MBA - Strategic Management Notes
MBA - Strategic Management Notes
MBA - Strategic Management Notes
Strategic Management
Objectives- Help understand concepts, tools, processes & applications of strategic
management. Provide insights into the business environment, competitive analysis and
the practice of strategic management through theory and case studies.
Concepts
• Strategy- Directing action towards desired outcome
• Corporate strategy- business/es you should be in
• Business strategy- tactics to beat the competition
• Functional strategy- operational methods to
implement the tactics
• Enterprise strategy- matching internal capabilities
with external environment
• Strategic Competitiveness- Firm successfully formulates & implements a value-
creating strategy
• Strategic Management Process- Full set of commitments, decisions & actions
required for a firm to achieve strategic competitiveness & earn above-average
returns
• Risk- Investor’s uncertainty of economic gains/ losses resulting from particular
investment
• Average Returns- Returns equal to investor earnings expectations from other
investments with similar amount of risk
• Above-average Returns- Returns in excess of what an investor expects to earn
from other investments with a similar amount of risk
• Strategic flexibility: Capabilities to respond to demands & opportunities in
dynamic & uncertain competitive environments
• Scale
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Adding Value at the Corporate Level- Key issue for Top Management (Prof Hax,
MIT)
1. Environmental scan at corporate level: Assess external forces impacting the firm
2. Mission of the firm: Choose competitive domains and the way to compete
3. Business segmentation: Select planning and organizational focus
4. Horizontal strategy: Pursue synergistic linkages across business units
5. Vertical integration: Define boundaries of the firm
6. Corporate philosophy: Define relation between firm and stakeholders
7. Strategic posture of the firm: Identify strategic thrust- corporate, business &
functional planning challenges and corporate performance objectives
8. Portfolio management: Assigning priorities for resource allocation and identifying
opportunities for diversification and divestment
9. Organization & managerial infrastructure: Align organization structures, managerial
processes & systems, in consonance with firm culture to facilitate strategy
implementation
10. HRM of key personnel: Selection, development, appraisal, reward & promotion
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Global Economy
• Global Economy- Goods, people, skills & ideas move freely across borders
• Globalization- "Producing where it is most cost effective, sourcing capital from
where it's cheapest and selling it where it is most profitable" Narayana Murthy
• Increased economic interdependence among countries- flow of goods & services,
finance & knowledge across country borders leading to increased opportunities
• Technology- Technology change, perpetual / disruptive innovation, design
• Information- Converting information to knowledge, competitive advantage
Vision & Mission- To energize employees to work towards corporate goals, visions &
missions. Should be internalised by executives & constantly communicated to employees.
Many companies use vision & mission statements only in annual report or reception..
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Now Future
Product Scope
Market Scope
Geographical Scope
Unique Competencies
Setting Goals
• Major outcome of strategic road-mapping and strategic planning, based on the
vision and mission statement
• Long-range, specific and realistic goals set through strategic planning, translated
into activities that will ensure reaching the goal through operational planning.
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Strategic Intent- Company's vision of what it wants to achieve in the long term
• Must convey a significant stretch for the company, a sense of direction, discovery, and
opportunity that can be communicated as worthwhile to employees
• Should focus so on tomorrow's opportunities than on today's problems
Stakeholders- Individuals and groups affected by the firm’s performance and who have
claims on it’s performance. 3 Stakeholder Groups
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Organizational Stakeholders
• Employees & managers- Expect a stimulating and rewarding work environment,
satisfied by a company that grows and actively develops their skills
Strategic Leaders- People responsible for design and execution of strategic management
processes (Top management). They will decide how resources will be developed or
acquired, at what price resources will be obtained, and how resources will be used
Organizational Culture- The complex set of ideologies, symbols and core values,
shared throughout the firm, that influence how the firm conducts business
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
The external business environment may be divided into 2 sectors: Broad & task
Broad Environment- context within which firm and its task environment exist. Consists
of domestic and global forces
• political trends (e.g. open markets)
• economic trends (e.g. growing economy)
• socio-cultural trends (e.g. demographics)
• technological trends (e.g. internet)
Dimensions in the broader society that influence industry and the firms within it
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
PEST analysis
Quadrants contain criteria (not exhaustive or exclusive) used to analyse either PEST
Political Economic
Ecological/environmental issues Domestic / International economy
Legislations / regulatory / policy Taxes, levies, FDI, interests
Government term and change Stock markets and exchange rates
Funding, grants and initiatives Seasonality/weather issues
Lobbies / pressure groups Market and trade cycles
Wars and conflict Industry Specific factors
Sociocultural Technological
Lifestyle trends Competing & emerging technologies
Demographics R&D
Psychographics Technology/solutions maturity
Consumer attitudes and opinions Manufacturing costs / capacity
Law changes affecting social factors Information and communication
Consumption & buying patterns Innovation
Events and influences Licensing, patents, IPR issues
Ethnic / ethical / religious factors Disruptive innovation
Common Pitfalls
• Defining industry- too broadly or too narrowly.
