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CHAPTER 4:
   CORPORATE LEVEL STRATEGIES
Categories of Business Organizations
• Corporation
  – Stock or non-stock
• Sole/ Single Proprietorship
• Partnership
• Cooperative
• Group of companies/ Conglomerate
  – Growing number of independently organized
    business organization


• Mother or parent company
  – Serves as the core or the unifying factor in the
    overall strategic direction of the entire business.
• Holding firm / holding company
   – Influences other small business organizations
     known as subsidiaries
• Subsidiaries / Affiliates
   – Partly capitalized or wholly owned by the mother
     company
• Diversified business group
   – Involves a variety of business concerns with one
     given out business opportunities for the other or
     one is serving as major contractor or supplier of
     member or affiliates of the business empire
The Nature of Corporate Level Strategy
• Corporate strategy
  – independent or single business unit (SBU) forming
    part of the family of business or group business
    concerns needs to be bothered with its own
    business level strategy
The Nature of Corporate Level Strategy
• Highly diversified business organizations
  – Group of individuals business organizations with
    individual charters or corporate status registered
    in appropriate agencies of the government
• Corporate level strategy
  – Serves as the guiding star of all the individual
    business organizations belongs to the group of the
    conglomerate
  – broad or corporate wide strategy synchronizing
    various business level strategies into a cohesive
    and coordinated efforts to achieve the vision of
    the entire business organization
  3 main categories acc. Wheelen and Hunger
  – Stability
  – Growth
  – Retrenchment
The 4 E’s to addressing Corporate Strategy by
Thompson and Cats-Baril
 a. Extend
   •   Extending the business by going beyond its
       current business model by adapting a new
       business model or entering into new businesses
 b. Expand
   •   This option takes the form of adding products or
       services within the context of the companies’
       existing business concern or present area of
       operation
The 4 E’s to addressing Corporate Strategy
by Thompson and Cats-Baril
a. Exit
  •   This option takes the form of making some
      sacrifice by dropping some product lines and
      services or business units deemed uncompetitive
      or unprofitable or less profitable to operate
b. Enhance
  •   This option takes the form of adding functionality
      or improving a product or service that is
      currently being offered
ENHANCEMENT                                          EXTENSION
 Add functionality or improve a                       Adopt new business model or
 product or service that is currently        E        enter new businesses
 offered                                     X
                                             T
                                             E
                                             N
                               ENHANCE       D

                                                 EXPAND
                                         E
                                         X
                                         I
                                         T
                EXIT                                           EXPANSION
   Drop a product or service                          Add products and services
   line or exit a business                            within an existing business




Ways that a Business Strategy can evolve
Key Issues in Corporate Level Strategy

 • The firm’s overall orientation towards
   growth, stability, or retrenchment (directional
   strategy)
 • The industries or markets in which the firm
   competes through its products and business units
   (portfolio strategy)
 • The manner in which management coordinates
   activities, transfers resources and cultivates
   capabilities among product lines and business
   units (parenting stategy)
Prosper
BPR and other                  Adopt Best
Cost Cutting      Trigger      Practices
and Operational   Point
                                  Parity
Initiatives
                                            Survive


