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Strategic Management




                    Notes            performance-production cost, quality, product and process technology, and global market
                                     scope-Apple was greatly inferior to its other rivals, such as IBM. Apple's only opportunity
                                     for survival  was to pursue a strategy founded upon Apple's image advantage, while
                                     simultaneously  minimising  Apple'  disadvantages  in  other  capabilities.  Apple'  new
                                     marketing strategy involved extending the  appeal of the Apple image of individuality
                                     from its traditional customer group (tech savvy, graphic designers) to more a general,
                                     young professional  types. Protection of the Apple name by means  of tougher controls
                                     over dealers was matched by wider exploitation of the Apple name through entry in other
                                     industries such as the portable music business.
                                     Apple's share of the computer market went from 15% in 1985 to 4% in 2005 and lost around
                                     $700 million in only three months in 1997.

                                     However, thanks to the iPod and to the Apple's iTunes music stores, its shares grew 90%
                                     between 2001 up until today, i.e. from a mere $7/share. Apple is today the premier provider
                                     of MP3 players.
                                     Designing strategy around the most critically important resources and capabilities may
                                     imply that the firm limits its strategic scope to those activities where it possesses a clear
                                     competitive advantage. The principal capabilities of Apple, are in design and new products
                                     development; it lacked both the manufacturing capabilities to compete effectively in the
                                     world's  computer market.  Apple's turnaround from year  2000 followed it decision to
                                     specialise upon design and new product development.

                                     The ability of a firm's resources  and capabilities to support  a sustainable competitive
                                     advantage is essential to the time frame of a firm's strategic planning process. If a company's
                                     resources and capabilities lack durability or are easily transferred or replicated, then the
                                     company  must either  adopt a strategy of  short-term  harvesting  or it  must invest  in
                                     developing new sources of competitive advantage.
                                     These considerations are  critical for  small technological  start-ups where  the speed  of
                                     technological  change may  mean that  innovations  offer  only temporary  competitive
                                     advantage. The company  must seek  either to  exploit its  initial innovation  before it  is
                                     challenged by stronger, established  rivals or  other start-ups, or it  must  establish  the
                                     technological capability for a continuing stream of innovations.
                                     The main  issue for  Apple is  to make  sure  that  it takes  advantage of  this  window of
                                     opportunity. Because there are tougher competitors down the road and the more money
                                     it makes, the more companies will enter the market making harder for Apple to sustain
                                     this new found competitive advantage.
                                     In industries where competitive advantages based upon differentiation and innovation
                                     can be imitated (such as financial services, retailing, fashion clothing, toys), firms have a
                                     brief window of opportunity during  which to exploit their advantage before imitators
                                     erode it away. Under such circumstances firms must be concerned not with sustaining the
                                     existing advantages,  but with  creating the flexibility and responsiveness that permits
                                     them to create new advantages at a faster rate than the old advantages are being eroded by
                                     competition.
                                     Question
                                     What lessons can be learnt from Apple's Turnaround?

                                   Source: http://www.bestcxo.com/strategic-management/formulating-a-strategy-following-apple-turnaround/








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