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Saturday 30 November 2013

chapter 9: ethic, corporate social responsibility, environmental sustainability and strategy

i will tell u about chapter 9: ethic, corporate social responsibility, environmental sustainability and strategy.

what do we mean by business ethics?
business ethics

  • is the application of general ethical principle to the actions and decisions of businesses and the conduct of their personnel.
  • are not materially different from ethical principles in general because business actions have to be judged in the context of society standard of right and wrong.


the school of ethical universalism: 


corporate social responsibility (CSR)
  • is a firm's duty to operate in an honorable manner, provide good working conditions foe employees, encourage workforce diversity, be a good steward of the environment and actively work to better quality of life in the local communities where it operates and in society at large.

in other work CSR is important in organization. 

end here..see u soon...:) :)

Wednesday 27 November 2013

chapter 8: corporate strategy: diversification and the multi business company

"Make winners out of every business in your company.don't carry loser."
(jack welch-former CEO, General Electric)

let start chapter 8:  corporate strategy: diversification and the multi business company


Today i would like to share another topic that i already learned in my strategic management class last tuesday. Every corporate entities or business have a different strategy. The objective of diversification is to increase and  build shareholder value. Enter into any new businesses can take any of three forms: acquisition, internal start up, or joint venture. Every best choice depends on the firm's resources  and capability, the industry entry barrier, the important of speed, and the relative costs.
There a two fundamental approaches to diversification which related and unrelated diversification.

Related diversification: strong foundation or base for creating shareholder value.
Unrelated diversification : since the specialized resources and capabilities that a leveraged in related diversification to be more valuable competitive assets than the generalized resources and capabilities underlying unrelated, which in most cases are relatively common and easier to imitate.

Business diversification becomes a consideration when :

  • Spot opportunities for expanding into industries whose technologies and product complement it's present business.
  • It can leverage its collection of resources and capabilities by expanding into business where these resources and capabilities are valuable competitive assets.
  • Diversifying into additional businesses opens new avenues for reducing costs.
  • Has a powerful and well-known brand name that can be transferred to the product of other business .

In Malaysia, we have many examples of the companies that has been diversified their business into many other sub business unit. We have Sime DarbyTabung Haji and Khazanah Nasional Berhad. For Sime Darby, they have Sime Darby Property, Sime Darby Plantation, Sime Darby Industrial, Sime Darby Motors and Sime Darby Energy and Utilities. This is how this company diversify their business either in the related business or in unrelated business.

Any firms that wish to have diversification in their business should consider this factors:
  • It can expand into business where the technologies and product complement its current product 
  • It have enough resources and capabilities to be use 
  • Cost can be reduced by cross-business sharing or transfer of resources and capabilities 
  • Transferring a strong brand name to the product of other businesses
Good company strategies is consist of 6 step.
  • Evaluate the long term attractiveness of the industries into which the company has diversified.
  • Evaluate the relative competitive strength of each of the company's business units.
  • Check for cross-business fit.
  • Check whether the firm's resources fit the resources requirement of it's present business line up.
  • Rank the performance prospects of the businesses from best to worst, and determined what the corporate parent's priority should be in allocating resources to its various business.
  • Crafting new business strategic moves to improve overall corporate performance.                

see u in the next chapter...<3<3<3
Wednesday 20 November 2013

chapter 7: strategies for competing in international markets

now let move to chapter 7: strategies for competing in international markets.

there is several reason why companies decide to enter foreign market:



why competing across national borders makes strategy-making more complex: 
  1. porter's diamond of national competitive advantages
   
     2. locating value chain activities advantageously

    
   3. the impact of government policies and economic condition in host countries



    4. the risk of adverse exchange rate shift



strategic option for entering and competing in international markets.
  1. maintain a national product base and export goods to foreign market.
  2. license foreign firms to produce and distribute the company product abroad.
  3. employ a franchising strategy.
  4. establish a subsidiary in a foreign market via acquisition or internal development.
  5. rely on strategic alliances or joint ventures with foreign companies.
there is three main strategic approaches in competing internationally.

