ACCA - P3 Business Analysis - Study Text 2016-2017
ACCA - P3 Business Analysis - Study Text 2016-2017
ACCA - P3 Business Analysis - Study Text 2016-2017
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Paper P3
Business Analysis
Study Text
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S
T
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PAPER P3 T
E
BUSINESS ANALYSIS X
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ii
Contents Page
Introduction
Helping you to pass iv
Studying P3 vi
The exam paper xi
Syllabus and study guide xii
Part G Finance
14 Finance 491
Part H People
15 Human resource management 547
Contents iii
Helping you to pass
Tackling studying
Studying can be a daunting prospect, particularly when you have lots of other commitments. The different
features of the Study Text, the purposes of which are explained fully on the Chapter features page, will
help you whilst studying and improve your chances of exam success.
iv Introduction
Chapter features
Each chapter contains a number of helpful features to guide you through each topic.
Topic list
Topic list Syllabus reference What you will be studying in this chapter and the relevant
section numbers, together with ACCA syllabus references.
Knowledge brought forward from earlier studies What you are assumed to know from previous
studies/exams.
Summarises the content of main chapter headings,
FAST FORWARD
allowing you to preview and review each section easily.
Demonstrate how to apply key knowledge and
Examples techniques.
Definitions of important concepts that can often earn you
Key terms
easy marks in exams.
When and how specific topics were examined, or how
Exam focus points
they may be examined in the future.
Formulae that are not given in the exam but which have to
Formula to learn
be learnt.
Gives you a useful indication of syllabus areas that
closely relate to performance objectives in your Practical
Experience Requirement (PER).
Chapter Roundup A full list of the Fast Forwards included in the chapter,
providing an easy source of review.
Introduction v
Studying P3
Much of the P3 exam is concerned with business strategy. As a Chartered Certified Accountant you are
likely to find yourself dealing with matters that are of strategic importance to your organisation. It is
important, therefore, that you have an understanding of the way business strategy is conducted so that
your input is appropriate and properly considered.
However, the name of P3 is Business Analysis, not Business Strategy. Business Analysis is wider than
simply strategy and this paper will also draw from your financial and business skills gained during your
studies so far. It brings these concepts together and encourages you to take a wider view of the
organisations you are presented with in order to give your analysis of those organisations as a whole.
1 What P3 is about
The aim of the syllabus is to develop students' ability to apply relevant knowledge and skills, and
exercise the professional judgement in assessing strategic position, determining strategic choice, and
implementing strategic action through beneficial business process and structural change that involve
people, finance and information technology.
This is an advanced level paper which builds on a number of the topics covered in Paper F1 Accountant in
Business as well as topics you will have seen in Paper F5 Performance Management. However, as an
advanced paper it tests much more than just your ability to recall models and theories. You must be able
to evaluate data, assess the strategic consequences of decisions and advise on alternative courses of
action.
The syllabus is divided into eight main sections, (although the examining team are keen that you view
them as an integrated whole, rather than as a series of unrelated sections).
(a) Strategic position
The syllabus begins by considering the impact of the external environment on an organisation,
and looks at the competitive forces organisations face. It then also looks at an organisation's
internal capabilities and expectations, to see how an organisation can position itself to get the
most value out of its resources.
However, an organisation also needs to consider its responsibilities to differing stakeholder
groups, and how the expectations of stakeholders, alongside ethics and culture, help shape
organisational purpose.
(b) Strategic choice
Once an organisation has established its current strategic position it can start thinking about the
direction it wants to take in the future. This section looks at the decisions which have to be made
about an organisation's future and the way an organisation can respond to the influences and
pressures which it identified while assessing its strategic position.
(c) Strategic action
This section deals with the implementation of strategic choices, and the transformation of these
choices into organisational action. This action takes place in a context of operational processes and
relationships, which need to be managed in line with the intended strategy, and involves the
effective coordination of business processes, information technology, people and finance.
You will be expected to identify problems and issues in an organisation which prevent it from
achieving its strategies, and make recommendations about how these problems can be resolved.
vi Introduction
(d) Business and process change
This section is the first considering how organisational elements support business strategy, and it
highlights that business process redesign can lead to significant organisational improvements.
Again, you will be expected to identify problems or inefficiencies with existing processes and make
recommendations as to how they can be made more effective.
(e) Information technology
The application of information technology is often one of the ways that business processes can be
redesigned. This reflects the fact that many existing processes are less efficient than they could be,
and that new technology and the application of e-business models make it possible to design
those processes more efficiently.
(f) Project management
In (c) above we noted that effective strategic action requires the coordination of a number of
operational processes. This coordination can be facilitated through effective project management.
(g) Financial analysis
Strategic planning and strategic implementation should be subject to financial benchmarks.
Financial analysis explicitly recognises this, reminding you of the importance of focusing on key
ratios and measures that can be used to assess the viability of a strategy and to monitor or
measure its success.
(h) People
Human resource management plays a vital role in underpinning strategy. Successful strategic
planning and implementation require the effective recruitment, training, and organisation of people,
coupled with strong leadership.
As with so many other areas of the syllabus, it is crucial that an organisation's personnel resources
are appropriate for the strategy it is pursuing.
3 How to pass
Study the entire syllabus questions may span a number of syllabus areas and you must be
prepared for anything!
Practise as many questions as you can under timed conditions. This is the best way of developing
good exam technique. Make use of the Question Bank at the back of this Study Text, and, more
importantly, BPP's Practice & Revision Kit. The Kit contains numerous exam standard questions
(many of them taken from past exam papers) as well as three mock exams for you to try.
P3 questions will be scenario-based and all the information given in the scenarios will be relevant
to the questions set. Make sure you relate your answers to the scenario rather than letting them
become generic. Answers that are simply regurgitated from texts are unlikely to score well.
Introduction vii
Present your answers in a professional manner there are marks available for coherent, well
structured arguments and for making recommendations when required. You should be aiming to
achieve all of these marks.
Manage your time in the exam hall carefully. Answer plans will help you to focus on the
requirements of the question and enable you to manage your time effectively. Also, do not waffle.
Make your answers complete, but brief.
Answer the question that you are most comfortable with first it will help to settle you down if you
feel you have answered the first question well.
Answer all parts of the question leaving out a five mark discursive element for example may
mean the difference between a pass and a fail.
Read the financial press and relevant web sites (for example, the BBC business website) for real life
examples. The examination team is specifically looking for evidence of wider reading. They have
repeatedly stressed the importance of reading the finance section of a good quality newspaper so
that you can draw on real-life situations to help inform your answers.
This does not, of course, mean you should simply quote real life examples in your exam just to
show you have read widely. Instead you should use the real life examples to help inform your
answers to the questions set.
Check the P3 section of the ACCA website regularly it often contains technical articles written
either by, or on the recommendation of, the examination team which can be invaluable for future
exams.
viii Introduction
Analysis of past papers
The table below provides details of when each element of the syllabus has been examined and the
question number and section in which each element appeared. Further details can be found in the Exam
Focus Points in the relevant chapters.
Covered Dec/
in Text Sept June Dec June Dec June Dec June Dec June Dec June Dec June Dec
chapter 2015 2015 2014 2014 2013 2013 2012 2012 2011 2011 2010 2010 2009 2009 2008
STRATEGIC
POSITION
1 Business C C O C C C C
strategy
1 Strategy lenses C C C
2 PESTEL C C C C C
analysis
2 National C O
competitiveness
2 Competitive C O C C
forces
2 Business O O O O
scenario
building &
forecasting
3 Marketing and O O O
market
segmentation
3 Industry
lifecycle
4 Value chain; O O O
supply chain
management
4 SWOT analysis C O C C C C C
4 Benchmarking O C
4 Knowledge O
management
5 Stakeholders O C
5 Culture and the C O C O O C
cultural web
5 Integrated O
reporting
STRATEGIC
CHOICES
6 Generic
strategies
6 Product-market O
strategy
6 BCG C C
6 Methods of C O C O
growth
6 Corporate C O
parents
6 SAF C C
STRATEGIC
ACTION
Introduction ix
Covered Dec/
in Text Sept June Dec June Dec June Dec June Dec June Dec June Dec June Dec
chapter 2015 2015 2014 2014 2013 2013 2012 2012 2011 2011 2010 2010 2009 2009 2008
7 Organisational O O
structures
8 Managing C C C C
strategic
change
BUSINESS AND
PROCESS
CHANGE
9 Process- O O O O
strategy matrix
9 Outsourcing O O C O
9 Business O O 0 0 C C
process
redesign
10 Managing risk O
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
11 E-business and O O
upstream
supply chain
management
11 E-business and O
downstream
supply chain
management
12 E-marketing O O O O O C
12 Customer O
relationship
marketing
PROJECT
MANAGEMENT
13 Project O O O C O O O O 0
management
FINANCIAL
ANALYSIS
14 Finance O C O O O
PEOPLE
15 Leadership O O
15 Job design O O
15 Staff
development
STRATEGIC
DEVELOPMENT
16 Developing
strategies
16 Strategic drift O
16 Learning O
organisation
x Introduction
The exam paper
Format of the paper
Number of
marks
Section A: One compulsory case study 550
Section B: Choice of two from three questions, 25 marks each 50
100
Section A will be a compulsory case study question with several requirements relating to the same
scenario information. The question will usually assess and link several subject areas from across the
syllabus, and will require you to demonstrate high-level capabilities to evaluate, relate and apply the
information in the scenario to the question requirements. There will always be some financial or numerical
data in the scenario and marks will be available for numerical analysis which supports your written
argument.
The compulsory Section A question can draw on ALL areas of the syllabus, making it imperative that
you cover all areas of the syllabus in your studies.
Section B questions are more likely to examine discrete subject areas. They will be based on short
scenarios, and you will be expected to apply information from the scenarios to the question requirements.
Again the questions can be drawn from all area of the syllabus, and the limited extent of the choice (two
from three) reinforces the importance of covering all areas of the syllabus.
P3 is designed to be a global paper, meaning that the case studies and the scenarios will focus on an
industry of global significance, which should be known to candidates wherever they live or work.
Although a lot of the examples in this text are based in the UK, they are designed to illustrate points which
could apply equally in other countries. The exam will not focus specifically on UK industries, nor the UK
business environment.
Questions in this exam will not require specialist knowledge of any particular industries, nor the business
environment of any particular country. However, an awareness of current business issues overall will be
useful in providing real-life examples to support your answers hence the examination team's instruction
that candidates should read the financial sections of a good quality newspaper or other business material
regularly.
Introduction xi
Syllabus and Study Guide
xii Introduction
Introduction xiii
xiv Introduction
Introduction xv
xvi Introduction
Introduction xvii
xviii Introduction
Introduction xix
xx Introduction
Introduction xxi
xxii Introduction
Introduction xxiii
xxiv Introduction
P
A
R
T
Strategic position
1
2
Business
strategy
Introduction
This Study Text concerns the ACCA examination called Business Analysis.
Analysis, of various kinds, forms an important element of the wider activity of
strategic management. Despite its name, your syllabus deals with the full
scope of strategic management and we will provide you with complete
coverage in this Text.
Section A of your syllabus is largely concerned with the analysis aspect of
strategic management, but before we start to discuss that in detail, we will give
you an overview of how it fits into the bigger strategic picture. This exploration
of strategic management covers the material specified in the first element of
syllabus Section A.
In this text we make frequent reference to the work of Johnson, Scholes and
Whittington, writers of Exploring Corporate Strategy. We refer to this book
using the abbreviation, JS&W.
.
3
Study guide
Intellectual level
A1 The need for, and purpose of, strategic and business analysis
(a) Recognise the fundamental nature and vocabulary of strategy and strategic
2
decisions
(b) Discuss how strategy may be formulated at different levels (corporate,
2
business level, operational) of an organisation
(c) Explore the Johnson, Scholes and Whittington model for defining elements
of strategic management the strategic position, strategic choices and 3
strategy into action
(d) Analyse how strategic management is affected by different organisational
3
contexts
(e) Compare three different strategy lenses (Johnson, Scholes and Whittington)
3
for viewing and understanding strategy and strategic management
(f) Explore the scope of business analysis and its relationship to strategy and
strategic management in the context of the relational diagram of this 3
syllabus
A6 The expectations of stakeholders and the influence of ethics and culture
(g) Advise on how organisations can communicate their core values and 3
mission
Exam guide
This chapter covers fundamental concepts that are likely to be relevant to any exam question. They could
be examined directly, or they could be used in the context of a scenario. If a strategy is to be successful, it
must be appropriate to the organisation or situation described in the scenario.
Models
Two models from this chapter are explicitly referenced in the Study Guide:
Johnson, Scholes and Whittington's (JS&W's) model for defining elements of strategic
management strategic position, strategic choices and strategy into action
JS&W's model of the three strategy lenses
These models could be specifically referred to in an exam question.
1 What is strategy?
FAST FORWARD
Strategy is the direction and scope of an organisation over the long term, which achieves advantage in a
changing environment through its configuration of resources and competences with the aim of fulfilling
stakeholder expectations. Strategic decisions are made under conditions of complexity and uncertainty;
they have wide impact on the organisation and often lead to major change.
Strategy is difficult to define; it is a topic with several different aspects and the word is used to mean
several different things. We are concerned with its meaning in relation to the higher management of
organisations. This is a complex process, but examining some of its features will help us to develop an
understanding of what is meant by strategy and strategic management.
It is worth reviewing at this point the view of the relationship between strategy and accountancy taken by a
former member of the examining team under the old P3 syllabus, who commented that ' accountants,
with their ability to subject proposals to robust analysis (have) an active and positive role to play in
resource allocation. An accountant's realism can balance the naturally optimistic marketeer.'
Key term Strategy is the direction and scope of an organisation over the long term, which achieves advantage in a
changing environment through its configuration of resources and competences with the aim of fulfilling
stakeholder expectations.
If you look at this definition alongside the top layer of the relational diagram describing the P3 syllabus,
you should get some idea of the context of strategic decisions:
The Ashridge College model of mission links business strategy to culture and ethics by including four
separate elements in an expanded definition of mission.
(a) Purpose. Why does the organisation exist? Who does it exist for?
(i) To create wealth for owners?
(ii) To satisfy the needs of all stakeholders?
(iii) To reach some higher goal such as the advancement of society?
(b) Values are the beliefs and moral principles that underlie the organisation's culture.
(c) Strategy provides the commercial logic for the company, and so addresses the following question:
'What is our business? What should it be?' Strategy in this sense is referred to by JS&W as a
'business model'.
(d) Policies and standards of behaviour provide guidance on how the organisation's business should
be conducted. For example, a service company that wishes to be the best in its market must aim
for standards of service, in all its operations, which are at least as good as those found at its
competitors.
Performance Objective 3 'Strategy and Innovation' of the Practical Experience Requirement requires you to
'plan, identify and monitor appropriate personal targets and standards of delivery that meet the wider
departmental and strategic objectives of your organisation'.
