Saturday, 7 January 2017

CHAPTER 2 : Identifying Competitive Advantage

             
Introduction

What is competitive advantage?

  •   A product or services that an organization’s customers place a greater value on than similar offerings from a competitor
  • Unfortunately, CA is temporary because competitors keep duplicate the strategy.
  • Then, the company should start the new competitive advantage.



  • Michael Porter's Five Forces Model is useful tool to aid organization in challenging decision whether to join a new industry or industry segment.



1.       Buyer Power

·         High – when buyers have many choices of whom to buy
·         Low – when their choices are few
·         To reduce buyer power (and create competitive advantage), an organization must make it more attractive to buy from the company not from the competitors
·         Best practices of IT based
 -  Loyalty program in travel industry.For example, rewards on free airline tickets or hotel stays.

The Competitive Environment

Bargaining Power of Customers/Buyer Power
  • Customers can grow large and powerful as a result of their market share.
  • Many choices of whom to buy from.
  •  Low when comes to limited items.
  • Example, used loyalty programs (Jusco card, Tesco card, being a members to get the discount).
2.       Supplier Power

·         High – when buyers have few choices of whom to buy from
·         Low – when their choices are many
-    Best practices of IT to create competitive advantage
-    Example, B2B marketplace – private exchange allow a single buyer to posts it needs and then open the bidding to any supplier who would care to bid. Reverse auction is an auction format in which increasingly lower bids.

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3.       Threat of Substitute products and services

·         High – when there are many alternatives to a product or service
·         Low – when there are few alternatives from which to choose
·         Ideally, an organization would like to be on a market in which there are few substitutes of their product or services.
- Best practices of IT.
- Example, Electronic product – same functions different brands.

The Competitive Environment

Threat of Substitutes : 
  • To the extent that customers can use different products to fulfill the same need, the threat of substitutes exists.
  • Example, electrical product – same function different brands.
  • Switching cost – costs can make customer reluctant to switch to another product or service.
4.       Threat of new entrants

·         High – when it is easy for new competitors to enter a market
·         Low – when there are significant entry barriers to entering a market
·         Entry barriers is a product or service feature that customers have come to except from organizations and must be offered by entering organization to complete and survive
·         Best practices of IT.
-     Example, new bank must offers online paying bills, acc. monitoring to compete.

The Competitive Environment

Threat of New Entrants :
  •  Many threats come from companies that do not yet exist or have a presence in a given industry or market
  • The threat of new entrants forces top management to monitor the trends, especially in technology, that might give rise to new competitors
  •  Example, new bank (online paying bills, acc. monitoring)
5.       Rivalry among existence competitors

·         High – when competition is fierce in a market
·         Low – when competition is more complacent
·         Best practices of IT
-    Wal-Mart and its suppliers using IT – enabled system for communication and track product at aisles by effective tagging system.
-    Reduce cost by using effective supply chain

The Competitive Environment

Rivalry Among Existing Firms :

  • Existing competitors are not much of the threat: typically each firm has found its “niche”.
  • However, changes in management, ownership, or “the rules of the game” can give rise to serious threats to long term survival from existing firms
  • Example, the airline industry faces serious threats from airlines operating in bankruptcy, who do not the debts while slashing fares against those healthy airlines who do pay on debt. (MAS & AIR ASIA).

The Value Chains – Targeting Business Processes

  • Supply Chain – a chain or series of processes that adds value to product and service for customer.
  •  Add value to its products and services that support a profit margin for the firm.


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