multi domestic strategy 

it strategy is matches to local market needs- think local, act local. different country strategies are called for when
  • significant country-to-country differences in customer need exist
  • buyers in one country want a product different from buyers in another country
  • host government regulations preclude uniform global approach.
two drawbacks
  • poses problem of transferring competencies across borders
  • works against building a unified competitive advantage

Multi domestic Approach
(think local, act local)
                                  advantages                                                                          

disadvantages
Can meet the specific needs of each market more precisely
Hinders resource and capability sharing or cross-market transfers
Can respond more swiftly to localized changes in demand
Higher production and distribution costs

Can target reactions to the moves of local rivals
Not conducive to a worldwide competitive advantage
Can respond more quickly to local opportunities and threats



global strategy 

strategy for competing is similar in all country markets- think global, act local
involves
  • coordinating strategic moves globally
  • selling in many, if not all, nations where a significant markets exists.
work best when product and buyer requirements are similar from country to country

Global Approach
(think global, act global)
                                       Advantages
Disadvantages
Lower costs due to scale and scope economies
Unable to address local needs precisely
Greater efficiencies due to the ability to transfer best practices across markets
Less responsive to changes in local market conditions
More innovation from knowledge sharing and capability transfer
Higher transportation costs and tariffs
The benefit of a global brand and reputation
Higher coordination and integration costs


transnational strategy

incorporates elements of both of globalization and localization approach to strategy making- think global, act global.

Transnational Approach
(think global, act local)
advantages
disadvantages
Offers the benefits of both local responsiveness and global integration
More complex and harder to implement
Enables the transfer and sharing of resources and capabilities across borders
Conflicting goals may be difficult to reconcile and require trade-offs
Provides the benefits of flexible coordination

Implementation more costly and time-consuming



that all for chapter 7...bye JJJ

Thursday 14 November 2013

Sharing Session

Sharing Session

In this week, dr. ummi have invited one of the talented entrepreneur namely Mdm.Asnidar  Hanim Yusuf owner of Oshima Japan Restaurant. We have been told that Oshima mean a huge island. Actually Mdm. Asnidar Hanim is one of dr. ummi’s friends and before this mdm. Hanim take degree in engineering at Japan and continue his master also in that field now she further her pHd in USIM..




Oshima Japan Restaurant have stated it business in 2009 and operated at kiosk B3, Shah Alam Walk, Persiaran Majlis 40000 Shah Alam , Selangor. It is the one and only 100% HALAL Japanese Restaurant in Malaysia. The services have in there is takes reservations, walk-ins welcome, good for groups, good for kids, take out, delivery, catering, waiter service and outdoor seating.





The input i get in the sharing session conducted by Mdm. Asnidar Hanim is we must like or has a passion in everything we do. by that way, every obstacle that we will face it will not push our motivated down. Other than that, in business the competitive advantages is important to make our business more successful and it must different from others....

anyway, i enjoyed this session..:)
Sunday 10 November 2013

chapter 6: Strengthening A Company’s Competitive Position

In chapter 6  namely: STRENGTHENING A COMPANY’S COMPETITIVE POSITION: STRATEGIC MOVES, TIMING, AND SCOPE OF OPERATIONS

If someone wants to open a company, that company must have a powerful strategy to compete with the existing company. The can use:
  •         Offensive and Defensive Competitive Actions
  •   Competitive Dynamics and the Timing of Strategic Moves
  •   Scope of Operations along the Industry’s Value Chain

OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE COMPETITIVE ACTIONS

Defensive Marketing Strategies

Because of ongoing rivalry, established firms need to engage in defensive strategies to fend off the various challengers. The primary purpose of defensive strategy is to make a possible attack unattractive and discourage potential challengers from attacking another firm.

Incumbents try to shape the challenger’s expectations about the industry’s profitability and convince them that the return on their investment will be so low that it does not warrant making an investment in that industry. Defensive strategies work better when they take place before the challenger makes an investment in the industry, or if they enter the industry before exit barriers are raised, making it difficult for the challenger to leave the industry.

