Introduction to Strategy and Technology
The introduction to this chapter provides an overview of the many
aspects of business that managers must consider when setting an
information systems strategy. The strategies discussed are
operational effectiveness, fast follower, first mover, and strategic
positioning. Each strategy, plus any others you may be able to identify,
has its strengths and weaknesses.
Powerful Resources
Learning Objectives
- Understand that technology is often critical to enabling competitive advantage, and provide examples of firms that have used technology to organize for sustained competitive advantage.
- Understand the value chain concept and be able to examine and compare how various firms organize to bring products and services to market.
- Recognize the role technology can play in crafting an imitation-resistant value chain, as well as when technology choice may render potentially strategic assets less effective.
- Define the following concepts: brand, scale, data and switching cost assets, differentiation, network effects, and distribution channels.
- Understand and provide examples of how technology can be used to create or strengthen the resources mentioned above.
Management
has no magic bullets. There is no exhaustive list of key resources that
firms can look to in order to build a sustainable business. And
recognizing a resource doesn't mean a firm will be able to acquire it or
exploit it forever. But being aware of major sources of competitive
advantage can help managers recognize an organization's opportunities
and vulnerabilities, and can help them brainstorm winning strategies.
And these assets rarely exist in isolation. Oftentimes, a firm with an
effective strategic position can create an arsenal of assets that
reinforce one another, creating advantages that are particualrly
difficult for rivals to successfully challenge.
Imitation-Resistant Value Chains
While many of the resources below are considered in isolation, the strength of any advantage can be far more significant if firms are able to leverage several of these resources in a way that makes each stronger and makes the firm's way of doing business more difficult for rivals to match. Firms that craft an imitation-resistant value chain have developed a way of doing business that others will struggle to replicate, and in nearly every successful effort of this kind, technology plays a key enabling role. The value chain is the set of interrelated activities that bring products or services to market (see below). When we compare FreshDirect's value chain to traditional rivals, there are differences across every element. But most importantly, the elements in FreshDirect's value chain work together to create and reinforce competitive advantages that others cannot easily copy. Incumbents trying to copy the firm would be straddled across two business models, unable to reap the full advantages of either. And late-moving pure-play rivals will struggle, as FreshDirect's lead time allows the firm to develop brand, scale, data, and other advantages that newcomers lack (see below for more on these resources).
Key Framework: The Value Chain
The
value chain is the "set of activities through which a product or
service is created and delivered to customers".
There are five primary components of the value chain and four supporting
components. The primary components are as follows:
- Inbound logistics - getting needed materials and other inputs into the firm from suppliers
- Operations - turning inputs into products or services
- Outbound logistics - delivering products or services to consumers, distribution centers, retailers, or other partners
- Marketing and sales - customer engagement, pricing, promotion, and transaction
- Support - service, maintenance, and customer support
The secondary components are the following:
- Firm infrastructure - functions that support the whole firm, including general management, planning, IS, and finance
- Human resource management - recruiting, hiring, training, and development
- Technology / research and development - new product and process design
- Procurement - sourcing and purchasing functions
While
the value chain is typically depicted as it's displayed in the figure
below, goods and information don't necessarily flow in a line from one
function to another. For example, an order taken by the marketing
function can trigger an inbound logistics function to get components
from a supplier, operations functions (to build a product if it's not
available), or outbound logistics functions (to ship a product when it's
available). Similarly, information from service support can be fed back
to advise research and development (R&D) in the design of future
products.
When a firm has an
imitation-resistant value chain - one that's tough for rivals to copy in
a way that yields similar benefits - then a firm may have a critical
competitive asset. From a strategic perspective, managers can use the
value chain framework to consider a firm's differences and
distinctiveness compared to rivals. If a firm's value chain can't be
copied by competitors without engaging in painful trade-offs, or if the
firm's value chain helps to create and strengthen other strategic assets
over time, it can be a key source for competitive advantage. Many of
the examples used in this book, including FreshDirect, Amazon, Zara,
Netflix, and eBay, illustrate this point.
An analysis of a firm's
value chain can also reveal operational weaknesses, and technology is
often of great benefit to improving the speed and quality of execution.
