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STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
2
MEANING & DEFINITION
 Strategic Management can be defined as “the
art and science of formulating, implementing
and evaluating cross-functional decisions that
enable an organization to achieve its objective.”
 Definition:
“The on-going process of formulating,
implementing and controlling broad plans guide
the organization in achieving the strategic
goods given its internal and external
environment”.
COMPARISON
STRATEGIC TACTICAL OPERATIONAL
Long range Intermediate Short range
3 or more yrs 2-3 yrs One yr
Top mgt Middle Lower
Broad objectives Integration of departments Day to day working
Focus on planning &
forecasting
On co-ordination On control
Levels of Strategy
 Corporate –Level
 Business-Level
 Functional -Level
BUSINESS POLICY
Business policy provides a basic
framework defining fundamental issues of a
company, its purpose, mission and broad
business objectives and a set of guideline
governing the company's conduct of
business within its total perspective.
 Overall Guide
 Focus on strategic allocation of scarce resources
Types of Policies
MAJOR POLICIES:
 Lines of business
 Code of ethics
SECONDARY POLICIES:
 Selection of geographic area
 Identification of major customers
 Major products
Types of Policies
FUNCTIONAL POLICIES:
 Production
 Marketing
 Finance
 Personnel
 Research
RULES:
 Salary & wage Adm.
 Discipline& discharge
 Welfare Adm
 Safety & health
Strategy Vs Policy
STRATEGY POLICY
Strategic decisions Guidelines
Putting a policy into
effect
General course of action
Deals with crucial
decisions, requires top
mgt involvement.
Once formulated can be
delegated to lower levels
STRATEGIC
MANAGEMENT PROCESS
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT PROCESS
SMP
1. Vision formulation which leads to the
statement of the Mission.
2. The mission is then converted into
performance Objectives
3. To achieve objectives you develop
Strategies
4. Strategy Implementation
5. Evaluation of performance
Purpose of SMP
 CORE COMPETENCE
 SYNERGY
 VALUE Creation
CORE COMPETENCE
 An organization’s core competence
is something it does exceptionally
well in comparison to its
competitors. It reflects a distinct
competitive advantage like superior
research, development etc..
SYNERGY
 Two or more sub systems working
together to produce more than the
total of what might they produce
working alone.
 Ex:1+1=3
VALUE CREATION
 Exploiting core competencies and
achieving synergy help organizations
create value for customers. Value is
the sum total of benefits received and
cost paid by the customer.
Steps in SMP
 Vision, Mission, Objectives
 External Analysis
 Internal analysis
STRATEGIC INTENT
Vision,Mission,Objectives
 Strategic intent is about clarity, focus
and inspiration.
VISION
MISSION
OBJECTIVES
GOALS
PLANS
VISION
 Corporate vision is a short and inspiring
statement of what the organization intends
to become and to achieve at some point in
the future, often stated in competitive terms.
 Vision refers to the category of intentions
that are broad, all-inclusive and forward-
thinking. It is the image that a business
must have of its goals before it sets out to
reach them.
 It describes aspirations for the future,
without specifying the means that will be
used to achieve those desired ends .
Mission
 Mission Statement describes what business you’re
in and who your customer is. As such, it captures
the very essence of your enterprise - its
relationship with its customer.
 Developing mission statement is the step which
moves your strategic planning process from the
present to the future.
 It depicts the mission statement connects “today”
with the “future.” Your mission statement must
“work” not only today but for the intended life of
your strategic plan of which your mission statement
is a part.
 If you’re developing a five year strategic plan, for
example, you develop a mission statement which
you believe will “work” for the next five years.
Values
 For any statement, whether mission or
vision, to be embraced and acted upon, it
must reflect the values of your organization.
 Values describe what your management
team really cares about. How would your
managers respond to a trade-off between
product quality and profit? That’s really a
question of value.
Corporate Goals & Objectives
Role of Objectives:
1. Legitimacy
2. Direction
3. Coordination
4. Benchmarks for success
5. Motivation
Characteristics of obj;
 Obj. form a HIRERACY
 Network
 Multiplicity of Obj
 Long and short-range obj
ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS
 Environment may be defined as the set of external
factors such as economic, socio cultural, Govt. &
legal, demographic, which are uncontrollable in
nature & affect the business decisions of a firm or
company.
1) Micro Environment
2) Macro Environment
 Micro Environment-
1) Supplier
2) Customers-industrial, retailers, wholesalers, Govt.,
foreigners
3) Market intermediates- middlemen, physical
distribution firms, marketing service agencies, and
financial intermediaries
4. Competitors-
 Desire competitions – limited disposable income many
unsatisfied desires T.V./washing machine/ investment
 Generic competition-among alternatives which satisfied
particular category of desire- Investment in
U.T.I./P.O./Bank/Any other.
