Solution Manual For Strategic Management Concepts and Cases Competitiveness and Globalization 11th Edition Hitt, Ireland, Hoskisson
Solution Manual For Strategic Management Concepts and Cases Competitiveness and Globalization 11th Edition Hitt, Ireland, Hoskisson
Solution Manual For Strategic Management Concepts and Cases Competitiveness and Globalization 11th Edition Hitt, Ireland, Hoskisson
eu/Solution-Manual-for-Strategic-Management-Concepts-and-Cases-Competitiveness-an
Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
Chapter 1
Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
CHAPTER OUTLINE
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
LECTURE NOTES
Chapter Introduction: You may want to begin this lecture with a general comment that
Chapter 1 provides an overview of the strategic management process. This chapter
introduces a number of key terms and models that students will study in more detail in
Chapters 2 through 13. Stress the importance of students paying careful attention to the
concepts introduced in this chapter so that they are well-grounded in strategic
management concepts before proceeding further.
OPENING CASE
The Global Impact of the Golden Arches
McDonald’s is a global company with broad market penetration and an extremely strong
brand. It is larger and more successful than its rivals. As the case notes, however,
McDonald’s success makes it an easy target. Public reaction to a 2012 ad turned from
positive to negative as criticism of its food and link to the obesity problem were spread via
social media. The company responded by offering healthy menu options and including
nutritional information on its packaging. It also has added Wi-Fi in its stores to attract
more customers (especially students). Even though the company is successful it must be
constantly aware of changing conditions that might impact its costs, demand, and ability
to perform.
Teaching Note: To initiate discussion, ask how the case lays the groundwork
for the importance of strategy as defined in the chapter—the coordinated set of
commitments and actions designed to achieve competitive advantage. Ask
students identify other ways that McDonald’s has responded to the many
environmental changes that it is experiencing. The case also provides a nice
lead-in to discuss global strategy and how companies compete in very different
markets. Ask students if they have been to a McDonald’s in another country
and, if so, to identify some of the ways the company caters to local conditions.
Strategy can be defined as an integrated and coordinated set of commitments and actions
designed to exploit core competencies and gain a competitive advantage.
So long as a firm can sustain (or maintain) a competitive advantage, investors will earn
above-average returns. Above-average returns represent returns that exceed returns that
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
investors expect to earn from other investments with similar levels of risk (investor
uncertainty about the economic gains or losses that will result from a particular investment).
In other words, above average-returns exceed investors’ expected levels of return for given
risk levels.
Teaching Note: Point out that in the long run, firms must earn at least
average returns and provide investors with average returns if they are to
survive. If a firm earns below-average returns and provides investors with
below-average returns, investors will withdraw their funds and place them in
investments that earn at least average returns. At this point it may be useful to
highlight the role institutional investors play in regulating above average
performances.
In smaller new venture firms, performance is sometimes measured in terms of the amount
and speed of growth rather than more traditional profitability measures—new ventures
require time to earn acceptable returns.
A framework that can assist firms in their quest for strategic competitiveness is the strategic
management process, the full set of commitments, decisions and actions required for a firm
to systematically achieve strategic competitiveness and earn above-average returns. This
process is illustrated in Figure 1.1.
FIGURE 1.1
The Strategic Management Process
Figure 1.1 illustrates the dynamic, interrelated nature of the elements of the strategic
management process and provides an outline of where the different elements of the process
are covered in this text.
Feedback linkages among the three primary elements indicate the dynamic nature of the
strategic management process: strategic inputs, strategic actions, and strategic outcomes.
Analysis, in the form of information gained by scrutinizing the internal environment and
scanning the external environment, are used to develop the firm's vision and mission.
Strategic actions are guided by the firm's vision and mission, and are represented by
strategies that are formulated or developed and subsequently implemented or put into
action.
Feedback links the elements of the strategic management process together and helps firms
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
continuously adjust or revise strategic inputs and strategic actions in order to achieve
desired strategic outcomes.
In addition to describing the impact of globalization and technological change on the current
business environment, this chapter also discusses two approaches to the strategic
management process. The first, the industrial organization model, suggests that the external
environment should be considered as the primary determinant of a firm’s strategic actions.
The second is the resource-based model, which perceives the firm’s resources and
capabilities (the internal environment) as critical links to strategic competitiveness.
Following the discussion in this chapter, as well as in Chapters 2 and 3, students should see
that these models must be integrated to achieve strategic competitiveness.
The competitive landscape can be described as one in which the fundamental nature of
competition is changing in a number of the world’s industries. Further, the boundaries of
industries are becoming blurred and more difficult to define.
