TYPES OF STRATEGIES
According
to Michel Porter, the strategies can be classified into three types. They are
Cost
leadership strategy
Differentiation
strategy
Focus
strategy
The following table illustrates Porter's generic strategies:
a) Cost Leadership Strategy
This generic strategy calls for
being the low cost producer in an industry for a given level of quality. The
firm sells its products either at average industry prices to earn a profit
higher than that of rivals, or below the average industry prices to gain market
share. In the event of a price war, the firm can maintain some profitability
while the competition suffers losses. Even without a price war, as the industry
matures and prices decline, the firms that can produce more cheaply will remain
profitable for a longer period of time. The cost leadership strategy usually
targets a broad market.
Some of the ways that firms acquire
cost advantages are by improving process efficiencies, gaining unique access to
a large source of lower cost materials, making optimal outsourcing and vertical
integration decisions, or avoiding some costs altogether. If competing firms
are unable to lower their costs by a similar amount, the firm may be able to
sustain a competitive advantage based on cost leadership.
Firms that succeed in cost
leadership often have the following internal strengths:
Access to the capital required to make a
significant investment in production assets; this investment represents a
barrier to entry that many firms may not overcome.
Skill in designing products for efficient
manufacturing, for example, having a small component count to shorten the
assembly process.
High level of expertise in manufacturing process
engineering.
Efficient distribution channels.
Each
generic strategy has its risks, including the low-cost strategy. For example,
other firms may be able to lower their costs as well. As technology improves,
the competition may be able to leapfrog the production capabilities, thus
eliminating the competitive advantage. Additionally, several firms following a
focus strategy and targeting various narrow markets may be able to achieve an
even lower cost within their segments and as a group gain significant market
share.
b) Differentiation Strategy
A
differentiation strategy calls for the development of a product or service that
offers unique attributes that are valued by customers and that customers
perceive to be better than or different from the products of the competition.
The value added by the uniqueness of the product may allow the firm to charge a
premium price for it. The firm hopes that the higher price will more than cover
the extra costs incurred in offering the unique product. Because of the
product's unique attributes, if suppliers increase their prices the firm may be
able to pass along the costs to its customers who cannot find substitute
products easily.
Firms that
succeed in a differentiation strategy often have the following internal
strengths:
Access to leading scientific research.
Highly skilled and creative product development
team.
Strong sales team with the ability to
successfully communicate the perceived strengths of the product.
Corporate reputation for quality and innovation.
The risks
associated with a differentiation strategy include imitation by competitors and
changes in customer tastes. Additionally, various firms pursuing focus
strategies may be able to achieve even greater differentiation in their market
segments.
c) Focus Strategy
The focus
strategy concentrates on a narrow segment and within that segment attempts to
achieve either a cost advantage or differentiation. The premise is that the
needs of the group can be better serviced by focusing entirely on it. A firm
using a focus strategy often enjoys a high degree of customer loyalty, and this
entrenched loyalty discourages other firms from competing directly.
Because of
their narrow market focus, firms pursuing a focus strategy have lower volumes
and therefore less bargaining power with their suppliers. However, firms
pursuing a differentiation-focused strategy may be able to pass higher costs on
to customers since close substitute products do not exist.
Firms that
succeed in a focus strategy are able to tailor a broad range of product
development strengths to a relatively narrow market segment that they know very
well.
Some risks
of focus strategies include imitation and changes in the target segments.
Furthermore, it may be fairly easy for a broad-market cost leader to adapt its
product in order to compete directly. Finally, other focusers may be able to
carve out sub-segments that they can serve even better.
A Combination of Generic Strategies
These
generic strategies are not necessarily compatible with one another. If a firm
attempts to achieve an advantage on all fronts, in this attempt it may achieve
no advantage at all. For example, if a firm differentiates itself by supplying
very high quality products, it risks undermining that quality if it seeks to
become a cost leader. Even if the quality did not suffer, the firm would risk
projecting a confusing image. For this reason, Michael Porter argued that to be
successful over the long-term, a firm must select only one of these three
generic strategies. Otherwise, with more than one single generic strategy the
firm will be "stuck in the middle" and will not achieve a competitive
advantage.
Porter
argued that firms that are able to succeed at multiple strategies often do so
by creating separate business units for each strategy. By separating the
strategies into different units having different policies and even different
cultures, a corporation is less likely to become "stuck in the
middle."
However,
there exists a viewpoint that a single generic strategy is not always best
because within the same product customers often seek multi-dimensional
satisfactions such as a combination of quality, style, convenience, and price.
There have been cases in which high quality producers faithfully followed a
single strategy and then suffered greatly when another firm entered the market
with a lower-quality product that better met the overall needs of the
customers.
Related Topics
Privacy Policy, Terms and Conditions, DMCA Policy and Compliant
Copyright © 2018-2023 BrainKart.com; All Rights Reserved. Developed by Therithal info, Chennai.