                                             RIP

                                             Fail
    Yesterday               Today           Tomorrow

   Current Choices Faced by Executives in
            the Digital Economy
Strategic Choices at the Corporate Level
 • Business closure
   – An undesired act of folding up or shutting down
     non-profitable business units to control or avoid
     further losses
 • Business disposal
   – Calls for disposing or unloading some of the
     members subsidiaries, affiliates or investments
Strategic Choices at the Corporate Level
 • Business acquisition
   – Option of business establishment meant to
     expand their size and make their presence felt in
     whatever area they want to do business
 • Business reorganization
   – This option may or may not lead to ownership
     changes among members of the organization
Strategic Choices at the Corporate Level
 • Business start-up
   – Realizing the need create new business units to
     cater to market opportunities
 • The impact of doing nothing different
   – This option is simply status quo which also comes
     in the form of pause or no change strategy
The Corporate Expansion Option
As shown in the next figure, a single business
  organization that is well managed is likely to
  grow in size and in number eventually
  becoming a conglomerate or highly diversified
  company within many individual business
  organizations forming part of the family.
Customers / End Users
    I
V   N
E   D                             Forward integration
R   I
T   R
I   E
C   C
A   T
L
            Horizontal                    The                     Horizontal
          diversification               Company                  integration
    C
I   O
N   M
T   P
E   E
G   T
R                                 Backward integration
    I
A   T
T   O                                   Suppliers
I   R
O   S                 Horizontal integration / diversification
N


    Basic Model for Integration and Diversification
                       Options
Corporate strategy


              Business
      (Division level strategy)


           Functional
               c
            strategy




Hierarchy of Strategy
Corporate




               Business strategy 1
               Business strategy 2
               Business strategy 3
               Business strategy 4




Corporate Strategy and Business Strategy
Vertical Integration Option
Evolves around the notion of how far or close
 a business is from the source of raw materials
 or the final consumer of the product
Involve engaging in business activities to the
 level of sources of supply or forward in the
 direction of final consumers
Vertical Integration Continuum
• Espoused by Harrigan postulates that vertical
  integration strategy may be in full or in part
  ranging from outsourcing to full integration

         Full         Taper         Quasi      Long-term
     Integration   Integration   Integration    contract


    Continuum of Vertical Integration Option
Forward Vertical Integration
• An option where the firm engages in business
  activities in the area of distribution and
  retailing of the product or service directly to
  the customers
Situations favoring forward integration
• present distributors are especially expensive
  or unreliable or incapable of meeting the
  firm’s distribution needs;
• availability of quality distributors is so limited
  as to offer a competitive advantage to those
  firms that integrate forward;
• advantages of stable production are
  particularly high;
Situations favoring forward integration
• organization competes in an industry that is
  growing and is expected to continue to grow
  markedly;
• organization has both the capital and human
  resources needed to manage the new
  business of distributing its own products;
• present distributors or retailers have high
  profit margins
Backward Vertical Integration
• A corporate option to engage in the business
  concentrating the efforts at the stage of raw
  materials production or close the source of
  raw materials
Situations favoring backward integration
• present suppliers are especially expensive or
  unreliable or incapable of meeting the firm’s
  distribution needs;
• The number of suppliers is small and the
  number of competitors is large;
• organization competes in an industry that is
  growing rapidly;
Situations favoring backward integration
• Organization’s present channels of distribution
  can be used to market the new products to
  current customers;
• New products have counter cyclical sales
  patterns compared to an organization’s
  present products
Conglomerate Diversification
Conglomerate diversification (unrelated
  diversification)

 a diversification option that involves investing in or
 buying into business organizations whose products
 and/or services have nothing to do or not related to
 the kind of products it is presently dealing with.
Situations favoring conglomerate diversification

• Organization’s basic industry is experiencing
  declining annual sales and profits;
• Organization has the capital and managerial
  talent needed to compete successfully;
• Organization has the opportunity to purchase
  an unrelated business;
Situations favoring conglomerate diversification

• Financial synergy exists between the acquired
  and acquiring firm;
• Existing market for an organization’s present
  products are saturated; and
• Antitrust action could be charged against an
  organization that historically has concentrated
  on a single industry
Concentric Diversification
• Concentric diversification (related diversification)

A corporate diversification option that
 involves engaging or dealing with products or
 services that are somehow related to or
 associated with what the firm is presently
 handling.
Situations favoring concentric diversification

• Organization competes in a no-growth or a
  slow-growth industry;
• Adding new, but related products significantly
  would enhance the sales of current products;
• New, but related, products could be offered at
  highly competitive prices;
Situations favoring concentric diversification