Consider recent changes that have taken place in the telecommunication and TV industries—
e.g., not only cable companies and satellite networks compete for entertainment revenue
from television, but telecommunication companies also are stepping into the entertainment
business through significant improvements in fiber-optic lines. Partnerships further blur
industry boundaries (e.g., MSNBC is co-owned by NBC, itself owned by General Electric
and Microsoft).
The contemporary competitive landscape thus implies that traditional sources of competitive
advantage—economies of scale and large advertising budgets—may not be as important in
the future as they were in the past. The rapid and unpredictable technological change that
characterizes this new competitive landscape implies that managers must adopt new ways of
thinking. The new competitive mind-set must value flexibility, speed, innovation, integration,
and the challenges that evolve from constantly changing conditions.
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
A global economy is one in which goods, services, people, skills, and ideas move freely
across geographic borders.
The emergence of this global economy results in a number of challenges and opportunities.
For instance, Europe is now the world’s largest single market (despite the difficulties of
adapting to multiple national cultures and the lack of a single currency. The European Union
has become one of the world’s largest markets, with 700 million potential customers.
STRATEGIC FOCUS
Starbucks is a New Economy Multinational
Starbucks is a large and innovative multinational firm with growth expectations in both its
domestic and international markets. It plans to significantly increase its presence in Asian
markets and has tailored its strategy to local conditions to position itself for growth (store
size, flavors, and teas). In fact, Starbucks expects China to become its second largest market
in the very near future. Vietnam and India are additional markets the company is targeting.
On the other hand, the company’s experience in Europe has been mixed. The European
‘coffee culture,’ built around the café experience, was difficult for the company to penetrate
with its traditional business model. To grow in Europe, Starbucks is now building larger
stores to improve seating and encourage customers to linger, and developed products to
appeal to local (country) cultures and tastes. In addition, the company has set its sights on
other markets (instant coffee, single-serving coffee, tea, juice, and bakery).
Teaching Note: Starbucks helps illustrate just how global business has become
and how companies must adapt strategy to align with local conditions. A one-
size-fits-all approach probably has limited potential for success, especially in
consumer products. Ask students if they have visited a Starbucks in another
country and, if so, to identify some of the ways the company caters to local
conditions. Ask students to evaluate the importance of the Starbucks brand as it
continues to expand and what might hinder the company’s expansion efforts in
the countries profiled in the Strategic Focus.
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
Although globalization seems an attractive strategy for competing in the current competitive
landscape, there are risks as well. These include such factors as:
The “liability of foreignness” (i.e., the risk of competing internationally)
Overdiversification beyond the firm’s ability to successfully manage operations in
multiple foreign markets
A point to emphasize: entry into international markets requires proper use of the strategic
management process.
Though global markets are attractive strategic options for some companies, they are not the
only source of strategic competitiveness. In fact, for most companies, even for those capable
of competing successfully in global markets, it is critical to remain committed to and
strategically competitive in the domestic market. And domestic markets can be testing
grounds for possibly entering an international market at some point in the future.
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
Three technological trends and conditions are significantly altering the nature of competition:
Increasing rate of technological change and diffusion
The information age
Increasing knowledge intensity
Both the rate of change and the introduction of new technologies have increased greatly over
the last 15 to 20 years.
A term that is used to describe rapid and consistent replacement of current technologies by
new, information-intensive technologies is perpetual innovation. This implies that
innovation—discussed in more detail in Chapter 13—must be continuous and carry a high
priority for all organizations.
The shorter product life cycles that result from rapid diffusion of innovation often means
that products may be replicated within very short time periods, placing a competitive
premium on a firm’s ability to rapidly introduce new products into the marketplace. In
fact, speed-to-market may become the sole source of competitive advantage. In the
computer industry during the early 1980s, hard disk drives would typically remain current
for four to six years, after which a new and better product became available. By the late
1980s, the expected life had fallen to two to three years. By the 1990s, it was just six to
nine months.
The rapid diffusion of innovation may have made patents a source of competitive advantage
only in the pharmaceutical and chemical industries. Many firms do not file patent
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
applications to safeguard (for at least a time) the technical knowledge that would be
disclosed explicitly in a patent application.
Disruptive technologies (in line with the Schumpeterian notion of “creative destruction”) can
destroy the value of existing technologies by replacing them with new ones. Current
examples include the success of iPods, PDAs, and WiFi.
Changes in information technology have made rapid access to information available to firms
all over the world, regardless of size. Consider the rapid growth in the following
technologies: personal computers (PCs), cellular phones, computers, personal digital
assistants (PDAs), artificial intelligence, virtual reality, and massive databases. These
examples show how information is used differently as a result of new technologies. The
ability to access and use information has become an important source of competitive
advantage in almost every industry.