 Product form competition- Washing machine, semi/
automotive
 Brand competition- Videocon/godrej
5. Public –
 media
 citizen action public
 local public
 Macro Environment -uncontrollable
1. Economic Environment
 Eco. Conditions- business cycle, growth of economy, size
of domestic Market & its dynamic effect
 Eco. Policies- budgets, industrial regulations, eco
planning, import & export regulations, business laws, ,
industrial policy, control on price & wages, trade &
transport policy, size of national income, demand &
supply of various goods
 Economic System—of a country
 free enterprise i.e. capitalist
 socialist
 communist
 mixed
2. Political & Govt. Environment. -
 Legislature- decide particularly
course of action
 Executive -implementation
 Judiciary -to see above both
working public interest.
3. Socio Cultural Environment-
people attitude to work & health, role
of family, marriage, religion &
education, ethical issues, social
responsibilities of business
4. Natural Environment- geographical
& ecological factors- natural
resources endowments, weather &
climatic conditions, topographical
factors, locational aspects, port
facilities
5. Demographic Environment. - Size
growth age composition of
population, family size, economic
stratification of population,
educational level, caste religion etc.
6. Technological Environment-
marketing, innovation, R & D
7. International Environment-
liberation force of view global
perspectives
Environmental Scanning:
 It helps every mgt in attaining maximum
profits and growth and the same time helps
in minimization of future threats.
Environment analysis has 3 basic objectives
 Under taking of current & potential changes
 Should provide inputs for strategic decision
making
 Rich source of idea & understanding of the
context, bring fresh views
Environmental Analysis-
Scanning
general supervision of all env. Factors & their
interaction in order
1. to identify early signals of change,
2. Detect env. Changes underway
Monitoring
tracking the env. Trends sequences of events or
stream of activities. Study of Indicators,
assemble data to discern emerging patterns.
Three outcomes emerges in monitoring
1. A specific description of env. trends
2. Identification of trends
3. Identification of areas of further scans
Forecasting - scanning & monitoring
provide a picture of what is
happening strategic decision
Making requires future orientation.
Forecasting is developing future
projections of changes
Assessment - outputs of above 3 steps
are assessed to determine
implementation. Assessment
involves identifying & evaluate how
& why current & projected env.
Changes affect strategic Mgt. Of the
organization
Techniques of Environment Analysis
 SWOT Analysis, strengths, weakness, opportunities, & threats.
 Forecasting methods
 Time services analysis & projection-moving averages, exponential
smoothing book Jenkins, trend projection.
 Casual Methods- regression model, econometric model, anticipation
surveys, input output model, diffusion index, leading indicators, life
cycle analysis.
 Qualitative Method-Delphi method, market research, panel
consensus, visionary forecast, historical analogy.
 Scenario technique- preparation of background, selection of critical
indicators, establishing past behavior of indicators, verification of
potential future events, forecasting the indicators, writing of scenario.
 Preparation of ETOP-environmental threat & opportunity profile is a
summary of environmental factors. It is a structured way. Assessing
Importance of environmental factors, assessing impact factor
combining importance & impact factor.
Environmental Scanning &
Monitoring
•Environmental scanning is a concept from
business management by which
businesses gather information from the
environment, to better achieve a
sustainable competitive advantage.
•To sustain competitive advantage the
company must also respond to the
information gathered from environmental
scanning by altering its strategies and
plans when the need arises.
Environmental Scanning &
Monitoring- Techniques
SWOT
Industry Analysis
Techniques
Competitor
Analysis
PEST QUEST
SWOT
(Strength-Weakness-Opportunity-Threat)
Identification of threats and
Opportunities in the environment
(External) and strengths and
Weaknesses of the firm (Internal) is the
cornerstone of business policy
formulation; these factors which
determine the course of action to
ensure the survival and growth of the
firm.
What is “PEST”?
PEST Analysis – The Meaning
 A PEST analysis is an analysis of the external macro-
environment that affects all firms.
 P.E.S.T. is an acronym for the Political, Economic,
Social, and Technological factors of the external
macro-environment.
 Such external factors usually are beyond the firm's
control and sometimes present themselves as threats.
 However, changes in the external environment also
create new opportunities.