Firms can often buy software to improve things, and tools such as supply
chain management (SCM; linking inbound and outbound logistics with
operations), customer relationship management (CRM; supporting sales,
marketing, and in some cases R&D), and enterprise resource planning
software (ERP; software implemented in modules to automate the entire
value chain), can have a big impact on more efficiently integrating the
activities within the firm, as well as with its suppliers and customers.
But remember, these software tools can be purchased by competitors,
too. While valuable, such software may not yield lasting competitive
advantage if it can be easily matched by competitors as well.
There's
potential danger here. If a firm adopts software that changes a unique
process into a generic one, it may have co-opted a key source of
competitive advantage particularly if other firms can buy the same
stuff. This isn't a problem with something like accounting software.
Accounting processes are standardized and accounting isn't a source of
competitive advantage, so most firms buy rather than build their own
accounting software. But using packaged, third-party SCM, CRM, and ERP
software typically requires adopting a very specific way of doing
things, using software and methods that can be purchased and adopted by
others. During its period of PC-industry dominance, Dell stopped
deployment of the logistics and manufacturing modules of a packaged ERP
implementation when it realized that the software would require the firm
to make changes to its unique and highly successful operating model and
that many of the firm's unique supply chain advantages would change to
the point where the firm was doing the same thing using the same
software as its competitors. By contrast, Apple had no problem adopting
third-party ERP software because the firm competes on product uniqueness
rather than operational differences.
Dell's Struggles: Nothing Lasts Forever
Michael
Dell enjoyed an extended run that took him from assembling PCs in his
dorm room as an undergraduate at the University of Texas at Austin to
heading the largest PC firm on the planet. For years Dell's
superefficient, vertically integrated manufacturing and
direct-to-consumer model combined to help the firm earn seven times more
profit on its own systems when compared with comparably configured
rival PCs. And since Dell
PCs were usually cheaper, too, the firm could often start a price war
and still have better overall margins than rivals.
It was a
brilliant model that for years proved resistant to imitation. While Dell
sold direct to consumers, rivals had to share a cut of sales with the
less efficient retail chains responsible for the majority of their
sales. Dell's rivals struggled in moving toward direct sales because any
retailer sensing its suppliers were competing with it through a
direct-sales effort could easily chose another supplier that sold a
nearly identical product. It wasn't that HP, IBM, Sony, and so many
others didn't see the advantage of Dell's model - these firms were
wedded to models that made it difficult for them to imitate their rival.
But
then Dell's killer model, one that had become a staple case study in
business schools worldwide, began to lose steam. Nearly two decades of
observing Dell had allowed the contract manufacturers serving Dell's
rivals to improve manufacturing efficiency.
Component suppliers located near contract manufacturers, and assembly
times fell dramatically. And as the cost of computing fell, the price
advantage Dell enjoyed over rivals also shrank in absolute terms. That
meant savings from buying a Dell weren't as big as they once were. On
top of that, the direct-to-consumer model also suffered when sales of
notebook PCs outpaced the more commoditized desktop market. Notebooks
can be considered to be more differentiated than desktops, and customers
often want to compare products in person - lift them, type on
keyboards, and view screens - before making a purchase decision.
In
time, these shifts created an opportunity for rivals to knock Dell from
its ranking as the world's number one PC manufacturer. Dell has even
abandoned its direct-only business model and now also sells products
through third-party brick-and-mortar retailers. Dell's struggles as
computers, customers, and the product mix changed all underscore the
importance of continually assessing a firm's strategic position among
changing market conditions. There is no guarantee that today's winning
strategy will dominate forever.
Brand
A firm's brand is the
symbolic embodiment of all the information connected with a product or
service, and a strong brand can also be an exceptionally powerful
resource for competitive advantage. Consumers use brands to lower search
costs, so having a strong brand is particularly vital for firms hoping
to be the first online stop for consumers. Want to buy a book online?
