Chapter 2: Strategy and Information Management (Business IT Alignment) Flashcards
Strategy Definition
- A plan of action to achieve a particular goal
- Strategy can be both long term (e.g., 3 – 5 years) and short term (next 6 months)
IS Strategy, IM Strategy, IT Strategy
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IS Strategy: Focuses on the system or business applications of IT and is primarily concerned with aligning them with business needs and using them to derive strategic benefits
- What?
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IT Strategy: Concerned with the various aspects of the technology such as architecture, technical standards, security levels, risk attitudes, and technology policies
- How?
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IM Strategy: Concerned with the structures and roles for the management of IS and IT, focuses on issues such as the relationship between specialist and users, management control, performance measurement processes, management responsibilities
- Which way? Who does it? Where is it located?
Strategy Hierarchy
- Corp. Level
- Division Level
- Functional Level
- Operational Level
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Corporate strategy
- Concerned with deciding what type of business the organization should be in and how the overall group of activities should be formed and managed
- 1) growth strategy, 2) stability strategy, 3) retrenchment strategy
- Depends on SWOT analysis.
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Generic or business unit strategy
- Refers to the actions and approaches crafted by management to create successful performance in one particular line of business
- 1) cost leadership, 2) differentiation, 3) focus, 4) mixed
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Functional strategy
- Concerned with managerial game plan for running a major functional activity or process within a business such as research and development unit, marketing unit, financial unit, production unit, HR development unit, etc.
Strategic Fit / Business IT Alignment Definition
- Strategic fit among many activities is fundamental not only to competitive advantage but also to the sustainability of that advantage. It is harder for a rival to match an array of interlocked activities than it is merely to imitate a particular sales-force approach, match a process technology, or replicate a set of product features. Porter (1996)
- Strategic alignment is the extent to which the business mission, objectives, and plans are supported by the IS mission, objectives, and plans. Reich and Benbasat, 2000; Sambamurthy and Zmud, 1999
- Alignment is the degree of fit and integration among business strategy, IT strategy, business infrastructure, and IT infrastructure. Henderson and Venkatraman (1993)
Relationship between Corporate Strategy and Information Systems
- Corporate Strategy - align -> Information Systems
- Information Systems -enable-> Corporate Strategy
Corporate Strategy: Industry & Competitive Forces
Porters 5 forces:
- New Market Entries (barriers to entry) –>
- Customer (bargainaing power) –>
- (Threat) Substitute Products / Services –>
- Supplier (bargaining power) –>
–> Company <–> Competitors
Competitive Forces: Basic idea
- The market oriented approach assumes that a company searches for an attractive market and positions itself in the market. It does so by
- choosing a suitable generic strategy
- influencing the direct market surroundings
- Starting point of all planning are the objectives that should be reached by positioning in the competitive field
- The organizational structure of a company should follow these targets („Structure follows strategy“)
Cost Leadership
- Striving to be the low-cost producer in an industry can be
especially effective
* when the market is composed of many **price-sensitive buyers** * when there are **few** **ways** to achieve **product differentiation** * when buyers do **not** care much about d**ifferences from brand to brand** * when there are a **large number of buyers** with **significant bargaining** power * The basic idea behind a cost leadership strategy is to **underprice competitors** or offer a better value and thereby gain market share and sales, driving some competitors out of the market entirely.
Differentiation
- Differentiation is aimed at producing products that are considered unique
- Allows a firm to charge higher prices for its products to gain customer loyalty because consumers may become strongly attached to the differentiation features
- A risk of pursuing a differentiation strategy is that the unique product may not be valued highly enough by customers to justify the higher price.
Focus
- Focus means producing products and services that fulfill the needs of small groups of consumers.
- There are two types of focus strategies.
- A low-cost focus strategy offers products or services to a small range (niche) of customers at the lowest price available on the market.
- A best-value focus strategy offers products to a small range of customers at the best price-value available on the market. This is sometimes called focused differentiation.
- Most effective
- when the niche is profitable and growing
- when industry leaders are uninterested in the niche
- when the industry offers several niches
- when there is little competition in the niche segment.
Generic Strategies according to Porter
Resource-based view (RBV)
- Provides an alternative to Porter’s competitive forces, which emphasizes the role of external factors, (e.g., attractiveness of an industry, competitive forces) for business success
- Resource-based view: Success & failure depends on companies’ internal capabilities
- Basic assumptions: Each company has certain core competencies or resources that are
responsible for the individual success - Companies differ significantly in their resources
- Basic assumptions: Each company has certain core competencies or resources that are
- Recommendations for core competency management
- Determine existence of core competencies and analyze their potential
- Keep tangible resources (market oriented production facilities) up to date
- Develop intangible resources/capabilities (organization culture and principles, skills, …)
Components of RBV
- Vision
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Dynamic Capabilities
- Capability of an Organization to adapt their resources and competencies to a changing environment
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Competencies
- Capability of an organization to use their resources efficiently and effectively
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Resources
- Fixed Assets, Human capital, money , Reputation incl. brands, Management-Team, Technology and Patents, (organizational culture), Organisational structure
Strategic Choice Perspective
- Organizational actions are only partially determined by environmental conditions
- Managerial choices are made to achieve desired business objectives
- Choices made by top management are critical determinants of structure and processes
Defenders:
- Maintain stability in their market domain
- Focus on efficiency – competitive pricing, high quality products
- Grow through market penetration
- Ignore developments and trends outside their domain
Prospectors:
- Find and exploit new product & market opportunities
- Maintain reputation as an Innovator
- Invest in environmental scanning
- Organizational structure more flexible
Analyzers:
- Combine strengths of prospectors and defenders
- Minimize risks while maximizing the opportunity for profit
- Maintain equilibrium between technological flexibility and technological stability
Relationship of Components
Resources –> Competencies –> Product
Those competencies most important for competition are called
core competencies. They are a starting point for the strategy development.