A. Industry Life Cycle Analysis
B. Study of the structure and
characteristics of an Industry
C. Profit Potential of Industry (Porter
Model)
Industry Analysis: Three sections
A. Industry Life Cycle Analysis
Four Stages:
 Pioneering Stage
 Rapid Growth Stage
 Maturity and Stabilization Stage
 Decline Stage
B. Study of the structure and
characteristics of an Industry
1. Structure of the Industry and nature of
Competition
2. Nature and Prospectus of the demand
3. Cost, Efficiency and Profitability
4. Technology and Research
Michael Porter has argued that the profit
potential of an industry depends on the
combined strength of the:
1. Threat of new entrant
2. Rivalry among existing firms
3. Pressure from substitute products
4. Bargaining power of buyers
5. Bargaining power of sellers
3. Profit Potential of Industry (Porter
Model)
INTERNAL ANALYSIS
 SWOT analysis
 Value chain Analysis
 Financial Analysis
 Key factor rating
 Functional area profile
 Strategic advantage profile
Internal Analysis
Resource-Based View
 Firms have heterogeneous resources and capabilities.
 By exploiting core competencies, firms can develop value-creating
strategies superior to their competitors.
 Four criteria must be met for a sustained competitive advantage.
Valuable
Costly to imitate
Rare
Non-substitutable
Internal Analysis
Resources
• Tangible
• Intangible
• Brand Equity
Capabilities
Core
Competencies
Competitive
Advantage
Above-Average
Returns
Components of the Resource- Based
View
Internal Analysis
Resources and Capabilities:
 Resources
• Represent what the firm has to work with.
• Resources must be combined to establish a capability.
• Types:
• Tangible
• Intangible
• Brand Equity
Internal Analysis
Tangible Resources – Assets that can be seen, touched or quantified.
- Financial resources (borrowing capacity)
- Physical Resources (facilities, locations)
- Organizational structure (reporting structures)
- Technological (patents)
Intangible Resources
- Human resources (experience, training)
- Resources for innovation (technical employees, facilities)
- Reputation
Brand Equity
- Brand name
- maintaining brand equity (Mercedes example – value/performance
and Japanese automakers)
Portfolio Analysis
And
BCG Matrix
The Growth Share Matrix
 It evaluates the strength of a firm from the portfolio
of businesses or products the firm has in different
stages of PLC, which are required for future growth.
 It analyses the impact of investing resources in
different SBUs on the corporate’s future earnings
and cash flow.
SBUs are evaluated from two ways
1. Industry attractiveness
(market growth)
And
2. Competitive strength
(relative market share)
The Growth Share Matrix
A Matrix is created considering the market
growth and relative market share of all the
businesses in their respective industries
and businesses are placed in that matrix for
analysis and evaluation.
The Growth Share Matrix
 The market growth rate on the vertical axis is
the proxy measure for the industry
Attractiveness.
 The relative market share is proxy for its
competitive strength in the industry.
BCG Growth-Share Matrix
In BCG approach, the company classifies
all its SBUs into 4 types as
“star”,
“cash cow”,
“question mark”
and
“dog”
according to their market growth and
relative market share.
The BCG Matrix
Source: Perspectives, No. 66, “The Product Portfolio,” Adapted by permission from The Boston Consulting Group, Inc., 1970.
Relative market share
Cash cows Dogs
High
Low
Question
marks
Stars
Marketgrowthrate
Cash cows Dogs
High
High Low
Question
marks
Stars
High
Low
Low
$
?
Stars
Cash Cows Dogs
Problem Child
Relative market share
MarketgrowthrateMarketgrowthrate
Relative market share
Marketgrowthrate
BCG Matrix
Stars
Cash Cows Dogs
Problem Child
Relative market share
MarketgrowthrateMarketgrowthrate
Relative market share
Marketgrowthrate
BCG Matrix
Revenue ++++
Expenses _ _ _
Net +
Revenue +
Expenses _ _ _ _
Net _ _ _
Revenue + + + + +
Expenses _
Net + + + +
Revenue + +
Expenses _ _ _ _
Net _ _ _
BCG Market Share/Market Growth Matrix
BCG Matrix
 Dogs are businesses that have a very small
share of a market that is not expected to
grow.
 Cash cows are businesses that have a
large share of a market that is not expected
to grow substantially.
 Question marks are businesses that have
only a small share of a quickly growing
market.
 Stars are businesses that have the largest
share of a rapidly growing market.
Stars
are high-growth, high-share businesses or
products. They often need heavy
investment to finance their rapid growth.
Therefore, they may not be producing a
positive cash flow. The business strategy
will generally be for growth fueled by
externally acquired capital. Eventually,
their growth will slow, and they will turn into
cash cows.
Cash cows
are low-growth, high-share businesses or
products. These established and successful
SBUs need less investment to keep their
market share. They produce a lot of cash to
be used for other business units of the
company. They are either milked for
investment in stars or question marks or
harvested if there is little optimism for a
stable future.
Question marks
sometimes called problem children, are low-
share business units in high-growth markets.
