KT2: 3.1.1 Corporate Objectives, 3.1.2. Theories of Corporate Strategy Flashcards
Aims
a generalised statement of where a business is heading.
Mission
an aim expressed in a particularly inspiring way.
Mission statement
a short passage of text that sums up an organisation’s mission. This may get displayed on walls throughout the business and placed prominently on its website.
Corporate strategy
provides a medium to long-term plan for meeting company wide objectives.
Distinctive capabilities
ways a firm operates that cannot easily be copied by rivals, e.g. Ryanair’s obsession with cost minimisation.
Economies of scale
factors that cause average costs to fall as the scale of output increases.
Generic strategy
a strategic position that will prove effective in every market, i.e. generically. Porter said lowest cost and highest differentiation were the perfect positions of strength.
Product differentiation
the extent to which consumers perceive one product as being distinct from its rivals.
Stock units
the number of different brands and pace sizes stocked by a business; each has its own barcode; a Tesco hypermarket might have 75,000 separate products; an Aldi has 1,200.
Ansoff’s Matrix
Igor Ansoff believe that businesses need greater awareness of the risk involved in developing new products or new markets, and especially in the combination of the two: diversification.
Diversification
when a business expands its activities outside its normal range. This may be done to reduce risk or to expand possible markets.
Repositioning
changing a product or its promotion to appeal to a different market segment.