Understanding the organisation's mission is invaluable for setting and controlling the overall functioning
and progress of the organisation. However, an organisation can operate reasonably effectively even if
most of the people within it have only a vague understanding of its purpose. Most people's work is
defined in terms of far more specific and immediate things to be achieved: if these things are related in
some way to the wider purpose, the organisation will function.
Loosely speaking, these 'things to be achieved' are the goals, objectives and targets of the various
departments, offices, and individuals that make up the organisation. In more effective organisations, goal
congruence will be achieved: all these disparate goals, objectives and targets will be consistent with one
another and will operate together to support progress with the mission.
Goals can be related in several ways:
Hierarchically, as in the pyramid structure outlined as follows
Functionally, as when colleagues collaborate on a project
The field of business strategy has its own vocabulary that you must become familiar with. Unfortunately,
there is no generally accepted list of definitions and you may encounter a variety of usages. The key terms
box which follows is based on the definitions used by JS&W.
Business
Information Project Financial
and process
technology management analysis
change
(E) (F) (G)
(D)
People (H)
Section A1(f) of the Study Guide for your syllabus calls explicitly for an understanding of the nature and
scope of business strategy, as envisioned by the syllabus and summarised in the relational diagram
shown above.
This vision adopts the systems approach to understanding the way organisations work and therefore
emphasises the importance of both the internal linkages between the various organisational components
and the boundary-spanning links between the organisation and its environment. These two elements are
reflected in the two main strategic issues dealt with by the syllabus: the external forces that influence the
organisation's strategy and the internal forces and activities that sustain it.
The relational diagram shows the syllabus and, by extension, the nature of business strategy, as three
interconnected layers.
The top layer is concerned with the overall strategic perspective, moving from the analysis of strategic
position through strategic choices to strategic action.
The middle layer expands on the basic idea of strategic implementation. The focus is on two linked
aspects of business process management.
Process improvement
IS and e-business
Any level of the organisation can have objectives and devise strategies to achieve them. The strategic
management process is multi-layered.
Hofer and Schendel refer to three levels of strategy:
(i) Corporate
(ii) Business
(iii) Functional or operational
The distinction between corporate and business strategy arises because of the development of the
divisionalised business organisation, which typically has a corporate centre and a number of strategic
business units (SBUs) dealing with particular markets. Chandler described how four large US
corporations found that the best way to divide strategic responsibility was to have the corporate HQ
allocate resources and exercise overall financial control, while the SBUs were each responsible for their
own product-market strategies. Operational strategies are then developed for component parts of SBUs.
Business-level strategy is about the particular and distinct combination of products and markets dealt with
by one business unit. A business unit might be a small, independent organisation or part of a larger one.
In the first case, business and corporate strategy merge with one another; in the second, SBU level
strategies must be co-ordinated with corporate strategy and with each other.
Much operational strategy is created by individual business functions and delivered by them.
Ganymede Co is a company selling widgets. The finance director says: 'We plan to issue more shares to
raise money for new plant capacity we don't want loan finance which will enable us to compete better
in the vital and growing widget markets of Latin America. After all, we've promised the shareholders 5%
profit growth this year, and trading is tough.'
Identify the corporate, business and functional strategies in the above statement.
Answer
The corporate objective is profit growth. The corporate strategy is the decision that this will be achieved by
entering new markets, rather than producing new products. The business strategy suggests that those
markets include Latin America. The operational or functional strategy involves the decision to invest in
new plant (the production function) which is to be financed by shares rather than loans (the finance
function).
Exam focus
Two articles titled 'The Strategic Planning Process, Part 1 & 2' written by Sean Purcell are available in the
point
technical articles section for P3 on the ACCA website. The articles provide a useful insight on how to apply
your knowledge of management and strategy to scenario questions by considering the three key stages in
the strategic planning process (analysis, choice and implementation).
A further article titled 'Strategic planning' (2008) written by David Jennings explores the main processes
in strategic planning and illustrates the costs and benefits of planning. It would be worth taking the time to
study these articles.
Position Strategic
audit control
Environmental
analysis
Position Choice
However, whereas the rational model is usually presented as a linear model, JS&W also recognise the
interdependencies between analysis, choice and implementation.
Strategic
position/
analysis
Exam focus
point Context is particularly important to you as a candidate for the P3 exam, since question settings will nearly
always provide detailed contexts for the problems they feature. You must always consider the question
context and make your answer clearly relevant to it. For example, if the scenario describes a small
company, this must be recognised in your answer, and you should not suggest strategies which would
only be appropriate for a large company, such as raising money for expansion through a share issue on
the stock exchange.
Strategic management has many aspects and the relative importance of each of these aspects for
individual organisations may vary considerably. For example, an organisation heavily influenced by
national political activity, such as the UK National Health Service, is likely to find the management of
conflicting stakeholder expectations of far greater significance than might a privately owned distributor of
standard electrical components. Even within a single company, differences of industry and market are
likely to require different business units to take different approaches to strategy.
4.2 Multinationals
Characteristic Effect on strategic processes
Diverse products, processes and markets Problems of relationships, structure and control
Significant resources of all kinds Allocation and co-ordination of resources
Multiple markets, operations and facilities Great importance of logistics of manufacturing and supply
New ideas/
innovation
Ideas
Design
Experience
Conformity
Analysis and
control
Exam focus In the post-exam report on the June 2013 exam, the examining team noted that students did not appear to
point have understood the three strategic lenses when asked to apply these to a public sector organisation. This
model had been tested in earlier examinations but students appeared to have not spent sufficient time
learning it. This is an important model which is explicitly mentioned in the study guide learning objectives.
Question Holiday
Apply the three strategic lenses to a process you are familiar with, such as choosing a holiday.
Answer
You may have come up with other ideas, but we suggest the following are relevant:
Strategy as design
Prices
Method of travel, distance, cost
Quality of accommodation
Availability of activities/things to do
Weather
Language
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
Introduction
The changing environment is one of the essential elements of JS&W's
definition of strategy and analysis of the environment is a fundamental part of
the process of developing strategy. Traditionally, strategy in business has been
seen as a process of adapting the firm to its environment: the importance of
environmental analysis in this approach is obvious. Other views of strategy
have emerged that place less emphasis on adaptation, but even when a firm
sets out to dominate its environment, it must have a full knowledge of the
nature of that environment.
23
Study guide
Intellectual level
A2 Environmental issues affecting the strategic position of, and future
outlook for, an organisation
(a) Assess the macro-environment of an organisation using PESTEL 3
(b) Highlight the external key drivers of change likely to affect the structure of a
3
sector or market
(c) Explore, using Porter's Diamond, the influence of national competitiveness
2
on the strategic position of an organisation
(d) Prepare scenarios reflecting different assumptions about the future
3
environment of an organisation
(e) Evaluate methods of business forecasting used when quantitatively 3
assessing the likely outcome of different business strategies
A3 Competitive forces affecting an organisation
(a) Discuss the significance of industry, sector and convergence 3
(b) Evaluate the sources of competition in an industry or sector using Porter's
3
five forces framework
Exam guide
This chapter, like the previous one, deals with wide topics that may be relevant to almost any exam
question. However, it also covers some key models, such as PESTEL and Porter's five forces, that you
must study in detail. Environmental analysis is a well-established aspect of the theory of business strategy
and the examining team find it an easy topic to introduce into questions. It will be unusual to come across
a question that deals exclusively with the environment, but it is common in this field for the examining
team to give a fair amount of environmental detail. Make sure you read question scenarios carefully and
note the potential implications of the environmental background.
Models
Three models covered in this chapter are explicitly referenced in the Study Guide and so could be
specifically required in a question:
PESTEL
Porter's Diamond
Porter's five forces framework
Exam focus A technical article in the P3 section of the ACCA website titled 'The adaptability of strategic models' (2007)
point written by Malcolm Eva explores the importance of understanding models such as those listed above and
illustrates how they can be used to identify and analyse strategic issues. Eva highlights that often the key
to using such models lies in the flexibility of their application to different scenarios. It would be worth
taking the time to study this article.
We will divide the environment into a variety of components in order to explain it. However, you should be
aware that the environmental influences affecting an organisation do not come in neatly labelled packages;
there are complex interactions between the elements we will discuss and you must always try to
understand the broader picture when you are thinking about the environment.
Following JS&W, we will start our analysis of the environment by dividing it into three parts, each of which
has its own particular tools or theories that provide a basis for thinking about it.
Macro-environment
Industry or sector
The organisation
A large part of business strategy consists of making the organisation's interaction with its environment as
efficient as possible. In the context of strategic management, therefore, the degree of uncertainty in the
environment is of great importance. The greater the uncertainty, the greater the strategic challenge.
Uncertainty depends on complexity and stability: the more complex or dynamic the environment is, the
more uncertain it is.
(a) An uncomplicated, stable environment can be dealt with as a matter of routine. The security and
efficiency of a mechanistic or bureaucratic approach to management can be exploited. Since the
future is likely to resemble the past, extrapolation from history is a satisfactory way of preparing for
future events.
(b) Where the environment is dynamic, the management approach must emphasise response to rapid
change. Scenario planning, intuition and a learning approach are all valid features of such a
response.
(c) Complexity makes an environment difficult to understand. Diversity of operations and technological
advances contribute to complexity. Complexity is difficult to analyse. It may be that it is best dealt
with by a combination of experience and extensive decentralisation.
Analysis of the macro-environment is commonly based on breaking it down into a handful of major
aspects. Your syllabus requires you to be familiar with the PESTEL framework, which is based on six
segments.
Political
Economic
Socio-cultural
Technological
Environmental
Legal
Macro-environmental influences
Political
Legal Economic
The
organisation
Environmental Socio-cultural
Technological
Note. The acronym PESTEL is sometimes replaced by SLEPT, in which the environmental protection
aspect is folded into the other five, or even by STEEPLE, where the extra E stands for ethics.
Exam focus An exam question may not refer to the PESTEL framework directly. Instead it may ask you for an
point 'environmental analysis' or an 'analysis of the macro environment'. This was the case in the June 2015
paper. The section A question scenario focused on a company (2Tel) operating in the mobile phone
industry. Students were required to 'analyse the macro-environmental factors' of the industry, which
meant applying the PESTEL framework to the detail provided in the scenario.
The examiner's report noted that 'many candidates produced long answers which were little more than
regurgitated facts from the case study scenario. This is not analysis. Analysis requires putting these facts
into the context of the briefing paper for 2Tel.'
Remember, also, that PESTEL is only concerned with the external environment, not the internal
capabilities of an organisation.
When required to use the PESTEL framework when answering questions, it is important to avoid
commenting on the featured organisation's internal strengths and weaknesses. These are not relevant to a
macro-environmental analysis, and so mentioning these issues would earn no marks.
Consideration Example
Possibility of political change Effect on economic policies
Likely nature of impact Change in taxes and interest rates
Consequences Cash flow and availability of resources
Coping strategies Cash flow planning
Influence on decision making Lobbying and publicity
Key term Economies of scale arise when a business grows to the extent that it is able to increase its input of all four
types of productive resource: land, labour, capital and enterprise. The effect is to cause the whole
structure of short-run costs to fall.
(b) A monopoly would be detrimental to the public interest if cost efficiencies are not achieved. Oliver
Williamson suggested that monopolies might be inefficient if 'market power provides the firm with
the opportunity to pursue a variety of other-than-profit objectives'. For example, managers might
instead try to maximise sales, or try to maximise their own prestige.
Consumer protection policies may be required.
(a) Control over markets can arise by firms eliminating the opposition, either by merging with or taking
over rivals or preventing other firms from entering the market. When a single firm controls a big
enough share of the market, it can begin to behave as a monopolist, even though its market share
is below 100%.
(b) Several firms could behave as monopolists by agreeing with each other not to compete. This could
be done in a variety of ways for example, by exchanging information, by setting common prices
or by splitting up the market into geographical areas and operating only within allocated
boundaries. Such a collusive oligopoly is called a cartel and is illegal in most jurisdictions.
The activity of the Competition and Markets Authority in the UK is a good example of the way governments
may approach the problem of monopoly. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has the power to
investigate if it appears that competition is being prevented, distorted or restricted in a particular market.
The Secretary of State may do the same if any proposed takeover or merger would create a firm that
controlled 25% or more of the market and where a merger appears to lead to a substantial lessening of
competition in one or more markets. The Authority will then investigate the proposed merger or takeover
and recommend whether or not it should be allowed to proceed.
Factor Impact
Overall growth or fall in Increased/decreased demand for goods (eg dishwashers) and services (eg
gross domestic product holidays).
Local economic trends Type of industry in the area. Office/factory rents. Labour rates. House
prices.
Inflation Low in most countries; distorts business decisions; wage inflation
compensates for price inflation.
Interest rates How much it costs to borrow money affects cash flow. Some businesses
carry a high level of debt. How much customers can afford to spend is
also affected as rises in interest rates affect people's mortgage payments.
Tax levels Corporation tax affects how much firms can invest or return to
shareholders. Income tax and sales tax (eg VAT) affect how much
consumers have to spend, hence demand.
Government spending Suppliers to the government (eg construction firms) are affected by
spending.
The business cycle Economic activity is always punctuated by periods of growth followed by
decline, simply because of the nature of trade. The UK economy has been
characterised by periods of boom and bust. Government policy can cause,
exacerbate or mitigate such trends, but cannot abolish the business cycle.
(Industries which prosper when others are declining are called counter-
cyclical industries.)
The forecast state of the economy will influence the planning process for organisations which operate
within it. In times of boom and increased demand and consumption, the overall planning problem will be
to identify the demand. Conversely, in times of recession, the emphasis will be on cost-effectiveness,
continuing profitability, survival and competition.
Factor Impact
Exchange rates Cost of imports, selling prices and value of exports; cost of
hedging against fluctuations
Characteristics of overseas markets Desirable overseas markets (demand) or sources of supply
(cheap imports)
International capital markets Generally, advanced economies accept that supply and demand
set the value of their currencies, using interest rates only to
control inflation.
Large multinational companies MNCs have huge turnovers and significant political influence
(MNCs) because of governments' desire to attract capital investment.
Government policy on trade/protection Cost of barriers to trade, effect on supplier interests of free
trade, erection of reciprocal barriers, possibility of dumping
Fairly obviously, there is constant and large scale interaction between government and economy through
the various aspects of government economic policy.
Key term Demography is the study of human population and population trends.
Factor Comment
Growth The rate of growth or decline in a national population and in regional populations.
Age Changes in the age distribution of the population. In some countries, there may be an
increasing proportion of the national population over retirement age. In others there
are very large numbers of young people.
Geography The concentration of population into certain geographical areas.
Ethnicity A population might contain groups with different ethnic origins from the majority.
Household and A household is the basic social unit and its size might be determined by the number of
family structure children, whether elderly parents live at home and so on. In the UK, there has been an
increase in single-person households and lone parent families.