There have been dramatic changes in information technology in recent years.
The number of PCs is expected to grow to 2.3 billion by 2015.
The declining cost of information technology.
The Internet provides an information-carrying infrastructure available to individuals and
firms worldwide.
The ability to access a high level of relatively inexpensive information has created strategic
opportunities for many information-intensive businesses. For example, retailers now can use
the Internet to provide shopping to customers virtually anywhere.
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
The implication of this discussion is that to achieve strategic competitiveness and earn
above-average returns, firms must develop the ability to adapt rapidly to change or achieve
strategic flexibility.
Strategic flexibility represents the set of capabilities—in all areas of their operations—that
firms use to respond to the various demands and opportunities that are found in dynamic,
uncertain environments. This implies that firms must develop certain capabilities,
including the capacity to learn continuously, that will provide the firm with new skill sets.
However, those working within firms to develop strategic flexibility should understand
that the task is not an easy one, largely because of inertia that can build up over time. A
firm’s focus and past core competencies may actually slow change and strategic
flexibility.
Teaching Note: Firms capable of rapidly and broadly applying what they learn
achieve strategic flexibility and the resulting capacity to change in ways that will
increase the probability of succeeding in uncertain, hypercompetitive
environments. Some firms must change dramatically to remain competitive or
return to competitiveness. How often are firms able to make this shift? Overall,
does it take more effort to make small, periodic changes, or to wait and make
more dramatic changes when these become necessary?
Two models describing key strategic inputs to a firm's strategic actions are discussed next:
the Industrial Organization (or externally focused) model and the Resource-Based (or
internally focused) model.
Teaching Note: The recommended teaching strategy for this section is to first
discuss the assumptions underlying the I/O model. Then use Figure 1.2 to
introduce linkages in the I/O model and provide the background for an
expanded discussion of the model in Chapter 2.
The I/O or Industrial Organization model adopts an external perspective to explain that
forces outside of the organization represent the dominant influences on a firm's strategic
actions. In other words, this model presumes that the characteristics of and conditions present
in the external environment determine the appropriateness of strategies that are formulated
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
and implemented in order for a firm to earn above-average returns. In short, the I/O model
specifies that the choice of industries in which to compete has more influence on firm
performance than the decisions made by managers inside their firm.
3. Resources used to implement strategies are highly mobile across firms. Significant
differences in strategically relevant resources among firms in an industry tend to disappear
because of resource mobility. Thus, any resource differences soon disappear as they are
observed and acquired or learned by other firms in the industry.
According to the I/O model, which was a dominant paradigm from the 1960s through the
1980s, firms must pay careful attention to the structured characteristics of the industry in
which they choose to compete, searching for one that is the most attractive to the firm, given
the firm's strategically relevant resources. Then, the firm must be able to successfully
implement strategies required by the industry's characteristics to be able to increase their
level of competitiveness. The five forces model is an analytical tool used to address and
describe these industry characteristics.
FIGURE 1.2
The I/O Model of Above-Average Returns
Based on its four underlying assumptions, the I/O model prescribes a five-step process for
firms to achieve above-average returns:
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
2. Locate an industry (or industries) with a high potential for returns based on the structural
characteristics of the industry. A model for assessing these characteristics, the Five
Forces Model of Competition, is discussed in Chapter 2.
3. Based on the characteristics of the industry in which the firm chooses to compete,
strategies that are linked with above-average returns should be selected. A model or
framework that can be used to assess the requirements and risks of these strategies (the
generic strategies called cost leadership & differentiation) are discussed in detail in
Chapter 4.
5. The I/O model indicates that above-average returns will accrue to firms that successfully
implement relevant strategic actions that enable the firm to leverage its strengths (skills
and resources) to meet the demands or pressures and constraints of the industry in which
it has elected to compete. The implementation process is described in Chapters 10
through 13.
STRATEGIC FOCUS
The Airlines Industry Exemplifies the I/O Model – Imitation and Poor Performance
The airline industry is a real-world example of the I/O model. Airlines are very similar with
respect to services, routes, and performance since the industry was deregulated. When an
airline does adapt something new, it is commonly imitated very quickly. A major
characteristic of the industry, both in the U.S. and Europe, is consolidation. This does little
to spur differentiation among competitors. The primary source of competitive advantage
comes from making fewer mistakes such as lost bags, flight cancellations, and delays. In the
current environment, most airlines are trying to cut costs (sometimes through scale), and
generate revenue by charging for amenities that used to be provided at no cost to travelers.