For this reason, an incumbent needs to take timely action to discourage a challenger from making any substantial commitment, because once the commitment is made, it is more difficult to dissuade the challenger from following through with the attack especially if exit barriers are high. If an attack has already begun, a defending firm may attempt to lower its intensity and potential for harm, by directing the attack to areas where the firm is less vulnerable, or in areas which are less desirable to the attacker.

Offensive Marketing Strategies

Firms engage in offensive marketing strategies to improve their own competitive position by taking market share away from rivals. Offensive strategies include direct and indirect attacks or moving into new markets to avoid incumbent competitors. If a firm possesses superior resources a direct attack may be called for. However, if a firm faces superior rivals, indirect attacks are more appropriate than direct, frontal attacks. Direct attacks invite retaliatory responses especially if they pose a serious threat to the defending firm.

 Indirect attacks are less likely to elicit a competitive response because that are difficult to detect, especially if they are targeted towards non-core segments or products. An extreme form of an indirect attack is to avoid competitors and undertake activities that are far removed from those of rivals.

Firms may choose from a multitude of different strategies to accomplish their offensive objectives. Like defensive strategies, offensive marketing strategies take many forms from flanking attacks or bypassing the competition to all-out frontal attacks intended to defeat the competition with all available means at the attacker’s disposal.

Blue-Ocean Strategy

Where the industry has not yet taken shape, with no rivals and wide-open long- term growth and profit potential for a firm that can create demand for new types of products.

The example of blue ocean strategy :

The Body Shop also created a “Blue Ocean” – and in the fiercely competitive cosmetics industry. The Body Shop ignored most glamorous aspects of the industry. Instead The Body Shop designed its image around functionality, reduced prices and modest packaging. Increased value was given to natural ingredients, a healthy lifestyle and ethical concerns.

          As a result The Body Shop’s products spoke to a totally new group of customers and achieved a high degree of cost savings (generally approx. 85% of costs in the cosmetics industry arise from packaging and advertising).

STRATEGIC MOVES

  §  When pioneering helps build a firm’s reputation and creates strong brand loyalty.
  §  When a first mover’s customers will thereafter face significant switching costs.
  §  When property rights protections thwart rapid imitation of the initial move.
  §  When an early lead enables movement down the learning curve ahead of rivals. 
  §  When a first mover can set the technical standard for the industry.

DEFINING THE SCOPE OF THE FIRM’S OPERATIONS

  ĂĽ  Range of its activities performed internally
  ĂĽ  Breadth of its product and service offerings
  ĂĽ  Extent of its geographic market presence and its mix of businesses
  ĂĽ  Size of its competitive footprint on its market or industry

Horizontal Scope
  • The range of product and service segments that a firm serves within its focal market.
Vertical Scope
  • The extent to which a firm’s internal activities encompass one, some, many, or all of the activities that make up an industry’s entire value chain system, ranging from raw-material production to final sales and service activities.
Backward Integration
  • Involves entry into activities previously performed by suppliers or other enterprises positioned along earlier stages of the industry value chain system.
Forward Integration
  • Involves entry into value chain system activities closer to the end user.
Strategic Alliance
  • A formal agreement between two or more separate companies in which they agree to work cooperatively toward some common objective.Joint Venture
Joint Venture
  • A partnership involving the establishment of an independent corporate entity that the partners own and control jointly, sharing in its revenues and expenses.

this is what i have learnt in this chapter...insyaallah i will improve it more.....JJJ



Saturday 9 November 2013
according to what miss ummi told i to do:

4 Categories Of Generic Business Strategies

Broad Cost Leadership 
·         Google
·         Facebook
·         Air Asia
·         Coca Cola
·         Mydin
·         Giant
·         Digi
·         Maxis
·         McDonald’s


Focused Cost 
·         Tesco
·         Proton
·         Subway
·         KFC
·         Perodua
·         Kamdar
·         Toyota
·         Victorious Secret


Broad Differentiation 
·         Avon
·         Kia Motors
·         IKEA
·         Old-Town Kopitiam
·         Al-Ikhsan
·         Honda


Focused Differentiation
·        Bonia
·        JW Marriott
·        Louis Vuitton
·        Porsche
·        Malaysia Airlines Systems
·        Rolls Royce
·        Nike