Social structure The population of a society can be broken down into a number of subgroups, with
different attitudes and access to economic resources.
Employment In part, this is related to changes in the workplace. Many people believe that there is a
move to a casual flexible workforce; factories will have a group of core employees,
supplemented by a group of insecure peripheral employees, on part time or
temporary contracts, working as and when required. Some research indicates a 'two-
tier' society split between 'work-rich' (with two wage-earners) and 'work-poor'.
However, despite some claims, most employees are in permanent, full-time
employment.
Wealth Rising standards of living lead to increased demand for certain types of consumer
good. This is why developing countries are attractive as markets.
In January 2014, the BBC reported on the emergence of four prospective economic superpowers known
as the 'Mint' countries. Jim O'Neill who in 2001 created the 'BRIC' terminology, highlighted the rise of
Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey, also known as 'Mint' nations. O'Neill suggested that the
emergence of these countries is based on a range of factors that are likely to support economic growth in
the long term. He noted that 'what they really share beyond having a lot of people, is that at least for the
next 20 years, they have really good "inner" demographics they are all going to see a rise in the number
of people eligible to work relative to those not working'.
Furthermore, three of the four 'Mint' countries are supported by their geographical positioning which
should enable easier access to some of the world's most successful markets, 'Mexico is next door to the
US, but also Latin America. Indonesia is in the heart of South-east Asia but also has deep connections
with China. Turkey is in both the West and East. Nigeria is not really similar in this regard for now, partly
because of Africa's lack of development, but it could be in the future if African countries stop fighting and
trade with each other'.
Source: O'Neill, J.(2014) 'The Mint countries: Next economic giants?', BBC, 6 January 2014,
www.bbc.co.uk
2.3.1 Culture
Through contact with a particular culture, individuals learn a language, acquire values and learn habits of
behaviour and thought.
(a) Beliefs and values: Beliefs are what we feel to be the case on the basis of objective and subjective
information (eg people can believe the world is round or flat). Values are beliefs which are
relatively enduring, relatively general and fairly widely accepted as a guide to culturally appropriate
behaviour.
(b) Customs: modes of behaviour which represent culturally accepted ways of behaving in response to
given situations.
(c) Artefacts: all the physical tools designed by human beings for their physical and psychological
well-being: works of art, technology, products.
(d) Rituals: A ritual is a type of activity which takes on symbolic meaning, consisting of a fixed
sequence of behaviour repeated over time.
The learning and sharing of culture is made possible by language (both written and spoken, verbal and
non-verbal).
Knowledge of the culture of a society is clearly of value to businesses in a number of ways.
(a) Culture influences tastes and lifestyles and therefore influences the sorts of products and
services a business should offer.
(b) Marketers can adapt their products accordingly, and be fairly sure of a sizeable market. This is
particularly important in export markets.
(c) Human resource managers may need to tackle cultural differences in recruitment. For example,
some ethnic minorities have different body language which may be hard for some interviewers to
interpret.
Subculture Comment
Class People from different social classes might have different values reflecting their
position in society.
Ethnic background Some ethnic groups can still be considered a distinct cultural group.
Religion Religion and ethnicity are related.
Geography or region Distinct regional differences might be brought about by the past effects of
physical geography (socio-economic differences etc). Speech accents most
noticeably differ.
Age Age subcultures vary according to the period in which individuals were socialised
to an extent, because of the great shifts in social values and customs in this
century. ('Youth culture'; the 'generation gap')
Sex Some products are targeted directly to women or to men.
Work Different organisations have different corporate cultures, in that the shared
values of one workplace may be different from another.
Cultural change might have to be planned for. There has been a revolution in attitudes to female
employment, despite the well-publicised problems of discrimination that still remain.
Club Fun is a UK company that sells packaged holidays. Founded in the 1960s, it offers a standard 'cheap
and cheerful' package to resorts in Spain and, more recently, to some of the Greek islands. It is
particularly successful at providing holidays for the 1830 age group.
What do you think the implications are for Club Fun of the following developments?
A fall in the number of school leavers
The fact that young people are more likely now than in the 1960s to go into higher education
Holiday programmes on TV which feature a much greater variety of locations
Greater disposable income amongst the 1830 age group
Answer
The firm's market is shrinking. There is an absolute fall in the number of school leavers. Moreover, it is
possible that the increasing proportion of school leavers going into higher education will mean there will
be fewer who can afford Club Fun's packages. That said, a higher disposable income in the population at
large might compensate for this trend. People might be encouraged to try destinations other than Club
Fun's traditional resorts if these other destinations are publicised on television.
PESTEL analysis is normally something an organisation carries out to help it understand its environment.
However, note that essential Performance Objective 3 'Strategy and Innovation' of the Practical Experience
Requirement asks you to 'research and be familiar with [your] employer's business, the
industrial/commercial sector in which it operates, and the wider business environment'.
You can use your knowledge of PESTEL analysis to improve your understanding of the external
environment in which the organisation for which you work operates. By contrast Porter's Five Forces
model (which is discussed later in this chapter) can be used to analyse the industry factors influencing
your employer's business.
Exam focus Here we are looking at 'environmental' awareness and policy as an important aspect of overall strategy, so
point be careful with terminology. The 'natural' environment has become an important part of the overall
business 'environment'. But note: where your syllabus (A2) refers to 'environmental issues affecting the
strategic position of an organisation,' it is referring to the overall business environment, not specifically
'green' issues. 'Green' issues should be considered as one part of the wider business environment.
Sustainability means that resources consumed are replaced in some way: for every tree cut down,
another is planted. Some resources, however, are inherently non-renewable. For example, oil will
eventually run out, even though governments and oil firms have consistently underestimated reserves.
(a) Metals can be recycled. Some car manufacturers are building cars with recyclable components.
Elkington quotes the example of Kvaerner, the Norwegian construction company, to show how important
it is to control material and energy usage. An environmental report compiled by the company listed the
following.
A 20% cut in insurance premiums would be worth $15m
A 1% reduction in absence due to sick leave is worth $30m
A 1% reduction in material and energy consumption is worth $60m
Factor Example
General legal framework: Basic ways of doing business; negligence proceedings; ownership; rights
contract, tort, agency and responsibilities; property
Criminal law Theft; insider dealing; bribery; deception; industrial espionage
Company law Directors and their duties; reporting requirements; takeover proceedings;
shareholders' rights; insolvency
Employment law Trade Union recognition; Social Chapter provisions; possible minimum
wage; unfair dismissal; redundancy; maternity; Equal Opportunities
Health and Safety Fire precautions; safety procedures
Data protection Use of information about employees and customers
Marketing and sales Laws to protect consumers (eg refunds and replacement, 'cooling off'
period after credit agreements); what is or isn't allowed in advertising
Environment Pollution control; waste disposal
Tax law Corporation tax payment; Collection of income tax (PAYE) and National
Insurance contributions; sales tax (VAT)
Competition law General illegality of cartels
In September 2015, the European Court of Justice controversially ruled that the time spent travelling to
and from work by workers without a fixed workplace should be treated as working time. The ruling applies
to workers travelling to their first and last appointments during the working day. It is anticipated that firms
such as those that employ gas fitters and care workers will be affected. The ruling is intended to protect
the rights of workers as part of the European Union's working time directive. The directive aims to ensure
that workers within the European Union are not required to work more than 48 hours in an average week.
The ruling is anticipated to have a significant impact on the way in which employers in certain industries
organise the work appointments of their employees. One report suggested that employers will need to
amend existing work schedules to ensure that their employees first and last work appointments are closer
to their homes.
Some legal and regulatory factors affect particular industries, if the public interest is served. For example,
in the UK, electricity, gas, telecommunications, water and rail transport may be subject to regulators who
have influence over market access, competition and pricing policy (can restrict price increases).
This is for either of two reasons.
The industries are, effectively, monopolies.
Large sums of public money are involved (eg in subsidies to rail companies following the
privatisation of the rail network in the UK).
In the previous section, we looked at environmental factors which can have an impact on an organisation's
strategy. However, it is important to realise that these environmental factors are not static, but rather that
they change over time. In this section, we will look at some of the key drivers of environmental change.
JS&W, following Yip, identify four aspects of globalisation as key drivers of change in the macro-
environment.
Market globalisation
Cost globalisation
Government activity and policy
Global competition
Exam focus Porter's diamond is a very important model. In the December 2013 exam, students were expected to apply
point the model to assess the attractiveness of a foreign country. The examining team noted that although most
students appeared to be aware of the diamond and its constituent parts, many were not clear on their
meaning.
A significant number of students confused the diamond model with Porter's Five Forces (see later in the
Study Text) and therefore answered the question incorrectly. The examining team noted that many
candidates commented that the absence of competition in the foreign country was a 'good thing' for the
featured organisation. From the perspective of 'competitive rivalry' which is a key part of Porter's Five
Forces framework, this assertion would be correct. However, in the context of the diamond this could be
interpreted as a weakness, because a strong, vigorous rivalry is required to produce and retain a nation's
competitive advantage in an industry. It is critical that you understand both models and are confident in
applying them to a scenario.
Factor Demand
conditions conditions
Related and
supporting industries
Porter's Diamond
The concept of clustering in certain industries is not a new phenomenon. Clusters were commonplace in
during the industrial revolution in England. Places such as Staffordshire became renowned for the skilled
potters working in the regions many potteries, whereas places such as Nottingham built a reputation for
lace-making.
Today one of the world's most famous clusters of companies is the iconic Silicon Valley in San Francisco,
California. Silicon Valley is home to hi-tech innovators including Apple and Cisco Systems, Google,
Facebook and eBay. Setting up operations close to firms operating in similar industries allows new firms
to achieve economies of scale which may not have been available to them elsewhere. New start-ups
benefit from the Valley's pool of highly skilled workers with expertise in innovation. Companies in Silicon
Valley are able to capitalise on their close proximity to Stanford University, which provide a readily
available source of new graduates in hi-tech specialisms. A number of the graduates from Stanford
University have gone on start up their own businesses in Silicon Valley, such as Hewlett-Packard. The
appeal of working for hi-tech companies saw 'around 20% of American business-school graduates' going
to work for technology firms in 2014. (The Economist 2015).
The Economist (2015) reported that in the Valley 'every year ideas grow from specks to spectacular' as
new start-up companies are very common. Sander Daniels, the founder of an app that matches skilled
labourers with tasks that suit them, notes that living in San Francisco today, with its bustle and big ideas,
feels like 'living in Florence during the Renaissance'.
Recently, Airbnb a company set-up in Silicon Valley in 2008 which operates a website for people to list,
find and rent lodgings was valued at $26 billion.
Source:
The Economist, (2015) To fly, to fall, to fly again, 25 July 2015, www.economist.com
How does a country create a diamond of competitive advantage? Governments cannot compete; only
firms can do that. Governments can influence the context in which an industry operates and can create
opportunities and pressures for innovation.
(a) Factors of production provide the seed corn. Eg A large endowment of easily mined iron ore would
suggest metal-working industries.
(b) Related and supporting industries can also be a foundation, if the competences within them can be
configured in a new way.
Key term A scenario is a detailed and consistent view of how the business environment of an organisation might
develop in the future. JS&W
Scenarios are built with reference to key influences and change drivers in the environment. They inevitably
deal with conditions of high uncertainty, so they are not forecasts; they are, rather, internally consistent
views of potential future conditions.
Approach Comment
Assume the most This choice puts too much faith in the scenario process and guesswork. A less
probable probable scenario may be one whose failure to occur would have the worst
consequences for the firm.
Hope for the best A firm designs a strategy based on the scenario most attractive to the firm: this is
wishful thinking.
Hedge The firm chooses the strategy that produces satisfactory results under all scenarios.
Hedging, however, is not optimal. The low risk is paid for by a low reward.
Flexibility A firm taking this approach plays a 'wait and see' game. It is safer, but sacrifices
first-mover advantages.
Influence A firm will try and influence the future, for example, by influencing demand for
related products in order that its favoured scenario will be realised in events as they
unfold.
A question in the June 2013 exam required students to discuss the potential use of scenarios by a
Exam focus
company's management team when considering whether to enter an overseas market. The examining
point
team noted that a significant number of students appeared to be unfamiliar with the use of scenarios, even
though the terms such as 'best-case' and 'worst-case' scenario are often used in the business world.
20X4 1 500
20X5 2 525
20X6 3 541
20X7 4 562
20X8 5 589
20X9 6 600
20Y0 7 624
20Y1 8 620
A line of best fit (with values rounded) calculated using linear regression analysis is:
y = 488 + 18 x
Required
Calculate the forecast sales for 20Y2 and 20Y3.
Solution
We can forecast 20Y2 and 20Y3 sales as follows:
20Y2: x = 9 forecast sales = 488 + (18 9) = 650
20Y3: x = 10 forecast sales = 488 + (18 10) = 668
Management are assuming that sales are on a linear rising trend, but with seasonal variations in sales in
each quarter.
Solution
(a) The first step is to calculate a trend line and seasonal variations from the trend in each quarter. The
trend line is calculated as a moving average. Since there are four quarters in each year, a moving
average would be calculated as the average of sales over a cycle of four quarters. However, the
average of quarters 1, 2, 3 and 4 is quarter 2.5, and the average of quarters 2, 3, 4 and 5 is quarter
3.5. To obtain a moving average for quarter 3, we must therefore calculate the moving average of
quarters 1 4 and quarters 2 5, and then calculate the average of these.
In the table below, the column for the moving total for 20X8 Quarter 3 is the sum of sales in time
periods (1 4) + (2 5). Similarly the moving total for 20X8 Quarter 4 is the sum of sales in time
periods (2 5) + (3 6) , and so on. The trend line is calculated by dividing the moving total by 8
(8 quarters in the total) and the total variation for the quarter is the difference between actual sales
and trend line sales in the quarter.
The seasonal variation for each quarter is calculated as the average of the variations for the quarter,
as shown below. Adjustments are made so that the total of seasonal variations from the trend line
each year add up to 0, and there is some rounding of the figures to limit the seasonal variations to
one decimal place.
The seasonal variations are shown in the large table, and the residual is the difference between the
actual variation in each quarter (difference between actual sales and the trend line) and the
estimated seasonal variation.
When the residual is large, the accuracy of either the trend line or the seasonal variation estimates
would be called into question.
(b) Given the estimates for the trend line of sales in 20Y2, the forecast of sales in each quarter can
now be calculated.
(a) The use of a trend line assumes that future sales growth (or decline) will follow the same trend as
in the past, and that there have been no changes in the trend. This assumption may be inaccurate.
(b) It assumes that the seasonal variation for each season is the same amount in each year, which may
not be correct.
Exam focus The Pilot Paper included a 25 mark question which required candidates to explain and evaluate a forecast
point spreadsheet, and to then go on to analyse the performance of the organisation. The level of this Pilot
Paper question provides a good pointer as to the level of knowledge required in this area of the syllabus.