They need a lot of cash to keep and increase
their share; they can not generate enough
cash themselves. Management must decide
which question mark it should build into stars
and which should phase out.
Dogs
are low-growth, low-share businesses and
products. They often have poor
profitability. Therefore, the business
strategy for a dog is most often to divest,
but occasionally to hold for possible
strategic repositioning as a question mark
or cash cow.
Portfolio Strategies
Four
Portfolio
Strategies
BUILD
Does the SBU have the potential to be a star?
HOLD
Can you maintain and preserve market share?
DIVEST
Is it appropriate to dump SBU’s
with low-growth potential?
.HARVEST
Increase the short-term return without
impacting long-run prospects.
Limitations of the BCG Matrix
1. Market Growth rate is an inadequate descriptor of
overall industry attractiveness.
2. Relative market share is inadequate as a descriptor of
overall competitive strength.
3. The analysis is highly sensitive to how growth and
share are measured.
4. It provide little guidance on how best to implement the
investment strategies.
5. The model implicitly assumes that business units are
independent or one another except for the flow of cash.
How to Identify SBUs?
 It is the basic competitive unit of a company.
 It has a specific and identifiable group of
customers.
 It has specific and identifiable competitors.
 It can be measured as an independent entity in
terms of profit and loss.
 Therefore, it may require a separate marketing
strategy.
GE / McKinsey Matrix
 In consulting engagements with General
Electric in the 1970's, McKinsey &
Company developed a nine-cell portfolio
matrix as a tool for screening GE's large
portfolio of strategic business units (SBU).
This business screen became known as the
GE/McKinsey Matrix and is shown below:
 The GE matrix has nine cells vs. four cells
in the BCG matrix. 
 The GE / McKinsey matrix is similar to the BCG
growth-share matrix in that it maps strategic
business units on a grid of the industry and the
SBU's position in the industry. The GE matrix
however, attempts to improve upon the BCG
matrix in the following two ways:
  The GE matrix generalizes the axes as
"Industry Attractiveness" and "Business Unit
Strength" whereas the BCG matrix uses the
market growth rate as a proxy for industry
attractiveness and relative market share as a
proxy for the strength of the business unit.
 The vertical axis of the GE / McKinsey matrix is
industry attractiveness, which is determined by
factors such as the following:
 Market growth rate
 Market size
 Demand variability
 Industry profitability
 Industry rivalry
 Global opportunities
 Macroenvironmental factors (PEST)
Industry Attractiveness
Each factor is assigned a weighting
that is appropriate for the industry.
The industry attractiveness then is
calculated as follows:
The horizontal axis of the GE / McKinsey matrix is the strength of
the business unit. Some factors that can be used to determine
business unit strength include:
Market share
Growth in market share
Brand equity
Distribution channel access
Production capacity
Profit margins relative to competitors
The business unit strength index can be calculated by multiplying the estimated
value of each factor by the factor's weighting, as done for industry attractiveness.
Business Unit Strength
Industry attractiveness and business unit strength
are calculated by first identifying criteria for each,
determining the value of each parameter in the
criteria, and multiplying that value by a weighting
factor. The result is a quantitative measure of
industry attractiveness and the business unit's
relative performance in that industry
Industry attractiveness =
factor value1 x factor weighting1
+ factor value2 x factor weighting2+…
GE MATRIX contd..
Each business unit can be portrayed as a circle
plotted on the matrix, with the information
conveyed as follows:
Market size is represented by the size of the
circle.
Market share is shown by using the circle as a pie
chart.
The expected future position of the circle is
portrayed by means of an arrow.
Plotting the Information
The shading of the above circle indicates a 38%
market share for the strategic business unit. The
arrow in the upward left direction indicates that
the business unit is projected to gain strength
relative to competitors, and that the business unit
is in an industry that is projected to become more
attractive. The tip of the arrow indicates the future
position of the center point of the circle.
The following is an example of such a representation:
Resource allocation recommendations can be made to grow,
hold, or harvest a strategic business unit based on its position
on the matrix as follows:
 Grow strong business units in attractive industries,
average business units in attractive industries, and strong
business units in average industries.
 Hold average businesses in average industries, strong
businesses in weak industries, and weak business in
attractive industries.
Strategic Implications
 Harvest weak business units in unattractive
industries, average business units in unattractive
industries, and weak business units in average
industries.
There are strategy variations within these three
groups. For example, within the harvest group
the firm would be inclined to quickly divest itself
of a weak business in an unattractive industry,
whereas it might perform a phased harvest of an
average business unit in the same industry.
LIMITATION GE
 While the GE business screen represents
an improvement over the more simple BCG
growth-share matrix, it still presents a
somewhat limited view by not considering
interactions among the business units and
by neglecting to address the core
competencies leading to value creation.
