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© 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-1 Strategic Management Concepts & Cases 8 th edition Fred R. David Chapter 8: Implementing Strategies: Marketing, Finance/Accounting,

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Presentation on theme: "© 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-1 Strategic Management Concepts & Cases 8 th edition Fred R. David Chapter 8: Implementing Strategies: Marketing, Finance/Accounting,"— Presentation transcript:

1 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-1 Strategic Management Concepts & Cases 8 th edition Fred R. David Chapter 8: Implementing Strategies: Marketing, Finance/Accounting, R&D, and CIS Issues PowerPoint Slides By: Anthony F. Chelte Western New England College

2 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-2 Implementing Strategies “ There is no “ perfect ” strategic decision. One always has to pay a price. One always has to balance conflicting objectives, conflicting opinions, and conflicting priorities. The best strategic decision is only an approximation— and a risk. ” —Peter Drucker—

3 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-3 Implementing Strategies “ As market windows open and close more quickly, it is important that R&D be tied more closely to corporate strategy. ” —William Spenser—

4 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-4 Implementing Strategies “ Most of the time, strategists should not be formulating strategy at all; they should be getting on with implementing strategies they already have. ” —Henry Mintzberg—

5 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-5 Implementing Strategies Less than 10% of strategies formulated are successfully implemented!

6 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-6 Implementing Strategies Some reasons for low success rate Failing to segment markets appropriately Paying too much for a new acquisition Falling behind competition in R&D Not recognizing benefit of computers in managing information

7 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-7 Marketing Issues Two Variables of Central Importance to Strategy Implementation: Market Segmentation Product Positioning

8 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-8 Marketing Issues Decisions that may require policies: Use exclusive dealers or multiple channels of distribution Use heavy, light, or no TV advertising Be a price leader or price follower Offer a complete or limited warranty Salespersons reward structure

9 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-9 Marketing Issues Current Issues: Tracking individual movements on the Internet Consumer “ profiling ”

10 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-10 Marketing Mix: Component Factors Service level Warranty Transportation carriers Product line Inventory levels/locations Packaging PublicitySales territoriesBrand name Payment termsSales promotionOutlet locationStyle Discounts & allowances Personal selling Distribution coverage Features LevelAdvertising Distribution channels Quality PricePromotionPlaceProduct

11 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-11 Marketing Issues Market Segmentation Used in strategy implementation Particularly useful in small and specialized firms

12 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-12 Marketing Issues Market Segmentation Important because: Market and product development, market penetration, and diversification require increased sales through new markets or products

13 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-13 Marketing Issues Market Segmentation Important because: Firm can operate with limited resources. Enables a small firm by maximizing per-unit profits and per-segment sales.

14 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-14 Marketing Issues Market Segmentation Important because: Segmentation decisions directly affect marketing mix variables:  Product, place promotion, and price

15 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-15 Marketing Issues Market Segmentation Strategists evaluate potential: Characteristics & needs of consumers Consumer similarities and differences Consumer group profiles

16 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-16 Marketing Issues Market Segmentation Based on: Geographic variables Demographic variables Psychographic variables Behavioral variables

17 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-17 Marketing Issues Product Positioning After segmenting the market, determine what customers want and expect  Analysis & research

18 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-18 Marketing Issues Product Positioning Develop schematic representations of products  Compare to competitors on industry success dimensions

19 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-19 Marketing Issues Develop a marketing plan to position firm ’ s products appropriately. Identify areas in the positioning map where firm ’ s products could be most competitive. Look for niches. Plot major competitors ’ products or services in the matrix. Diagram a two-dimensional product positioning map. Select key criteria that are differentiators in the industry. Action Steps in Product Positioning

20 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-20 Marketing Issues Product Positioning as a Strategy Implementation Tool Look for the “ vacant niche. ” Avoid suboptimization Don ’ t serve two segments with same strategy. Don ’ t position firm in the middle of the map.