The macro environment provides a general background of influences on the organisation. Closer in, we
find the day-to-day environment of immediate business concerns: the industry or sector, competitors and
markets. Taken together, these factors are sometimes called the task environment.
Key term An industry is a group of firms producing the same product or products that are close substitutes for one
another.
The industry concept may be extended into the arena of public and not-for-profit services, though the
term sector is normally used rather than industry. The terminology is a little vague in that, for example,
'the public sector' is also used to mean all public services of whatever kind.
For convenience, we will use the word 'industry' as shorthand to mean 'industry or sector', unless there
are considerations that require us to be more specific.
Industries tend not to be stable: such features as location, products, customers and rate of growth all tend
to be more or less variable. One important feature of this instability is the way in which the boundaries of
an industry can change. Previously distinct industries can converge: their technologies; activities and
products start to mingle or become complementary; and their member firms start to compete or
collaborate. This process can be supply-led or demand-led.
Supply-led convergence occurs where suppliers discover links with suppliers in other industries and
move together to co-operate in building new markets. Such convergence is common in the public sector,
where government departments are regularly merged and re-organised. Government can also promote
supply-led convergence in the private sector, especially by deregulation, as has happened in the UK
financial services industry. The development of e-commerce has provided manufacturers with a
completely new route to consumers, eroding the boundaries of traditional retailing and distribution
industries in the process.
Demand-led convergence occurs when customers treat the products of different industries as
substitutable, as in the case of mobile and fixed line telephones, or complementary, as in the case of air
travel and car hire.
Exam focus The five forces is one of the three or four most important models in the field of strategy and is explicitly
point referenced in the Study Guide for P3, so could be specifically required to answer an exam question .
Therefore you must study it carefully and be able to apply it. In particular, you need to be able to decide
which of the five categories properly describes a given strategic problem which may be discussed in a
scenario. Pay particular attention to the nature of the substitutes.
In discussing competition, Porter (Competitive Strategy) distinguishes between factors that characterise
the nature of competition.
(a) In one industry compared with another (eg in the chemicals industry compared with the clothing
retail industry), some factors make one industry as a whole potentially more profitable than another
(ie yielding a bigger return on investment).
(b) Factors within a particular industry lead to the competitive strategies that individual firms might
select.
Five competitive forces influence the state of competition in an industry, and collectively determine the
profit potential of the industry as a whole. (You must learn these five factors.)
The threat of new entrants to the industry
The threat of substitute products or services
The bargaining power of customers
The bargaining power of suppliers
The rivalry amongst current competitors in the industry
Potential
entrants
Threats of
new entrants
Bargaining Bargaining
power of
Industry competitors power of
suppliers customers
Suppliers Customers
Rivalry among
existing firms
Threat of
substitute products
or services
Substitute
Exam focus
point The Section A question in the June 2015 exam required candidates to analyse the competition within the
featured industry in the scenario (mobile phone operators). As the focus of the question was on a
particular industry, this was a clue that the use of Porter' Five Forces was appropriate.
A question in the June 2013 exam specifically required candidates to use Porter's Five Forces model to
assess the attractiveness to the featured company (a fixed-price discount retailer) of entering the discount
retail market in a foreign country.
7.1 The threat of new entrants (and barriers to entry to keep them out)
A new entrant into an industry will bring extra capacity and more competition (and so could, in turn, drive
down profits). The strength of this threat is likely to vary from industry to industry and depends on two
things.
Thirty years ago, it was assumed that, following the success of Japanese firms worldwide in motor
vehicles (Nissan, Honda, Toyota) and consumer electronics (eg Sony, JVC, Matsushita), no Western
companies were safe from Japanese competition. Kao (household goods), Suntory (drinks), Nomura
(banking and securities) were seen as successors to firms such as Procter and Gamble and Heineken.
This has not happened, however. For example, Japanese pharmaceutical firms, such as Green Cross, have
not achieved the world domination they were expected to in the 1980s. US and European firms are still
dominant in this industry.
Perhaps cars and consumer electronics are the exception rather than the rule. The reason for this might be
distribution. Normally, outsiders do not find it easy to break into established distribution patterns.
However, distribution channels in cars and consumer electronics offered outsiders an easy way in.
(a) The car industry is vertically integrated, with a network of exclusive dealerships. Given time and
money, the Japanese firms could simply build their own dealerships and run them as they liked,
with the help of local partners. This barrier to entry was not inherently complex.
(b) Consumer electronics
(i) In the early years, the consumer electronics market was driven by technology, so innovative
firms such as Sony and Matsushita could overcome distribution weaknesses with innovative
products, as they had plenty to invest. This lowered entry barriers.
(ii) Falling prices changed the distribution of hi-fi goods from small specialist shops to large
cut-price outlets. Newcomers to a market are the natural allies of such new outlets: existing
Passengers have several ways of getting from London to Paris, and the pricing policies of the various
industries transporting them there reflects this.
(a) 'Le Shuttle' carries cars in the Channel Tunnel. Its main competitors come from the ferry
companies, offering a substitute service. Therefore, you will find that Le Shuttle sets its prices with
reference to ferry company prices, and vice versa.
(b) Eurostar is the rail service from London to Paris/Brussels. Its main competitors are not the ferry
companies but the airlines. Prices on the London-Paris air routes fell with the commencement of
Eurostar services, and some airlines have curtailed the number of flights they offer.
When the threat of substitutes is high, industry profitability suffers. Substitute products or services limit
an industry's profit potential by placing a ceiling on prices (because buyers will switch to the substitute if
it offers a better value alternative).
The threat of a substitute is high if:
It offers an attractive alternative to the industry's product in terms of price and performance.
The buyer's cost of switching to the substitute is low.
The following case focuses on the power of Taylor Swift as a supplier of music to Apple.
In 2015 one of the world's most famous music stars, Taylor Swift, took on the might of technology
company Apple when she refused to allow the company to use any of her music on its new 'Apple Music'
streaming service. Apple had originally intended to not pay royalties to artists for songs streamed during
the three-month trial period that users would receive when signing up for the service.
Within a matter of hours of Swift making the announcement, Apple executive Eddy Cue issued a series of
responses on Twitter saying 'Apple will always make sure that artists are paidApple Music will pay
artists for streaming, even during the customer's free trial period... We hear you Taylor Swift and indie
artists. Love, Apple'.(The Guardian, 2015).
Jefferson Graham of USA Today reported this was not the first time that Swift had removed her music in
protest of the royalties on offer. In 2014 she stopped the Spotify streaming service from using her songs.
USA Today highlighted the words of industry analyst Tim Bajarin who said he had never seen Apple
change its position so quickly before. 'This is the biggest one, with the biggest ramifications that I can
remember. You have to hand it to Taylor Swift. She is a force to be reckoned with'.
Sources:
Arthur, C. (2015) 'Taylor Swift may have triumphed, but Apple will still call the tune' The Guardian,
27 June 2015 www.theguardian.com
Graham, J. (2015) 'What Apple could learn from Swift: Analysis' USA Today, 22 June 2015
www.usatoday.com
Since the turn of the century, the global tea industry has seen a noticeable reversal in its fortunes.
Between the 1970s and the early 2000s, the tea industry was characterised by oversupply, with a surplus
of about 80,000 tonnes a year. However, this trend has now reversed, with demand now outstripping
supply. Some reports suggest that global tea consumption has increased by nearly 60% since the early
1990s. This increase has been partially helped by a global shortage of coffee, which has led to price rises.
The surge in the demand for tea has, however, resulted in a number of challenges for growers.
The rising price of tea around the world is being driven in part by the impact of adverse weather patterns
as a result of climate change which has been damaging crops. Growers have also been affected by the
loss of skilled workers who are choosing to leave the industry due to the low wages on offer. Tea estates
swallow capital, and the return is not as attractive as in industries such as technology or services.
Answer
Here are some ideas. Barriers to entry are high (eg the increasing cost of hiring skilled workers to work on
tea estates coupled to the need to find areas of the world which are less susceptible to the impact of
climate change). There are plenty of substitute products (most notably, coffee). Competitive rivalry is high
because of the difficulty of stockpiling fresh tea. The impact of the increase in demand for tea will also
drive competition among growers to obtain the best prices from large manufacturers.
Customer bargaining power is lowering as the shortage of available tea around the world means that tea-
bag manufacturers have to accept the growers higher prices. By contrast, supplier power is likely to be
increasing: if workers on a tea estate are classed as suppliers to the tea growing industry, then their power
is gradually increasing as they can now command better wages.
7.8 Government
It is possible to view the influence of government as so great as to justify viewing it as a sixth force. The
activities of government would normally be analysed using the PESTEL model but, as we have pointed out,
the division of the general environment into these categories is arbitrary and it may be useful to reconsider
government in the task environment context. There is also the consideration that competition itself is often
the target of specific government policies, either to encourage it or, quite often, to restrict it.
Porter argues that the best approach is to assess the impact of government on one or more of the five
forces, rather than viewing it as a separate six force.
Exam focus The examining team has commented that candidates often do not appear to understand how the five
point forces interrelate, or how the importance of a particular force varies over time. It is crucial that you
consider the forces as being dynamic rather than static.
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
Introduction
Competitors and markets make up the inner layer of the environmental shell. A
detailed knowledge of both is essential for the development of effective
strategy. In particular, customer reaction is what determines an organisation's
critical success factors.
In this chapter, we start to deal with specific topics that may form the basis of
exam questions.
63
Study guide
Intellectual level
A3 Competitive forces affecting an organisation
(c) Assess the contribution of the lifecycle model, the cycle of competition and
3
associated costing implications to understanding competitive behaviour
(d) Analyse the influence of strategic groups and market segmentation 3
(e) Determine the opportunities and threats posed by the environment of an
2
organisation
A4 Marketing and the value of goods and services
(a) Analyse customers and markets 2
(b) Establish appropriate critical success factors (CSF) and key performance 2
indicators (KPI) for products and services
Exam guide
In this chapter, we start to look at some very specific aspects of strategy. Much of the material, such as
the discussion of the nature of marketing, is still background, but the more specific topics, such as market
segmentation, critical success factors and customer analysis, may have direct relevance to future
examination questions.
Models
Two frameworks covered in this chapter are explicitly referenced in the Study Guide and so could be
specifically required in a question:
Cycle of competition
Lifecycle model
The other models referred to in the chapter, for example the marketing mix, could still be important in
helping you answer a question, so you should not overlook them. The marketing mix is defined later in
this Study Text.
1 Competition dynamics
FAST FORWARD
The dynamic nature of competition may be considered using a variety of concepts.
The cycle of competition describes the typical development of the relationship between an
established firm and a new challenger.
Hyper-competition is an unstable state of constantly shifting short-term advantage.
The industry life cycle has the following phases: inception, growth, shakeout/maturity and decline.
Each phase has typical implications for customers, competitors, products and profits.
Strategic group analysis examines the strategic space occupied by groups of close competitors in
order to identify potential competitive advantage.
The five forces model is a very useful tool for analysing the nature of competition within an industry, but it
is essentially static: it does not focus on the dynamic nature of the business environment. The nature of
competition is that future developments are not controllable by a single firm; each competitor will exercise
its own influence on what happens. The business environment is therefore subject to constant change.
Strategic managers must attempt to forecast what form this change is likely to take, since it is their
responsibility to make plans that will be appropriate under future conditions. JS&W, quoting D'aveni with
Gunter, describe a typical cycle of competition.
Later in this Study Text, we will discuss the concept of the product life cycle: this is a well established
strategic and marketing tool. It may be possible to discern an industry life cycle, which will have wider
implications for the nature of competition and competitive advantage. This cycle reflects changes in
demand and the spread of technical knowledge among producers. Innovation creates new industry, and
this is normally achieved through product innovation. Later, innovation shifts to processes in order to
maintain margins. A summary of the overall progress of the industry lifecycle is illustrated below.
Each phase has different implications for competitive behaviour and corporate strategy eg if an industry is
growing, the organisations in that industry can grow as the market develops. In a mature industry, growth
can only be achieved by stealing market share from other competitors and typically the market becomes
more fragmented.
Costs faced by organisations will also vary at different stages in the industry lifecycle. For example,
research and development costs will be very high in the inception phase. Production costs may be low
during the maturity stage as processes have been refined and contracts negotiated, but marketing
expenditure may be high in order to protect market share.
Financial returns to an industry also vary according to the lifecycle stage.
Time
Industry lifecycle
The shakeout and maturity phases are often presented together due to the strong overlap between the two.
The following table presents both phases separately to illustrate how the characteristics of the industry
subtly change between shakeout and maturity. The shakeout phase is characterised by a slowing in market
growth which leads to weaker players being forced out of the industry. By the time the industry reaches
maturity, fewer players remain, but they are forced to compete more fiercely to increase revenue by
gaining market share.
This case study illustrates the importance of adapting to environmental changes to prolong the industry
lifecycle.
In August 2013, the BBC reported on the continued decline of the Scottish newspaper industry. The Audit
Bureau of Circulation (ABC) confirmed that Scottish newspaper sales had fallen by 11% in the preceding
12 months. Several newspapers have seen their sales fall by more than half in the past decade.
The decline in sales of The Scotsman newspaper have left it classed as being a 'regional' title.
Interestingly, online readership of the Scotsman.com has increased though. 'The free-to-access web
service saw a rise in daily browsers of 13%, according to ABC, reaching 120,000. The failure to convert
the increase in online readers into increased advertising revenue had led to a decline in the value of the
titles owned by Johnston Press, the Edinburgh-based company which includes The Scotsman among
more than 200 mainly local titles. Johnston Press recently announced that it is writing down the asset
valuation of its newspapers by nearly 200m'.
John McLellan, of the Scottish Newspaper Society said, 'some titles have been responding to changing
market conditions for 20 years of the digital revolution. The truth is that while we can't deny there are
challenges, so far as hard copy sales are concerned, the journalism produced by all newspaper companies
is being accessed by more people than ever'.
Professor Raymond Boyle, a communications expert at Glasgow University, commented on the state of
the industry: 'Traditionally, Scottish newspapers have been a very important part of Scottish national
identity. That's changed over the past 10 to 15 years. Certain sectors remain very strong; sport, for
example, and football remains an important part of Scottish newspapers and their identity. But the sense
of newspapers being carriers of national identity is no longer sustainable'.
Adapted from an article:
'Further decline in Scottish newspaper sales' (28 August 2013) published on the BBC website;
www.bbc.co.uk
Exam focus When considering an organisation's strategy, it is important to consider where its industry (or its
point products) are in their lifecycles. Again, context is crucial. If there is a mismatch between strategy and the
position in a lifecycle, the strategy will not be successful. For example, if a company in a mature industry
decides to start charging premium prices for its product, it is unlikely to be successful. By the mature
phase, products will be fairly standardised and there is likely to be intense price competition in the
industry. If the company increases prices, customers will simply switch and buy a competitor's product.
Instead the company should be looking to make production as efficient and cost-effective as possible to
preserve its margins by reducing its costs.