• New, but related, products have seasonal sales
  levels that counterbalance an organization’s
  existing peaks and valley;
• Organization’s products are currently in the
  decline stage of the product life cycle; and
• Organization has strong management team
Strategic Fit
the relatedness in making decisions
 concerning the appropriateness of the
 strategic moves vis-à-vis the various operating
 divisions or business units of the company
Degree of relationship or connectivity
Categories of strategic fit acc. To
      Thompson and Strickland

• Product fit
• Operating fit
• Management fit
Directions of Corporate Level Strategies
According to Wheelen and Hunger:
• Growth strategy
• Stability strategy
• Retrenchment strategy
Growth Strategy Options
Designed to achieve growth in
 sales, assets, profits or some combination

Categories:
• Merger
• Acquisition
• Strategic alliance
Stability strategies
This option is sometimes viewed as having lck
 of strategy s the firm simply opts to stay put or
 maintain the current array of businesses

Forms:
• Pause/proceed with caution
• No change strategy
• Profit strategy
Retrenchment strategies
Evolves around the concept of reduction in a
  variety of aspects usually in terms of
  size, capital, personnel complement and the
  like.
Forms:
• Turnaround strategy
  – Contraction
  – Consolidation
• Sell-out/Divestment strategy
• Bankruptcy strategy
• Liquidation strategy
International and Other Entry Options
Usually done by multinational or foreign-
 based organizations
designed to explore other markets beyond
 their usual or original place of doing their
 business
Strategies in entering the Int’l markets
•   Exporting       • Production sharing
•   Licensing       • Turnkey operations
•   Franchising     • Management contract
•   Joint venture   • Build-Operate-
•   Acquisition       Transfer or BOT
•   Greenfield        concept
    development     • Outsourcing
Strategic Alliance
 Used for the purpose of achieving mutual
  advantage and certain strategic or specific goals
 Done through a process of exploration and
  negotiation with targeted parties or business
  concerns leading to signing up an alliance
  document in the form of memorandum of
  agreement, memorandum of understanding and
  /or contracts stipulating mutual desire to attain
  specific objective and expressing support for one
  another.
Objectives in strategic alliance
• To collaborate on technology development or
  new product development;
• To fill gaps in technical or manufacturing
  expertise;
• To acquire new competencies
• To improve supply chain efficiency
• To gain economies of scalein production and
  marketing; and
• To acquire or improve market access via joint
  marketing agreements
Guidelines in forming strategic alliances
• Pick a good partner, one that shares a
  common vision;
• Be sensitive to cultural differences;
• Recognize that the alliance must benefit both
  sides
• Both parties have to deliver on their
  commitments in the agreement;
Guidelines in forming strategic alliances
• Structure decision-making process so actions
  can be taken swiftly when needed; and
• Parties must do a good job of managing the
  learning process, adjusting the alliance
  agreement over time to fit new circumstances
Success factors in alliances:
• Ability of an alliance to endure depends on
  how well partners work together;
• Success of partners in responding and
  adapting to changing conditions; and
• Willingness of partners to renegotiate the
  bargain.
Failure factors in alliances:
• Diverging objectives and priorities of partners;
• Inability of partners to work well together;
• Emergence of more attractive technological
  paths;
• Marketplace rivalry between one or more
  allies; and
• Merger and acquisition strategies.