In the Strategic Focus, Southwest Airlines is noted as a strong performer due to the fact that
it is both efficient and has developed resources and capabilities over time that its more
traditional rivals have not.
Teaching Note: The airline industry has not been an attractive industry for quite
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
some time. Even the best performers produce results that are much weaker than
the average performers of many other industries. Ask students to compare some of
the airlines profiled in the Strategic Focus. Ask them what factors are most important
to them when they purchase a ticket and what airlines might be able to do to get
their business.
The resource-based model adopts an internal perspective to explain how a firm's unique
bundle or collection of internal resources and capabilities represent the foundation on which
value-creating strategies should be built.
Resources are inputs into a firm's production process, such as capital equipment, individual
employee's skills, patents, brand names, finance, and talented managers. These resources can
be tangible or intangible.
Core competencies are resources and capabilities that serve as a source of competitive
advantage for a firm. Often related to functional skills (e.g., marketing at Philip Morris), core
competencies—when developed, nurtured, and applied throughout a firm—may result in
strategic competitiveness.
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
FIGURE 1.3
The Resource-Based Model of Above-Average Returns
1. Firms should identify their internal resources and assess their strengths and weaknesses.
The strengths and weaknesses of firm resources should be assessed relative to
competitors.
2. Firms should identify the set of resources that provide the firm with capabilities that are
unique to the firm, relative to its competitors. The firm should identify those capabilities
that enable the firm to perform a task or activity better than its competitors.
3. Firms should determine the potential for their unique sets of resources and capabilities to
outperform rivals in terms of returns. Determine how a firm’s resources and capabilities
can be used to gain competitive advantage.
4. Locate an attractive industry. Determine the industry that provides the best fit between
the characteristics of the industry and the firm’s resources and capabilities.
Resources and capabilities can lead to a competitive advantage when they are valuable, rare,
costly to imitate, and non-substitutable.
Resources are valuable when they support taking advantage of opportunities or
neutralizing external threats.
Resources are rare when possessed by few, if any, competitors.
Resources are costly to imitate when other firms cannot obtain them inexpensively
(relative to other firms).
Resources are non-substitutable when they have no structural equivalents.
Teaching Note: Refer students to Figure 1.1 that indicates the link or
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
Vision
Vision is a picture of what the firm wants to be, and in broad terms, what it wants to
ultimately achieve. Vision is “big picture” thinking with passion that helps people feel what
they are supposed to be doing.
Vision statements:
Reflect a firm’s values and aspirations
Are intended to capture the heart and mind of each employee (and hopefully, many of its
other stakeholders)
Tend to be enduring, whereas its mission can change in light of changing environmental
conditions
Tend to be relatively short and concise, easily remembered
Rely on input from multiple key stakeholders
The CEO is responsible for working with others to form the firm’s vision. However,
experience shows that the most effective vision statement results when the CEO involves a
host of people to develop it.
A vision statement should be clearly tied to the conditions in the firm’s external and internal
environments and it must be achievable. Moreover, the decisions and actions of those
involved with developing the vision must be consistent with that vision.
Mission
A firm's mission is an externally focused application of its vision that states the firm's unique
purpose and the scope of its operations in product and market terms.
As with the vision, the final responsibility for forming the firm’s mission rests with the CEO,
though the CEO and other top-level managers tend to involve a larger number of people in
forming the mission. This is because middle- and first-level managers and other employees
have more direct contact with customers and their markets.
A firm's vision and mission must provide the guidance that enables the firm to achieve the
desired strategic outcomes—strategic competitiveness and above-average returns—
illustrated in Figure 1.1 that enable the firm to satisfy the demands of those parties having an
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
Earning above-average returns often is not mentioned in mission statements. The reasons for
this are that all firms want to earn above-average returns and that desired financial outcomes
result from properly serving certain customers while trying to achieve the firm’s intended
future. In fact, research has shown that having an effectively formed vision and mission has a
positive effect on performance (growth in sales, profits, employment, and net worth).
STAKEHOLDERS
Stakeholders are the individuals and groups who can affect and are affected by the strategic
outcomes achieved and who have enforceable claims on a firm's performance.
Classification of Stakeholders
The stakeholder concept reflects that individuals and groups have a "stake" in the strategic
outcomes of the firm because they can be either positively or negatively affected by those
outcomes and because achieving the strategic outcomes may be dependent on the support or
active participation of certain stakeholder groups.
Figure Note: Students can use Figure 1.4 to visualize the three stakeholder
groups.