The lifecycle model is explicitly referenced in the Study Guide so it may be specifically required in a
question. Make sure you would be comfortable applying it to a scenario.
Key term Marketing mix: the set of controllable variables and their levels that the firm uses to influence the target
market. These are product, price, place and promotion and are sometimes known as the four Ps.
Elements in the marketing mix act partly as substitutes for each other and they must be integrated. This
is so the product can be positioned in the market to appeal to the customer. For example, a firm can raise
the selling price of its products if it also raises product quality or advertising expenditure.
Exam focus
point The marketing mix can be useful when answering questions that require you to advise on courses of
action. While it is unlikely that you will be required to discuss all of the variables, thinking about the
relationship between two or three of them may give some useful insights.
A question in the December 2013 exam required students to use their understanding of the marketing mix
to recommend appropriate marketing strategies for use at a visitor attraction which was experiencing
financial difficulties. A significant number of students failed to apply enough elements of the model to the
scenario. The examining team highlighted that students should have used the model as a framework to
help come up with ideas on future marketing strategies.
2.1 Product
Key term A product (goods or services) is anything that satisfies a need or want. It is not a 'thing' with 'features,'
but a package of benefits.
From the firm's point of view, the product element of the marketing mix is what is being sold. From the
customer's point of view, a product is a solution to a problem or a package of benefits. Many products
might satisfy the same customer need.
Product issues in the marketing mix will include such factors as:
Design (size, shape)
Features
Quality and reliability
2.2 Place
Place deals with how the product is distributed, and how it reaches its customers.
(a) Channel. Where are products sold?
(b) Logistics. The location of warehouses and efficiency of the distribution system.
A firm can distribute the product itself (direct distribution) or through intermediary organisations such as
retailers.
2.3 Promotion
Many of the practical activities of the marketing department are related to promotion. Promotion is the
element of the mix over which the marketing department generally has most control.
Promotion in the marketing mix includes all marketing communications which let the public know of the
product or service.
Advertising (newspapers, billboards, TV, radio, direct mail, internet)
Sales promotion (discounts, coupons, special displays in particular stores)
Direct selling by sales personnel
Public relations
2.4 Price
The price element of the marketing mix is the only one which brings in revenue. Price is influenced by
many factors including economic factors (supply and demand), competitor's prices and payment terms.
Pricing will be looked at in detail in Chapter 12 of this Study Text.
2.5.1 People
Employees are particularly important in service marketing. Front-line staff must be selected, trained and
motivated with particular attention to customer care and public relations.
In some services, the physical presence of people performing the service is a vital aspect of customer
satisfaction. The staff involved are performing or producing a service, selling the service and also liaising
with the customer to promote the service, gather information and respond to customer needs.
2.5.2 Processes
Efficient processes can become a marketing advantage in their own right. If an airline, for example,
develops a sophisticated ticketing system, it can offer shorter waits at check-in or a wider choice of flights
through allied airlines. This both increases customer satisfaction and cuts down on the time it takes to
complete a sale.
Much marketing planning is based on the concepts of segmentation and product positioning. The
purpose of segmentation is to identify target markets in which the firm can take a position. A market is not
a mass, homogeneous group of customers, each wanting an identical product. Every market consists of
potential buyers with different needs and different buying behaviour. These different customers may be
grouped into segments. A different marketing approach will be taken by an organisation for each market
segment.
Note. As with so many other aspects of business, access to customers and markets has increased with
the growth of the internet and e-business. Therefore, the ideas we are discussing here will also link into
the chapters of e-business and e-marketing later in this Study Text.
Reason Comment
Better satisfaction of customer needs One solution will not satisfy all customers
Growth in profits Some customers will pay more for certain benefits
Revenue growth Segmentation means that more customers may be attracted by
what is on offer, in preference to competing products
Customer retention By targeting customers, a number of different products can be
offered to them
Targeted communications Segmentation enables clear communications as people in the
target audience share common needs
Innovation By identifying unmet needs, companies can innovate to satisfy
them
Criteria Comment
Can the segment be It might be possible to conceive of a market segment, but it is not
measured? necessarily easy to measure it. For example, for a segment based on
people with a conservative outlook to life, can conservatism of outlook
be measured by market research?
Is the segment big enough? There has to be a large enough potential market to be profitable.
Can the segment be reached? There has to be a way of getting to the potential customers via the
organisation's promotion and distribution channels.
Do segments respond If two or more segments are identified by marketing planners but each
differently? segment responds in the same way to a marketing mix, the segments
are effectively one and the same and there is no point in distinguishing
them from each other.
Can the segment be reached Do the identified customer needs cost less to satisfy than the revenue
profitably? they earn?
Is the segment suitably The stability of the segment is important, if the organisation is to
stable? commit huge production and marketing resources to serve it. The firm
does not want the segment to 'disappear' next year. Of course, this may
not matter in some industries.
Because of limited resources, competition and large markets, organisations are not usually able to sell
with equal efficiency and success to every market segment. It is necessary to select target markets. A
target market is a particularly attractive segment that will be served with a distinct marketing mix. The
marketing management of a company may choose one of the following policy options.
It is important to assess company strengths when evaluating attractiveness and targeting a market. This
can help determine the appropriate strategy, because once the attractiveness of each identified segment
has been assessed, it can be considered along with relative strengths to determine the potential
advantages the organisation would have. In this way, preferred segments can be targeted.
The major disadvantage of differentiated marketing is the additional costs of marketing and production
(more product design and development costs, the loss of economies of scale in production and storage,
additional promotion costs and administrative costs etc). When the costs of further differentiation of the
market exceed the benefits from further segmentation and target marketing, a firm is said to have
over-differentiated.
The major disadvantage of concentrated marketing is the business risk of relying on a single segment of
a single market. On the other hand, specialisation in a particular market segment can give a firm a
profitable, although perhaps temporary, competitive edge over rival firms.
The choice between undifferentiated, differentiated or concentrated marketing as a marketing strategy will
depend on the following factors.
(a) The extent to which the product and/or the market may be considered homogeneous. Mass
marketing may be 'sufficient' if the market is largely homogeneous (for example, for safety
matches).
(b) The company's resources must not be over extended by differentiated marketing. Small firms may
succeed better by concentrating on one segment only.
(c) The product must be sufficiently advanced in its life cycle to have attracted a substantial total
market; otherwise segmentation and target marketing is unlikely to be profitable, because each
segment would be too small in size.
It is not always possible to identify a market segment where there is no direct competitor, and a marketing
problem for the firm will be the creation of some form of product differentiation (real or imagined) in the
marketing mix of the product. The aim is to make the customer perceive the product as different from its
competitors.
A perceptual map of product positioning can be used to identify gaps in the market. This example might
suggest that there could be potential in the market for a low-price high-quality bargain brand. A company that
carries out such an analysis might decide to conduct further research to find out whether there is scope in
the market for a new product which would be targeted at a market position where there are few or no rivals.
(A firm successfully pursuing cost leadership might be in a good position to offer a bargain brand.)
Low price
Many goods and services are purchased, not by their end users but by intermediaries such as retailers,
sales agents and procurement department staff. Where this pattern applies, the supplier has to take
account of the influence of the intermediary; indeed, the intermediary is the strategic customer, not the
end user, and it is the intermediary's requirements that are of primary strategic importance. The
requirements of the end user are important, but subordinate in many cases to those of the intermediary.
Customers purchase products and services because they value the things the products and services
provide them with. This may be a relatively simple satisfaction, as when motorists buy petrol, or it may
include a wide range of both tangible and intangible benefits. Many products are, in fact, complex
packages of features that their producers have worked hard to assemble. The intangibles among these
features are often collectively referred to as brand values.
Consider a wristwatch, for example. It would be a mistake to imagine that most wristwatches are bought
because they tell the time. They also reflect the taste, self-image and status of the purchaser.
There is likely to be a wide range of opinion among customers as to the features of a product that provide
them with the greatest satisfaction, but, equally, it is also likely that some features will be widely
regarded as particularly important. These features, the satisfactions they provide and the demands they
make on the organisation's way of doing business constitute critical success factors: the organisation
must get these things right if it is to be successful in what it does.
Thus, for a producer of luxury goods, manufacturing quality would undoubtedly be a critical success
factor, but ensuring that an air of luxury pervaded its retail outlets would be just as important.
Key term Critical success factors (CSFs) are those product features that are particularly valued by a group of
customers and, therefore, where the organisation must excel to outperform competitors. JS&W
There are important messages connected with this concept. First, value must be assessed through the
eyes of the customer, not those of the designer or professional specialist. Second, resources should be
deployed so as to achieve high performance in critical success factors.
This also illustrates the importance of aligning external forces (customer desires) with internal factors
(resources).
An organisation can measure how well it is achieving the critical success factors through the use of key
performance indicators (KPIs). CSFs represent 'what' an organisation needs to do in order to be
successful. KPIs are the measures then used to assess whether or not the CSFs are being achieved.
Key term Key performance indicators (KPIs) are quantifiable measurements that management can use to monitor
and control progress towards achieving its critical success factors.
In practice, the term KPI tends to be overused and can describe almost any kind of measurement.
However, in order to be useful they should clearly identify the information needs required to demonstrate
how well the organisation is doing in achieving its overall strategy. They should:
Reflect the performance and progress of the organisation
Be measurable
Be comparable ie can be compared to a standard such as budgeted figures, or prior year data
Be usable ie provide data that can be acted upon
For example, an organisation may have a critical success factor of providing the highest level of customer
service. Appropriate KPIs may relate to the speed of the delivery time, the number of repeat business
transactions from existing customers, or the scores achieved in customer satisfaction surveys.
Exam focus
point The compulsory question in the December 2011 exam included a 10 mark requirement in which students
were required to explain and discuss the concepts of CSFs and KPIs within the context of the scenario.
This was the first time that CSFs and KPIs had been specifically examined and this was problematic for
some students. If faced with such a question, the balanced scorecard can be a useful basis for generating
ideas but don't lose sight of the organisation in question and remember to relate your answer specifically
back to the given scenario.
A marketing audit involves a review of an organisation's products and markets, the marketing
environment, and its marketing system and operations. The profitability of each product and each market
should be assessed, and the costs of different marketing activities established.
Information obtained about markets
(a) Size of the customer base. Does the organisation sell to a large number of small customers or a
small number of big customers?
(b) Size of individual orders. The organisation might sell its products in many small orders, or it
might have large individual orders. Delivery costs can be compared with order sizes.
Area Detail
Key customer identity Name of each key customer
Location
Status in market
Products they make and sell
Size of firm (capital employed, turnover, number of employees)
Customer history First purchase date.
Who makes the buying decision in the customer's organisation?
What is the average order size, by product?
What is the regularity/periodicity of the order, by product?
What is the trend in size of orders?
What is the motive in purchasing?
What does the customer know about the firm's and competitors' products?
On what basis does the customer reorder?
How is the useful life of the product judged?
Were there any lost or cancelled orders? For what reason?
Relationship of What does the customer use the product for?
customer to product Do the products form part of the customer's own service/product?
Relationship of What is the size of the customer in relation to the total end-market?
customer to potential Is the customer likely to expand, or not? Diversify? Integrate?
market
Customer attitudes What interpersonal factors exist which could affect sales by the firm and by
and behaviour competitors?
Does the customer also buy competitors' products?
To what extent may purchases be postponed?
The financial How successful is the customer?
performance of the
customer
Key term Customer profitability analysis (CPA) is an analysis of the revenue streams and service costs associated
with specific customers or customer groups to identify the profitability of servicing those customers.
'An immediate impact of introducing any level of strategic management accounting into virtually every
organisation is to destroy totally any illusion that the same level of profit is derived from all customers'.
(Ward, Strategic Management Accounting)
Different customer costs can arise out of the following.
Order size
Sales mix
Order processing
Transport costs (eg if a just in time (JIT) production system requires frequent deliveries)
Management time
Cash flow problems (eg increased overdraft interest) caused by slow payers
Order complexity (eg if the order has to be sent out in several stages)
Inventory holding costs can relate to specify customers
The customer's negotiating strength
The total costs of servicing customers can vary depending on how customers are serviced.
(a) Volume discounts. A customer who places one large order is given a discount, presumably
because it benefits the supplier to do so (eg savings on administrative overhead in processing the
orders as identified by an activity based costing system).
(b) Different rates charged by power companies to domestic as opposed to business users. This in
part reflects the administrative overhead of dealing with individual customers. In practice, many
domestic consumers benefit from cross-subsidy.
Remember Customer profitability is the 'total sales revenue generated from a customer or customer group, less all
the costs that are incurred in servicing that customer or customer group.'
It is possible to analyse customer profitability over a single period but more useful to look at a longer time
scale. Such a multi period approach fits in with the idea of relationship marketing, with its emphasis on
customer retention for the longer term.
Customer profitability analysis focuses on profits generated by customers and suggests that profit does
not automatically increase with sales revenue. CPA can benefit a company in the following ways.
It enables a company to focus resources on the most profitable areas
It identifies unexpected differences in profitability between customers
It helps quantify the financial impact of proposed changes
It helps highlight the cost of obtaining new customers and the benefit of retaining existing
customers
It helps to highlight whether product development or market development is to be preferred
An appreciation of the costs of servicing clients assists in negotiations with customers
It is important to remember the purpose of all environmental analysis ideas is to provide input into the
process of designing a practical business strategy.
One very useful way of thinking about the implications of environmental information is to consider it in
terms of opportunities and threats.
5.1 Threats
For a commercial organisation, the most urgent threats are likely to emerge from within the immediate
industry arena. The five forces model provides a good summary of the threats inherent here,
supplemented by strategic group analysis. Recognising threats in the wider PESTEL environment is,
perhaps, more difficult, since it covers such an enormous range of factors.
5.2 Opportunities
Opportunities may take the form of strategic gaps: these are potentially profitable aspects of the
competitive environment that are not being exploited by rivals. JS&W give several examples of how these
might arise.
(a) Potential substitutes for existing products might be created. This is largely a technology-based
opportunity, but an important route to the development of substitutes is the imaginative
development of new uses for existing products and methods.
(b) Other strategic groups may present opportunities, especially if there are changes in the macro-
environment, such as deregulation or opening of new markets in developing countries.
(c) It may be possible to target different strategic customers. In the case of consumer goods, the
development of internet selling means that the ultimate user is displacing the distributor as the
strategic customer.
(d) There may be potential to market complementary products. For example, capital goods
manufacturers routinely offer credit services to assist the customer to buy.
(e) New market segments may have potential, though there may be a need to adapt the product.
External forces
The environment The industry Lifecycles
Opportunities
or
Threats
However, having identified all the external factors influencing their organisation, the strategist then needs
to work out how best to align them to the internal strengths and weaknesses of an organisation.
We will now move on to look at the internal resources of organisations in the next chapter of this Study
Text.
