7-1© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. Corporate-Level Strategy Chapter Seven.

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7-1 © 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. Corporate-Level Strategy Chapter Seven
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Transcript of 7-1© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. Corporate-Level Strategy Chapter Seven.

7-1© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Corporate-Level Strategy

Chapter Seven

7-2© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Chapter 5Bus. - Level

Strategy

Chapter 6Competitive

Dynamics

Chapter 9International

Strategy

Chapter 10CooperativeStrategies

Chapter 8Acquisitions &Restructuring

Chapter 11Corporate

Governance

Chapter 12Structure& Control

Chapter 13Strategic

Leadership

Chapter 14Entrepreneurship & Innovation

Str

ateg

icIn

pu

ts

Str

ateg

icA

ctio

ns

Str

ateg

ic O

utc

om

esChapter 4Internal

Environment

Chapter 3External

Environment Strat. Intent

Strat. Mission

The Strategic .

Management .

Process

Strategy Formulation Strategy Implementation

Strategic Competitiveness

Chapter 1

Above Average Returns

Chapter 2 Feedback

Strategic Competitiveness

Chapter 1

Chapter 7Corp. - Level

Strategy

Chapter 5Bus. - Level

Strategy

Chapter 6Competitive

Dynamics

7-3© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Corporate–Level Strategy

Knowledge Objectives:

1. Define corporate-level strategy and discuss its importance to the diversified firm.

2. Describe the advantages and disadvantages of single-business strategies and dominant-business strategies.

3. Explain three primary reasons why firms move from single-business strategies and dominant-business strategies to more diversified strategies.

4. Describe how related-diversified firms create value by sharing or transferring core competencies.

7-4© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Corporate – Level Strategy

Knowledge Objectives – continued…

5. Explain the two ways value can be treated with an unrelated-diversification strategy.

6. Discuss the incentives and resources that encourage diversification.

7. Describe motives that can encourage managers to overdiversify a firm.

7-5© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Corporate-level strategy specifies actions to be taken by the firm to gain a competitive advantage

by selecting & managing a group of different businesses competing in several industries &

product markets

Corporate Strategy concerns 2 key questions:

1. What businesses should the firm in? 2. How should the corporate office manage the array of business units?

7-6© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Firms Vary by Degree of Diversification

Single-business > 95% of revenues from a single business unit

Low Levels of Diversification

AAAA

Dominant-business Between 70% & 95% of revenues from a single business unit BBBBAAAA

Unrelated-Diversified Business units not closely related High Levels of Diversification AAAA

BBBB CCCC

Moderate to High Levels of Diversification< 70% of revenues from dominant business; bus.s share product, technological & distribution links

Related constrained

Related linked (mixed) < 70% of revenues from dominant business, only limited links exist

AAAA

BBBB CCCC

BBBB

AAAA

CCCC

7-7© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Motives to Enhance Motives to Enhance Strategic CompetitivenessStrategic Competitiveness

•Economies of ScopeEconomies of Scope

•Market PowerMarket Power

•Financial EconomiesFinancial Economies

ResourcesResources

IncentivesIncentives

ManagerialManagerialMotivesMotives

Reasons for Diversification

*

7-8© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Incentives & Resources Incentives & Resources with Neutral Effects of with Neutral Effects of

Strategic CompetitivenessStrategic Competitiveness

ResourcesResources

IncentivesIncentives

ManagerialManagerialMotivesMotives

Reasons for Diversification

•Anti-Competition RegulationAnti-Competition Regulation•Tax LawsTax Laws

•Low PerformanceLow Performance

•Uncertain Future Cash Uncertain Future Cash FlowsFlows

•Firm Risk ReductionFirm Risk Reduction

•Tangible ResourcesTangible Resources

•Intangible ResourcesIntangible Resources

7-9© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

•Managerial Motives Managerial Motives Causing Value ReductionCausing Value Reduction

•Diversifying ManagerialDiversifying ManagerialEmployment RiskEmployment Risk

•Increasing Managerial Increasing Managerial CompensationCompensation

Reasons for Diversification

ResourcesResources

IncentivesIncentives

ManagerialManagerialMotivesMotives

*

7-10© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Summary Model of the Relationship between Firm Performance & Diversification

ResourcesResources

IncentivesIncentives

ManagerialManagerialMotivesMotives

DiversificationStrategy

7-11© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Value-creating Strategies of DiversificationOperational and Corporate Relatedness

Corporate Relatedness: Transferring Skills Into Business Through Corporate Headquarters

Low High

Sharing:OperationalRelatednessBetweenBusiness

High

Low

•Related Linked Diversification

(Economies of Scope)

•UnrelatedDiversification

(Financial Economies)

•Both Operational and Corporate Relatedness

(Rare & can create diseconomies of scope)

•Related Constrained Diversification

•Vertical Integration

(Market Power)

7-12© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Transferring Core CompetenciesTransferring Core Competencies22

Efficient Internal Capital Market Allocation

Unrelated Diversification Strategies

3

Restructuring4

Sharing ActivitiesSharing Activities11

Related Diversification Strategies

Alternative Diversification Strategies

7-13© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Sharing Activities can lower costs if it:

Example: Laboratory costs forcing drug companies to merge in order to continue R&D efforts.