• Paying equal attention to all forces than focusing on the most important ones.
• Confusing effect (price sensitivity) with cause (buyer economics).
• Using static analysis that ignores industry trends.
• Confusing cyclical or transient changes with true structural changes.
• Use framework for strategic choices than declare industry - attractive/ unattractive
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Strategic Groups- Set of firms emphasizing similar strategic dimensions & using similar
strategies. Intra strategic group firm competition greater than between firms outside that
strategic group. More heterogeneity in performance of firms within strategic groups. Eg
Cars, PC, Airlines, segmented by sensitivity to price, quality, technology & service
Competitor Analysis
Competitor Intelligence- Gather information & data to understand and better anticipate:
• Competitor’s direction (future objectives)
• Competitor’s capabilities and intentions (current strategy)
• Competitor’s beliefs about the industry (assumptions)
• Competitors (capabilities)
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
The Value Net (Drive Industry Profits Up)- Brandenberger & Nalebuff
• Complementary products- (Telecom Towers improve mobile signal, HD Plasma TV)
• Cooperation with buyers & suppliers
• Coordination among competitors
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Creating Value
• By exploiting core competencies or competitive advantages, firms create value
• Value is measured by a product’s performance characteristics and its attributes for
which customers are willing to pay
• Firms create value by innovatively bundling & leveraging their resources & capabilities
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Core Competencies
When the 4 key criteria of R&C are met, they become core competencies, and serve as a
source of competitive advantage. Managerial competencies are especially important
Resources
• Inputs into a firm’s production process- Capital equipment, employee skills,
patents, finances, talent, brands, financial resources, and talented managers
• Organization is made up of resources: financial, physical, human, general
organizational (structure, systems, culture, reputation, stakeholder relationships
• Source of a firm’s capabilities & assets, including people & value of its brand
name
• Broad in scope, cover a spectrum of individual, social & organizational
phenomena
• Tangible - Seen & quantified- financial, physical, production resources
• Intangible - Deep roots in firms history- trust, innovation, knowledge, reputation
• Effective development or acquisition of organizational resources may be the most
important reason that some organizations are more successful than others
Capabilities
• Capacity of a set of resources to perform, in an integrative manner.
Capability should not be highly imitable but should be manageable &
controllable
• Firm’s capacity to deploy resources, integrated to achieve a desired end state
• Emerge over time by complex interactions among tangible & intangible resources
• By developing, carrying, exchanging information & knowledge through firm’s
HR
• Foundation in unique skills, knowledge of firm’s employees & functional
expertise
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Competitive Advantage
• Firms achieve strategic competitiveness and earn above-average returns when their
core competencies are effectively- acquired, bundled or leveraged
• Over time, competitors may duplicate benefits of any value-creating strategy
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Value Chain Analysis: Template that allows firm to understand parts of its operations
that create value & those that do not
• Understand cost position
• Identify means to
facilitate implementation
of a chosen business-level
strategy
• Primary activities
involved with: product’s
physical creation,
product’s sale &
distribution to buyers,
product’s after sales
service
• Support activities-
provide necessary support
to enable primary
activities
• Shows how a product
moves from raw-material
stage to the final customer
• To be source of
competitive advantage, R/C must allow firm: To perform an activity in a superior
manner wrt how competitors perform it, or perform a value-creating activity that
competitors cannot complete
• Marketing and sales- Providing means and inducing customers to purchase products
(advertising, promotion, distribution channels, etc.)
