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Strategy is Not Operational Effectiveness By Dr. Michael McDermott [email protected]

Strategy is not operational effectiveness

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Page 1: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Strategy is Not Operational

Effectiveness

By

Dr. Michael McDermott

[email protected]

Page 2: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Structure

1. Common mistakes in discussing strategy 2. The Limited Advantages of Being Better –

Operational Effectiveness 3. The Significant Advantages of Being Smarter –

Genuine Strategy 4. Smarter can beat Better 5. The Critical and Sustainable Advantages of Being

Better and Smarter – Operational Effectiveness and Genuine Strategy

6. Smarter and Better is Invincible 2 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 3: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Common mistakes in discussing strategy

• Many people, including executives, often make the mistake of equating operational effectiveness with strategy:

• Strategy is not:

– transferring production to a lower cost location; or,

– Increasing productivity; or,

– Lowering costs

• Improving operational effectiveness is great, but it’s not strategy

3 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 4: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

What is Operational Effectiveness (OE)?

• It’s all about internal performance

• It’s about being:

– Better, or

– Cheaper, or

– Faster, or

– Wider (i.e. more international)

4 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 5: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Nature and Limitations of Operational Effectiveness

Nature of OE

• OE means performing

similar activities better than rivals perform them

• Constant improvement

in operational effectiveness is necessary to achieve superior profitability.

Implications

• Constant improvement or

getting better is seldom sufficient for profitability

• And that is tough – hence many companies exit an industry where they have exhausted all possibilities

5 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 6: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Operational Effectiveness

Being Better Constant

improvement

6 © McDermott, 2012.

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Operational Effectiveness

Constant Improvement

Law of Diminishing Returns and

Others Narrow Gap

7 © McDermott, 2012.

For example, the success of many Japanese companies was based upon being better and cheaper. But you can see that they are seeing their advantage eroded (i.e. South Koreans)

Page 8: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Nature and Limitations of Operational Effectiveness

Nature of OE

• OE means performing

similar activities better than rivals perform them

• Constant improvement

in operational effectiveness is necessary to achieve superior profitability.

Limitations of OE

• Constant improvement or

getting better is seldom sufficient for profitability

• And that is tough – hence many companies exit an industry where they have exhausted all possibilities

8 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 9: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

The Limitations of OE

• Those who rely exclusively upon OE are quickly overtaken

• Just think of the TV, PC industries

– Japanese topple US and Europeans

– South Koreans/Taiwanese topple US and Japanese

– Will Chinese topple South Korean and Taiwanese?

9 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 10: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Operational Effectiveness Explains Initial Success of Asian Companies

1960s-80s Japanese companies are winners

1990s-2010s South Korean companies are winners

2020s- Chinese companies are winners

10 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 11: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Operational Effectiveness

Being Better

Operational Effectiveness May Deliver Advantage Briefly

11 © McDermott, 2012.

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Operational Effectiveness

Temporary Competitive Advantage

Operational Effectiveness May Deliver Advantage Briefly

12 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 13: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Running out of steam: the limitations of OE

• Companies that are copycats simply exploiting differences in operational efficiency soon come undone;

• Once gaps in OE narrow, such companies struggle;

• Because they lack a distinct competitive position.

• In short, they need to learn strategy!

• In Porter’s terms they need to develop a unique competitive position

13 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 14: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Japanese Winners in the Past

According to Porter, since they were better, they did not need to

be smarter

14 © McDermott, 2012.

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© McDermott, 2012. 15

Page 16: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Surely they were more than just Better?

• In the 1980s-1990s, Sony was “the Apple” of today. • Surely it was “smarter”, rather than just better? • What’s the difference between Sony then and Apple

today? • Both made great products that are “better”, but Apple

realized that its focus needs to be the consumer experience not simply the products.

• Apple’s success may reflect a total customer-centric business model – that is “smarter”;

• Sony’s focus was, and appears to remain, simply offering “better” products.

© McDermott, 2012. 16

Page 17: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Future Japanese Winners Must Also Be Smarter

Do they have

genuine strategy?

17 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 18: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Genuine

Strategy Operational

Effectiveness

Sustainable

Competitive Advantage

Genuine Strategy and Operational Effectiveness Deliver

Enduring Competitive Advantage

18 © McDermott, 2012.

I am not sure that any competitive advantage is sustainable

Page 19: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Genuine Strategy and OE

Both are essential for superior performance

Excellence in one is not enough for enduring success or competitive advantage

19 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 20: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Establishing Competitive Advantage

1 • Deliver greater value to customers;

• Kroger, Meijer, Netflix, Nike, Under Armor

2 • Create comparable value at lower prices;

• Coinstar, Dell, Samsung, Vizio

3

• Do both

20 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 21: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

Creating Competitive Advantage: Effectiveness vs Efficient

• Leads to greater value-creation

• Higher unit prices

• Apple, BMW

More Effective

• Leads to Lower unit costs

• Can offer lowest prices

• Costco, Lenovo

More Efficient

21 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 22: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

OE and Buyers

• Continuous improvements in OE proves of enormous benefits to buyers; – Today we can buy a USB stick at Wal-mart for less than

$5 that has more memory than a computer that cost $000s in the 1980s;

• But this is a nightmare scenario for companies that are sucked into damaging price wars; – Who makes a profit as a PC producer today?

22 © McDermott, 2012.

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© McDermott, 2012. 23

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Examples of Strategically Smart

The Smarts

• Tend to be ‘different’

• Are innovative

The Laggards

• Imitate and emulate their national rivals

24 © McDermott, 2012.

Page 25: Strategy is not operational effectiveness

OE and Competition

• Companies converge

• They all follow the exact same strategic path

– From “made-in-China” to “sold-in-Wal-mart”

• And this is a race that no producer wins

– So let’s reduce the number of ‘runners’ – and acquire our rivals

• In a ‘buy or be bought’ world, no one enjoys true competitive advantage

25 © McDermott, 2012.

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It does not have to be this way!

26 © McDermott, 2012.

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Competitive Strategy is about being different!

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Determining Strategic Position

Activities

• Perform similar activities differently

• Or perform different activities

Value • Deliver a unique mix of value

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What do they offer?

• Often low cost

• Because they do things differently

• But in addition to that they often ‘break the rules’ in order to better meet the needs of their target market

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Nature of Strategic Positioning

• Means performing different activities from rivals or performing similar activities in different ways

• Competitive advantage requires developing a distinct strategic position

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What’s the Solution?

• According to Porter, it’s focusing upon creating a strong competitive position (i.e. developing a strategy)

• Kim & Mauborgne suggest that the solution is developing a Blue Ocean Strategy

• Rumelt suggests that the company must focus all energies on its “big issue” problem

© McDermott, 2012. 33