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Strategic Management




                    Notes          the extent the value it receives exceeds the total cost involved in creating its products. Creating
                                   value for  buyers that  exceeds the  cost of production (i.e.  margin) is a key  concept used in
                                   analyzing a firm’s competitive position.




                                     Notes  The concept of value chain analysis was introduced by Michael Porter in 1985 in his
                                     seminal book “Competitive Advantage”.  This concept  is derived  from an  established
                                     accounting practice that calculates the value added to a product by individual stages in a
                                     manufacturing or service  process. Porter  has applied  this idea  to the  activities of an
                                     organisation as a whole, arguing that it is necessary to examine activities separately in
                                     order to identify sources of competitive advantage.

                                   According to Porter, customer value is derived from three basic sources.
                                   1.  Activities that differentiate the product

                                   2.  Activities that lower its costs
                                   3.  Activities that meet the customer’s need quickly.
                                   Competitive advantage, argues Michael Porter (1985), can be understood only by looking at a
                                   firm as a whole, and cost advantages and successful differentiation are found in the chain of
                                   activities that a firm performs to deliver value to its customers.

                                   6.2.1 Analysis

                                   According to Porter, value chain activities are divided into two broad categories, as shown in
                                   the figure.
                                   1.  Primary activities
                                   2.  Support activities

                                   Primary activities  contribute to the physical creation of  the product or service,  its sale and
                                   transfer to the buyer and its service after the sale.
                                   Support activities include such activities as procurement, HR etc. which either add value by
                                   themselves or add value through primary activities and other support activities.
                                   Advantage or disadvantage can occur at any one of the five primary and four secondary activities,
                                   which together form the value chain for every firm.

                                   Primary Activities

                                   Inbound Logistics

                                   These activities focus on inputs. They include material handling, warehousing, inventory control,
                                   vehicle scheduling, and returns to suppliers of inputs and raw materials.

                                   Operations

                                   These include all activities associated with transforming inputs into the final product, such as
                                   production, machining, packaging, assembly, testing, equipment maintenance etc.







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