• Service- Enhancing or maintain a product’s value (repair, training, adjustment)
• Procurement- inputs to produce firm’s products (raw materials & supplies)
• Technological development- Improving firm’s product & processes in manufacturing
(process equipment, basic research, product design, etc)
• HR management- Recruiting, training and compensating personnel
• Firm infrastructure- Supporting the work of the entire value chain (management,
planning, finance, accounting, legal, government relations, etc.)
• Effectively and consistently identify external opportunities and threats
• Identify resources and capabilities, support core competencies
Examine each activity wrt competitors’ abilities & rate as superior, equivalent or inferior
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Industrial Markets
• End-use segments
• Product segments (technology, production economics)
• Geographic segments (country, regional differences)
• Common buyer segments (product market &
geographic segments)
• Customer size segments
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Competitive scope
Scope- Dimensions, including product groups, customer segments & geographic markets
• Broad scope- firm competes in many customer segments
• Narrow scope- firm selects a segment / group of segments in the industry and
tailors its strategy to serving them at the exclusion of others
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Differentiation
An integrated set of actions taken to produce goods or services (at an acceptable cost)
that customers perceive as being different in ways that are important to them
• Nonstandardised products
• Customers value differentiated features more than they value low cost
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Focus strategies- Integrated set of actions that produce goods / services to serve a
particular competitive segment (buyer group) / different segment of a product line /
different geographic markets
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Competitive Dynamics
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Competitor analysis
• Understand competitors future objectives, current strategies, assumptions & capabilities
• Predict competitor behaviour, anticipate response, form competitive actions &
responses
• Market commonality & resource similarity with competitors
Competitive rivalry- Ongoing actions and responses taking place between an individual
firm and its competitors for an advantageous market position
Competitive action- A strategic or tactical action the firm takes to build or defend its
competitive advantages or improve its market position
Competitive response- A strategic or tactical action the firm takes to counter the effects
of a competitor’s competitive action
Quality exists when firm’s goods or services meet or exceed customers’ expectations
Product Quality Dimensions
• Performance—Operating characteristics
• Features—Important special characteristics
• Flexibility—Meeting operating specifications over some period of time
• Durability—Amount of use before performance deteriorates
• Conformance—Match with preestablished standards
• Serviceability—Ease and speed of repair
• Aesthetics—How a product looks and feels
• Perceived quality—Subjective assessment of characteristics (product image)
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Competitive dynamics
Slow cycle market Fast cycle market Standard cycle
market
Competitive Shielded from Not shielded from Moderately shielded
advantage imitation for long imitation from
periods of time
Sustainability High Low Partial
Imitation Costly Quick & inexpensive moderate
Strategy Concentrate on Competitors reverse Upgrade quality is
competitive actions engineer to quickly continuously
& responses to imitate or improve on Firms seek large
protect, maintain & firm’s products market shares
extend proprietary Non-proprietary Firms gain customer
advantage technology diffused loyalty through brand
rapidly names
Firms carefully control
operations
Industry Pharma R&D patents Reverse engineering HUL, P&G
Disney characters firms- Indian pharma
PC makers
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Diversification
When a firm chooses to diversify beyond a single industry and operate businesses in
several industries. Firm creates value by productively using excess resources.
