Sustainable Competetive Strategy
Sustainable Competetive Strategy
Sustainable Competetive Strategy
Submitted by –
Manas Kumar Meher (08BS0004011)
Faculty Guide
Prof. Biraj Mohanty
1
Contents
INTRODUCTION
CREATE A SCA
ROUTES TO SCA
CREATE COMPETITIVEADVANTAGE
RECOGNISING PATTERNS
PORTER`S APPROACH
PORTER`S APPROACH TO CA
PORTER`S RECIPE
BEYOND PORTER
ATTACKERS VS DEFENDER
EXAMPLE OF SUZLON
2
SUSTAINABLE COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
Sustainability is a framework for responding to the emerging competitive threats and maintaining
competitive advantage.
1) Attract customers
INTRODUCTION
• A firm must identify its position relative to the competition in the market
• By knowing if it is a leader, challenger, follower or nicher, it can adopt appropriate strategies to compete
A good strategist seeks not only to “win the hill, but hold on to it.”(Subash Jain)
Sustainability is a framework for responding to the emerging competitive threats and maintaining
competitive advantage.
Basis of competition
CREATE A SCA
We have suggested that the ability to add value is enhanced by outright dominance or cooperation
3
In the case of oligopoly we get an understanding of the drivers of market level profits (5 forces)
But what about differences amongst firms in the same market. What might determine the ability of a
particular firm to outperform the market average? To achieve a sustainable superior level of
performance? Or generate ‘rents of ability’?
ROUTES TO SCA
What are the firm specific determinants of relative success and failure in the firm’s search for value
(absolute if you buy the Austrian line of course).
Are there any useful generalisations to be made, lessons to be learned, which can help to guide the
strategy process?
Lower overall costs for same prices. More productive organisation relative to rivals.
Higher (premium) prices for similar costs. More highly valued products (by consumers) not negated by
higher costs of production.
Innovation.
Differentiation.
Organisational effectiveness
Better reputation:
Provide your own examples of firms that compete successfully on this basis
RECOGNISING PATTERNS
Advantage comes from understanding and exploiting the emerging competitive market patterns. There is
scope for advantage based on:
4
Analysis/ interpretation capabilities
Implementation capabilities
The ability to do this depends in turn on the effectiveness and integration of the appropriate key business
activities and processes (distinctive capabilities/ competencies) which underlie cost competitiveness,
quality, innovation, speed to market, network building, and customer intimacy.
Production, marketing, logistics, supply chain management, collaboration, branding, quality, market
development, product development, and innovation.
Which in turn depends on organisational processes and practices such as HRM, information and decision
management, and relationship management.
PORTER’S APPROACH
In ‘Competitive Advantage’ P argues that firm specific perf depends basically on the individual firm’s
ability to organise and manage the cost/ differentiation drivers involved so as to produce a cost advantage
or a differentiation advantage. (see next slide)
Cost advantage means having costs below average for a given market price which might come from ….
Differentiation means getting a higher price for similar costs Which might come from being better, newer,
earlier to market, more desirable, more distinctive, more reliable, offering a more cost effective ‘solution’
for customers, or providing a better ‘total system’ with complementor’s (Wintel)
BENEFIT ADVANTAGE
Differential adv means benefit advantage. A strategy based on this would aim to offer a superior ‘benefit’
to the consumer and obtain a price differential which would justify the higher costs involved. That is there
would be a positive return to the extra investment.
Costs arise for a business because it acquires RESOURCES (people/ machines/buildings), builds an
ORGANISATION to mobilise and coordinate them, creates CAPABILITIES& COMPETENCIES, creates
BRAND NAMES, creates a REPUTATION, establishes POSITIONS in markets, creates firm specific
KNOWLEDGE, acquires PATENTS, creates supply NETWORKS, creates RELATIONSHIPS, creates a
portfolio of STRATEGIC ACTIONS/ policies and so on.
5
ASSET CREATION
Organisational assets
Positional assets
Knowledge assets
Network assets
Capabilities/ competencies (such as for product development/ marketing/ innovation/ cost management)
Relational assets
Patents
PORTER’S APPROACH TO CA
Low cost/ differentiation may indeed be the proximate cause of CA but they cannot be the ultimate
source.
Low cost positions, superior quality, speed to market, or whatever, must come from something or other
the organization has or does.
For example in Ricardo’s time the superior returns (CA) of some farmers indeed came from lower costs
which derived ultimately from superior quality (i.e. more productive) land, a resource that was very hard
to make more of!
Nowadays Nokia’s or Dell’s superior returns come ultimately from something similar, something (scarce
and hard to make more of) which allows them to do things which enable them to offer a better ‘value for
money’ proposition to consumers. But what things exactly?
BEYOND PORTER
Can we now offer a better/ deeper explanation of the roots of (and routes to) superior business
performance?