FIGURE 1.4
The Three Stakeholder Groups
Figure 1.4 provides a definition of a stakeholder and illustrates the three general
classifications and members of each stakeholder group:
Capital market stakeholders
Product market stakeholders
Organizational stakeholders
Note: Students can use Figure 1.4 while you discuss the challenges of meeting conflicting
stakeholder expectations.
Teaching Note: The following table was developed from the text’s
presentation (and more) to assist you in organizing a discussion of each
stakeholder group's expectations or demands, potential conflicts, and
stakeholder management strategies.
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
If the firm is strategically competitive and earns above-average returns, it can afford to
simultaneously satisfy all stakeholders. When earning average or below-average returns,
tradeoffs must be made. At the level of average returns, firms must at least minimally satisfy
all stakeholders. When returns are below average, some stakeholders can be minimally
satisfied, while others may be dissatisfied.
For example, reducing the level of research and development expenditures (to increase short-
term profits) enables the firm to pay out the additional short-term profits to shareholders as
dividends. However, if reducing R&D expenditures results in a decline in the long-term
strategic competitiveness of the firm's products or services, it is possible that employees will
not enjoy a secure or rewarding career environment (which violates a primary union
expectation or demand for job security for its membership). At the same time, customers may
be offered products that are less reliable at unattractive prices, relative to those offered by
firms that did not reduce R&D expenditures.
Thus, the stakeholder management process may involve a series of tradeoffs that is
dependent on the extent to which the firm is dependent on the support of each affected
stakeholder and the firm's ability to earn above-average returns.
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
right.” This suggests that customer interests are to be tended to next. Finally,
we get around to looking to the needs of employees, if resources make that
possible. This is the standard approach, but some firms have turned this idea
on its head. For example, Southwest Airlines has been extremely successful
by taking great efforts to select the right employees and treat them well, which
then spills over into appropriate treatment of the customer. As you might
guess, the company assumes that these emphases will naturally lead to
positive outcomes for stockholders as well (as has been the case). This issue
can lead to interesting discussions with students about their thoughts on the
topic.
STRATEGIC LEADERS
Although it depends on the size of the organization, all organizations have a CEO or top
manager and this individual is the primary organizational strategist in every organization.
Small organizations may have a single strategist: the CEO or owner. Large organizations may
have few or several top-level managers, executives, or a top management team. All of these
individuals are organizational strategists.
Top managers play decisive roles in firms’ efforts to achieve their desired strategic outcomes.
As organizational strategists, top managers are responsible for deciding how resources will
be developed or acquired, at what cost, and how they will be used or allocated throughout the
organization. Strategists also must consider the risks of actions under consideration, along
with the firm’s vision and managers’ strategic orientations.
Organizational strategists also are responsible for determining how the organization does
business. This responsibility is reflected in the organizational culture, which refers to the
complex set of ideologies, symbols, and core values shared throughout the firm and that
influences the way it conducts business. The organization’s culture is the social energy that
drives—or fails to drive—the organization.
Though it seems simplistic, performing their role effectively requires strategists to work
hard, perform thorough analyses of available information, be brutally honest, desire high
performance, exercise common sense, think clearly, and ask questions and listen. In addition,
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
strategic leaders must be able to “think seriously and deeply … about the purposes of the
organizations they head or functions they perform, about the strategies, tactics, technologies,
systems, and people necessary to attain these purposes and about the important questions that
always need to be asked.” Additionally, effective strategic leaders work to set an ethical tone
in their firms.
Strategists work long hours and face ambiguous decision situations, but they also have
opportunities to dream and act in concert with a compelling vision that motivates others in
creating competitive advantage.
Top-level managers try to predict the outcomes of their strategic decisions before they are
implemented, but this is sometimes very difficult to do. Those firms that do a better job of
anticipating the outcomes of strategic moves will obviously be in a better position to
succeed. One way to do this is by mapping out the profit pools of an industry. Profit pools
are the total profits earned in an industry at all points along the value chain. Four steps are
involved:
1. Define the pool’s boundaries
2. Estimate the pool’s overall size
3. Estimate the size of the value-chain activity in the pool
4. Reconcile the calculations
Teaching Note: The final section of this chapter reviews Figure 1.1 (The
Strategic Management Process), providing both an outline of the process and
the framework for the next 12 chapters. Thus, students should refer back to
Figure 1.1 as you present the material to come next.
Chapters 2 and 3 provide more detail regarding the strategic inputs to the strategic
management process: analysis of the firm's external and internal environments that must be
performed so that sufficient knowledge is developed regarding external opportunities and
internal capabilities. This enables the development of the firm's vision and mission.