Product diversification concerns scope of the industries and markets in which the firm
competes and how managers buy, create and sell different businesses to match skills and
strengths with opportunities presented to the firm
Diversification levels
Low Single >95% revenue from single business 1
business
Dominant 70-95% revenue from single business 1 2
business
Moderate Related <70% revenue from dominant
to High constrained business & all businesses share 1
product, technological & distribution 2 3
linkages
Related <70% revenue from dominant
linked business and limited linkages between 1 2 3
businesses
Very Unrelated <70% revenue from dominant
High business and no linkages between 1 2 3
businesses
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Unrelated Diversification
• Financial economies- cost savings through improved allocations of financial
resources, create value through efficient internal capital allocations, purchase
other corporations & restructure their assets
• Efficient internal capital allocation- Corporate office distributes capital to SBU to
create overall value
• Business restructuring-
• Creates value by buying & selling other firms’ assets in external market
• Focus on mature, low-technology businesses, not reliant on a client orientation
Strategic Motives
• Economies of scope (related diversification)
Sharing activities
Transferring core competencies
• Market power (related diversification)
Blocking competitors through multipoint competition
Vertical integration
• Financial economies (unrelated diversification)
Efficient internal capital allocation
Business restructuring
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Internal Ventures
Internal ventures make use of the R&D programs of the organization
• Advantages- Control over the venture, information not shared, profits retained
• Disadvantages- High failure risk, lot of time to execute, Internal resources locked
Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A)
Mergers & acquisitions also undertaken to “buy” innovation than produce in-house
• Add scale
• Fast way to enter new markets and geographies
• Acquire new products / services / technologies / knowledge and skills
• Vertically integrate
• Fill needs in the corporate portfolio
Horizontal acquisition
•Acquisition in the same industry increases firm’s market power by exploiting
cost-based and revenue-based synergies
•Acquisitions with similar characteristics result in higher performance than those with
dissimilar characteristics
Vertical acquisitions
•Acquisition of a supplier or distributor of one or more of the firm’s goods or services
•Increases a firm’s market power by controlling additional parts of the value chain
Related acquisitions
•Acquisition of a company in a highly related industry
•Difficulty in implementing synergy, make related acquisitions difficult to implement
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Restructuring
• A strategy through which a firm changes its set of businesses or financial structure
• Failure of an acquisition strategy often precedes a restructuring strategy
• Due to changes in the external or internal environments
Restructuring strategies:
Strategy What happens Short term outcomes Long term
outcomes
Down Reduction in number of Reduced labour costs Loss of human
sizing employees/operating More efficient operations capital
units Lower performance
Down Divestment / spin-off to Reduced debt costs Higher performance
scoping eliminate non core Strategic controls emphasis
businesses & refocus
Leveraged A party buys the firm’s Strategic controls emphasis Higher risk
buyouts assets to take it private High debt costs
Can correct managerial
mistakes, facilitate
entrepreneurial growth
Concentration
Concentration ratio
Consolidation
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
International Strategy
Strategy where a firm sells its goods or services, outside its domestic market.
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Cooperative Strategy
Strategy in which firms work together to achieve a shared objective to create customer
value and establish a favorable position relative to competitors
Strategic Alliance
Combine resources and capabilities of firms to create a mutually competitive advantage.
To co-develop, co-market or distribute goods and services. Competitive advantage
developed through a cooperative strategy is called a collaborative or relational advantage.
Types
• Joint Venture- 2 or more firms create an independent firm by sharing some of their
resources and capabilities
• Equity Strategic Alliance- Partners own different equity shares in separate company
• Non-equity Strategic Alliance- 2 or more firms develop a contractual relationship to
share some of their unique resources and capabilities
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Strategic Direction
• Setting long-term goals and objectives, like- mission & vision
• Defines the purposes for which an organization exists & operates
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Strategy Formulation
• Strategy is an organizational plan of action intended to accomplish goals.
• Corporate strategy formulation refers to domain definition, or the choice of business
areas. Usually decided by the CEO and the BOD.
• Business strategy formulation involves domain direction and navigation, or how to
compete in a given area. Usually decided by SBU heads & managers.
• Functional strategy formulation contains the details of how the functional areas such
as marketing, operations, finance, and research should work together to achieve the
business-level strategy.
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Growth Strategies
Internal Strategies External Strategies
• Market penetration • Horizontal integration
• Market development • Alliance formation
• Applications development
• Product development
Note: these strategies assume that the firm is seeking a broad customer base. If the firm is
pursuing a particular market segment it is using a “focus” strategy.
Differentiation
Create Value Through Uniqueness
• Superior Quality
• Innovations and Research
• Speed and Flexibility
• Reputation and Brand Name
• Creative advertising
Customers Must Be Willing to Pay More for Uniqueness
• Added costs vs. incremental price
Cost Leadership
• Accurate Demand Forecasting and High Capacity Utilization
• Economies of Scale
• Technological Advances
• Learning/Experience Effects
Typical Learning/Experience Curve
Best Cost-Combination of cost leadership and differentiation
• May actually be the dominant strategy among the most successful companies today
Either: The same resources/activities that allow cost reductions also allow
differentiation. (e.g., automation that lowers costs and improves speed and service).
• Profits from cost reductions are used to invest in differentiating features & vice versa.
