufficient: Weaknesses • Gradually, managers have let OE supplant strategy. The results are: • Zero-sum competition • Static or declining prices • Pressure on cost that compromise company’s ability to invest in the business for the long-term

  4. Strategic Positions • The essence of strategy is choosing to perform activities different from rivals. • Strategic positions are often not obvious and finding them requires creativity and insight. • New entrants often discover unique positions that have been available but overlooked by established competitors. • E.g.: IKEA, ,Southwest Airlines

  5. The Origins of Strategic Positions • Companies can obtain strategic position in three ways (not mutually exclusive): • Variety-based positioning • Needs-based positioning • Access-based positioning

  6. Variety-Based Positioning • Based on the choice of product or service varieties rather than customer segments. • This position can serve a wide array of customers but it will primarily will meet only a subset of their needs. • E.g.: The Vanguard Group

  7. Needs- Based Positioning • Based on targeting a segment of customers. • This position is not that obvious if companies consider the difference in needs and the range of activities that should differ between the segments. • E.g.: Edward Jones

  8. Access- Based Positioning • Based on the importance of accessing the product/service. • Access can be a function of customer geography or anything that requires a different set of activities to reach customers in the best way • E.g.: Amazon.com

  9. Positioning & Strategy • Positioning : requires a tailored set of activities (based on variety, needs, access or a combination of them) because it is always a function of DIFFERENCE. • Strategy : is the creation of a unique and valuable position involving a different set of activities. • The essence is to choose activities that are different from rivals.

  10. Important Concepts • Positioning trade-offs are pervasive in competition and essential to strategy. • Trade-offs create the need for choice and purposefully limit what a company offers. • Positioning determines also how activities relate to one another. • Strategy is combining activities. • Competitive advantage comes from the way activities fit and reinforce one another. Strategic fit = competitive advantage + superior profitability

  11. Type of Fits • Create consistency between each activity or function and the overall strategy. • Create activities that are reinforcing. • Optimize efforts with coordination and information exchange to eliminate redundancy and minimize wasted efforts. • Competitive advantage grows out of the entire system of activities. • The fit among activities substantially reduces cost or increase differentiation.

  12. Strategic Position (SP): Fit and Sustainability • Strategic fit among many activities is essential to the sustainability of the competitive advantage. • Positions built on systems of activities are more sustainable than those built in individual activities (OE). • When activities complement one another, rivals will get little benefit from imitation unless they successfully match the whole system.

  13. Strategic Position (SP): Fit and Sustainability • SP sets the trade-off rules that defines how individual activities will be integrated. • SP should have a long-term horizon of a decade or more, not a single planning cycle. • The success of strategy is doing many things well and integrating them among them.

  14. Why many companies do not have a strategy? • Leaders have the idea that making trade-offs is a sign of weakness and do not understand the need of it. • Pursuing OE is easier to attain because is concrete and actionable. • Companies imitate one another assuming that rivals have something they do not. • Trade-offs and limits appear to constrain growth. However, compromise and inconsistencies in the pursue of growth may erode a competitive advantage.

  15. What should companies and leaders do ? • They should reevaluate their strategies and challenge themselves to start over. • They should refocus on the unique core and realign the companies activities with it. • Evaluate the vision of the founder and reexamine the original strategy. • Leaders should be in charge of defining and communicating the company’s unique position, making trade-offs and forging it among activities.

More Related