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
Introduction
In this chapter, we move deeper into highly examinable territory. It is a long
chapter and contains a number of very important ideas and models. You should
work through it with care. When you reach the last section, do not be tempted
to dismiss the content as a simple mnemonic: both SWOT and TOWS have
important things to say about potential strategic choices.
89
Study guide
Intellectual level
A4 Marketing and the value of goods and services
(c) Explore the role of the value chain in creating and sustaining competitive
2
advantage
(d) Advise on the role and influence of value networks 3
(e) Assess different approaches to benchmarking an organisation's
3
performance
A5 The internal resources, capabilities and competences of an organisation
(a) Discriminate between strategic capability, threshold resources, threshold
3
competences, unique resources and core competences
(b) Discuss from a strategic perspective, the continuing need for effective cost 3
management and control systems within organisations
(c) Discuss the capabilities required to sustain competitive advantage 2
(d) Explain the impact of new product, process and service developments and
2
innovation in supporting business strategy
(e) Discuss the contribution of organisational knowledge to the strategic
2
capability of an organisation
(f) Determine the strengths and weaknesses of an organisation and formulate
2
an appropriate SWOT analysis
B3 Alternative directions and methods of development
(a) Determine generic development directions (employing an adapted Ansoff 2
matrix and a TOWS matrix) available to an organisation.
Exam guide
In this chapter, we introduce some specific models that you must become very familiar with.
They are useful both for analysing data and structuring answers. The most important, by far, is the value
chain: you must have this model at your fingertips.
Key term An organisation's ability to survive and prosper depends on its strategic capability; this is defined by the
adequacy and suitability of its resources and competences.
The process of analysing and assessing the organisation's resources and competences is called position
audit.
Key term Position audit is the part of the planning process that examines the current state of the business entity's
strategic capability.
Much of the rest of this chapter is concerned with the tools and methods that can be used to carry out the
task of position audit. However, we must first discuss resource-based strategy and look more closely at
resources and competences.
Exam focus
An article titled 'Position based and resource based strategies' (October 2010) written by Ken Garrett is
point
available in the Technical Articles section for P3 on the ACCA website. It would be worth taking the time to
study this article.
A resource audit is a review of all aspects of the resources the organisation uses. The Ms model
categorises the factors as follows.
Resource Example
Machinery Age. Condition. Utilisation rate. Value. Replacement cost.
Make-up Culture and structure. Patents. Goodwill. Brands.
Management Size. Skills. Loyalty. Career progression. Structure.
Management Ability to generate and disseminate ideas. Innovation. Information systems.
information
Markets Products and customers. Specialised or general. Regional, national, international.
Materials Source. Suppliers and partnering. Waste. New materials. Cost. Availability. Future
provision.
Men and Number. Skills. Efficiency. Industrial relations. Adaptability. Innovatory capacity. Wage
women costs. Labour turnover.
Methods How are activities carried out? Outsourcing, quality.
Money Credit and turnover periods. Cash surpluses/deficits. Short term and long term finance.
Gearing levels. Debts.
Key term A unique resource is one which is both better than its equivalent employed by competitors and difficult to
imitate.
Resources are of no value unless they are organised into systems, and so a resource audit should go on
to consider how well or how badly resources have been utilised, and whether the organisation's systems
are effective and efficient.
Key term A limiting factor or key factor is 'a factor which at any time or over a period may limit the activity of an
entity, often one where there is shortage or difficulty of supply.'
1.3.1 Examples
A shortage of production capacity
A limited number of key personnel, such as salespeople with technical knowledge
A restricted distribution network
Too few managers with knowledge about finance, or overseas markets
Inadequate research design resources to develop new products or services
A poor system of strategic intelligence
Lack of money
A lack of adequately trained staff
Once the limiting factor has been identified, the planners should do two things.
In the short term, make best use of the resources available
Try to reduce the limitation in the long term
There are two fundamentally different approaches to strategy: position-based strategy, and resource-
based strategy.
Position-based strategy seeks to develop competitive advantage in a way that responds to the nature of
the competitive environment: the firm positions its offering in response to the external opportunities or
threats it discerns, and develops the appropriate competences and resources it needs to compete.
The contrasting resource-based strategy was developed in response to two problems with the position-
based strategy.
(a) Many environments are too complex and dynamic to permit continuing effective analysis and
response.
(b) Once an opportunity is discerned and an offering made, it is very easy for competitors to make
similar offerings, thus rapidly eroding competitive advantage.
The resource-based view is that sustainable competitive advantage is only attained as a result of the
possession of distinctive resources. These may be physical resources, such as the effective
monopolisation of diamonds by De Beers, or, more typically in today's service economies, they may be
competences. So resource-based strategy focuses internally, rather than externally.
JS&W argue that a resource-based strategy is the more appropriate approach for most organisations to
take because it is the better way of achieving a sustainable advantage, as it enables organisations to have
control over the means of obtaining advantages (ie their resources).
Key terms Strategic capability is the adequacy and suitability of the resources and competences of an organisation
for it to survive and prosper.
Tangible resources are the physical assets of an organisation, such as plant, labour and finance.
Intangible resources are non-physical assets such as information, reputation and knowledge.
Competences are the activities and processes through which an organisation deploys its resources
effectively.
Threshold capabilities are essential for the organisation to be able to compete in a given market.
Threshold resources and threshold competences are needed to meet customers' minimum requirements
and therefore for the organisation to continue to exist.
Unique resources and core competences underpin competitive advantage and are difficult for
competitors to imitate or obtain.
Exam focus To some extent, the resource-based approach is the opposite to the marketing concept since, instead of
point approaching strategy on the basis of giving customers what they want, it concentrates on exploiting what
the business already has to offer.
In fact, this distinction is largely theoretical, but it leads to some important ideas that you could use in the
exam.
(a) Where the marketing concept is adopted, it will still be necessary to deploy threshold capabilities in
all critical areas and the possession of unique resources and core competences will enhance the
market offering.
(b) Conversely, where strategy is built on unique resources and core competences, marketing activities
must be carried out with at least threshold competence if the customer is to be satisfied.
2.2.4 Experience
You are probably familiar with the way the learning curve effect has been used for many years as a means
of estimating the future manufacturing costs of existing products. (The learning curve illustrates that as
workers become more familiar with their jobs, they learn to do them more efficiently. As a process is
repeated, it is expected that costs will be reduced due to this increased efficiency.)
The principle can be extended to activities other than manufacturing, to the extent that the passage of time
should allow any organisation to improve the cost efficiency of any of its activities and thus experience a
continuing decline in real unit costs. This can be seen in the experience curve: as output increases, the
cost per unit of output falls. This wider experience curve effect holds out the possibility of developing core
competences through the acquisition of experience, though the probability that this will happen is low.
There are other important considerations.
(a) There should be an advantage in being the first mover in a new market, in that it should give an
opportunity to create an experience-based cost advantage lead over later-entering rivals.
(b) Outsourcing may allow an organisation to benefit from the experience of suppliers. Outsourcing is
discussed in more detail later in this Study Text.
(c) Since competitive rivalry prompts all the firms in an industry to seek cost advantage, as
mentioned earlier, so it follows that they will all seek the experience advantages that come with
growth. This will be particularly apparent during the growth phase of the industry lifecycle.
Even if we do not entirely accept the resource-based view of strategy, it is clear that unique resources and
core competences are of great importance in creating and sustaining competitive advantage. JS&W
3.2 Rarity
A single unique resource may have the potential to create competitive advantage by itself. Here are some
examples.
(a) A unique tangible resource in the form of ownership of extraction rights to an easily worked
deposit of a scarce and valuable mineral
(b) A unique intangible resource in the form of ownership of the copyright of a best-selling novel
(c) A core competence in a dangerous and demanding process such as extinguishing oil well fires
The importance of rarity is that if a resource or competence is generally available (ie not rare) then an
organisation's competitions will have access to it in the same way as the organisation does. In which case,
the resource or competence does not confer any advantage to the organisation compared to its rivals.
3.3 Robustness
Robustness is the term JS&W use to mean that a resource is difficult for competitors to imitate. They
point out that, generally, it is difficult to base competitive advantage simply on possession of tangible
resources, since they can often be imitated or simply bought in. Robustness most frequently resides in the
competences involved in linking activities and processes in ways that both satisfy the critical success
factors defined by customer priorities, and which are difficult for competitors to imitate.
There are three main aspects of a competence that tend to make it robust.
(a) Complexity arises from the linkages between the activities the organisation undertakes and the way
it organises them. It also appears when organisations develop complex links with their customers.
(b) The culture and history of the organisation provided tacit knowledge (see below) and capability in
the form of an accepted, if ill-defined, way of doing things.
(c) Causal ambiguity occurs when the processes and linkages that produce the organisation's
competences are difficult to discern and so competitors are uncertain about how to imitate them.
3.4 Non-substitutability
Substitutability of strategic capability has two forms and managers must be alert to the emergence of
either, since both are a threat to even a competence that possesses the other three vital qualities.
(a) The substitute product you are familiar with from our earlier discussion of the five forces
Key term Dynamic capabilities are an organisation's abilities to develop and change competences to meet the
needs of rapidly changing environments. JS&W
Such capabilities demand the ability to change, to innovate and to learn. They can take many forms and
may include such things as systems for new product development or the acquisition of market intelligence
and the absorption of new skills and products acquired by merger or acquisition. Indeed, we might regard
the ability to 'develop and change competences' as a competence in its own right a higher-order
competence, perhaps.
4 Knowledge
FAST FORWARD
The aim of knowledge management is to capture, organise and make widely available all the knowledge
the organisation possesses, whether explicit (in recorded form) or tacit (in people's heads).
Knowledge management is a relatively new concept in business theory. It is connected with the theory of
the learning organisation and founded on the idea that knowledge is a major source of competitive
advantage in business.
Studies have indicated that 2030% of company resources are wasted because organisations are not
aware of what knowledge they already possess. Lew Platt, Ex-Chief Executive of Hewlett Packard, has
articulated this, saying 'If only HP knew what HP knows, we would be three times as profitable'.
Knowledge is thus seen as an important resource and may in itself constitute a competence: it can
certainly underpin many competences.
Key term Organisational knowledge is the collective and shared experience accumulated through systems, routines
and activities of sharing across the organisation. JS&W
Exam focus
A question in the June 2015 exam focused on the performance of a music company over a 50 year period.
point
The company had been particularly successful in its earlier years but had failed to appreciate the
significance that digital music downloads were having on its industry. One of the requirements asked
candidates to explain knowledge management and its relevance to the company featured. Candidates were
expected to show how knowledge management would have helped the company identify the changes
taking place in its industry. The examining team noted that the question was answered particularly poorly
adding that it 'was clear that many candidates knew very little about this concept and were unable to score
more than one or two marks'.
Knowledge management is the process by which organisations generate value from their intellectual and
knowledge-based assets. This involves:
Discovering or identifying knowledge Distributing knowledge
Capturing knowledge Using knowledge
Sharing knowledge Maintaining knowledge
In effect, knowledge management has three phases: capture, record and disseminate.
Knowledge management is becoming increasingly important in helping organisations sustain competitive
advantage.
As organisations become more complex, there is more knowledge to manage. Moreover, the importance
of capturing and sharing it is increased as job mobility increases. If staff leave, there is a danger
knowledge could leave with them, if it has not been properly managed within the organisation.
Also organisations' external environments technology, competitors, markets are changing rapidly so
organisations need to ensure they have up-to-date knowledge about these external factors to take account
of the opportunities and threats they represent.
Recognition of the value of knowledge and understanding of the need to organise data and make it
accessible have provoked the development of sophisticated IT systems. Such systems deal, by definition
with explicit knowledge: that is, knowledge that is widely distributed. Tacit knowledge exists within
individuals' brains and is not readily available, especially when its possession enhances power and status.
Tacit knowledge only becomes available to the KM System when conscious decisions are taken to share it.
(a) Office automation systems are IT applications that improve productivity in an office. These include
word processing and voice messaging systems.
The American retailer Wal-Mart discovered an unexpected relationship between the sale of nappies and
beer! Wal-Mart found that both tended to sell at the same time, just after working hours, and concluded
that men with small children stopped off to buy nappies on their way home, and bought beer at the same
time. Logically, therefore, if the two items were put in the same shopping aisle, sales of both should
increase. Wal-Mart tried this and it worked.
Here is an amended version of our earlier table. This one includes the relevant IT systems.
Data Information Knowledge
Nature Facts Relationships between processed Patterns discerned in
facts information
Importance of Total Some Context independent
context
Importance to Mundane Probably useful for management May be strategically useful
business
Relevant IT Office automation Groupware Data mining
systems Data warehouse Expert systems Intranet
Report writing software Expert systems
Intranet
The value chain model of corporate activities offers a bird's eye view of the firm and what it does.
Competitive advantage arises out of the way in which firms organise and perform activities to add value.
Activities incur costs, and, in combination with other activities, provide a product or service which earns
revenue.
5.2 Example
Let us explain this point by using the example of a restaurant. A restaurant's activities can be divided into
buying food, cooking it, and serving it (to customers). There is no reason, in theory, why the customers
should not do all these things themselves, at home. The customer however, is not only prepared to pay for
someone else to do all this but also pays more than the cost of the resources (food, wages and so on).
The ultimate value a firm creates is measured by the amount customers are willing to pay for its products
or services above the cost of carrying out value activities. A firm is profitable if the realised value to
customers exceeds the collective cost of performing the activities.
(a) Customers purchase value, which they measure by comparing a firm's products and services with
similar offerings by competitors.
(b) The business creates value by carrying out its activities either more efficiently than other
businesses, or by combining them in such a way as to provide a unique product or service.
Answer
Here are some ideas. Each of these options is a way of organising the activities of buying, cooking and
serving food in a way that customers will value.
(a) It can become more efficient, by automating the production of food, as in a fast food chain.
(b) The chef can develop commercial relationships with growers, so he or she can obtain the best
quality fresh produce.
(c) The chef can specialise in a particular type of cuisine (eg Nepalese, Korean).
(d) The restaurant can be sumptuously decorated for those customers who value atmosphere and a
sense of occasion, in addition to a restaurant's purely gastronomic pleasures.
(e) The restaurant can serve a particular type of customer (eg students).
Exam focus The Value Chain is explicitly referenced in the Study Guide and so could be specifically examined in your
point exam. Make sure you know all the activities in the chain.
The value chain diagram is also worth committing to memory since it is an excellent basic description of
how an organisation works. It is not only suitable for answering questions that require analysis of how an
organisation works, but is also very useful as a kind of checklist for brainstorming a wide range of
questions that require you to make suggestions for dealing with business problems. Work your way
through the various activities asking yourself what the organisation could do about each one, if anything.
The Value Chain was specifically examined in December 2009, where one of the 25 mark questions related
entirely to the Value Chain. In part (a), worth 10 marks, candidates were required to analyse the primary
activities of the value chain of the products in question. Part (b), worth 15 marks, asked candidates to
suggest changes that could be made to the primary activities in order to improve the competitiveness of
the organisation (a charity).