** Achieves economies of scale

** Boosts efficiency of utilization

** Helps move more rapidly down Learning Curve.

Sharing Activities can enhance differentiation if it:

Example: Shared order processing system may allow the firm to discover new features customers value from a group of products.

11 Sharing ActivitiesSharing Activities

Involves activities crucial to competitive advantage.**

Key Characteristics

7-14© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

** Incentive system that rewards more than just business unit performance

Strong sense of corporate identity**

Assumptions

11 Sharing ActivitiesSharing Activities

Clear corporate mission that emphasizes the importance of integrating business units

**

*

7-15© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Transferring Core CompetenciesTransferring Core Competencies22

Sharing ActivitiesSharing Activities11

Related Diversification StrategiesAlternative Diversification Strategies

Efficient Internal Capital Market Allocation

Unrelated Diversification Strategies

3

Restructuring4

7-16© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

** Exploits Interrelationships among divisions

** Start with Value Chain analysis

Identify ability to transfer skills or expertise among similar value chains

Exploit ability to share activities

Two firms can share the same sales force, logistics network or distribution channels.

Key Characteristics

22 Transferring Core CompetenciesTransferring Core Competencies

7-17© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Assumptions

Transferring Core Competencies leads to competitive advantage only if the similarities among business units meet the following conditions:

22 Transferring Core CompetenciesTransferring Core Competencies

Activities involved in the businesses are similar enough that sharing expertise is meaningful.

**

Transfer of skills involves activities which are important to competitive advantage.

**

The skills transferred represent significant sources of competitive advantage for the receiving unit.

**

7-18© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Transferring Core CompetenciesTransferring Core Competencies22

Efficient Internal Capital Market Allocation

Unrelated Diversification Strategies

3

Restructuring4

Alternative Diversification Strategies

Sharing ActivitiesSharing Activities11

Related Diversification Strategies

7-19© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

•Acquire sound, attractive companies•Acquired units are autonomous•Acquiring corporation supplies needed capital

Portfolio managers transfer resources from units that generate cash to those with high growth potential and substantial cash needs.

•Add professional management/control to sub-units

•Sub-unit managers’ compensation based on unit results.

Key Characteristics Firms using this strategy often diversify by acquisition:

3 Efficient Internal Capital Market Allocation

7-20© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Assumptions

Managers have more detailed knowledge of firm relative to outside investors.

Firm can reduce risk by allocating resources among diversified businesses, although shareholders can generally diversify more economically on their own.

Firm need not risk competitive edge by disclosing sensitive competitive information to investors.

Efficient Internal Capital Market Allocation3 Efficient Internal Capital Market Allocation

7-21© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Efficient Internal Capital Market Allocation

Unrelated Diversification Strategies

3

Restructuring4

Alternative Diversification Strategies

Transferring Core CompetenciesTransferring Core Competencies22

Sharing ActivitiesSharing Activities11

Related Diversification Strategies

7-22© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Key Characteristics•Seek out undeveloped, sick or threatened organizations or industries

Often sells unit after making one-time changes since parent no longer adds value to ongoing operations.

•Parent firm (acquirer) intervenes & frequently:- Changes sub-unit management team- Shifts strategy

- Divests part of firm- Makes additional acquisitions to achieve critical mass

- Infuses firm with new technology- Enhances discipline by changing control systems

4 Restructuring

7-23© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Assumptions

Requires keen management insight in selecting firms with depressed values or unforeseen potential.

Must do more than restructure companies.

Need to initiate restructuring of industries to create a more attractive environment.

4 Restructuring

*

7-24© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

Per

form

ance

Level of Diversification

DominantBusiness

UnrelatedBusiness

RelatedConstrained

Diversification & Firm Performance

7-25© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

External Incentives

•Relaxation of Anti-Competition regulation allows more related acquisitions than in the past.

Incentives to Diversify

•Poor performance may lead some firms to diversify to attempt to achieve better returns in new industries.

•Firms may diversify into different businesses in order to reduce risk.

Internal Incentives

•Firms may diversify to balance uncertain future cash flows.

•Managers often have incentives to diversify to raise their compensation & reduce employment risk. (Effective governance mechanisms may restrict such abuses)

7-26© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.

FirmFirmPerformancePerformance

Summary Model of the Relationship between Firm Performance & Diversification

ResourcesResources

IncentivesIncentives

ManagerialManagerialMotivesMotives

DiversificationDiversificationStrategyStrategy

Capital Market Capital Market Intervention and Intervention and

Market for Market for Managerial TalentManagerial Talent

InternalInternalGovernanceGovernance

StrategyStrategyImplementationImplementation