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Strategic Management




                    Notes          As Porter observes, while the low cost and differentiation strategies are aimed at achieving their
                                   objectives industry-wide, the entire focus strategy is built  around serving  a particular target
                                   very well.
                                   Sometimes, according to  Porter, neither a low-cost leadership strategy  nor a  differentiation
                                   strategy is possible for an organisation across the broad range of the market.


                                          Example: The costs of achieving low-cost leadership may require substantial funds which
                                   are not available.
                                   Equally, the costs of differentiation, while serving the mass market of customers, may be too
                                   high. If the differentiation involves quality, it may not  be credible  to offer high quality and
                                   cheap products under the same brand name. So a new brand name has to be developed and
                                   supported. For these and related reasons, it may be better to adopt a focus strategy.

                                   The focus strategy has two variants:
                                   1.  Cost focus: A firm seeks to achieve low cost position in its target segment only.
                                   2.  Differentiation focus: A firm seeks to differentiate its products in its target segment only.
                                   The essence of focus strategy is the exploitation of a narrow target’s differences from the balance
                                   of  the  industry.  Focus  builds  competitive  advantage  through  high  specialization  and
                                   concentration of resources in a given niche. A focus strategy can serve the needs of a niche
                                   segment (a) by identifying gaps not covered by existing players, and (b) by developing superior
                                   skills or efficiency while serving such narrow segments. By targeting a small, specialized group
                                   of buyers it should be possible to earn higher than average profits, either by charging a premium
                                   price for exceptional quality or by a cheap and cheerful low priced product. In the global car
                                   market, Rolls Royce and Ferrari are clearly niche players. They have only a minute percentage
                                   of the market world-wide. Their niche is premium product and premium price.

                                   The focus strategy rests on the premise that the firm is able to serve its narrow strategic target
                                   more effectively and efficiently than competitors who are competing more broadly. As a result,
                                   the firm achieves either differentiation from better meeting the needs of the particular target, or
                                   lower costs in serving this target, or both. Even though the focus strategy does not achieve low
                                   cost or differentiation industry-wide, it does so in its narrow market target.
                                   The focus strategy  requires for  its success  the same common factors, as are required for the
                                   success of cost  leadership and differentiation, except that they are directed at the  particular
                                   target market. In the Indian context, examples of focus strategy are Ayur Herbal Brand, Anjali
                                   Kitchenware, Anchor toothpaste, T-series Cassettes etc.

                                   There are, however, some problems with the focus strategy:
                                   1.  By definition, the niche is small and may not be large enough to justify attention.
                                   2.  Cost focus may be difficult if economies of scale are important in an industry such as the
                                       car industry.
                                   3.  The niche is clearly specialist in nature and may disappear over time.
                                   None  of these problems is insurmountable. Many small and medium-sized companies have
                                   found that this is the most useful strategy to explore.

                                   8.3.1  Risks in Competitive Strategies

                                   No one competitive strategy is guaranteed for success. Some companies that have successfully
                                   implemented one of Porters’ competitive strategies have found that they could not sustain the
                                   strategy. Each of these generic strategies has its own risks.


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