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Internal Stragegy

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Page 1: Internal Stragegy
Page 2: Internal Stragegy

What Does Internal Analysis Tell Us?

Internal analysis provides a comparative look at a firm’s capabilities

• what are the firm’s strengths?

• what are the firm’s weaknesses?

• how do these strengths & weaknesses compareto competitors?

Page 3: Internal Stragegy

Why Does Internal Analysis Matter?

• establish strategies that will exploit any sourcesof competitive advantage

• determine if its resources and capabilities arelikely sources of competitive advantage

Internal analysis helps a firm:

Page 4: Internal Stragegy

The Theory Behind Internal Analysis

The Resource-Based View

• Developed to answer the question: Why do some firms achieve better economic performancethan others?

• assumes that a firm’s resources and capabilitiesare the primary drivers of competitive advantageand economic performance

• Used to help firms achieve competitive advantageand superior economic performance

Page 5: Internal Stragegy

The Resource-Based View

Resources and Capabilities

Resources:

• tangible and intangible assets of a firm» tangible: factories, products intangible: reputation

• used to conceive of and implement strategies

Capabilities:

• a subset of resources that enable a firm totake full advantage of other resources» marketing skill, cooperative relationships

Page 6: Internal Stragegy

The Resource-Based View

Resources and Capabilities

Firm Assets:

Machinery

Collective Product Design Skill

Recruiting Skill

Engineering Skill of Individuals

Mineral Deposits

Are these resourcesor capabilities?

?

?

?

?

?

Page 7: Internal Stragegy

The Resource-Based View

Four Categories of Resources

• Financial (cash, retained earnings)

• Physical (plant & equipment, geographic location)

• Human (skills & abilities of individuals)

• Organizational (reporting structures, relationships)

Page 8: Internal Stragegy

The Resource-Based View

Two Critical Assumptions of the RBV

• Resource Heterogeneity

» different firms may have different resources

• Resource Immobility

» it may be costly for firms without certainresources to acquire or develop them

» some resources may not spread from firm tofirm easily

Page 9: Internal Stragegy

The Resource-Based View

• heterogeneity of resources typically occurs as the result of ‘bundling’ the resources and capabilitiesof a firm (bundles of HR practices, p. 90)

Resource Heterogeneity

• managers of a firm could take resources that seemhomogeneous and ‘bundle’ them to createheterogeneous combinations

• competitive advantage typically stems from severalresources and capabilities ‘bundled’ together

Page 10: Internal Stragegy

Resource-Based View (RBV)

1. RBV is a method of analyzing and identifying a firm’s strategic advantages based on examining its distinct combination of assets, skills, capabilities, and intangibles

2. The RBV’s underlying premise is that firms differ in fundamental ways because each firm possesses a unique “bundle” of resources

3. Each firm develops competencies from these resources, and these become the source of the firm’s competitive advantages

Page 11: Internal Stragegy

Value Chain Analysis (VCA)

• The term value chain describes a way of looking at a business as a chain of activities that transform inputs into outputs that customers value

• Value chain analysis (VCA) attempts to understand how a business creates customer value by examining the contributions of different activities within the business to that value

• VCA takes a process point of view

Page 12: Internal Stragegy

The Value Chain

Page 13: Internal Stragegy

Conducting a VCA

1. Identify activities2. Allocate costs• VCA proponents hold that the

activity-based VCA approach would provide a more meaningful analysis of the procurement function’s costs and consequent value added than the traditional cost accounting approach

Page 14: Internal Stragegy

Traditional Cost Accounting VS Activity Based Cost Accounting

Page 15: Internal Stragegy

Value Chain Analysis (VCA)

• It is important to note that existing financial management and accounting systems in many firms are not set up to easily provide activity-based cost breakdowns

• Identify the activities that differentiate the firm

• Examine the value chain

Page 16: Internal Stragegy

The Internal Analysis Tool

The VRIO Framework

Four Important Questions:

• Value

• Rarity

• Imitability

• Organization

Page 17: Internal Stragegy

The VRIO Framework

If a firm has resources that are:

• valuable,

• rare, and

• costly to imitate, and…

• the firm is organized to exploit these resources,

then the firm can expect to enjoy a sustainedcompetitive advantage.

Page 18: Internal Stragegy

The VRIO Framework

• a resource or bundle of resources is subjected toeach question to determine the competitiveimplication of the resource

Applying the Tool

• each question is considered in a comparativesense (competitive environment)

Page 19: Internal Stragegy

Applying the VRIO Framework

The Question of Value

• in theory: Does the resource enable the firmto exploit an external opportunity or neutralizean external threat?

• the practical: Does the resource result in anincrease in revenues, a decrease in costs, orsome combination of the two? (Levi’s reputationallows it to charge a premium for its Docker’s pants)

Page 20: Internal Stragegy

Applying the VRIO Framework

The Question of Rarity

• a resource must be rare enough that perfect competition has not set in

• if a resource is not rare, then perfect competitiondynamics are likely to be observed (i.e., nocompetitive advantage, no above normal profits)

• thus, there may be other firms that possess theresource, but still few enough that there is scarcity (several pharmaceuticals sell cholesterol-loweringdrugs, but the drugs are still scarce—look at prices)

Page 21: Internal Stragegy

Applying the VRIO Framework

Valuable and Rare

If a firm’s resources are: The firm can expect:

Not Valuable Competitive Disadvantage

Valuable, but Not Rare Competitive Parity

Valuable and Rare Competitive Advantage(at least temporarily)

