Melissa Schilling: Strategic Management of Technological Innovation
Melissa Schilling: Strategic Management of Technological Innovation
Melissa Schilling: Strategic Management of Technological Innovation
Melissa Schilling
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Overview
A coherent technological innovation strategy leverages the firms existing competitive position and provides direction for future development of the firm. Formulating this strategy requires:
Appraising the firms environment, Appraising the firms strengths, weaknesses, competitive advantages, and core competencies Articulating an ambitious strategic intent. Determining the key resources and capabilities the firm needs to develop or acquire to meet its long-term objectives
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1. Degree of existing rivalry. Determined by number of firms, relative size, degree of differentiation between firms, demand conditions, exit barriers (for firm to leave the market) 2. Threat of potential entrants. Determined by attractiveness of industry, height of entry barriers (e.g., start-up costs, brand loyalty, regulation, etc.) 3. Bargaining power of suppliers. Determined by number of suppliers and their degree of differentiation, the portion of a firms inputs obtained from a particular supplier, the portion of a suppliers sales sold to a particular firm, switching costs, and potential for backward vertical integration - firm produce its own supplies
Organizations Strategic Direction
Discount retail industry as a whole is very competitive and thus unattractive for new entrants but an individual entrant such as WalMart could be profitable because of its scale, use of advanced technology, location strategies, etc.
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Substitutes are not competitive products but can fulfill a strategically equivalent role for the customer Other coffeehouses are competitors to Starbucks but bars, restaurants, beer, soft drinks are substitutes Buses are substitutes for airlines
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The ink cartridge market is extremely profitable to desktop printer manufacturers and thus the cartridge of one company is incompatible with the printer of another company
The market is so profitable that third-party vendors produce clones or refill the empty cartridge with ink
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Each activity can then be considered from the view of how it contributes to the overall value produced by the firm and what the firms strengths and weaknesses are in that activity
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Several core competencies may underlie a business unit and several business units may draw from same competency.
The organizations structure and incentives must encourage cooperation and exchange of resources across strategic business unit boundaries
Sonys core competency is miniaturization which arises from harmonizing multiple technologies (liquid crystal displays, semiconductors, etc.) and is leveraged into multiple markets (TVs, radios, PDAs, etc.)
Organizations Strategic Direction
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Does it transcend a single business? Does it cover a range of businesses, both current and new?
For example, Hondas core competence in engines enables the company to be successful in businesses as diverse as automobiles, motorcycles, lawn mowers, and generators.
Is it hard for competitors to imitate? In general, competencies that arise from the complex harmonization of multiple technologies will be difficult to imitate. The competence may have taken years (or decades) to build. This combination of resources and embedded skills will be difficult for other firms to acquire or duplicate. According to Prahalad and Hamel, few firms are likely to be leaders in more than five or six core competencies. If a company has compiled a list of 20 to 30 capabilities, it probably has not yet identified its true core competencies.
By viewing the business as a portfolio of core competencies, managers are better able to focus on value creation and meaningful new business development, rather than cost cutting or opportunistic expansion
Organizations Strategic Direction
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Strategic Intent
Strategic Intent
A firms purpose is to create value not just by cutting costs or improving operations but by developing new businesses and markets and leveraging corporate resources Strategic intent is a long-term goal that is ambitious, builds upon and stretches firms core competencies, and draws from all levels of the organization.
Canons obsession with overtaking Xerox, Apples mission of ensuring that everyone has a personal computer and Yahoos goal of becoming the worlds largest Internet shopping mall (Hamel & Prahalad) Typically looks 10-20 years ahead, establishes clear milestones for employees to target Without it, firms follow their customers instead of leading them Firm should identify resources and capabilities needed to close gap between strategic intent and current position.
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Customer perspective
Goals: improve customer loyalty, offer best-in-class customer service Measures: market share, percent of repeat purchases, customer satisfaction surveys
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Theory In Action
Internal perspective
Goals: reduce internal safety incidents, build best-in-class franchise teams, improve inventory management Measures: number of safety incidents per month, franchise quality rating, inventory costs
Innovation and learning perspective Goals: accelerate and improve new product development, improve employee skills Measures: percentage of sales from products developed within the past 5 years, average length of the new product development cycle, employee training targets The scorecard may have to be adapted to fit different markets and businesses, but a 2002 survey found that approximately 50% of Fortune 1,000 companies in the US and 40% in Europe use some version of the balanced scorecard
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Theory In Action
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