Auction a product? Search for information? Which firm would you visit
first? Almost certainly Amazon, eBay, or Google. But how do you build a
strong brand? It's not just about advertising and promotion. First and
foremost, customer experience counts. A strong brand proxies quality and
inspires trust, so if consumers can't rely on a firm to deliver as
promised, they'll go elsewhere. As an upside, tech can play a critical
role in rapidly and cost-effectively strengthening a brand. If a firm
performs well, consumers can often be enlisted to promote a product or
service (so-called viral marketing). Consider that while scores of
dot-coms burned through money on Super Bowl ads and other costly
promotional efforts, Google, Hotmail, Skype, eBay, Facebook, LinkedIn,
Twitter, YouTube, and so many other dominant online properties built
multimillion member followings before committing any significant
spending to advertising.
Early
customer accolades for a novel service often mean that positive press
(a kind of free advertising) will also likely follow.
But show up
late and you may end up paying much more to counter an incumbent's
place in the consumer psyche. In recent years, Amazon has spent no money
on television advertising, while rivals Buy.com and Overstock.com spent
millions. Google, another strong brand, has become a verb, and the cost
to challenge it is astonishingly high. Yahoo! and Microsoft's Bing each
spent $100 million on Google-challenging branding campaigns, but the
early results of these efforts seemed to do little to grow share at
Google's expense. Branding is
difficult, but if done well, even complex tech products can establish
themselves as killer brands. Consider that Intel has taken an ingredient
product that most people don't understand, the microprocessor, and
built a quality-conveying name recognized by computer users worldwide.
Scale
Many
firms gain advantages as they grow in size. Advantages related to a
firm's size are referred to as scale advantages. Businesses benefit from
economies of scale when the cost of an investment can be spread across
increasing units of production or in serving a growing customer base.
Firms that benefit from scale economies as they grow are sometimes
referred to as being scalable. Many Internet and tech-leveraging
businesses are highly scalable since, as firms grow to serve more
customers with their existing infrastructure investment, profit margins
improve dramatically.
Consider that in just one year, the
Internet firm BlueNile sold as many diamond rings with just 115
employees and one Web site as a traditional jewelry retailer would sell
through 116 stores. And with lower operating costs, BlueNile can sell at prices that
brick-and-mortar stores can't match, thereby attracting more customers
and further fueling its scale advantages. Profit margins improve as the
cost to run the firm's single Web site and operate its one warehouse is
spread across increasing jewelry sales.
A growing firm may also
gain bargaining power with its suppliers or buyers. Apple's dominance of
smartphone and tablet markets has allowed the firm to lock up 60
percent of the world's supply of advanced touch-screen displays, and to
do so with better pricing than would be available to smaller rivals. Similarly, for years eBay could raise auction fees
because of the firm's market dominance. Auction sellers who left eBay
lost pricing power since fewer bidders on smaller, rival services meant
lower prices.
The scale of technology investment required to run a
business can also act as a barrier to entry, discouraging new, smaller
competitors. Intel's size allows the firm to pioneer cutting-edge
manufacturing techniques and invest $7 billion on next-generation
plants. And although Google was
started by two Stanford students with borrowed computer equipment
running in a dorm room, the firm today runs on an estimated 1.4 million
servers. The investments being made by Intel and
Google would be cost-prohibitive for almost any newcomer to justify.
Switching Costs and Data
Switching
costs exist when consumers incur an expense to move from one product or
service to another. Tech firms often benefit from strong switching
costs that cement customers to their firms. Users invest their time
learning a product, entering data into a system, creating files, and
buying supporting programs or manuals. These investments may make them
reluctant to switch to a rival's effort.
Similarly, firms that
seem dominant but that don't have high switching costs can be rapidly
trumped by strong rivals. Netscape once controlled more than 80 percent
of the market share in Web browsers, but when Microsoft began bundling
Internet Explorer with the Windows operating system and (through an
alliance) with America Online (AOL), Netscape's market share plummeted.
Customers migrated with a mouse click as part of an upgrade or
installation. Learning a new browser was a breeze, and with the Web's
open standards, most customers noticed no difference when visiting their
favorite Web sites with their new browser.
Sources of Switching Costs
- Learning costs: Switching technologies may require an investment in learning a new interface and commands.