Primary activities are directly related to production, sales, marketing, delivery and service.
Comment
Inbound logistics Receiving, handling and storing inputs to the production system: warehousing,
transport, inventory control and so on.
Operations Converting resource inputs into a final product: resource inputs are not only
materials. People are a resource, especially in service industries.
Outbound logistics Storing the product and its distribution to customers: packaging, testing,
delivery and so on; for service industries, this activity may be more concerned
with bringing customers to the place where the service is available; an example
would be front of house management in a theatre.
Marketing and sales Informing customers about the product, persuading them to buy it, and
enabling them to do so: advertising, promotion and so on.
After sales service Installing products, repairing them, upgrading them, providing spare parts and
so forth.
Support activities provide purchased inputs, human resources, technology and infrastructural functions
to support the primary activities. It may seem an obvious point that support activities need to support the
primary activities, but do not overlook it. For example, staff recruitment and training need to be
appropriate for the item being produced in the operations.
Activity Comment
Procurement All of the processes involved in acquiring the resource inputs to the
primary activities (eg purchase of materials, subcomponents
equipment).
Technology development Product design, improving processes and resource utilisation.
Human resource management Recruiting, training, managing, developing and rewarding people; this
activity takes place in all parts of the organisation, not just in the HRM
department.
Firm infrastructure Planning, finance, quality control, the structures and routines that
make up the organisation's culture.
The purpose of value chain analysis is to understand how the company creates value. It is unlikely that any
business has more than a handful of activities in which it outperforms its competitors. There is a clear link
here with the idea of core competences: a core competence will enable the company to create value in a
way that its competitors cannot imitate. These value activities are the basis of the company's unique
offering.
There is a strong case for examining the possibilities of outsourcing non-core activities so that
management can concentrate on what the company does best.
Activities and linkages that add value do not stop at the organisation's boundaries. For example, when a
restaurant serves a meal, the quality of the ingredients although they are chosen by the cook is
determined by the grower. The grower has added value, and the grower's success in growing produce of
good quality is as important to the customer's ultimate satisfaction as the skills of the chef.
Similarly, the value received by a person buying a new car has been created by a complex system that
includes several organisations' value chains. These would include the nominal manufacturer, their
suppliers of parts and subsystems, their suppliers in turn, the retailer, the transport companies that
delivered the car to the showroom and possibly others as well. A firm's value chain is connected to other
value chains in what JS&W call a value network. (Porter used the term value system; value network is a
better term since it emphasises the interconnectedness of separate organisations.)
Key term The value network is the set of inter-organisational links and relationships that are necessary to create a
product or service. JS&W
Value network
The diagram illustrates the similarities between the value network and a supply chain. However, whereas a
supply chain shows the system of organisations, people, technology or activities involved in transforming
a product or service from its raw materials to a finished product to be delivered to the end user customer,
the value network places an emphasis on the value-creating capability within the supply chain processes.
In this respect, understanding value networks can be helpful when looking at supply chain management.
It may be possible to capture the benefit of some of the value generated both upstream and downstream
in the value network. An obvious way to do this is by vertical integration through the acquisition of
suppliers and customers. This aspect of strategy is dealt with in more detail later in this Study Text.
Toyota is well-known for close involvement with its suppliers. The company works with suppliers to
improve their methods and the quality of their output; and to develop new, improved materials and
components for input into its own operations. The relationship has benefits for all parties, but tends to be
unequal, with Toyota dominating the operations of a large number of semi-captive suppliers.
Li & Fung aim for more equal relationships with the large number of clothing manufacturers they deal
with. It guarantees to take at least 30% of a supplier's output in order to build a close relationship and
improve innovation and learning. But it also tries to limit its purchases to no more than 70% of a
supplier's output in order to avoid creating a dependent organisation whose managers are influenced
more by fear than by trust.
Using the value chain. A firm can secure competitive advantage in several ways:
Invent new or better ways to do activities
Combine activities in new or better ways
Manage the linkages in its own value chain
Manage the linkages in the value network
Sana Sounds is a small record company. Representatives from Sana Sounds scour music clubs for new
bands to promote. Once a band has signed a contract (with Sana Sounds) it makes a recording. The
recording process is subcontracted to one of a number of recording studio firms which Sana Sounds uses
regularly. (At the moment, Sana Sounds is not large enough to invest in its own equipment and studios.)
Sana Sounds also subcontracts the production of CDs to a number of manufacturing companies. Sana
Sounds then distributes the disks to selected stores, and engages in any promotional activities required.
What would you say were the activities in Sana Sounds' value chain?
Answer
Sana Sounds is involved in the record industry from start to finish. Although recording and CD
manufacture are contracted out to external suppliers, this makes no difference to the fact that these
activities are part of Sana Sounds' own value chain. Sana Sounds earns its money by managing the whole
set of activities. If the company grows, then perhaps it will acquire its own recording studios.
The profitability and sales of a product can be expected to change over time. The product life cycle is an
attempt to recognise distinct stages in a product's sales history. Marketing managers distinguish between
different aspects of the product.
(a) Product class: this is a broad category of product, such as cars, washing machines, newspapers
also referred to as the generic product.
(b) Product form: within a product class there are different forms that the product can take, for
example, five-door hatchback cars or two-seater sports cars; twin tub or front loading automatic
washing machines; national daily newspapers or weekly local papers and so on.
(c) Brand: the particular type of the product form (for example, for cars Volkswagen Golf, Vauxhall
Astra; or for newspapers Financial Times, Daily Mail, Sun).
The product life cycle applies in differing degrees to each of the three cases. A product-class (eg cars) may
have a long maturity stage, and a particular make or brand might have an erratic life cycle (eg Rolls
Royce) or not. Product forms, however, tend to conform to the classic life cycle pattern.
Introduction Growth Maturity Decline
Revenue
Revenue / Profit
Profit
Time
Product Lifecycle
6.1.2 Growth
If the new product gains market acceptance, sales will eventually rise more sharply and the product
will start to make profits.
Capital investments are needed to fulfil the level of demand, meaning cash flow remains lower than
profit. Cash flow is likely to remain negative.
Competitors are attracted. As sales and production rise, unit costs fall.
Need to add additional features to differentiate from competitors, so product complexity likely to
rise. Costs involved in developing this could be high. Alternatively, could chose to lower price and
compete on price grounds.
Continued marketing expenditure required to differentiate the firm's product from competitors'
offerings.
Growth is sustained by attracting new types of customers.
6.1.3 Maturity
The market is no longer growing. Purchases are now based on repeat or replacement purchases,
rather than new customers.
The rate of sales growth slows down and the product reaches a period of maturity, which is
probably the longest period of a successful product's life. Most products on the market will be at
the mature stage of their life.
Profits remain good, and levels of investment are low, meaning cash flow is also positive.
Prices start to decline, as firms compete with one another to try to increase their share of a fixed-
size market.
Firms try to capitalise on a brand name by launching spin off products under the same name.
The number of firms in industry reduces, due to consolidation in the industry in an attempt to
restore profitability.
6.1.4 Decline
Eventually, sales will begin to decline so that there is over-capacity of production in the industry. Severe
competition occurs, profits fall and some producers leave the market. The remaining producers seek
means of prolonging the product life by modifying it and searching for new market segments. Many
producers are reluctant to leave the market, although some inevitably do because of falling profits.
American technology giant Apple, maker of the iPhone and iPad, actively manages its product portfolio in order
to keep ahead of the competition. In September 2015, a report by Reuters highlighted that the company had
taken to posting dozens of job advertisements to attract individuals with artificial intelligence expertise. Julia
Love of Reuters notes that the 'goal is to challenge Google in an area the internet search giant has long
dominated: smartphone features that give users what they want before they ask'. This latest move is part of the
company's push towards machine learning, 'which helps devices infer from experience what users are likely to
want next, it relies on crunching vast troves of data to provide unprompted services, such as the scores for a
favourite sports team or reminders of when to leave for an appointment based on traffic'(Reuters, 2015).
This follows reports in March 2014 that Apple had taken to hiring engineers from competing technology
companies, including HTC. Apple's recruitment push has been largely driven by the need to produce new
products faster in response to growing demand for the latest iPhone and iPad devices.
The lifecycle of many of Apple's products has reduced in recent years as competitors such as Samsung
have been increasing the speed at which they develop their own range of mobile devices. To date, Apple
has taken to releasing a new iPhone nearly every year to replace older models which are nearing the end of
their lifecycle.
Source:
Love, J. (2015) 'Apple ups hiring, but faces obstacles to phones smarter' Reuters, 7 September 2015,
www.reuters.com
Over time, the design and specification of television sets has changed. Black and white screens have been
superceded by colour; cathode ray tubes have been superceded by flat screens and plasma screens, and
manufacturers have developed home cinema systems.
However, the switch to online distribution methods of video content has also had a significant impact on
the television set industry. Online TV, mobile and tablet TV, and free TV catch up services offered by the
major channels give viewers much greater choice, allowing them to watch programmes at their own
convenience.
To prevent decline, the TV industry has had to adapt to cope with these changes, and internet-enabled
television has emerged. 3D televisions have also been developed to differentiate television from internet
viewing and to capitalise on the changes in the cinema industry.
Key term
PIMS stands for Profit Impact of Marketing Strategy. The concept originated in a 1960s General Electric
project to compare the profitability of GE SBUs. An extensive PIMS database of strategic actions and
results is now administered by the American Strategic Planning Institute.
PIMS data indicate that there is a negative correlation between profitability and a high level of
expenditure on R&D, perhaps because of the costs associated with these problems.
Key terms Pure research is original research to obtain new scientific or technical knowledge or understanding. There
is no obvious commercial or practical end in view.
Applied research is also original research work like pure research above, but it has a specific practical aim
or application (eg research on improvements in the effectiveness of medicines etc).
Development is the use of existing scientific and technical knowledge to produce new (or substantially
improved) products or systems, prior to starting commercial production operations.
Many organisations employ specialist staff to conduct research and development (R&D). They may be
organised in a separate functional department of their own. In an organisation run on a product division
basis, R&D staff may be employed by each division.
Key terms Product research is based on creating new products and developing existing ones, in other words the
organisation's 'offer' to the market.
Process research is based on improving the way in which those products or services are made or
delivered, or the efficiency with which they are made or delivered.
The following case study highlights the booming market for smartphone apps in the UK. There has been
an evolution in the relationship between smartphone manufacturers and their customers, with growing
numbers of young adults and children now developing apps for others to purchase through their
smartphones.
Revenues generated by UK app downloads have jumped almost a third in the past year (20145) as the
boom in smartphones has led to demand for entertainment and news on the move. According to research
by App Annie for the Financial Times, the number of downloads in the UK grew 5% in 2014 but revenues
generated rose about 30% as apps become popular as a way to watch, read, listen and play.
Apps have proliferated on the stores hosted by Google and Apple and there is now an app to meet many
needs and many things not needed at the touch of a screen. Games remain the most popular type of
download, with UK-based developer King still the largest with Candy Crush Saga.
Away from games, however, more people are watching TV and listening to music through apps such as
the BBC iPlayer, Sky Go and Spotify as well as looking for love: Match.com was the most popular non-
gaming app by revenue in the UK in 2014.
Smartphone users are happy signing into a newspaper app, with the Guardian, Times and Telegraph
among the top ten non-gaming apps by revenue.
'Media apps do particularly well in the UK as well as apps that help stream video, TV and music,' said
Olivier Bernard, European vice-president of App Annie. 'But there are starting to be more retailers using
apps well, such as Just Eat, Tesco and Adidas.'
The rise in app consumption comes alongside data showing the state of the UK app economy is similarly
robust. The UK is the largest app-development market in Europe, by revenues, ahead of Germany and
France and fifth biggest globally, behind the US, Japan, China and South Korea.
8 Benchmarking 12/12
FAST FORWARD
Benchmarking enables a firm to meet industry standards by copying others, but it is perhaps less valuable
as a source of innovation. It is a good way to challenge existing ways of doing things.
Key term Benchmarking is the process of gathering data about targets and comparators, that permit current levels
of performance to be identified and evaluated against best practice. Adoption of identified best practices
should improve performance.
There are a number of different types of benchmarking. JS&W propose the following categories:
Historical benchmarking is an internal comparison of current against past performance. This is
unsatisfactory, since it can induce complacency; comparison with competitors is the real test of
performance.
Industry/sector benchmarking compares like with like across the industry or similar providers in the
public service. In the UK public sector, league tables are an obvious example of this approach. The
limitation of this method is that the whole industry may be under-performing and in danger from
substitute products provided by other industries.
Best-in-class benchmarking looks for best practice wherever it can be found. This involves making
comparisons with similar features or processes in other industries. JS&W suggest that this approach can
have a shock effect on complacent managers and lead to dramatic performance improvements.
So far in this chapter we have concentrated on the analysis of strategic capability. We must now turn our
attention to the problems of managing and improving it.
We examined the way in which opportunities and threats in the environment are detected and analysed in
the previous chapters. In this chapter, we have discussed the analysis of the organisation's strategic
capability; that is to say, its strengths and weaknesses. A complete awareness of the organisation's
environment and its internal capacities is necessary for a rational consideration of future strategy, but it is
not sufficient. The threads must be drawn together so that potential strategies may be developed and
assessed. This is done by combining the internal and external analyses into a SWOT analysis or corporate
appraisal.
Key term SWOT analysis summarises the key issues from the business environment and the strategic capability of
an organisation that are most likely to impact on strategy development. JS&W
Exam focus
point It is crucial that you understand that opportunities and threats are external factors while strengths and
weaknesses are internal factors.
An exam question may ask you for a full SWOT analysis, or may focus on either internal or external
factors. It is important that you understand what the question is asking for, and answer accordingly. The
December 2007 exam asked candidates to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of an airline company,
but the examining team noted some candidates still described SWOT analysis overall. This was not
required. More importantly, points made about opportunities and threats would have gained no marks,
because the questions specifically asked for strengths and weaknesses rather than for a full strategic
appraisal (SWOT).
Strengths Weaknesses
Internal
to the
M
company Conversion
a
t
c
h
I
Exist n
independently Conversion
g
of the
company
Opportunities Threats
Quick Quiz
1 What are the nine categories of resources described by the Ms Model?
2 What are core competences?
3 What four qualities enable a capability to form the basis of competitive advantage?
4 What is the difference between tacit and explicit knowledge?
5 What is a data warehouse?
6 Draw a value chain diagram.
7 What does the value chain illustrate?
8 List the stages of the product life cycle.
9 What are the three types of benchmarking described by Johnson, Scholes and Whittington?
10 What are the four types of strategy described by Weirich and based on the TOWS matrix?
7 The value chain illustrates how value is created by value activities and the linkages between them, and that
the customer is prepared to pay for that value. (Ultimately the value is created for the customer.)
