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Building Competitive Advantage through Functional Level Strategy

Building Competitive Advantage through Functional Level Strategy. Chapter 4. Functional-Level Strategies. Should flow from Business-Level Strategy Strategies aimed at improving the effectiveness of a company’s operations

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Building Competitive Advantage through Functional Level Strategy

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  1. Building Competitive Advantage through Functional Level Strategy Chapter 4

  2. Functional-Level Strategies • Should flow from Business-Level Strategy • Strategies aimed at improving the effectiveness of a company’s operations • Improving a company’s ability to attain superior efficiency, quality, innovation, and customer responsiveness

  3. The Roots of Competitive Advantage

  4. Achieving Superior Efficiency • Economies of scale • Unit cost reductions associated with a large scale of output • Ability to spread fixed costs over a large production volume • Ability of companies producing in large volumes to achieve a greater division of labor and specialization • Diseconomies of scale • Unit cost increases associated with a large scale of output

  5. Economies and Diseconomies of Scale

  6. Achieving Superior Efficiency (cont’d) • Learning effects • Cost savings that come from learning by doing • Labor productivity • Management efficiency • When changes occur in a company’s production system, learning has to begin again

  7. Achieving Superior Efficiency (cont’d) • The experience curve • The systematic lowering of the cost structure and consequent unit cost reductions that occur over the life of a product • Economies of scale and learning effects underlie the experience curve

  8. The Experience Curve

  9. The Impact of Learning and Scale Economies on Unit Costs

  10. Economies of ScaleExperience • Old rule of thumb: Unit cost of production goes down 20% as volume doubles. • Companies have set price to achieve a level of volume and desired unit cost of production; some with success.

  11. Achieving Superior Efficiency (cont’d) • Dangers of complacency with the experience curve • It will bottom out • New technologies can make experience effects obsolete • Some technologies may not produce lower costs with higher volumes of output • Flexible manufacturing technologies may allow small manufacturers to product at low unit costs

  12. Unit Production Costs in an Integrated Mill and Mini-Mill

  13. Achieving Superior Efficiency (cont’d) • Flexible manufacturing (lean production) • Technology that reduces setup times for complex equipment, improves scheduling to increase use of individual machines, and improves quality control • Increases efficiency and lowers unit costs • Mass customization reconciles two goals: low cost and differentiation through product customization

  14. Tradeoff Between Costs and Product Variety

  15. Exercise • Strategy in Action 4.1: Explain what went wrong in Texas Instrument and its reliance on the experience curve. • Strategy in Action 4.2: Explain how Toyota’s lean production system illustrates Figure 4.6.

  16. Achieving Superior Efficiency (cont’d) • Marketing • Marketing strategy: pricing, promotion, advertising, product design, distribution • Reducing customer defection rates and building customer loyalty

  17. The Relationship Between Customer Loyalty and Profit per Customer

  18. Achieving Superior Efficiency (cont’d) • Materials management • Getting inputs and components to a production facility, through the production process, and out through a distribution system to the end user • Just-in-time (JIT) inventory system • Supply chain management

  19. Achieving Superior Efficiency (cont’d) • R&D strategy • Designing products that are easy to manufacture • Process innovations

  20. Achieving Superior Efficiency (cont’d) • Human resource strategy: employee productivity • Hiring • Training • Self-Managing Teams • Pay for Performance

  21. Achieving Superior Efficiency (cont’d) • Information systems and the Internet • Automating interactions between • Company and customers • Company and suppliers • Infrastructure • Company structure, culture, style of strategic leadership, and control system determine context of all value creation activities

  22. Primary Roles of Value Creation Functions in Achieving Superior Efficiency

  23. Achieving Superior Quality • Attaining superior reliability • Total quality management (TQM) • Improved quality means that costs decrease • As a result, productivity improves • Better quality leads to higher market share and allows increased prices • This increases profitability • More jobs are created

  24. Steps in a TQM Program • Have a clear business model • Mistakes and defects should be unacceptable • Supervision should be improved • Employees should not be fearful of reporting problem or making suggestions • Work standards should include quality • Employees should be trained in new skills • Better quality requires company-wide commitment

  25. The Role Played by Different Functions in Implementing TQM

  26. Implementing Reliability Improvement Methodologies • Build organizational commitment to quality • Focus on the customer • Find ways to measure quality • Set goals and create incentives • Solicit input from employees • Identify defects and trace them to source • Work with suppliers • Design for ease of manufacture • Break down barriers among functions

  27. Attributes Associated with a Product Offering

  28. Achieving Superior Quality (cont’d) • Developing Superior Attributes • Learn which attributes are most important to customers • Design products and associate services to embody the important attributes • Decide which attributes to promote and how best to position them in consumers’ minds • Monitor competition for improvement in attributes and development of new attributes

  29. Achieving Superior Innovation • Innovation can • Result in new products that better satisfy customer needs • Improve the quality of existing products • Reduce costs • Innovation can be imitated so it must be continuous • Successful new product launches are major drivers of superior profitability

  30. The High Failure Rate of Innovation • Uncertainty • Quantum innovation vs. incremental innovation • Poor commercialization • Poor positioning strategy • Technological Myopia • Slow to Market

  31. Achieving Superior Innovation (cont’d) • Building Competencies in Innovation • Building skills in basic and applied research • Project selection and management

  32. The Development Funnel

  33. Achieving Superior Innovation (cont’d) • Building Competencies in Innovation (cont’d) • Cross-functional integration • Product development teams • Partly parallel development processes

  34. Sequential and Partly Parallel Development Processes

  35. Function Roles for Achieving Superior Innovation

  36. Achieving Superior Responsiveness to Customers • Customer focus • Leadership • Employee attitudes • Bringing customers into the company • Satisfying customer needs • Customization • Response time

  37. The Primary Role of Different Functions in Achieving Superior Responsiveness to Customers

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