- Information and data: Users may have to reenter data, convert files or databases, or may even lose earlier contributions on incompatible systems.
- Financial commitment: Can include investments in new equipment, the cost to acquire any new software, consulting, or expertise, and the devaluation of any investment in prior technologies no longer used.
- Contractual commitments: Breaking contracts can lead to compensatory damages and harm an organization's reputation as a reliable partner.
- Search costs: Finding and evaluating a new alternative costs time and money.
- Loyalty programs: Switching can cause customers to lose out on program benefits. Think frequent purchaser programs that offer "miles" or "points" (all enabled and driven by software).
It is critical for challengers to realize that in
order to win customers away from a rival, a new entrant must not only
demonstrate to consumers that an offering provides more value than the
incumbent, they have to ensure that their value added exceeds the
incumbent's value plus any perceived customer switching costs. If it's going to cost you and be inconvenient, there's no
way you're going to leave unless the benefits are overwhelming.
Data
can be a particularly strong switching cost for firms leveraging
technology. A customer who enters her profile into Facebook, movie
preferences into Netflix, or grocery list into FreshDirect may be
unwilling to try rivals - even if these firms are cheaper - if moving to
the new firm means she'll lose information feeds, recommendations, and
time savings provided by the firms that already know her well. Fueled by
scale over time, firms that have more customers and have been in
business longer can gather more data, and many can use this data to
improve their value chain by offering more accurate demand forecasting
or product recommendations.
In order to win
customers from an established incumbent, a late-entering rival must
offer a product or service that not only exceeds the value offered by
the incumbent but also exceeds the incumbent's value and any customer
switching costs.
Competing on Tech Alone Is Tough: Gmail versus Rivals
Switching
e-mail services can be a real a pain. You've got to convince your
contacts to update their address books, hope that any message-forwarding
from your old service to your new one remains active and works
properly, and regularly check the old service to be sure nothing is
caught in junk folder purgatory. Not fun. So when Google entered the
market for free e-mail, challenging established rivals Yahoo! and
Microsoft Hotmail, it knew it needed to offer an overwhelming advantage
to lure away customers who had used these other services for years.
Google's offering? A mailbox with vastly more storage than its
competitors. With 250 to 500 times the capacity of rivals, Gmail users
were liberated from the infamous "mailbox full" error, and could send
photos, songs, slideshows, and other rich media files as attachments.
A
neat innovation, but one based on technology that incumbents could
easily copy. Once Yahoo! and Microsoft saw that customers valued the
increased capacity, they quickly increased their own mailbox size,
holding on to customers who might otherwise have fled to Google. Four
years after Gmail was introduced, the service still had less than half
the users of each of its two biggest rivals.
Differentiation
Commodities
are products or services that are nearly identically offered from
multiple vendors. Consumers buying commodities are highly price-focused
since they have so many similar choices. In order to break the commodity
trap, many firms leverage technology to differentiate their goods and
services. Dell gained attention from customers not only because of its
low prices, but also because it was one of the first PC vendors to build
computers based on customer choice. Want a bigger hard drive? Don't
need the fast graphics card? Dell will oblige.
Data is not only a
switching cost, it also plays a critical role in differentiation. Each
time a visitor returns to Amazon, the firm uses browsing records,
purchase patterns, and product ratings to present a custom home page
featuring products that the firm hopes the visitor will like. Customers
value the experience they receive at Amazon so much that the firm
received the highest score ever recorded on the University of Michigan's
American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI). The score was not just the
highest performance of any online firm, it was the highest ranking that
any service firm in any industry had ever received.
Capital One
has also used data to differentiate its offerings. The firm mines data
and runs experiments to create risk models on potential customers.
Because of this, the credit card firm aggressively pursued a set of
customers that other lenders considered too risky based on simplistic
credit scoring. Technology determined that a subset of underserved
customers was not properly identified by conventional techniques and was
actually a good bet. Finding profitable new markets that others ignored
allowed Capital One to grow its EPS (earnings per share) 20 percent a
year for seven years, a feat matched by less than 1 percent of public
firms.
