Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook
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hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit
Figure 10.2
Resource imitability ladder Source : Adapted from Collis and Montgomery (1997) . Cannot be imitated Relatively hard to imitate Relatively easy to imitate Difficult to imitate Can be imitated but at a cost Easy to imitate Legal copyrights and patents, unique locations, unique physical assets Brand image and reputation, customer loyalty, corporate culture and employee motivation, networks and alliances Physical capacity, plant and machinery Unskilled workforce, undifferentiated products and services, cash in hand 260 CHAPTER 10 CREATING SUSTAINABLE COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE 10.3 Achieving cost leadership Porter (1985) has identified several major factors that affect organisational costs. These he terms ‘cost drivers’; they are shown in Figure 10.4 and each is reviewed briefly. 10.3.1 Economies of scale Economies of scale are perhaps the single most effective cost driver in many industries. Scale economies stem from doing things more efficiently or differently in volume. In addition, sheer size can help in creating purchasing leverage to secure cheaper and/or better-quality (less waste) raw materials and securing them in times of limited availability. There are, however, limits to scale economies. Size can bring with it added complexity that itself can lead to diseconomies. For most operations there is an optimum size, above or below which inefficiencies occur. The effects of economies of scale are often more pronounced in the manufacturing sector than in services. While manufacturing operations such as assembly lines can benefit through scale, the advantages to service firms such as advertising agencies are less obvious. They may continue to lie in enhanced purchasing muscle (for the ad agency in media purchasing, for example) and spread training costs. 10.3.2 Experience and learning effects Further cost reductions may be achieved through learning and experience effects. Learning refers to increases in efficiency that are possible at a given level of scale through an employee having performed the necessary tasks many times before. The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) extended the recognised production learning curve beyond manufacturing and looked at the increased efficiency that was possible in all aspects of the business (such as in marketing, advertising and selling) through experience. BCG esti- mated empirically that, in many industries, costs reduced by approximately 15–20 per cent each time cumulative production (a measure of experience) doubled. This finding suggests Download 6.59 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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