The document discusses several key topics related to business strategy and management. It describes distinctive competencies as strengths that are difficult for competitors to imitate. It also discusses performing internal audits to understand how different parts of a firm fit together. Additionally, it outlines the resource-based view that internal resources are important for competitive advantage. Some of the main functions of management discussed include planning, organizing, motivating, staffing, and controlling. Marketing functions include customer analysis, selling products, product planning, pricing, distribution, research, and cost/benefit analysis.
The document discusses several key topics related to business strategy and management. It describes distinctive competencies as strengths that are difficult for competitors to imitate. It also discusses performing internal audits to understand how different parts of a firm fit together. Additionally, it outlines the resource-based view that internal resources are important for competitive advantage. Some of the main functions of management discussed include planning, organizing, motivating, staffing, and controlling. Marketing functions include customer analysis, selling products, product planning, pricing, distribution, research, and cost/benefit analysis.
The document discusses several key topics related to business strategy and management. It describes distinctive competencies as strengths that are difficult for competitors to imitate. It also discusses performing internal audits to understand how different parts of a firm fit together. Additionally, it outlines the resource-based view that internal resources are important for competitive advantage. Some of the main functions of management discussed include planning, organizing, motivating, staffing, and controlling. Marketing functions include customer analysis, selling products, product planning, pricing, distribution, research, and cost/benefit analysis.
The document discusses several key topics related to business strategy and management. It describes distinctive competencies as strengths that are difficult for competitors to imitate. It also discusses performing internal audits to understand how different parts of a firm fit together. Additionally, it outlines the resource-based view that internal resources are important for competitive advantage. Some of the main functions of management discussed include planning, organizing, motivating, staffing, and controlling. Marketing functions include customer analysis, selling products, product planning, pricing, distribution, research, and cost/benefit analysis.
Key Internal Forces vDistinctive competencies vA firm's strengths that cannot be easily matched or imitated by competitors vBuilding competitive advantages involves taking advantage of distinctive competencies.
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
The Process of Performing an Internal Audit vThe internal audit vRequires gathering, assimilating, and prioritizing information about the firm's management, marketing, finance, accounting, production/operations, research and development (R&D), and management information systems operations vProvides more opportunity for participants to understand how their jobs, departments, and divisions fit into the whole firm
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
The Resource-Based View (RBV) vThe Resource-Based View (RBV) Approach vcontends that internal resources are more important for a firm than external factors in achieving and sustaining competitive advantage
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
The Resource-Based View (RBV) vProponents of the RBV contend that organizational performance will primarily be determined by internal resources that can be grouped into three all- encompassing categories: vphysical resources vhuman resources vorganizational resources
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
The Resource-Based View (RBV) vFor a resource to be valuable, it must be either (1) rare, (2) hard to imitate, or (3) not easily substitutable. vThese three characteristics of resources are called Empirical Indicators vThese enable a firm to implement strategies that improve its efficiency and effectiveness and lead to a sustainable competitive advantage.
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Management The functions of management consist of five basic activities: vplanning vorganizing vmotivating vstaffing vcontrolling DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4 The Basic Functions of Management v Planning: forecasting, establishing objectives, devising strategies, and developing policies v Organizing: organizational design, job specialization, job descriptions, span of control, coordination, job design, and job analysis v Motivating: leadership, communication, work groups, behavior modification, delegation of authority, job enrichment, job satisfaction, needs fulfillment, organizational change, employee morale, and managerial morale
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
The Basic Functions of Management vStaffing: wage and salary administration, employee benefits, interviewing, hiring, firing, training, management development, employee safety, equal employment opportunity, and union relations vControlling: quality control, financial control, sales control, inventory control, expense control, analysis of variances, rewards, and sanctions
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Marketing Marketing
the process of defining, anticipating,
creating, and fulfilling customers’ needs and wants for products and services
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Functions of Marketing Customer analysis Selling products and services Product and service planning Pricing Distribution Marketing research Cost/benefit analysis DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4 Marketing vCustomer Analysis vthe examination and evaluation of consumer needs, desires, and wants vinvolves administering customer surveys, analyzing consumer information, evaluating market positioning strategies, developing customer profiles, and determining optimal market segmentation strategies
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Selling Products and Services vSelling vincludes many marketing activities, such as advertising, sales promotion, publicity, personal selling, sales force management, customer relations, and dealer relations
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Product and Service Planning vProduct and Service Planning vincludes activities such as test marketing; product and brand positioning; devising warranties; packaging; determining product options, features, style, and quality; deleting old products; and providing for customer service vimportant when a company is pursuing product development or diversification
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Pricing vPricing vFive major stakeholders affect pricing decisions: consumers, governments, suppliers, distributors, and competitors vSometimes an organization will pursue a forward integration strategy primarily to gain better control over prices charged to consumers.
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Distribution vDistribution vincludes warehousing, distribution channels, distribution coverage, retail site locations, sales territories, inventory levels and location, transportation carriers, wholesaling, and retailing vespecially important when a firm is striving to implement a market development or forward integration strategy
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Marketing Research vMarketing Research vthe systematic gathering, recording, and analyzing of data about problems relating to the marketing of goods and services vcan uncover critical strengths and weaknesses
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Cost/Benefit Analysis vCost/Benefit Analysis vThree steps are required: 1. compute the total costs associated with a decision 2. estimate the total benefits from the decision 3. compare the total costs with the total benefits
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Finance/Accounting Functions The functions of finance/accounting comprise three decisions: 1. the investment decision 2. the financing decision 3. the dividend decision
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Finance/Accounting Functions vInvestment Decision (Capital Budgeting) vthe allocation and reallocation of capital and resources to projects, products, assets, and divisions of an organization vFinancing Decision vdetermines the best capital structure for the firm and includes examining various methods by which the firm can raise capital
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Finance/Accounting Functions vDividend Decisions vconcern issues such as the percentage of earnings paid to stockholders, the stability of dividends paid over time, and the repurchase or issuance of stock vdetermine the amount of funds that are retained in a firm compared to the amount paid out to stockholders
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Production/Operations vProduction/operations function v consists of all those activities that transform inputs into goods and services vProduction/operations management deals with inputs, transformations, and outputs that vary across industries and markets.
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
The Basic Functions (Decisions) Within Production/Operations
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Management Information Systems vManagement Information System vReceives raw material from both external and internal evaluation of an organization vImproves the performance of an enterprise by improving the quality of managerial decisions vCollects, codes, stores, synthesizes, and presents information in such a manner that it answers important operating and strategic questions
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Value Chain Analysis (VCA) vValue Chain Analysis (VCA) vrefers to the process whereby a firm determines the costs associated with organizational activities from purchasing raw materials to manufacturing product(s) to marketing those products vaims to identify where low-cost advantages or disadvantages exist anywhere along the value chain from raw material to customer service activities
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
Benchmarking vBenchmarking van analytical tool used to determine whether a firm's value chain activities are competitive compared to rivals and thus conducive to winning in the marketplace ventails measuring costs of value chain activities across an industry to determine “best practices”
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4
DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4 DMU- Beco - sm- chapter 4 The Internal Factor Evaluation (IFE) Matrix 1. List key internal factors as identified in the internal-audit process. 2. Assign a weight that ranges from 0.0 (not important) to 1.0 (all-important) to each factor. 3. Assign a 1-to-4 rating to each factor to indicate whether that factor represents a strength or weakness. 4. Multiply each factor's weight by its rating to determine a weighted score for each variable. 5. Sum the weighted scores for each variable to determine the total weighted score for the organization.