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Strategic Management




                    Notes          5.  Geographical location (for example, proximity to supplies reduces input costs)
                                   6.  Policy choices (such as the choices on the product mix, the number of suppliers used, wage
                                       costs, skills requirements and other human resource policies affect costs)
                                   7.  Institutional factors (which include political and legal factors, each of which can have a
                                       significant impact on costs).

                                   Value Drivers

                                   Value drivers are similar to cost drivers, but they relate to other features (other than low price)
                                   valued by buyers. Identifying value derivers comes from understanding customer requirements,
                                   which may include:

                                   1.  Policy choices (choices such as product features, quality of input materials, provision of
                                       customer services and skills and experience of staff).
                                   2.  Linkages between activities (for example, between suppliers and buyers; sales and after-
                                       sales staff).
                                   The cost and value drivers vary between industries. The value chain concept shows that companies
                                   can gain competitive advantage by controlling cost or value drivers and/or reconfiguring the
                                   value chain, that is, a better way of designing, producing, distributing or marketing a product or
                                   service. For example, Ryanair has become one of the most profitable airlines in Europe through
                                   concentrating on the parts of its value chain, such as ticket transaction costs, no frills etc.

                                   6.3 Organisational Capability Factors

                                   Organisations  capabilities  lies  in  its  resources.  The  resources  are  the  means  by  which an
                                   organisation  generates value.  It is  this value  that is then distributed  for various  purposes.
                                   Resources and capabilities of a firm can be best explained with the help of Resource Based View
                                   (RBV)  of  a  firm  which  is  popularized  by  Barney.  RBV  considers the  firm as  a  bundle  of
                                   resources – tangible resources, intangible resources, and organisational capabilities. Competitive
                                   advantage, according to this view, generally arises from the creation of bundles of distinctive
                                   resources and capabilities.
                                   6.3.1  Resources


                                   A ‘resource’ can be an asset, skill, process or knowledge controlled by an organisation. From a
                                   strategic perspective,  an organisation’s resources include both those that are owned by  the
                                   organisation and those that can be accessed by the organisation to support its strategies. Some
                                   strategically important resources may be outside the organisation’s ownership, such as its network
                                   of contacts or customers.

                                   Typically, resources can be grouped into four categories:
                                   1.  Physical  resources  include  plant  and  machinery,  land  and  buildings,  production
                                       capacity etc.
                                   2.  Financial resources include capital, cash, debtors, creditors etc.

                                   3.  Human resources include knowledge, skills and adaptability of human resources.
                                   4.  Intellectual capital  is  an  intangible  resource  of  an  organisation.  This  includes  the
                                       knowledge that has been captured in patents, brands, business systems, customer databases
                                       and relationships with partners. In a knowledge-based economy,  intellectual capital is
                                       likely to be the major asset of many organisations.




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