The ideologies below should be tools your managers must not miss in their struggle to improve Business.
Cost Leadership
Cost
leadership is the first competitive advantage businesses often attempt
to gain. Cost leadership as an advantage occurs when a business is able
to offer the same quality product as its competitors, but at a lower
price. Cost leadership can occur when a company finds ways to produce
goods at a lower cost through the perfection of production methods or by
the utilization of resources in a more efficient manner than
competitors. Other factors, such as proprietary technology, can also
factor into this type of advantage. Cost leadership may be classified as
an offensive strategy, whereby businesses attempt to drive competitors
out of the market by consistently using price strategies designed to win
over consumers.
Differentiation
Differentiation
is a second strategy that businesses often use to set themselves apart
from competitors. In a differentiation strategy, low cost is only one of
many possible factors that may set aside a business from others.
Business that differentiate themselves typically look for one or more
marketable attributes that they have that can set them apart from their
competitors. They then find the segment of the market that finds those
attributes important and market to them. The process can also work in
the other direction with businesses conducting research to determine
which things consumers find most important and then developing a niche
market for those products or characteristics.
Defensive Strategies
Another
way for a business to gain a competitive advantage is to utilize a
defensive strategy. The advantage gained by this type of strategy is
that it allows the business to further distance itself from its
competition by, in some sense, maintaining a competitive advantage it
has gained. Therefore, this strategy is closely related to
differentiation and cost leadership because it is a method used by
businesses to keep those advantages in place once they have been
attained. Whereas the other two strategies are more offensive in nature,
this strategy becomes an actual advantage as it becomes increasingly
difficult for so-called competitors to offer any real opposition to the
business.
Alliances
Competitive
advantages can also be gained by businesses that seek strategic
alliances with other businesses in related industries or within the same
industry. Businesses have to be careful not to cross the line between
alliances and collusion, though. Collusion occurs when businesses within
the same industry work together to artificially control prices.
Strategic alliances, on the other hand, are more along the lines of
joint ventures that businesses use to pool resources and gain themselves
exposure at the expense of other competitors not in the alliance.
No comments:
Post a Comment