Benefits of mergers and acquisition
• More or better competitive capabilities;
• More attractive line-up of products/services;
• Wider geographic coverage;
• Greater financial resources to invest in
  R&D, add capacity, or expand;
• Cost-saving opportunities;
• Filling in of resource or technological skills;
• Greater ability to launch next-wave
  products/services
Pitfalls of merger and acquisition
• Resistance from rank-and-file employees;
• Hard-to-resolve conflicts in management
  styles and corporate cultures;
• Tough problems in combining and integrating
  the operations of the once-different
  companies; and
• Greater-than-anticipated difficulties in
  achieving expected cost-savings, sharing of
  expertise, and achieving enhanced
  competitive capabilities
Advantages of Outsourcing
• Improves firm’s ability to obtain high quality
  and/or cheaper components or services;
• Improves firm’s ability to innovate by
  interacting with “best-in-the-world” suppliers;
• Enhances firm’s flexibility
• Increases firm’s ability to assemble diverse
  kinds of expertise speedily and efficiently;
• Allows firm to concentrate its resources on
  performing those activities internally
Conditions to consider in outsourcing:
• Activity can be performed better or more
  cheaply by outside specialists
• Activity is not crucial to achieve a sustainable
  competitive advantage
• Risk exposure to changing technology and/or
  changing buyer preferences is reduced
Conditions to consider in outsourcing:
• Operations are streamlined to
  – Cut cycle time
  – Speed decision-making
  – Reduce coordination costs
• Firm can concentrate on doing those “core”
  value chain activities that best suit its resource
  strengths and capabilities
Situations favoring Joint Venture:
• When privately owned organization is forming
  a joint venture with a publicly owned
  organization;
• When a domestic organization is forming a
  joint venture with a foreign company;
• The distinctive competencies of two or more
  firms complement each other especially well;
Situations favoring Joint Venture:
• When some project is potentially very
  profitable, but requires overwhelming
  resources and risks;
• When two or more smaller firms have trouble
  competing with a large firm; and
• When there exists a need to introduce a new
  technology quickly.
Situations favoring Retrenchment:
• An organization has a clearly distinctive
  competence but has failed to meet its
  objectives and goals consistently over time;
• An organization is one of the weaker
  competitors in a given industry;
• An organization is plagued by inefficiency, low
  profitability, poor employee morale, and
  pressure from stockholders improve
  performance;
Situations favoring Retrenchment:
• An organization has failed to capitalized on
  external opportunities, minimize external
  threats, take advantage on internal
  strengths, and overcome internal weakness
  over time;
• An organization has grown so large so quickly
  that major internal reorganization is needed.
Situations favoring Divestiture:
• When an organization has pursued a
  retrenchment strategy and it failed to
  accomplish needed improvements;
• When a division needs more resources to be
  competitive than the company ca provide;
• When a division is responsible for an
  organizations overall poor performance; and
• When a division is a misfit with the rest of the
  organization.
Situations favoring Liquidation:
• When an organization has pursued both
  retrenchment strategy and a divestiture
  strategy;
• When an organization’s only alternative is
  bankruptcy;
• When the stockholders of a firm can minimize
  their losses by selling the organization’s
  assets.
THE END...
THANK YOU
    FOR
LISTENING.. 

