Value chain analysis

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Value Chain Analysis Presentation by Group A: Abhishek, Pankaj, Raj, Rohitashw, Sahil Presented to Prof. Siddharth Bose

Transcript of Value chain analysis

Page 1: Value chain analysis

Value Chain Analysis

Presentation by Group A:

Abhishek, Pankaj, Raj, Rohitashw, Sahil

Presented to Prof. Siddharth Bose

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Value Chain Analysis as a Strategic Management Tool 2

Learning Outcomes

• Awareness of Value Chain Analysis (VCA)

• Align VCA to goals, strategies & objectives

• Assessing competitive advantage through VCA

• Applying VCA through strategic frameworks

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Value Chain Analysis as a Strategic Management Tool 3

What’s Value Chain?

“internal processes or activities

to design, produce, market,

deliver and support the

product”

History of the company,

strategy and its

implementation and the

economics of the activities

C

u

s

t

o

m

e

r

V

a

l

u

ePrimary Activities

Support Activities

Firm Infrastructure

Human Resources Management

Technology Development

Procurement

Inbound & Outbound Logistics

Operations

Marketing & Sales

Service

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Special slide – Today’s Value Chain

Firm Infrastructure

Human Resources Management

Technology Development

R&D Supply Chain

Marketing& Branding

Sales

Firm Infrastructure

Human Resources Management

Technology Development

Procurement

Inbound & Outbound Logistics

Operations

Marketing & Sales

Service

Primary Activities

Support Activities

Primary Activities

Support Activities

Old perception Modern perception

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Why Value Chain Analysis?

Identify Core

Competence

Recognise Competitive Advantage

Impetus on Forward or Backward

integration

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Value Chain Analysis as a Strategic Management Tool 6

Examples of VCA and its output (1)

Filling Transport Retail Customers

• Make

Container

on site

• Tetra Pak

specialized

equipment

• No reefer

vehicles

• No space in

filling &

Packaging

• Low store

handling

• Less space

required

• Longer

shelf life

• Easy access

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Examples of VCA and its output (2)

Value

Chain

IKEA’s Choice

Design Simple, high quality, low cost

Parts Standard, Common size, Global

Assly By the customer

Stock Computerized network

Mktg Scandinavian Image

Display Focus on design and not pieces

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Assessing Competitive

Advantage

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The three tiers of VCA

Internal Cost

Analysis

Internal

Differentiati

on Analysis

Vertical

Linkages

Analysis

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Internal Cost Analysis

Cost Factors

Why costs differ?

Why swings in profitability?

Efficiencies and inefficiencies

Competitor’s costs

Nature and source of

advantage

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Internal Differentiation Analysis

Identify Value Creating

ProcessesEvaluate differentiation

strategies

Determine the best

sustainable points of

differentiation

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Vertical Linkage Analysis

Align industry value chain

to resources that create

value

Diagnose the cost drivers

for each value-creating

process

Determine Opportunities

for sustainable competitive

advantage

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Value Chain Analysis as a Strategic Management Tool 13

Strategic Framework

for VCA

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Industry Analysis

Intensity of

competition

Bargaining

power of

suppliers

Threat of

new

entrants

Threat of

substitute

Bargaining

power of

buyers

Customer concentration

Cost of switching suppliers

The no. of alternative suppliers

Uniqueness of service; Power Balance

Substitute Performance

Cost of change

Cost of advantage

Rate of profit may fall

COMPETITION

Quality differences

Cost of leaving market

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Core Competence Analysis (CCA)

• Superior integration of technological, physical and human

resources

• Can it be leveraged?

• Does it enhance customer value?

• Can it be imitated?

Hard to Imitate

Focused on End-userScalable

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Segment Analysis

SegmentationMatrix

Analyze Segment

attractiveness

Identify Segment variables

Identify key factors for

each segment

Analyze broad and narrow

segment scope

Product lines, Type of customer

Channels of distribution and region/geography

Evaluate Profitability

Consider Interrelationship among segments

Quality, delivery, customer satisfaction, market share, profitability

ROI as a measure of success

Matching of a firm’s resources with the market

Sharing costs

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Segmentation Matrix

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Generic Strategies

Relative

Differentiation

Position

Relative cost Advantage

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Limitations

• Oriented towards manufacturing business

• Few experts to use it

• Lack of information available

• Less of strategic impact

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Challenges

• Bring the importance of customer value to the forefront of managements

• Designing internal and external information systems

• Adequate information system

• Requires expertise in internal operations and information

• Cooperation of all managers