Network Effects
Facebook
is by far the most dominant social network worldwide. Microsoft Windows
has a 90 percent market share in operating systems. EBay has an 80
percent share of online auctions. Why are these firms so dominant?
Largely due to the concept of network effects. Network effects (sometimes called
network externalities or Metcalfe's Law) exist when a product or service
becomes more valuable as more people use it. If you're the first person
with a Facebook account, then Facebook isn't very valuable. But with
each additional user, there's one more person to communicate with. A
firm with a big network of users might also see value added by third
parties. Apple's iOS devices (the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad) and
Google's Android dominate rivals from Microsoft and HP in part because
Apple and Google have tens of thousands more apps that run on and
enhance these devices, and most of these apps are provided by firms
other than Apple and Google. Third-party add-on products, books,
magazines, or even skilled labor are all attracted to networks of the
largest number of users, making dominant products even more valuable.
Switching
costs also play a role in determining the strength of network effects.
Tech user investments often go far beyond simply the cost of acquiring a
technology. Users spend time learning a product; they buy add-ons,
create files, and enter preferences. Because no one wants to be stranded
with an abandoned product and lose this additional investment, users
may choose a technically inferior product simply because the product has
a larger user base and is perceived as having a greater chance of being
offered in the future. The virtuous cycle of network effectsA virtuous
adoption cycle occurs when network effects exist that make a product or
service more attractive (increases benefits, reduces costs) as the
adopter base grows. doesn't apply to all tech products, and it can be a
particularly strong asset for firms that can control and leverage a
leading standard (think Apple's iPhone and iPad with their closed
systems versus the once-dominant but now rarely used Netscape browser,
which was almost entirely based on open standards), but in some cases
where network effects are significant, they can create winners so
dominant that firms with these advantages enjoy a near-monopoly hold on a
market.
Distribution Channels
If no one sees your product,
then it won't even get considered by consumers. So distribution channels
- the path through which products or services get to customers - can be
critical to a firm's success. Again, technology opens up opportunities
for new ways to reach customers.
Users can be recruited to create
new distribution channels for your products and services (usually for a
cut of the take). You may have visited Web sites that promote books
sold on Amazon.com. Web site operators do this because Amazon gives them
a percentage of all purchases that come in through these links. Amazon
now has over 1 million of these "associates" (the term the firm uses for
its affiliates), yet it only pays them if a promotion gains a sale.
Google similarly receives some 30 percent of its ad revenue not from
search ads, but from advertisements distributed within third-party sites
ranging from lowly blogs to the New York Times.
In
recent years, Google and Microsoft have engaged in bidding wars, trying
to lock up distribution deals that would bundle software tools,
advertising, or search capabilities with key partner offerings. Deals
with partners such as Dell, Nokia, and Verizon Wireless have been valued
at up to $1 billion each.
The
ability to distribute products by bundling them with existing offerings
is a key Microsoft advantage. But beware - sometimes these distribution
channels can provide firms with such an edge that international
regulators have stepped in to try to provide a more level playing field.
Microsoft was forced by European regulators to unbundle the Windows
Media Player, for fear that it provided the firm with too great an
advantage when competing with the likes of RealPlayer and Apple's
QuickTime.
What about Patents?
Intellectual
property protection can be granted in the form of a patent for those
innovations deemed to be useful, novel, and nonobvious. In the United
States, technology and (more controversially) even business models can
be patented, typically for periods of twenty years from the date of
patent application. Firms that receive patents have some degree of
protection from copycats that try to identically mimic their products
and methods.
The patent system is often considered to be unfairly
stacked against start-ups. U.S. litigation costs in a single patent
case average about $5 million, and a few months of patent litigation can be enough to
sink an early stage firm. Large firms can also be victims. So-called
patent trolls hold intellectual property not with the goal of bringing
novel innovations to market but instead in hopes that they can sue or
extort large settlements from others. BlackBerry maker Research in
Motion's $612 million settlement with the little-known holding company
NTP is often highlighted as an example of the pain trolls can inflict.