Chapters 4 through 9 discuss the strategy formulation stage of the process. Topics covered
include:
Deciding on business-level strategy, or how to compete in a given business (Chapter 4)
Understanding competitive dynamics, in that strategies are not formulated and
implemented in isolation but require understanding and responding to competitors' actions
(Chapter 5)
Setting corporate-level strategy, or deciding in which industries or businesses the firm will
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
compete, how resources will be allocated, and how the different business units will be
managed (Chapter 6)
The acquisition of business units and the restructuring of the firm’s portfolio of businesses
(Chapter 7)
Selecting appropriate international strategies that are consistent with the firm's resources,
capabilities and core competencies, and external opportunities (Chapter 8)
Developing cooperative strategies with other firms to gain competitive advantage (Chapter
9)
The final section of the text, Chapters 10–13, examines actions necessary to effectively
implement strategies. Effective implementation has a significant impact on firm
performance. Topics covered include:
Methods for governing to ensure satisfaction of stakeholder demands and attainment of
strategic outcomes (Chapter 10)
Structures that are used and actions taken to control a firm's operations (Chapter 11)
Patterns of strategic leadership that are most appropriate given the competitive
environment (Chapter 12)
Linkages among corporate entrepreneurship, innovation, and strategic competitiveness
(Chapter 13)
Teaching Note: Students should realize that none of the chapters stands
alone, just as no single step or facet of the strategic management process
stands alone. If the strategic management process is to result in a firm being
strategically competitive and earning above-average returns, all facets of the
process must be treated as both interdependent and interrelated.
Above-average returns are returns that are in excess of what an investor expects to earn
from other investments with a similar level or amount of risk.
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
The strategic management process (see Figure 1.1) is the full set of commitments,
decisions, and actions required for a firm to achieve strategic competitiveness and earn
above-average returns.
2. What are the characteristics of the current competitive landscape? What two
factors are the primary drivers of this landscape?
In the current competitive landscape, the nature of competition has changed. As a result,
managers making strategic decisions must adopt a new mind-set that is global in
orientation. Firms must learn to compete in highly chaotic environments that produce
disorder and a great deal of uncertainty.
The two primary factors that have created the current competitive landscape are
globalization of industries and markets and rapid and significant technological change.
The implication for business firms is that to be successful, they must be able to meet or
exceed global performance standards (in terms of such factors as quality, price, product
features, speed to market) and be able to keep up with both the rapid pace of
technological change as well as the rapid diffusion of innovation.
3. According to the I/O model, what should a firm do to earn above-average returns?
The I/O model suggests that conditions and characteristics of the external environment
(the general, industry, and competitive environments) are the primary inputs to and
determinants of strategies that firms should formulate and implement to earn above-
average returns. Assumptions of the I/O model are that: (1) the external environment
imposes pressures and constraints that determine which strategies will result in superior
profitability, (2) most firms competing in an industry (or industry segment) control
similar strategically relevant resources and pursue similar strategies in light of resource
similarity, (3) resources used to implement strategies are highly mobile across firms, and
(4) decision makers are assumed to be rational and committed to acting in the firm’s best
interests.
The I/O model thus challenges firms to seek out the industry (or industry segment) with
the greatest profit potential and then learn how to use their resources to implement value-
creating strategies given the structural characteristics of the industry.
4. What does the resource-based model suggest a firm should do to earn above-
average returns?
The resource-based model assumes that each firm is a collection of unique resources and
capabilities that provides the basis for its strategy and is the primary source of its
profitability. It also assumes that over time, firms acquire different resources and develop
unique capabilities. Thus, all firms competing within an industry (or industry segment)
may not possess the same strategically relevant resources and capabilities. In addition,
resources may not be highly mobile across firms.
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
Thus, the resource-based model challenges firms to formulate and implement strategies
that allow the firm to best exploit its core competencies—capabilities that are valuable,
rare, costly to imitate, and non-substitutable—relative to opportunities in the external
environment. Resources and capabilities that meet the criteria of core competencies then
serve as the basis of a firm's sustainable competitive advantage, enabling it to achieve
strategic competitiveness and earn above-average returns.
5. What are vision and mission? What is their value for the strategic management
process?
Vision is a picture of what the firm wants to be, and in broad terms, what it wants to
ultimately achieve. Vision is “big picture” thinking with passion that helps people feel
what they are supposed to be doing.
The differences between vision and mission are important because of their different
focuses. However, they are both highly interdependent and add value to the strategic
management process. The externally focused mission provides a sense of purpose for the
firm by indicating the products to be provided to specific markets, while the internally set
vision indicates what ultimately will be achieved. In other words, taken together, the
vision and mission will provide a firm’s managers with the insights needed to effectively
formulate and implement the firm’s strategies.