Rather than serving as the primary tool for
resource allocation, portfolio matrices are
better suited to displaying a quick synopsis
of the strategic business units.
GE Mckinsey Matrix
HOLDLow
AVERAGE
High
WEAKAVERA
GE
STR
- ONG
Bus Str
Ind at
GROW
HOLD
HARVEST

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Strategic Management Unit I&II

  • 2. 2 MEANING & DEFINITION  Strategic Management can be defined as “the art and science of formulating, implementing and evaluating cross-functional decisions that enable an organization to achieve its objective.”  Definition: “The on-going process of formulating, implementing and controlling broad plans guide the organization in achieving the strategic goods given its internal and external environment”.
  • 3. COMPARISON STRATEGIC TACTICAL OPERATIONAL Long range Intermediate Short range 3 or more yrs 2-3 yrs One yr Top mgt Middle Lower Broad objectives Integration of departments Day to day working Focus on planning & forecasting On co-ordination On control
  • 4. Levels of Strategy  Corporate –Level  Business-Level  Functional -Level
  • 5. BUSINESS POLICY Business policy provides a basic framework defining fundamental issues of a company, its purpose, mission and broad business objectives and a set of guideline governing the company's conduct of business within its total perspective.  Overall Guide  Focus on strategic allocation of scarce resources
  • 6. Types of Policies MAJOR POLICIES:  Lines of business  Code of ethics SECONDARY POLICIES:  Selection of geographic area  Identification of major customers  Major products
  • 7. Types of Policies FUNCTIONAL POLICIES:  Production  Marketing  Finance  Personnel  Research RULES:  Salary & wage Adm.  Discipline& discharge  Welfare Adm  Safety & health
  • 8. Strategy Vs Policy STRATEGY POLICY Strategic decisions Guidelines Putting a policy into effect General course of action Deals with crucial decisions, requires top mgt involvement. Once formulated can be delegated to lower levels
  • 10. STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT PROCESS SMP 1. Vision formulation which leads to the statement of the Mission. 2. The mission is then converted into performance Objectives 3. To achieve objectives you develop Strategies 4. Strategy Implementation 5. Evaluation of performance
  • 11. Purpose of SMP  CORE COMPETENCE  SYNERGY  VALUE Creation
  • 12. CORE COMPETENCE  An organization’s core competence is something it does exceptionally well in comparison to its competitors. It reflects a distinct competitive advantage like superior research, development etc..
  • 13. SYNERGY  Two or more sub systems working together to produce more than the total of what might they produce working alone.  Ex:1+1=3
  • 14. VALUE CREATION  Exploiting core competencies and achieving synergy help organizations create value for customers. Value is the sum total of benefits received and cost paid by the customer.
  • 15. Steps in SMP  Vision, Mission, Objectives  External Analysis  Internal analysis
  • 17.  Strategic intent is about clarity, focus and inspiration. VISION MISSION OBJECTIVES GOALS PLANS
  • 18. VISION  Corporate vision is a short and inspiring statement of what the organization intends to become and to achieve at some point in the future, often stated in competitive terms.  Vision refers to the category of intentions that are broad, all-inclusive and forward- thinking. It is the image that a business must have of its goals before it sets out to reach them.  It describes aspirations for the future, without specifying the means that will be used to achieve those desired ends .
  • 19. Mission  Mission Statement describes what business you’re in and who your customer is. As such, it captures the very essence of your enterprise - its relationship with its customer.  Developing mission statement is the step which moves your strategic planning process from the present to the future.  It depicts the mission statement connects “today” with the “future.” Your mission statement must “work” not only today but for the intended life of your strategic plan of which your mission statement is a part.  If you’re developing a five year strategic plan, for example, you develop a mission statement which you believe will “work” for the next five years.
  • 20. Values  For any statement, whether mission or vision, to be embraced and acted upon, it must reflect the values of your organization.  Values describe what your management team really cares about. How would your managers respond to a trade-off between product quality and profit? That’s really a question of value.