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Unrelated Diversification
• Large, highly diversified firms are called conglomerates
• Not a high performing strategy for most firms (with a few notable exceptions) in
industrialized nations like the U.S.
• Difficult for a top manager to understand and appreciate the core technologies, key
success factors and special requirements of each business area
Related Diversification
• Based on tangible and intangible relatedness
• In theory, can lead to synergy (but synergy is often illusive)
• Often a higher performing strategy than unrelated diversification (lower risk and higher
profitability)
• Can lead to corporate-level distinctive competencies
Requirements for Synergy Creation
Relatedness
• Tangible--same physical resources for multiple purposes
• Intangible--capabilities developed in one area can be used elsewhere
• Fit
• Strategic-matching of organizational capabilities-complementary resources & skills
• Organizational--similar processes, cultures, systems and structures
• Managerial actions to share resources and skills
• Benefits must outweigh costs of integration
Strategy Implementation
• the role of leadership in successful execution of strategies
• how culture and organizational energy influence success of strategy implementation
• functional strategies and their importance to strategy implementation
• the stages firms encounter as they execute global strategies
• basic organizational structures, and their strengths and weaknesses
• the various roles played by foreign subsidiaries
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Situational Leadership
• Leadership style should fit the situation
• Effective leaders employ range of styles- coercive to coaching to consensus-building
• Most successful leaders exhibit a high degree of emotional intelligence
Organizational Culture
An organization’s culture, the system of shared values that guides employee beliefs and
behavior, influences the success of strategy implementation.
• Often reflects the values and leadership styles of top executives
• HRM practices can influence culture – recruitment, training, performance evaluation
Challenge of the Future
• Technological advancements, including communications and the Internet
• Globalization
• Blended cultures, diverse and mobile labor pools
• New companies from emerging markets
• More educated, demanding customers
• Increased concern about governance and social responsibility
Challenges for managers:
• retaining valuable employees
• creating and preserving competitive advantage
• holding back new entrants
• serving increasingly demanding customers
• choosing and timing technology investments at a time when change is so rapid
• major shocks associated with terrorism, new diseases and wars
Business Tactics (Strategic Management, Alex Miller)
Anticipatory Engagement
Offensive Preemption Attack
• Pioneer • Frontal
• Attack • Flank
• Intimidate • Guerilla
• Capture • Siege
Defensive Deterrence Response
• Raise structural barriers • Counter attack
• Expect retaliation • Fast follow
• Discourage attack • Retrenchment
• Diplomatic peacekeeping • Withdrawal
Scenario: An internally consistent view of what the future might turn out to be – not a
forecast, but one possible future outcome (Porter).
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Growth Strategies
The different routes to growth fall broadly into 5 options, but, they are not mutually
exclusive and can overlap. They maybe limited by available resources, but require a clear
focus on objectives and a sustained level of commitment.
• Organic growth
• Mergers and acquisitions
• Integration
• Diversification
• Specialisation
Business level growth strategies: New products, new markets, new geographies
(Ansoff’s model)
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Strategic Management‐ MBA Notes‐ Dr Amit Rangnekar
Crown Jewels
A defense against a takeover in which a company sells its most precious assets to a
friendly buyer. The suitor then disappears since the target of its pursuit has gone
elsewhere and the company rebuys its assets from its friend.
Pac-man defense
A takeover, in which the target bites back, and makes an offer to take over the shares of
the suitor. The name is derived from a once popular video game.
Poison Pill
A range of devices designed to make a takeover unpalatable to the swallower (acquirer).
Eg accompany might borrow a large sum of money in order to distribute it immediately
as dividends to the company’s shareholders; or it might make an issue of preferred stock
that gives shareholders the right to redeem it at a hefty premium after a takeover
Scorched Earth
Shark Repellant
A smell put out by a company to deter potential suitors. Eg Laked announcement about a
‘secret’ contract to pay millions to existing managers should the company be taken over.
White Knight
A firm which rescues a company that is in the throes of an unwelcome takeover.
Dawn Raid
An early morning purchase on the stock market, of a large block of a company’s shares,
by an investor who has an eye on taking over the company. Aimed at pre-empting any
other potential raider from gaining a similar stranglehold on the takeover target.
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