6. What are stakeholders? How do the three primary stakeholder groups influence
organizations?
Stakeholders are individuals and groups who can affect and are affected by strategic
outcomes achieved and who have enforceable claims on a firm's performance. In other
words, stakeholders have a stake (or a vested interest) in the actions of the firm.
Stakeholders can influence organizations because they have the ability to withhold
participation that is essential to a firm's survival, competitiveness, and profitability. The
three primary stakeholder groups are: (1) capital market stakeholders, e.g., shareholders,
lenders, (2) product market stakeholders, e.g., customers, suppliers, host communities,
unions, and (3) organizational stakeholders, e.g., employees, managers, and others.
There are many ways that stakeholders can influence organizations. For example,
dissatisfied lenders can impose stricter covenants on subsequent borrowing of capital.
Dissatisfied stockholders can reflect this sentiment through several means, including
selling their stock (which can have a negative effect on its price). Dissatisfied employees
can organize for collective bargaining. Dissatisfied community groups could express their
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
disapproval by boycotting the firm’s goods. Stakeholder groups each have ways of
bringing their influence to bear on the firm.
Strategic leaders are people located in different parts of the firm using the strategic
management process to help the firm reach its vision and mission. Regardless of their
location in the firm, successful strategic leaders are decisive and committed to nurturing
those around them and are committed to helping the firm create value for customers and
returns for shareholders and other stakeholders.
8. What are the elements of the strategic management process? How are they
interrelated?
The parts of the strategic management process (illustrated in Figure 1.1) are strategic
inputs, strategic actions and strategic outcomes. Strategic inputs are represented by the
firm’s vision and mission that result from the assessment of the firm’s resources,
capabilities, and competencies and conditions in the external environment. These
strategic inputs—vision and mission—drive the firm’s strategic actions or the
formulation and implementation of strategy. The strategic outcomes of successfully
formulating and implementing value-creating strategies are strategic competitiveness and
above-average returns. A feedback loop links strategic outcomes with strategic inputs.
This exercise is meant to piece together many of the elements that are covered in chapter 1
such as stakeholders, strategic management process and strategic leadership. The exercise
brings this all together by asking teams of students to identify a not for profit firm. This
forum is used because many times not for profits face unique stakeholder challenges that
are interesting to uncover. Additionally most not for profits put their strategic plans in
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
easy to find places on their websites. The key for the student teams is to identify the
stakeholders and relevant issues that may face them if the firm implements the items in its
strategic plan.
You may also make this an individual assignment rather than team if so desired as the
exercise would fit well in either scenario.
Each team should present its findings as regards the exercise. The instructor should pay
particular attention to the teams attentiveness regarding stakeholders.
In this exercise, students are asked to individually select a company from Fortune 500’s
“Top Companies: Most Profitable Firms” list. The 2012 list is available directly at:
http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune500/2012/performers/companies/profits/.
Ask for student volunteers to present their findings. You may opt to select a particular
industry in which students have selected several firms as a basis of comparison. During
the presentations, have the others students in the class participate by: Identifying if there
are missing external environment pressures and constraints on the firm in question and
identify missing resources.
Following the presentations, lead a discussion with the whole class about whether or not
the I/O model explains these firms’ above average returns.
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
With stagnant economies across the world, Brazil’s economy is growing at 7%--3 times
faster than America. Brazil is a huge country, slightly larger than the continental US with
vast expanses of arable farmland, an abundance of natural resources, and 14% of the
world’s fresh water. With the world’s greenest economy, 80% of Brazil’s electricity
comes from hydropower and it has the most sophisticated biofuel industry in the world.
Brazil is already the world’s largest producer of iron ore and leading exporter of beef,
chicken, orange juice, sugar, coffee, and tobacco. China has replaced the US as Brazil’s
leading trade partner. Brazilians contend that their size can match China’s dragon-like
appetite and they need Brazil to fulfill the Chinese needs. Batista, with Chinese
investment, and interests in mining, transportation, oil, and gas is building a huge super
port complex north of Rio that will accommodate the world’s largest tankers and speed
delivery of iron ore and other resources to Asia. Commodities are not the only things
driving the Brazilian boom—Brazil has a substantial manufacturing base and a large auto
industry. The world’s third largest aircraft manufacturer also resides in Brazil. Batista says
that the one thing Brazil needs more of is skilled labor—more engineers, which he now
must import from America. He indicates that Brazil is walking into a phase of almost full
employment with the creation of 1.5 million jobs in one year.