In the 90’s a capabilities/ competencies approach emerged as a ‘new orthodoxy’ leading to a distinctive
‘resource based view’ of the firm and approach to strategy.
6
THE CAPABILITIES APPROACH
Question: What ‘things’ or ‘qualities’ could give a specific firm a sustainable edge (cheaper/ better/ …)
over its rivals?
A series of influential articles in the HBR and elsewhere during the 90’s suggested a new approach
(although it turned out its origins were much earlier…Penrose, or even earlier…Ricardo)
Examines the nature and origins of firm specific competitive advantage, or the firm specific determinants of
performance. It takes as a start point the evidence, of substantial and sustained differences in the profitability of
firms operating in the same market. It then considers how such a differential could be sustained in competitive
conditions. Why don’t the laggard firms simply study and replicate the lessons of their more successful rivals?
Why don’t the individual resource owners involved capture the value created for themselves rather than it going to
the organisation? The school gets its name from the answer it provides to this question. Basically the answer it
provides is to point to the simple fact that each firm has a distinctive history and thus distinctive resources, assets,
capabilities and competencies, acquired and developed over time, which drive its performance.
Management’s ability to consolidate technology and production skills into competencies so the business
can adapt quickly to changing opportunities/circumstances.
Many firms fail to identify their own core competencies and so fail to nurture them properly or exploit
them fully.
Competitive advantage derives ultimately from the ownership of a scarce valuable ‘resource’.
Superior performance derives from developing a ‘competitively distinct’ set of resources and deploying
them effectively.
Traces connection between performance, strategy, customer perspective, processes and assets.
Key perspectives or generic value propositions are product leadership, customer intimacy, and
operational excellence.
NB it isn’t just a matter of having capabilities or competencies, but having distinctive c and c. More
effective than average in some area(s)?
Innovation effectiveness
Organisational effectiveness
Financial effectiveness
Learning effectiveness
Corporate Architecture
8
Innovation
Reputation
ATTACKERS V DEFENDERS
Recent research by McKinsey suggests that all really successful businesses (out performers) are
innovators but that not all innovators are successful (Apple).
Success comes from ‘creative destruction’. From aggressive attacking not defending.
But success can bring ‘cultural lock in’ and gradual decline. Few firms are superior performers for very
long (10/15 years is a long time nowadays).
These longer term successes manage the trick of ‘creative destruction’, generating creative change whilst
maintaining effective central control. In a word, architecture.
Theodore Levitt in his article, “Innovative Imitation” argued that a product imitation strategy might be just as
profitable as a product innovation strategy e.g. Product innovation—Sony Product-imitation—Panasonic
Smaller firms can avoid larger firms by targeting smaller markets or niches that are of little or no interest
to the larger firms e.g. Logitech—mice Microbrewers--special beers
Nichers must create niches, expand the niches and protect them e.g. Nike constantly created new niches--
cycling, walking, hiking, cheerleading, etc.
Market niche may be attacked by larger firms once they notice the niches are successful .
COMPANY OVERVIEW
Suzlon Energy Limited (Suzlon) is a wind power company along with its subsidiaries engages in designing,
developing and manufacturing of wind turbine generators and related components such as rotor blades, control
panels, nacelle cover, tubular towers, generators and gearboxes. Further, the company also provides consultancy,
design, manufacturing, installation, operation maintenance services as well as is involved in wind resource
mapping, identification of suitable sites and technical planning of wind power projects. The company principally
operates in India, China, Americas, Europe, New Zealand, South Korea, South Africa Australia. Suzlon, a major
force in Global Wind Industry (Ranked Worldwide) by installed capacity. It provides end-to-end power solutions.
The company holds nearly 10.5% share in the global market. Now, the company has the total production capacity
of over 3000 The company currently has a combined manufacturing base of 2700 MW of annual capacity, and is
undertaking an aggressive expansion program to expand its base to 5,700 MW of capacity in FY2009.
10
TIMELINE & SELECT MILESTONES
11
SUZLON GROUP – GLOBAL PRESENCE
12
DRIVERS FOR GROWTH
1. Access to technology
2. Access to people
Management etc. with existing and tested relationships comprising the core team.
Follow shift in customer trends (consolidating and becoming bigger more complex.
13
3. Access to new markets/customers
Receivables
Inventories
• Procurement reduction.
14
SUSTAINING COMPETETIVE ADVANTAGE OF SUZLON
CONCLUSIONS
Sustainability is a method for integrating environmental and social issues into critical long-term decision
making decisions for the company.
Sustainability provides a mechanism through which a company can maintain a competitive edge.
Application of the proposed Sustainability Triangle can help companies answer the question “Why
Sustainability” by addressing specific issues of relevance, scope and bottom line results.
15