  • 21. Corporate Goals & Objectives Role of Objectives: 1. Legitimacy 2. Direction 3. Coordination 4. Benchmarks for success 5. Motivation
  • 22. Characteristics of obj;  Obj. form a HIRERACY  Network  Multiplicity of Obj  Long and short-range obj
  • 24.  Environment may be defined as the set of external factors such as economic, socio cultural, Govt. & legal, demographic, which are uncontrollable in nature & affect the business decisions of a firm or company. 1) Micro Environment 2) Macro Environment  Micro Environment- 1) Supplier 2) Customers-industrial, retailers, wholesalers, Govt., foreigners 3) Market intermediates- middlemen, physical distribution firms, marketing service agencies, and financial intermediaries
  • 25. 4. Competitors-  Desire competitions – limited disposable income many unsatisfied desires T.V./washing machine/ investment  Generic competition-among alternatives which satisfied particular category of desire- Investment in U.T.I./P.O./Bank/Any other.  Product form competition- Washing machine, semi/ automotive  Brand competition- Videocon/godrej 5. Public –  media  citizen action public  local public
  • 26.  Macro Environment -uncontrollable 1. Economic Environment  Eco. Conditions- business cycle, growth of economy, size of domestic Market & its dynamic effect  Eco. Policies- budgets, industrial regulations, eco planning, import & export regulations, business laws, , industrial policy, control on price & wages, trade & transport policy, size of national income, demand & supply of various goods  Economic System—of a country  free enterprise i.e. capitalist  socialist  communist  mixed
  • 27. 2. Political & Govt. Environment. -  Legislature- decide particularly course of action  Executive -implementation  Judiciary -to see above both working public interest.
  • 28. 3. Socio Cultural Environment- people attitude to work & health, role of family, marriage, religion & education, ethical issues, social responsibilities of business 4. Natural Environment- geographical & ecological factors- natural resources endowments, weather & climatic conditions, topographical factors, locational aspects, port facilities
  • 29. 5. Demographic Environment. - Size growth age composition of population, family size, economic stratification of population, educational level, caste religion etc. 6. Technological Environment- marketing, innovation, R & D 7. International Environment- liberation force of view global perspectives
  • 30. Environmental Scanning:  It helps every mgt in attaining maximum profits and growth and the same time helps in minimization of future threats. Environment analysis has 3 basic objectives  Under taking of current & potential changes  Should provide inputs for strategic decision making  Rich source of idea & understanding of the context, bring fresh views
  • 31. Environmental Analysis- Scanning general supervision of all env. Factors & their interaction in order 1. to identify early signals of change, 2. Detect env. Changes underway Monitoring tracking the env. Trends sequences of events or stream of activities. Study of Indicators, assemble data to discern emerging patterns. Three outcomes emerges in monitoring 1. A specific description of env. trends 2. Identification of trends 3. Identification of areas of further scans
  • 32. Forecasting - scanning & monitoring provide a picture of what is happening strategic decision Making requires future orientation. Forecasting is developing future projections of changes Assessment - outputs of above 3 steps are assessed to determine implementation. Assessment involves identifying & evaluate how & why current & projected env. Changes affect strategic Mgt. Of the organization
  • 33. Techniques of Environment Analysis  SWOT Analysis, strengths, weakness, opportunities, & threats.  Forecasting methods  Time services analysis & projection-moving averages, exponential smoothing book Jenkins, trend projection.  Casual Methods- regression model, econometric model, anticipation surveys, input output model, diffusion index, leading indicators, life cycle analysis.  Qualitative Method-Delphi method, market research, panel consensus, visionary forecast, historical analogy.  Scenario technique- preparation of background, selection of critical indicators, establishing past behavior of indicators, verification of potential future events, forecasting the indicators, writing of scenario.  Preparation of ETOP-environmental threat & opportunity profile is a summary of environmental factors. It is a structured way. Assessing Importance of environmental factors, assessing impact factor combining importance & impact factor.
  • 34. Environmental Scanning & Monitoring •Environmental scanning is a concept from business management by which businesses gather information from the environment, to better achieve a sustainable competitive advantage. •To sustain competitive advantage the company must also respond to the information gathered from environmental scanning by altering its strategies and plans when the need arises.
  • 35. Environmental Scanning & Monitoring- Techniques SWOT Industry Analysis Techniques Competitor Analysis PEST QUEST
  • 36. SWOT (Strength-Weakness-Opportunity-Threat) Identification of threats and Opportunities in the environment (External) and strengths and Weaknesses of the firm (Internal) is the cornerstone of business policy formulation; these factors which determine the course of action to ensure the survival and growth of the firm.
  • 38. PEST Analysis – The Meaning  A PEST analysis is an analysis of the external macro- environment that affects all firms.  P.E.S.T. is an acronym for the Political, Economic, Social, and Technological factors of the external macro-environment.  Such external factors usually are beyond the firm's control and sometimes present themselves as threats.  However, changes in the external environment also create new opportunities.