Even if an innovation is patentable, that doesn't
mean that a firm has bulletproof protection. Some patents have been
nullified by the courts upon later review (usually because of a
successful challenge to the uniqueness of the innovation). Software
patents are also widely granted, but notoriously difficult to defend. In
many cases, coders at competing firms can write substitute algorithms
that aren't the same, but accomplish similar tasks. For example,
although Google's PageRank search algorithms are fast and efficient,
Microsoft, Yahoo! and others now offer their own noninfringing search
that presents results with an accuracy that many would consider on par
with PageRank. Patents do protect tech-enabled operations innovations at
firms like Netflix and Caesars Entertainment Corporation (formerly
known as Harrah's), and design innovations like the iPod click wheel.
But in a study of the factors that were critical in enabling firms to
profit from their innovations, Carnegie Mellon professor Wes Cohen found
that patents were only the fifth most important factor. Secrecy, lead
time, sales skills, and manufacturing all ranked higher.
Key Takeaways
- Technology can play a key role in creating and reinforcing assets for sustainable advantage by enabling an imitation-resistant value chain; strengthening a firm's brand; collecting useful data and establishing switching costs; creating a network effect; creating or enhancing a firm's scale advantage; enabling product or service differentiation; and offering an opportunity to leverage unique distribution channels.
- The value chain can be used to map a firm's efficiency and to benchmark it against rivals, revealing opportunities to use technology to improve processes and procedures. When a firm is resistant to imitation, a superior value chain may yield sustainable competitive advantage.
- Firms may consider adopting packaged software or outsourcing value chain tasks that are not critical to a firm's competitive advantage. A firm should be wary of adopting software packages or outsourcing portions of its value chain that are proprietary and a source of competitive advantage.
- Patents are not necessarily a sure-fire path to exploiting an innovation. Many technologies and business methods can be copied, so managers should think about creating assets like the ones previously discussed if they wish to create truly sustainable advantage.
- Nothing lasts forever, and shifting technologies and market conditions can render once strong assets as obsolete.
Questions and Exercises
- Define and diagram the value chain.
- Discuss the elements of FreshDirect's value chain and the
technologies that FreshDirect uses to give the firm a competitive
advantage. Why is FreshDirect resistant to imitation from incumbent
firms? What advantages does FreshDirect have that insulate the firm from
serious competition from start-ups copying its model?
- Which firm
should adopt third-party software to automate its supply chain - Dell
or Apple? Why? Identify another firm that might be at risk if it adopted
generic enterprise software. Why do you think this is risky and what
would you recommend as an alternative?
- Identify two firms in the
same industry that have different value chains. Why do you think these
firms have different value chains? What role do you think technology
plays in the way that each firm competes? Do these differences enable
strategic positioning? Why or why not?
- How can information technology help a firm build a brand inexpensively?
- Describe BlueNile's advantages over a traditional jewelry chain. Can
conventional jewelers successfully copy BlueNile? Why or why not?
- What are switching costs? What role does technology play in strengthening a firm's switching costs?
- In most markets worldwide, Google dominates search. Why hasn't Google shown similar dominance in e-mail, as well?
- Should Lands' End fear losing customers to rivals that copy its custom clothing initiative? Why or why not?
- How can technology be a distribution channel? Name a firm that has
tried to leverage its technology as a distribution channel.
- Do you think it is possible to use information technology to achieve competitive advantage? If so, how? If not, why not?
- What are network effects? Name a product or service that has been able to leverage network effects to its advantage.
- For well over a decade, Dell earned above average industry profits. But lately the firm has begun to struggle. What changed?
- What are the potential sources of switching costs if you decide to
switch cell phone service providers? Cell phones? Operating systems?
PayTV service?
- Why is an innovation based on technology alone often subjected to intense competition?
- Can you think of firms that have successfully created competitive
advantage even though other firms provide essentially the same thing?
What factors enable this success?
- What role did network effects
play in your choice of an instant messaging client? Of an operating
system? Of a social network? Of a word processor? Why do so many firms
choose to standardize on Microsoft Windows?
- What can a firm do to
prepare for the inevitable expiration of a patent (patents typically
expire after twenty years)? Think in terms of the utilization of other
assets and the development of advantages through employment of
technology.