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SUMMARY OF LESSONS: 2 Presentation By: Courtney Karcasinas, Adam Hall, Robert Brinkmann, Justin Weden, & Stephen Gonzalez.

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Presentation on theme: "SUMMARY OF LESSONS: 2 Presentation By: Courtney Karcasinas, Adam Hall, Robert Brinkmann, Justin Weden, & Stephen Gonzalez."— Presentation transcript:

1 SUMMARY OF LESSONS: 2 Presentation By: Courtney Karcasinas, Adam Hall, Robert Brinkmann, Justin Weden, & Stephen Gonzalez

2 Objectives 1. Understand the term “Competitive Advantage” 2. Predict potential for competition to wear away competitive advantage 3. Recognize how resource conditions create imperfections in the competitive process that offer opportunities for competitive advantage 4. Distinguish the two primary types: cost advantage and differentiation advantage 5. Use value chain framework to analyse potential sources of cost and differentiation advantage to recommend strategies for enhancing competitiveness 6. Appreciate the pitfalls of being ‘stuck in the middle’ and the challenge of achieving effective differentiation and low cost

3 1. Understand the term “Competitive Advantage” When two or more firms compete within the same market, one firm possesses a competitive advantage over its rivals when it earns (or has the potential to earn) a persistently higher rate of profit. nderstand the term “Competitive Advantage”

4 In the long run competition wears away differences in profitability between firms but eternal and internal change can both create opportunities for advantage and destroy them. 2. Predict potential for competition to wear away competitive advantage

5 Firms owning resources or having capabilities that are in some way unique and offer the firms some protection against imitation by rivals. 3. Recognize how resource conditions create imperfections in the competitive process that offer opportunities for competitive advantage

6 Competitive Advantage Differentiation Advantage Cost Advantage Similar Product at lower cost Price Premium from unique product 4. Distinguish the two primary types: cost advantage and differentiation advantage

7 1)Break down the firm into separate activities. 2)Establish the relative importance of different activities in the total cost of the product. 3)Compare costs by activity. 4)Identify cost drivers. 5)Identify linkages. 6)Identify opportunities for reducing costs. 5. Use value chain framework to analyse potential sources of cost and differentiation advantage to recommend strategies for enhancing competitiveness

8 Cost leadership and differentiation are mutually exclusive strategies and firms that are ‘stuck in the middle’ are almost guaranteed low profitability. The most successful forms are often those who have managed to differentiate themselves in a highly cost-effective way. 6. Appreciate the pitfalls of being ‘stuck in the middle’ and the challenge of achieving effective differentiation and low cost

9 Industry Life Cycle  ILC driving factors  Demand Growth  Production Knowledge

10 Demand Growth  Introduction  Sales are often small  Growth  Rapid market penetration  Maturity Stage  Increased market saturation  Decline Stage  Superior products are available from new industries

11 Product Knowledge  Beginning  Advances in product technology  Consumers usually know little about product  Course of ILC  Customers become better informed  Market expands  Judge products better and make informed decisions

12 Strategy at Various Stages of ILC  Introduction  Product innovation and marketing  Growth  Increase production efficiently and effectively  Maturity  Cost efficiency, usually through mass production and lower input prices  Decline  Find protected market niches, innovate, or exit at appropriate time

13 Public and Not-for-profit Sectors  Public  Ownership vested in government  Funding from government  Serve public interest  Not-for-profit  Use excess funds for organizational goals  Usually in areas such as education, health care, social services, arts and culture, and religion  Placed in special category for tax, regulatory, and legal purposes

14 Public and Not-for-profit Features  Multiple goals  Different constraints than private sectors  Market force absence  Monopoly power  Decreased flexibility  Increased accountability  Decreased Predictability

15 Types of Organizations

16 Stakeholder Analysis  Identify list of potential stakeholders  Rank stakeholders by importance and influence  Find criteria each stakeholder will use to judge performance  See how organization is doing from stakeholders’ perspective  Identify how to satisfy each stakeholder  Identify and record long term issues with stakeholders, both individually and as a group

17 Scenario Analysis  Define purpose of analysis  Decide on time horizon  Identify key trends  Identify key uncertainties  Create scenarios and check for consistency  Identify indicators that might signify which scenario is unfolding  Assess strategic implications of scenarios

18 Innovation Process  The core aim of Boeing is to:  “ focus on the execution today and into the future in developing, producing and marketing commercial jet aircraft and providing related support services, principally to the commercial airline industry worldwide”  Invention: Creation of new product  Innovation: the creation of new products and processes through the development of new knowledge or from new combinations of existing knowledge.