  • 39. A. Industry Life Cycle Analysis B. Study of the structure and characteristics of an Industry C. Profit Potential of Industry (Porter Model) Industry Analysis: Three sections
  • 40. A. Industry Life Cycle Analysis Four Stages:  Pioneering Stage  Rapid Growth Stage  Maturity and Stabilization Stage  Decline Stage
  • 41. B. Study of the structure and characteristics of an Industry 1. Structure of the Industry and nature of Competition 2. Nature and Prospectus of the demand 3. Cost, Efficiency and Profitability 4. Technology and Research
  • 42. Michael Porter has argued that the profit potential of an industry depends on the combined strength of the: 1. Threat of new entrant 2. Rivalry among existing firms 3. Pressure from substitute products 4. Bargaining power of buyers 5. Bargaining power of sellers 3. Profit Potential of Industry (Porter Model)
  • 44.  SWOT analysis  Value chain Analysis  Financial Analysis  Key factor rating  Functional area profile  Strategic advantage profile
  • 45. Internal Analysis Resource-Based View  Firms have heterogeneous resources and capabilities.  By exploiting core competencies, firms can develop value-creating strategies superior to their competitors.  Four criteria must be met for a sustained competitive advantage. Valuable Costly to imitate Rare Non-substitutable
  • 46. Internal Analysis Resources • Tangible • Intangible • Brand Equity Capabilities Core Competencies Competitive Advantage Above-Average Returns Components of the Resource- Based View
  • 47. Internal Analysis Resources and Capabilities:  Resources • Represent what the firm has to work with. • Resources must be combined to establish a capability. • Types: • Tangible • Intangible • Brand Equity
  • 48. Internal Analysis Tangible Resources – Assets that can be seen, touched or quantified. - Financial resources (borrowing capacity) - Physical Resources (facilities, locations) - Organizational structure (reporting structures) - Technological (patents) Intangible Resources - Human resources (experience, training) - Resources for innovation (technical employees, facilities) - Reputation Brand Equity - Brand name - maintaining brand equity (Mercedes example – value/performance and Japanese automakers)
  • 50. The Growth Share Matrix  It evaluates the strength of a firm from the portfolio of businesses or products the firm has in different stages of PLC, which are required for future growth.  It analyses the impact of investing resources in different SBUs on the corporate’s future earnings and cash flow.
  • 51. SBUs are evaluated from two ways 1. Industry attractiveness (market growth) And 2. Competitive strength (relative market share)
  • 52. The Growth Share Matrix A Matrix is created considering the market growth and relative market share of all the businesses in their respective industries and businesses are placed in that matrix for analysis and evaluation.
  • 53. The Growth Share Matrix  The market growth rate on the vertical axis is the proxy measure for the industry Attractiveness.  The relative market share is proxy for its competitive strength in the industry.
  • 54. BCG Growth-Share Matrix In BCG approach, the company classifies all its SBUs into 4 types as “star”, “cash cow”, “question mark” and “dog” according to their market growth and relative market share.
  • 55. The BCG Matrix Source: Perspectives, No. 66, “The Product Portfolio,” Adapted by permission from The Boston Consulting Group, Inc., 1970. Relative market share Cash cows Dogs High Low Question marks Stars Marketgrowthrate Cash cows Dogs High High Low Question marks Stars High Low Low
  • 56. $ ? Stars Cash Cows Dogs Problem Child Relative market share MarketgrowthrateMarketgrowthrate Relative market share Marketgrowthrate BCG Matrix
  • 57. Stars Cash Cows Dogs Problem Child Relative market share MarketgrowthrateMarketgrowthrate Relative market share Marketgrowthrate BCG Matrix Revenue ++++ Expenses _ _ _ Net + Revenue + Expenses _ _ _ _ Net _ _ _ Revenue + + + + + Expenses _ Net + + + + Revenue + + Expenses _ _ _ _ Net _ _ _
  • 58.
  • 59. BCG Market Share/Market Growth Matrix
  • 60. BCG Matrix  Dogs are businesses that have a very small share of a market that is not expected to grow.  Cash cows are businesses that have a large share of a market that is not expected to grow substantially.  Question marks are businesses that have only a small share of a quickly growing market.  Stars are businesses that have the largest share of a rapidly growing market.
  • 61. Stars are high-growth, high-share businesses or products. They often need heavy investment to finance their rapid growth. Therefore, they may not be producing a positive cash flow. The business strategy will generally be for growth fueled by externally acquired capital. Eventually, their growth will slow, and they will turn into cash cows.
  • 62. Cash cows are low-growth, high-share businesses or products. These established and successful SBUs need less investment to keep their market share. They produce a lot of cash to be used for other business units of the company. They are either milked for investment in stars or question marks or harvested if there is little optimism for a stable future.
  • 63. Question marks sometimes called problem children, are low- share business units in high-growth markets. They need a lot of cash to keep and increase their share; they can not generate enough cash themselves. Management must decide which question mark it should build into stars and which should phase out.