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CORP STRATEGIES

  • 1. CHAPTER 4: CORPORATE LEVEL STRATEGIES
  • 2. Categories of Business Organizations • Corporation – Stock or non-stock • Sole/ Single Proprietorship • Partnership • Cooperative
  • 3. • Group of companies/ Conglomerate – Growing number of independently organized business organization • Mother or parent company – Serves as the core or the unifying factor in the overall strategic direction of the entire business.
  • 4. • Holding firm / holding company – Influences other small business organizations known as subsidiaries • Subsidiaries / Affiliates – Partly capitalized or wholly owned by the mother company • Diversified business group – Involves a variety of business concerns with one given out business opportunities for the other or one is serving as major contractor or supplier of member or affiliates of the business empire
  • 5. The Nature of Corporate Level Strategy • Corporate strategy – independent or single business unit (SBU) forming part of the family of business or group business concerns needs to be bothered with its own business level strategy
  • 6. The Nature of Corporate Level Strategy • Highly diversified business organizations – Group of individuals business organizations with individual charters or corporate status registered in appropriate agencies of the government
  • 7. • Corporate level strategy – Serves as the guiding star of all the individual business organizations belongs to the group of the conglomerate – broad or corporate wide strategy synchronizing various business level strategies into a cohesive and coordinated efforts to achieve the vision of the entire business organization 3 main categories acc. Wheelen and Hunger – Stability – Growth – Retrenchment
  • 8. The 4 E’s to addressing Corporate Strategy by Thompson and Cats-Baril a. Extend • Extending the business by going beyond its current business model by adapting a new business model or entering into new businesses b. Expand • This option takes the form of adding products or services within the context of the companies’ existing business concern or present area of operation
  • 9. The 4 E’s to addressing Corporate Strategy by Thompson and Cats-Baril a. Exit • This option takes the form of making some sacrifice by dropping some product lines and services or business units deemed uncompetitive or unprofitable or less profitable to operate b. Enhance • This option takes the form of adding functionality or improving a product or service that is currently being offered
  • 10. ENHANCEMENT EXTENSION Add functionality or improve a Adopt new business model or product or service that is currently E enter new businesses offered X T E N ENHANCE D EXPAND E X I T EXIT EXPANSION Drop a product or service Add products and services line or exit a business within an existing business Ways that a Business Strategy can evolve
  • 11. Key Issues in Corporate Level Strategy • The firm’s overall orientation towards growth, stability, or retrenchment (directional strategy) • The industries or markets in which the firm competes through its products and business units (portfolio strategy) • The manner in which management coordinates activities, transfers resources and cultivates capabilities among product lines and business units (parenting stategy)
  • 12. Prosper BPR and other Adopt Best Cost Cutting Trigger Practices and Operational Point Parity Initiatives Survive RIP Fail Yesterday Today Tomorrow Current Choices Faced by Executives in the Digital Economy
  • 13. Strategic Choices at the Corporate Level • Business closure – An undesired act of folding up or shutting down non-profitable business units to control or avoid further losses • Business disposal – Calls for disposing or unloading some of the members subsidiaries, affiliates or investments
  • 14. Strategic Choices at the Corporate Level • Business acquisition – Option of business establishment meant to expand their size and make their presence felt in whatever area they want to do business • Business reorganization – This option may or may not lead to ownership changes among members of the organization
  • 15. Strategic Choices at the Corporate Level • Business start-up – Realizing the need create new business units to cater to market opportunities • The impact of doing nothing different – This option is simply status quo which also comes in the form of pause or no change strategy
  • 16. The Corporate Expansion Option As shown in the next figure, a single business organization that is well managed is likely to grow in size and in number eventually becoming a conglomerate or highly diversified company within many individual business organizations forming part of the family.
  • 17. Customers / End Users I V N E D Forward integration R I T R I E C C A T L Horizontal The Horizontal diversification Company integration C I O N M T P E E G T R Backward integration I A T T O Suppliers I R O S Horizontal integration / diversification N Basic Model for Integration and Diversification Options
  • 18. Corporate strategy Business (Division level strategy) Functional c strategy Hierarchy of Strategy
  • 19. Corporate Business strategy 1 Business strategy 2 Business strategy 3 Business strategy 4 Corporate Strategy and Business Strategy
  • 20. Vertical Integration Option Evolves around the notion of how far or close a business is from the source of raw materials or the final consumer of the product Involve engaging in business activities to the level of sources of supply or forward in the direction of final consumers
