Value Innovation The Strategic Logic of High Growth Presented by Icebreak team 2006 3.23.

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Presentation transcript:

Value Innovation The Strategic Logic of High Growth Presented by Icebreak team

Value Innovation Introduction: a case Conventional logic and value innovation logic Application of value innovation The fields to apply value innovation Face of rival’s imitation Conclusion

Introduction What separates high-growth companies from others? The way to approach strategy The companies’ fundamental, implicit assumptions about strategy Staying ahead of competition vs Making competitor irrelevant

A Case: Kinepolis Background: The business was shrinking The competition was getting more fierce A lot of cinemas were forced to shut down

A Case: Kinepolis Kinepolis’ performance Win 50% of the market in Brussels in the first year Expand the market by about 40%

A Case: Kinepolis The approach other companies adopted: Turn the cinemas into multiplexes with ten screens Broad film offerings Expand food and drink services Increase showing times

A Case: Kinepolis Kinepolis’ Strategy Have up to 700 seats in a room, and no legroom Install over-sized seats with individual armrests Design a steep slop in the floor Have a screen of 29 meters by 10 meters Locate off the ring road circling Brussels Have a large well-lit lots where patrons can park for free

Differences Between Two Strategic Logics

Value Innovation

Four questions to ask: Which factors that our industry has taken for granted? Which factors should be reduced well below the industry’s standard? Which factors should be raised well above the industry’s standard? Which factors should be created that the industry has never offered? Application Of Value Innovation Logic

Consider The Case of Accor.

What may happen once a company has created a new value curve? Rival’s imitation Growth and profits under attack Fall into the trap of conventional strategic logic Performance just like the rivals Face of Rival’s Imitation

How to avoid the trap? View the value curve in a dynamic way Monitor the value curve Accumulate the differences Face of Rival’s Imitation

Product Service Delivery The Platforms to Apply Value Innovation

The difference between a high-profit company and others lies in value innovation Senior executives must ask four questions when to create a new value curve: which to eliminate, which to reduce, which raise and which to create Value innovation is the simultaneous pursuit of radically superior value for buyers and lower costs for companies We can pursuit it in the three fields: product, service and delivery Conclusions

Resource Barriers and Sustained Competitive Advantage Presented by icebreak team

Resource barrier What’s resource? All assets controlled by a firm which can enable the firm to conceive of and implement strategies to improve efficiency and effectiveness. It can be divided into three parts: physical capital resource, human capital resource and organizational capital resource. What’s sustained competitive advantage? A firm is implementing a value creating strategy not simultaneously being implemented by any current or potential competitors and when these other firms are unable to duplicate the benefits of this strategy.

Resource barrier Two assumptions Firm resource heterogeneity Firm resource immobility The firms may be heterogeneous with respect to the strategic resources they control. Resource may be perfectly mobile across firms, and thus heterogeneity can be long lasting.

Resource barrier Functions Bargaining power Production experience Customers loyalty Machine capacity Technological leads

Resource barrier Bargaining power Bargaining advantage over suppliers, buyers, and substitute resource Machine capacity Lower expected revenues for prospective acquirers Customer loyalty Later buyers will have to pay higher than earlier buyers Production experience Using experience curve strategy, and assuming no first mover advantage exist Technological leads Given resource position barrier will have consequences for several products

Resource Barriers and Sustained Competitive Advantage Resource control valuerareness Imperfect imitability History dependent Causal ambiguity Social complexity substitutability Sustained Competitive advantage theory

Resource Barriers and Sustained Competitive Advantage A method