  • 64. Dogs are low-growth, low-share businesses and products. They often have poor profitability. Therefore, the business strategy for a dog is most often to divest, but occasionally to hold for possible strategic repositioning as a question mark or cash cow.
  • 65. Portfolio Strategies Four Portfolio Strategies BUILD Does the SBU have the potential to be a star? HOLD Can you maintain and preserve market share? DIVEST Is it appropriate to dump SBU’s with low-growth potential? .HARVEST Increase the short-term return without impacting long-run prospects.
  • 66. Limitations of the BCG Matrix 1. Market Growth rate is an inadequate descriptor of overall industry attractiveness. 2. Relative market share is inadequate as a descriptor of overall competitive strength. 3. The analysis is highly sensitive to how growth and share are measured. 4. It provide little guidance on how best to implement the investment strategies. 5. The model implicitly assumes that business units are independent or one another except for the flow of cash.
  • 67. How to Identify SBUs?  It is the basic competitive unit of a company.  It has a specific and identifiable group of customers.  It has specific and identifiable competitors.  It can be measured as an independent entity in terms of profit and loss.  Therefore, it may require a separate marketing strategy.
  • 68. GE / McKinsey Matrix  In consulting engagements with General Electric in the 1970's, McKinsey & Company developed a nine-cell portfolio matrix as a tool for screening GE's large portfolio of strategic business units (SBU). This business screen became known as the GE/McKinsey Matrix and is shown below:  The GE matrix has nine cells vs. four cells in the BCG matrix. 
  • 69.  The GE / McKinsey matrix is similar to the BCG growth-share matrix in that it maps strategic business units on a grid of the industry and the SBU's position in the industry. The GE matrix however, attempts to improve upon the BCG matrix in the following two ways:   The GE matrix generalizes the axes as "Industry Attractiveness" and "Business Unit Strength" whereas the BCG matrix uses the market growth rate as a proxy for industry attractiveness and relative market share as a proxy for the strength of the business unit.
  • 70.  The vertical axis of the GE / McKinsey matrix is industry attractiveness, which is determined by factors such as the following:  Market growth rate  Market size  Demand variability  Industry profitability  Industry rivalry  Global opportunities  Macroenvironmental factors (PEST) Industry Attractiveness
  • 71. Each factor is assigned a weighting that is appropriate for the industry. The industry attractiveness then is calculated as follows:
  • 72. The horizontal axis of the GE / McKinsey matrix is the strength of the business unit. Some factors that can be used to determine business unit strength include: Market share Growth in market share Brand equity Distribution channel access Production capacity Profit margins relative to competitors The business unit strength index can be calculated by multiplying the estimated value of each factor by the factor's weighting, as done for industry attractiveness. Business Unit Strength
  • 73. Industry attractiveness and business unit strength are calculated by first identifying criteria for each, determining the value of each parameter in the criteria, and multiplying that value by a weighting factor. The result is a quantitative measure of industry attractiveness and the business unit's relative performance in that industry Industry attractiveness = factor value1 x factor weighting1 + factor value2 x factor weighting2+… GE MATRIX contd..
  • 74. Each business unit can be portrayed as a circle plotted on the matrix, with the information conveyed as follows: Market size is represented by the size of the circle. Market share is shown by using the circle as a pie chart. The expected future position of the circle is portrayed by means of an arrow. Plotting the Information
  • 75. The shading of the above circle indicates a 38% market share for the strategic business unit. The arrow in the upward left direction indicates that the business unit is projected to gain strength relative to competitors, and that the business unit is in an industry that is projected to become more attractive. The tip of the arrow indicates the future position of the center point of the circle. The following is an example of such a representation:
  • 76. Resource allocation recommendations can be made to grow, hold, or harvest a strategic business unit based on its position on the matrix as follows:  Grow strong business units in attractive industries, average business units in attractive industries, and strong business units in average industries.  Hold average businesses in average industries, strong businesses in weak industries, and weak business in attractive industries. Strategic Implications
  • 77.  Harvest weak business units in unattractive industries, average business units in unattractive industries, and weak business units in average industries. There are strategy variations within these three groups. For example, within the harvest group the firm would be inclined to quickly divest itself of a weak business in an unattractive industry, whereas it might perform a phased harvest of an average business unit in the same industry.
  • 78. LIMITATION GE  While the GE business screen represents an improvement over the more simple BCG growth-share matrix, it still presents a somewhat limited view by not considering interactions among the business units and by neglecting to address the core competencies leading to value creation. Rather than serving as the primary tool for resource allocation, portfolio matrices are better suited to displaying a quick synopsis of the strategic business units.
  • 79. GE Mckinsey Matrix HOLDLow AVERAGE High WEAKAVERA GE STR - ONG Bus Str Ind at GROW HOLD HARVEST