21 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-21 Product Positioning Map Low Convenience High Customer Loyalty Low Customer Loyalty High Convenience Firm 1 Firm 2 Firm 3 Rental Car Market

22 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-22 Finance/Accounting Central to Strategy Implementation Capital acquisition Development of pro forma financial statements Financial budget preparation Business valuation

23 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-23 Finance/Accounting Decisions that may require policies: Raise capital with short-term debt, long- term debt, preferred stock, or common stock Lease or buy fixed assets Determine dividend payout ration LIFO, FIFO, or market-value accounting approach

24 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-24 Finance/Accounting Decisions that may require policies: Extend the time of accounts receivable Establish a certain percentage discount on accounts w/I specified period of time Determine the amount of cash on hand

25 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-25 Finance/Accounting Capital Acquisition Sources of capital: Net profit from pperations Sale of assets Debt Equity

26 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-26 Finance/Accounting Capital Acquisition Earnings Per Share/Earnings Before Interest and Taxes (EPS/EBIT) Analysis Determination of debt, stock, or combination of debt & stock is best alternative for raising capital to implement strategies

27 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-27 Finance/Accounting Pro Forma Financial Statements Allows the firm to examine the expected results of various actions and approaches

28 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-28 Finance/Accounting Pro Forma Financial Statements Forecast impact of various implementation decisions Compute projected financial ratios under various strategy-implementation scenarios

29 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-29 Finance/Accounting Subtract from net income any dividends to be paid. Add remaining net income to Retained Earnings. Retained earnings total on both income statement and balance sheet as this is the key link for the projected statements. Calculate the projected net income. Use percentage-of-sales method to project cost of goods sold (CGS) and the expense items in the income statement. Prepare pro forma income statement. Forecast sales as accurately as possible. Steps in Pro Forma Financial Analysis

30 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-30 Finance/Accounting List comments (remarks) on the projected statements. Significant changes from prior years to projected year necessitate a remark. Remarks are necessary for meaningful pro formas. Project balance sheet items. Begin with Retained Earnings. Forecast in the following order: stockholders ’ equity, long-term liabilities, current liabilities, total liabilities, total assets, fixed assets, and current assets. Use cash account as the plug figure. Make appropriate adjustments. Steps in Pro Forma Financial Analysis

31 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-31 Finance/Accounting Financial Budgets Document that details how funds will be obtained and spent for a specified period of time.  Annual budgets most common  Not a tool for limiting expenditures  Method for obtaining the most productive and profitable use of firm ’ s resources

32 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-32 Finance/Accounting Financial Budgets Types of Budgets: Cash budgets Operating budgets Sales budgets Profit budgets Factory budgets

33 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-33 Finance/Accounting Financial Budgets Types of Budgets: Capital budgets Expense budgets Divisional budgets Variable budgets Flexible budgets Fixed budgets

34 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-34 Finance/Accounting Financial Budgets Limitations: Can become too detailed; cumbersome and expensive Can become a substitute for objectives Can hide inefficiencies Can be used as instruments of tyranny

35 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-35 Finance/Accounting Business Valuation Main approaches: What a firm owns What a firm earns What a firm will bring in the market

36 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-36 Finance/Accounting Business Valuation Determine net worth or stockholders ’ equity  Sum of common stock, additional paid in capital and retained earnings. Goodwill and under- or overvalued assets.  Provides estimate of firm ’ s monetary value

37 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-37 Finance/Accounting Business Valuation Future benefits derived through net profits  5 X the firm ’ s current annual profit or  Five-year average profit level

38 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-38 Finance/Accounting Business Valuation Market determination  Selling price of similar company  Price-earnings ratio method  Outstanding shares method

39 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-39 R&D Issues Research and Development (R&D) Development of new products and improvement of existing products Strategies of product development, market penetration, and concentric diversification require R&D

40 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-40 R&D Issues Research and Development (R&D) R&D policies match market opportunities with internal capabilities

41 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-41 R&D Issues Research and Development (R&D) Policies enhance strategy- implementation efforts:  Product or process improvements  Stress basic or applied research  Leaders or followers in R&D

42 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-42 R&D Issues Research and Development (R&D) Policies enhance strategy- implementation efforts:  Develop robotics or manual processes  Spend high, average, or low on R&D  Perform R&D internal or outsource  Use university resources or private

43 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-43 R&D Issues Three Major Approaches First mover in new technological products Innovative imitator of successful products Low-cost producer through mass production similar to recently introduced product s

44 © 2001 Prentice Hall Ch. 8-44 Key Terms & Concepts Cash budget Computer Information systems EPS/EBIT analysis Financial budget Market segmentation Marketing mix variables Outstanding shares method Price-earnings ratio Pro forma financial statement analysis product positioning Research and development Vacant niche


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