Brazil has seen periods of prosperity before—only to have the bubbles burst. Brazil spent
billions in the 50s and 60s moving its capital to Savannah where it built the futuristic city
Brazilia. Brazil then borrowed billions more to develop the county’s interior. Corruption
then led to a financial collapse—2000 % inflation and the largest financial rescue package
in the history of the international monetary fund. Lula, as President of Brazil, a metal
worker with a 4th grade education, receives much credit for turning the country around.
Lula, in an interview, indicates that Brazil was a capitalist country without capital. He
asserts that Brazil needed a metal worker with socialist views to bring more money for
banks, more sales for car companies, and more money to the workers. When asked how,
Lula says the success of an elected official is in the art of doing what is obvious—what
everyone knows needs to be done but some insist on doing differently. Lula recognized
the separation between the rich and poor of Brazil. He gave the poor families a monthly
stipend of $115 dollars just for sending their kids to school and taking them to the doctor.
Such an infusion of cash helped lift 21 million out of poverty and into the lower middle
class, which created an untapped market of first-time buyers for refrigerators and cars.
Lula also encouraged growth and development by businesses but created tight banking
regulations to maintain conservative fiscal policies.
Historically, Brazil had ignored the festering slums overlooking Rio, which was a staging
area for street crimes and drug gangs, but now gets the attention of military police. Brazil
has massive problems with infrastructure—traffic and roads. Ninety percent of the roads
remain unpaved and little public transportation exists in the cities. Delays in building and
renovation exist for the upcoming 2014 World Cup. Lula, in the interview, indicates that
Brazil will organize the most extraordinary World Cup ever. He says that as he leaves
office he told his people that they are not second class citizens—we can get things done,
and we can believe in ourselves. People have started to believe—meaning that he expects
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
3. Is Brazil a hypercompetitor?
Text: Hypercompetition results from the dynamics of strategic maneuvering
among global and innovative combatants. It is a condition of rapidly escalating
competition based on price-quality positioning, competition to create new know-
how and establish first-mover advantage, and competition to protect or invade
established product or geographic markets. The emergence of a global economy
and technology, specifically rapid technological change are two primary drivers of
hypercompetitive environments.
Hypercompetitor: The world’s greenest economy, most sophisticated biofuel
industry in the world, largest producer of iron ore, leading exporter of beef,
chicken, orange juice, sugar, coffee, and tobacco, third largest aircraft
manufacturer, and world’s largest tankers and delivery speed of iron ore and other
resources to Asia
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
6. Identify and explain the stakeholders associated with Brazil’s thriving economy.
Text: Stakeholders are those who can affect, and are affected by, a firm’s strategic
outcomes
Stakeholders:
Brazilian populations: will be affected by increases in standards of
living/changes in social class, increased goods produced and exported,
increased economic opportunities (employment)
Global populations: will be affected by quality of goods produced and
exported from Brazil
Trading partners: will received greater number of products and
opportunities for exchange and appropriate supply to meet population
satisfaction
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
The following questions and exercises can be presented for in-class discussion or assigned as
homework.
1. Business success is often tied to effectively managed strategies. Using the Internet, study
Starbuck’s current performance. Based on analysis, do you judge Starbucks to be a
success? Why or why not?
2. Choose several firms in your local community with which you are familiar. Describe the
twenty-first century competitive landscape to them, and ask for their feedback about how
they anticipate that the landscape will affect their operations during the next five years.
3. Select an organization (e.g., school, club, or church) that is important to you. Who are the
organization’s stakeholders? What degree of influence do you believe each has over the
organization and why?
4. Are you a stakeholder at your university or college? If so, of what stakeholder group or
groups are you a part?
5. Think of an industry in which you want to work. In your opinion, which of the three
primary stakeholder groups is the most powerful in that industry today? Why? Which do
you expect to be the most powerful group in five years? Why?
6. Do you agree or disagree with the following statement? “I think managers have little
responsibility for the failure of business firms.” Justify your view.
7. Do vision and mission have any meaning in your personal life? If so, describe it. Are
your current actions being guided by a vision and mission? If not, why not?
Ethics Questions
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Chapter 1: Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
Internet Exercise
Internet-based services depend heavily on continuous change and rapid strategic decision
making. Companies such as Amazon.com that rely on Internet users for their customer base
have demonstrated a distinct competitive advantage in serving their customers well. Barnes
& Noble (http://www.barnesandnoble.com) is one of Amazon.com’s competitors in the on-
line book and music markets. How does this Web-based expansion affect the stakeholders of
each? How does the entrance of these profitable retailers into the online market affect
Amazon.com’s competitive advantage?
*e-project: Using other Web resources, such as current business press and financial reports,
discuss Amazon.com’s continued growth and limited profits.
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