19 The Jet Engine  Frank Witte first patented the engine in 1930.  In 1957, the first commercial jetliner, the De Havilland Comet, took flight.  Two years later, the Boeing 707 was introduced.

20 Boeing’s Value  Profitability of Innovation:  Customers Value  Advance Aviation Performance Program:  Provides 24/7 customer service support all around the world  Provide the best technical support to the customers  Delivers spare parts and equipment if urgently needed

21 Four Factors to Competitive Advantage  Property Rights  Tacitness and Complexity of the technology  Lead Time  Complementary Resources

22 Property Rights  Intellectual Property:  Patents  Copyright,  Trademarks  Trade secrets  Patents: make the information public and only valid for 17 years

23 Tacitness and Complexity  Tacitness : In the absence of legal protection, the extent to which an innovation can be imitated by a competitor depends on how the innovation can be comprehended and replicated  Complexity: Boeing 787 Dreamliner

24 Boeing 787 Dreamliner  Able to carry passengers with non-stop point-to- point flights between secondary airports

25 Lead Time  Amount of time it will take followers to catch up  Took 2 years to create the 707

26 Complementary Resources  Resources needed to finance, produce and market the innovation.

27 Boeing’s Resources  Airport Technology:  planning and engineering  Boeing Capital Corporation:  Airplane Financing  Commercial Aviation Services:  Customer support, flight operations, fleets, maintenance, and material management  Fuel Conservation Services:  Increases fuel efficiency  Training Flight Services:  Flight crew training activities

28 Strategies Managing Risks: Market uncertainty  787 Dreamliner created to recover the market shrink and compete with Airbus  Began to lose market share after initial success  Delays in delivering products to customers resulted in 120% increase in cost

29 Creating the Conditions for Innovation  People: Over $170,000  Facilities: 70 countries with 22,000 suppliers  Information: Jet Engine  Time: Founded in 1916 - Design organizational processes that capture, direct, and exploit individuals’ drive for success and commitment to their innovations.

30 4 Steps of Visualizing Strategy

31 Boeing 787  Before Boeing 787, the 767 was in line with competition.  Strategy canvas for Boeing 787  Included criteria such as: Purchase Price Seating Capacity Maintenance Costs

32 Boeing 787 Four Actions Eliminate Maintenance costs Raise Passenger friendly environment New aircraft (Boeing 787) Reduce Purchase price Create Fuel efficiency Seating Capacity

33 Pioneer, Migrator, Settler Map

34 Overcoming Obstacles  Strategy should be the big picture and not solely numbers driven  Strategy canvases and the PMS map are good places to start  Details and numbers will fall into place.

35

36 First- Tier Noncustomers  “Soon to be” Noncustomers  Minimal use of the market offering  Focus on similarities between first-tier customers to minimize chance of them leaving market

37 Second- Tier Noncustomers  “Refusing” Noncustomers  Do not use or can’t afford the offering  Needs are met by something else, or are not met at all  Provide an untapped demand for the market

38 Third-Tier Noncustomers  Farthest away from an industry’s existing customers/cliental  “Unexplored” noncustomers  Have not been targeted or thought of as potential customers since their needs are thought to belong to another market.

39 Go for the Biggest Catchment  Companies should focus on the tier that represents the biggest catchment at the time.

40 Get the Strategic Sequence Right  Buyer Utility  Is there a compelling reason for the mass of people to buy?  Price  Is your offering price to attract the mass of the buyers so that they have a compelling ability to pay for your offering?  Cost  Can you produce your offering at the target cost and still earn a healthy profit margin?  Adoption  What are the adoption hurdles among retailers or partners?  Ex: Netflix “Watching Instantly”

41 Buyer Utility  Is there a compelling reason for the mass of people to buy?  The Six Utility Levers

42 Price

43 Cost

44 Adoption  New ideas can be seen as threatening to the company.  Three main stakeholders may not accept new ideas, they are:  Employees  Partners  General Public


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