  • 21. Vertical Integration Continuum • Espoused by Harrigan postulates that vertical integration strategy may be in full or in part ranging from outsourcing to full integration Full Taper Quasi Long-term Integration Integration Integration contract Continuum of Vertical Integration Option
  • 22. Forward Vertical Integration • An option where the firm engages in business activities in the area of distribution and retailing of the product or service directly to the customers
  • 23. Situations favoring forward integration • present distributors are especially expensive or unreliable or incapable of meeting the firm’s distribution needs; • availability of quality distributors is so limited as to offer a competitive advantage to those firms that integrate forward; • advantages of stable production are particularly high;
  • 24. Situations favoring forward integration • organization competes in an industry that is growing and is expected to continue to grow markedly; • organization has both the capital and human resources needed to manage the new business of distributing its own products; • present distributors or retailers have high profit margins
  • 25. Backward Vertical Integration • A corporate option to engage in the business concentrating the efforts at the stage of raw materials production or close the source of raw materials
  • 26. Situations favoring backward integration • present suppliers are especially expensive or unreliable or incapable of meeting the firm’s distribution needs; • The number of suppliers is small and the number of competitors is large; • organization competes in an industry that is growing rapidly;
  • 27. Situations favoring backward integration • Organization’s present channels of distribution can be used to market the new products to current customers; • New products have counter cyclical sales patterns compared to an organization’s present products
  • 28. Conglomerate Diversification Conglomerate diversification (unrelated diversification)  a diversification option that involves investing in or buying into business organizations whose products and/or services have nothing to do or not related to the kind of products it is presently dealing with.
  • 29. Situations favoring conglomerate diversification • Organization’s basic industry is experiencing declining annual sales and profits; • Organization has the capital and managerial talent needed to compete successfully; • Organization has the opportunity to purchase an unrelated business;
  • 30. Situations favoring conglomerate diversification • Financial synergy exists between the acquired and acquiring firm; • Existing market for an organization’s present products are saturated; and • Antitrust action could be charged against an organization that historically has concentrated on a single industry
  • 31. Concentric Diversification • Concentric diversification (related diversification) A corporate diversification option that involves engaging or dealing with products or services that are somehow related to or associated with what the firm is presently handling.
  • 32. Situations favoring concentric diversification • Organization competes in a no-growth or a slow-growth industry; • Adding new, but related products significantly would enhance the sales of current products; • New, but related, products could be offered at highly competitive prices;
  • 33. Situations favoring concentric diversification • New, but related, products have seasonal sales levels that counterbalance an organization’s existing peaks and valley; • Organization’s products are currently in the decline stage of the product life cycle; and • Organization has strong management team
  • 34. Strategic Fit the relatedness in making decisions concerning the appropriateness of the strategic moves vis-à-vis the various operating divisions or business units of the company Degree of relationship or connectivity
  • 35. Categories of strategic fit acc. To Thompson and Strickland • Product fit • Operating fit • Management fit
  • 36. Directions of Corporate Level Strategies According to Wheelen and Hunger: • Growth strategy • Stability strategy • Retrenchment strategy
  • 37. Growth Strategy Options Designed to achieve growth in sales, assets, profits or some combination Categories: • Merger • Acquisition • Strategic alliance
  • 38. Stability strategies This option is sometimes viewed as having lck of strategy s the firm simply opts to stay put or maintain the current array of businesses Forms: • Pause/proceed with caution • No change strategy • Profit strategy
  • 39. Retrenchment strategies Evolves around the concept of reduction in a variety of aspects usually in terms of size, capital, personnel complement and the like. Forms: • Turnaround strategy – Contraction – Consolidation • Sell-out/Divestment strategy • Bankruptcy strategy • Liquidation strategy
  • 40. International and Other Entry Options Usually done by multinational or foreign- based organizations designed to explore other markets beyond their usual or original place of doing their business
  • 41. Strategies in entering the Int’l markets • Exporting • Production sharing • Licensing • Turnkey operations • Franchising • Management contract • Joint venture • Build-Operate- • Acquisition Transfer or BOT • Greenfield concept development • Outsourcing