Page 22: Internal Stragegy

Applying the VRIO Framework

The Question of Imitability

• the temporary competitive advantage of valuableand rare resources can be sustained only if competitors face a cost disadvantage in imitatingthe resource

» intangible resources are usually morecostly to imitate than tangible resources(Harley-Davidson’s styles may be easilyimitated, but its reputation cannot)

Page 23: Internal Stragegy

Applying the VRIO Framework

The Question of Imitability

• if there are high costs of imitation, then the firmmay enjoy a period of sustained competitiveadvantage

» a sustained competitive advantage will lastonly until a duplicate or substitute emerges

if a firm has a competitive advantage, otherswill attempt to imitate it (Razor scooterswere a big hit and others quickly imitated them)

Page 24: Internal Stragegy

Applying the VRIO Framework

The Question of Imitability

Costs of Imitation

Unique Historical Conditions (Caterpillar)

• first mover advantages

• path dependence

Page 25: Internal Stragegy

Applying the VRIO Framework

The Question of Imitability

Costs of Imitation

Causal Ambiguity (Southwest Airlines – HR)

• causal links between resources and competitive advantage may not be understood

• bundles of resources fog these causallinks

Page 26: Internal Stragegy

Applying the VRIO Framework

The Question of Imitability

Costs of Imitation

Social Complexity (WordPerfect)

• the social relationships entailed in resources may be so complex thatmanagers cannot really manage themor replicate them

Page 27: Internal Stragegy

Applying the VRIO Framework

The Question of Imitability

Costs of Imitation

Patents

• patents may be a two-edged sword

• offer a period of protection if the firm isable to defend its patent rights

• required disclosure may actually decreasethe cost of imitation, and the timing

Page 28: Internal Stragegy

Applying the VRIO Framework

Value, Rarity, & Imitability

If a firm’s resources are: The firm can expect:

Valuable, Rare, butnot Costly to Imitate

TemporaryCompetitive Advantage

Valuable, Rare, and Costly to Imitate

SustainedCompetitive Advantage

(if Organized appropriately)

Page 29: Internal Stragegy

Applying the VRIO Framework

The Question of Organization• a firm’s structure and control mechanisms

must be aligned so as to give people abilityand incentive to exploit the firm’s resources

• examples: formal and informal reporting structures,management controls, compensation policies,relationships, etc.

• these structure and control mechanisms complementother firm resources—taken together, they can help a firm achieve sustained competitive advantage(3M Company)

Page 30: Internal Stragegy

The VRIO Framework

Valuable? Rare?Costly toImitate?

Exploited byOrganization?

CompetitiveImplications

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes Yes Yes

No

No

No Disadvantage

Parity

TemporaryAdvantage

SustainedAdvantage

Page 31: Internal Stragegy

The VRIO Framework

Valuable? Rare?Costly toImitate?

Exploited byOrganization?

CompetitiveImplications

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes Yes Yes

No

No

No Disadvantage

Parity

TemporaryAdvantage

SustainedAdvantage

EconomicImplications

BelowNormal

Normal

AboveNormal

AboveNormal

Page 32: Internal Stragegy

Entrepreneurial and InternationalApplication of the VRIO Framework

The Logic Remains the Same

• small firms and start-ups can apply the VRIOframework to their resources and capabilities

» competitive advantage vis-à-vis largerfirms can often be identified

recognizing if and why larger firmsface high costs of imitation can becritical to small firm success

Page 33: Internal Stragegy

Entrepreneurial and InternationalApplication of the VRIO FrameworkThe International Context

Two Reasons for International Expansion:

1) to exploit current resource and capabilityadvantages in a new market

2) to develop new resources and capabilities ina foreign market

Page 34: Internal Stragegy

Entrepreneurial and InternationalApplication of the VRIO FrameworkThe International Context

Critical Caveat:

• resources and capabilities that generatean advantage in one market may or maynot generate an advantage in a new market

Firms should re-apply the VRIO frameworkwhen entering new markets!!

Page 35: Internal Stragegy

Competitive Dynamics of Resource Imitation

Competitive Dynamics:

• the strategic decisions and actions of firms inresponse to the strategic decisions and actionsof other firms

Firm A(strategy decisionslead to competitive

advantage)

Firm B’s Possible Responses

No Response

Change Tactics

Change Strategy

Page 36: Internal Stragegy

Competitive Dynamics

• the other firm is serving a different market

A firm may decide to take no action because:

• a response may hurt its own competitive advantage

• it does not have the resources and capabilitiesto mount an effective response

• it wants to reduce or manage rivalry in themarket through tacit collusion

“No Action” Response (Rolex Casio)

Page 37: Internal Stragegy

Competitive Dynamics

“Change” Responses

Tactics (Tide) Strategy (Monsanto)

• specific actions

» tweaking productcharacteristics

• usually imitated soquickly that there isno advantage

• a ‘leap frog’ movemay create advantage

• a fundamental changein a firm’s theory

• may be necessary if current strategybecomes obsolete

• a mimetic change mayachieve parity, but notadvantage

Page 38: Internal Stragegy

SWOT Components• A strength is a resource or capability controlled by or

available to a firm that gives it an advantage relative to its competitors in meeting the needs of the customers it serves

• A weakness is a limitation or deficiency in one or more of a firm’s resources or capabilities relative to its competitors that create a disadvantage in effectively meeting customer needs

• An opportunity is a major unfavorable situation in a firm’s environment

• A threat is a major unfavorable situation in a firm’s environment

Page 39: Internal Stragegy