  • 42. Strategic Alliance  Used for the purpose of achieving mutual advantage and certain strategic or specific goals  Done through a process of exploration and negotiation with targeted parties or business concerns leading to signing up an alliance document in the form of memorandum of agreement, memorandum of understanding and /or contracts stipulating mutual desire to attain specific objective and expressing support for one another.
  • 43. Objectives in strategic alliance • To collaborate on technology development or new product development; • To fill gaps in technical or manufacturing expertise; • To acquire new competencies • To improve supply chain efficiency • To gain economies of scalein production and marketing; and • To acquire or improve market access via joint marketing agreements
  • 44. Guidelines in forming strategic alliances • Pick a good partner, one that shares a common vision; • Be sensitive to cultural differences; • Recognize that the alliance must benefit both sides • Both parties have to deliver on their commitments in the agreement;
  • 45. Guidelines in forming strategic alliances • Structure decision-making process so actions can be taken swiftly when needed; and • Parties must do a good job of managing the learning process, adjusting the alliance agreement over time to fit new circumstances
  • 46. Success factors in alliances: • Ability of an alliance to endure depends on how well partners work together; • Success of partners in responding and adapting to changing conditions; and • Willingness of partners to renegotiate the bargain.
  • 47. Failure factors in alliances: • Diverging objectives and priorities of partners; • Inability of partners to work well together; • Emergence of more attractive technological paths; • Marketplace rivalry between one or more allies; and • Merger and acquisition strategies.
  • 48. Benefits of mergers and acquisition • More or better competitive capabilities; • More attractive line-up of products/services; • Wider geographic coverage; • Greater financial resources to invest in R&D, add capacity, or expand; • Cost-saving opportunities; • Filling in of resource or technological skills; • Greater ability to launch next-wave products/services
  • 49. Pitfalls of merger and acquisition • Resistance from rank-and-file employees; • Hard-to-resolve conflicts in management styles and corporate cultures; • Tough problems in combining and integrating the operations of the once-different companies; and • Greater-than-anticipated difficulties in achieving expected cost-savings, sharing of expertise, and achieving enhanced competitive capabilities
  • 50. Advantages of Outsourcing • Improves firm’s ability to obtain high quality and/or cheaper components or services; • Improves firm’s ability to innovate by interacting with “best-in-the-world” suppliers; • Enhances firm’s flexibility • Increases firm’s ability to assemble diverse kinds of expertise speedily and efficiently; • Allows firm to concentrate its resources on performing those activities internally
  • 51. Conditions to consider in outsourcing: • Activity can be performed better or more cheaply by outside specialists • Activity is not crucial to achieve a sustainable competitive advantage • Risk exposure to changing technology and/or changing buyer preferences is reduced
  • 52. Conditions to consider in outsourcing: • Operations are streamlined to – Cut cycle time – Speed decision-making – Reduce coordination costs • Firm can concentrate on doing those “core” value chain activities that best suit its resource strengths and capabilities
  • 53. Situations favoring Joint Venture: • When privately owned organization is forming a joint venture with a publicly owned organization; • When a domestic organization is forming a joint venture with a foreign company; • The distinctive competencies of two or more firms complement each other especially well;
  • 54. Situations favoring Joint Venture: • When some project is potentially very profitable, but requires overwhelming resources and risks; • When two or more smaller firms have trouble competing with a large firm; and • When there exists a need to introduce a new technology quickly.
  • 55. Situations favoring Retrenchment: • An organization has a clearly distinctive competence but has failed to meet its objectives and goals consistently over time; • An organization is one of the weaker competitors in a given industry; • An organization is plagued by inefficiency, low profitability, poor employee morale, and pressure from stockholders improve performance;
  • 56. Situations favoring Retrenchment: • An organization has failed to capitalized on external opportunities, minimize external threats, take advantage on internal strengths, and overcome internal weakness over time; • An organization has grown so large so quickly that major internal reorganization is needed.
  • 57. Situations favoring Divestiture: • When an organization has pursued a retrenchment strategy and it failed to accomplish needed improvements; • When a division needs more resources to be competitive than the company ca provide; • When a division is responsible for an organizations overall poor performance; and • When a division is a misfit with the rest of the organization.
  • 58. Situations favoring Liquidation: • When an organization has pursued both retrenchment strategy and a divestiture strategy; • When an organization’s only alternative is bankruptcy; • When the stockholders of a firm can minimize their losses by selling the organization’s assets.
  • 60. THANK YOU FOR LISTENING.. 