8 Introduction, growth, maturity, decline
9 Historical; Industry/Sector; Best-in-class.
10 SO Strategies employ strengths to seize opportunities.
ST Strategies employ strengths to counter or avoid threats.
WO Strategies address weaknesses so as to be able to exploit opportunities.
WT Strategies are defensive, aiming to avoid threats and the impact of weaknesses.
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
Introduction
Organisations are part of society and, like individual people, are subject to rules
that govern their conduct towards others. Some of these rules are law and
enforced by legal sanction. Other rules fall into the realm of ethics or morality
and are enforced only by the strength of society's approval or disapproval. The
first section of this chapter is concerned with the strategic impact of ethical
ideas on organisations.
The behaviour of organisations may also be considered in the light of notions
of corporate social responsibility. This is a rather poorly defined concept.
However, there does now seem to be widespread acceptance that commercial
organisations should devote some of their resources to the promotion of wider
social aims that are not necessarily mandated by either law or the rules of
ethics.
The third section of this chapter is concerned with corporate governance and
the mechanisms that may be installed to promote fair and honest behaviour at
the strategic apex.
The fourth section discusses the influence of culture on the organisation and its
people. Finally, we conclude the chapter with a discussion of integrated
reporting.
125
Study guide
Intellectual level
A6 The expectations of stakeholders and the influence of ethics and culture
(a) Advise on the implications of corporate governance on organisational
2
purpose and strategy
(b) Evaluate, through stakeholder mapping, the relative influence of
3
stakeholders on organisational purpose and strategy
(c) Assess ethical influences on organisational purpose and strategy 3
(d) Explore the scope of corporate social responsibility 3
(e) Assess the impact of culture on organisational purpose and strategy 3
(f) Prepare and evaluate a cultural web of an organisation 2
(h) Explain the role of integrated reporting in communicating strategy and 2
strategic performance
Exam guide
The importance of the topics covered in this chapter is indicated by the emphasis laid on them by all
professional bodies. Ethics and social responsibility are things that are relevant to all behaviour, so could
be included in a question on any topic.
In particular, there are likely to be stakeholder, ethical or cultural issues in most case studies.
The syllabus for Paper F1 Accountant in Business includes sections on ethics, governance and social
responsibility. You should already be familiar with many of the basic ideas underpinning this chapter.
Also, if you have already studied Paper P1 Governance, Risk & Ethics you will have a detailed knowledge
of these matters. Our coverage here is intended to provide a minimum of essential revision and new
material relevant to the Business Analysis syllabus. However, if you do not feel comfortable with the
underlying material here, you would be well advised to look back at your F1 Text.
FAST FORWARD
Ethics is about right and wrong but it is not the same thing as law or the rules of religion. Cognitive
approaches to ethics assume that objective moral truths can be established.
126 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
1.1 Ethics and business
Ethics is concerned with right and wrong and how conduct should be judged to be good or bad. It is about
how we should live our lives and, in particular, how we should behave towards other people. Business life
is a fruitful source of ethical dilemmas because its whole purpose is material gain, the making of profit.
Success in business requires a constant, avid search for potential advantage over others and business
people are under pressure to do whatever yields such advantage.
Performance Objective 1 'Professionalism and Ethics' of the Practical Experience Requirement is closely
linked to the issues discussed in this Chapter. In order to meet this objective, you need to illustrate how
you have applied 'the fundamental ethical principles of integrity, objectivity, professional competence and
due care, confidentiality, and professional behaviour and raise concerns regarding non-compliance
appropriately'.
1.3 Cognitivism
Cognitivist approaches to ethics are built on the principle that objective, universally applicable moral
truths exist and can be known. There are four important cognitivist theories to consider after we have
looked at law and religion in relation to ethics.
(a) Religions are based on the concept of universally applicable principles but they cannot be regarded
as reliable guides to ethical conduct since they differ so much between themselves, forming, in fact
the basis of the moral relativist approach. This problem may be approached by asking how does
God decide what is right and what is wrong? Presumably, it is not mere whim and moral
principles are involved. The implication is that it is proper to seek to understand these reasons for
ourselves and to use them as the basis of our moral code.
(b) Cognitivist ethics and law can be seen as parallel and connected systems of rules for regulating
conduct. Both are concerned with right conduct and the principles that define it. However, ethics
and law are not the same thing. Law must be free from ambiguity. However, unlike law, ethics can
quite reasonably be an arena for debate, about both the principles involved and their application in
specific rules. The law must be certain and therefore finds it difficult to deal with problems of
conduct that are subject to opinion and debate. Another difference is that many legal rules are only
very remotely connected with ethics, if at all, and some laws in some countries have been of
debateable moral stature, to say the least.
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 127
The consequentialist approach to ethics is to make moral judgements about courses of action by
reference to their outcomes or consequences. Right or wrong becomes a question of benefit or harm.
Utilitarianism is the best-known formulation of this approach and can be summed up in the 'greatest
good' principle. This says that when deciding on a course of action we should choose the one that is likely
to result in the greatest good for the greatest number of people.
There is an immediate problem here, which is how we are to define what is good for people.
The utilitarian approach may also be questioned for its potential effect upon minorities. A situation in
which a large majority achieved great happiness at the expense of creating misery among a small minority
would satisfy the 'greatest good' principle. It could not, however, be regarded as ethically desirable.
However, utilitarianism can be a useful guide to conduct. It has been used to derive wide ranging rules and
can be applied to help us make judgements about individual, unique problems.
128 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
While individual cases are bound to provoke debate, it would be reasonable to suggest that an inflexible
approach to rules of conduct is likely to produce ethical dilemmas. Deciding what to do when the
arguments point in opposite directions is always going to be difficult. However, generally we do not have
the option of doing nothing, and this is particularly true of business.
An understanding of the everyday ethical dilemmas that you may face in your career is outlined in the next
section. It is worth taking the time to read this carefully as it provides some useful background reading
before attempting the professional ethics module.
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 129
(a) Extortion. Foreign officials have been known to threaten companies with the complete closure of
their local operations unless suitable payments are made.
(b) Bribery. This is payments for services to which a company is not legally entitled. There are some
fine distinctions to be drawn; for example, some managers regard political contributions as bribery.
(c) Grease money. Multinational companies are sometimes unable to obtain services to which they are
legally entitled because of deliberate stalling by local officials. Cash payments to the right people
may then be enough to oil the machinery of bureaucracy.
(d) Gifts. In some cultures (such as Japan) gifts are regarded as an essential part of civilised
negotiation, even in circumstances where to Western eyes they might appear ethically dubious.
Managers operating in such a culture may feel at liberty to adopt the local customs.
Business ethics are also relevant to competitive behaviour. This is because a market can only be free if
competition is, in some basic respects, fair. There is a distinction between competing aggressively and
competing unethically.
130 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
Ethical codes and policies on behaviour can, of course, be linked to and summarised in the mission
statement.
It is important to note, however, that managers need not be corrupt in order to fail in their responsibilities
or duties to their organisations. The CEO who sets in motion a takeover bid that will enhance his prestige,
the head of department who 'empire builds', and the IT manager who buys an unnecessarily sophisticated
system are all failing in their responsibilities to the owners of the company (usually, the shareholders)
even though they have not acted illegally or received any material benefit themselves.
2 Social responsibility
FAST FORWARD
There is a fundamental split of views about the organisation's relationship with its stakeholders and the
nature of corporate responsibility.
The strong view that a range of goals should be pursued
The weak view that the business organisation is a purely economic force, subject to law
2.1 Stakeholders
The syllabus for Paper F1 Accountant in Business includes material on stakeholders. You should,
therefore, be familiar with many of the ideas in this section. The coverage here is intended to provide a
minimum of essential revision coupled with new material relevant to the P3 syllabus. If you do not feel
comfortable with the underlying material here, you should look back at your F1 Text.
FAST FORWARD
Stakeholders have an interest in what the organisation does.
Key term Stakeholders: groups or individuals whose interests are directly affected by the activities of a firm or
organisation
Stakeholder groups can exert influence on strategy. The greater the power of a stakeholder group, the
greater its influence will be. Each stakeholder group has different expectations about what it wants, and
the expectations of the various groups will conflict. To some extent, the expectations of stakeholders will
influence the organisation's mission.
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 131
(b) Customers
(i) Products of a certain quality at a reasonable price
(ii) Products that should last a certain number of years
(iii) A product or service that meets customer needs.
(c) Suppliers: regular orders in return for reliable delivery and good service
(d) Shareholders: long-term wealth
(e) Providers of loan capital (stock holders): reliable payment of interest due and maintenance of the
value of any security.
(f) Society as a whole
(i) Control pollution
(ii) Financial assistance to charities, sports and community activities
(iii) Co-operate with government in identifying and preventing health hazards
2.1.2 Competitors
Competitors can be stakeholders. You may find this easier to understand if you think of all the competitors
in a given industry as stakeholders in that industry's overall status and the public's perception.
132 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
Stakeholder Interests to defend Response to risk
External
Government Jobs, training, tax Tax increases
Regulation
Legal action
Interest/pressure Pollution Publicity
groups Rights Direct action
Other Sabotage
Pressure on government
How stakeholders relate to the management of the company depends very much on what type of
stakeholder they are internal, connected or external and on the level in the management hierarchy at
which they are able to apply pressure. Clearly a company's management will respond differently to the
demands of, say, its shareholders and the community at large.
(a) Managers who are accountable to everyone are, in fact, accountable to no one.
(b) If managers are required to balance different stakeholders' interests, there is a danger that they will
favour their own interests.
(c) It confuses a stakeholder's interest in a firm with a person's citizenship of a state.
(d) People have interests, but this does not give them rights.
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 133
Performance Objective 2 'Stakeholder relationship management' of the Practical Experience Requirement
focuses on your ability to interact with and manage stakeholders. In order to meet this objective you need
to illustrate how you have displayed 'cultural and interpersonal sensitivity and empathy in all
communications to establish trust and credibility with a range of stakeholders and to gain their
confidence'.
The way in which the relationship between company and stakeholders is conducted is a function of the
parties' relative bargaining strength and the philosophy underlying each party's objectives. This can be
shown by means of a spectrum.
Stakeholders
Weak bargaining strength Strong
Consultation Participation
Companys and and Democratic Command/
conduct Command/ consideration Negotiation acceptance voting by dictated by
of relation- dictated by of of stakeholders stakeholders
ship company stakeholders stakeholders
views views
Mendelow classifies stakeholders on a matrix whose axes are power held and likelihood of showing an
interest in the organisation's activities. These factors will help define the type of relationship the
organisation should seek with its stakeholders.
Level of interest
Low High
Low
A B
Power
C D
High
Mendelow's matrix
(a) Key players are found in segment D: strategy must be acceptable to them, at least. An example
would be a major customer.
(b) Stakeholders in segment C must be treated with care. While often passive, they are capable of
moving to segment D. They should, therefore be kept satisfied. Large institutional shareholders
might fall into segment C.
(c) Stakeholders in segment B do not have great ability to influence strategy, but their views
can be important in influencing more powerful stakeholders, perhaps by lobbying. They
should therefore be kept informed. Community representatives and charities might fall into
segment B.
134 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
(a) The framework of corporate governance should recognise stakeholders' levels of interest and
power.
(b) It may be appropriate to seek to reposition certain stakeholders and discourage others from
repositioning themselves, depending on their attitudes.
Stakeholder mapping can also be used to establish political priorities. A map of the current position
can be compared with a map of a desired future state. This will indicate critical shifts that must be
pursued.
Exam focus Stakeholders and their influence are regular features of business strategy exam questions.
point
Mendelow's Matrix is not mentioned explicitly in the P3 Study Guide, so you will not have a question
specifically about it.
However, the Study Guide does state that you need to be able to 'Evaluate, through stakeholder mapping,
the relative influence of stakeholders on organisational purpose and strategy'. Mendelow's Matrix would
be a very useful framework for any such stakeholder mapping.
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 135
Different stakeholders will have their own views as to strategy. As some stakeholders have negative power,
in other words power to impede or disrupt the decision, their likely response might be considered.
Businesses, particularly large ones, are subject to increasing expectations that they will exercise social
responsibility. This is an ill-defined concept, but appears to focus on the provision of specific benefits to
society in general, such as charitable donations, the creation or preservation of employment, and
spending on environmental improvement or maintenance. A great deal of the pressure is created by the
activity of minority action groups and is aimed at businesses because they are perceived to possess
extensive resources.
The momentum of such arguments is now so great that the notion of social responsibility has become
almost inextricably confused with the matter of ethics. It is important to remember the distinction. Social
responsibility and ethical behaviour are not the same thing.
In this context, you should remember that a business managed with the sole objective of maximising
shareholder wealth can be run in just as ethical a fashion as one in which far wider stakeholder
responsibility is assumed. On the other hand, there is no doubt that many large businesses have behaved
irresponsibly in the past and some continue to do so.
136 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
2.7 The stakeholder approach to corporate social responsibility
The stakeholder approach is based on the premise that many groups have a stake in what the
organisation does. This is particularly important in the business context, where shareholders own the
business but employees, customers and government also have particularly strong claims to having their
interests considered. This is fundamentally an argument derived from natural law theory and is based on
the notion of individual and collective rights.
It is suggested that modern corporations are so powerful socially, economically and politically, that
unrestrained use of their power will inevitably damage other people's rights. For example, they may
blight an entire community by closing a major facility, thus enforcing long-term unemployment on a large
proportion of the local workforce. Similarly, they may damage people's quality of life by polluting the
environment. They may use their purchasing power or market share to impose unequal contracts on
suppliers and customers alike. They may also exercise undesirable influence over government through
their investment decisions. Under this approach, the exercise of corporate social responsibility constrains
the corporation to act at all times as a good citizen.
Another argument points out that corporations exist within society and are dependent upon it for the
resources they use. Some of these resources are obtained by direct contracts with suppliers but others
are not, being provided by government expenditure. Examples are such things as transport infrastructure,
technical research and education for the workforce. Clearly, corporations contribute to the taxes that pay
for these things, but the relationship is rather tenuous and the tax burden can be minimised by careful
management. The implication is that corporations should recognise and pay for the facilities that society
provides by means of socially responsible policies and actions.
Henry Mintzberg (in Power In and Around Organisations) suggests that simply viewing organisations as
vehicles for shareholder investment is inadequate.
(a) In practice, he says, organisations are rarely controlled effectively by shareholders. Most
shareholders are passive investors.
(b) Large corporations can manipulate markets. Social responsibility, forced or voluntary, is a way of
recognising this.
(c) Moreover, as mentioned above, businesses do receive a lot of government support. The public
pays for roads, infrastructure, education and health, all of which benefits businesses. Although
businesses pay tax, the public ultimately pays, perhaps through higher prices.
(d) Strategic decisions by businesses always have wider social consequences. In other words, says
Mintzberg, the firm produces two kinds of outputs: goods and services and the social
consequences of its activities (eg pollution).
2.8 Externalities
FAST FORWARD
There is particular concern over externalities, or the social and environmental costs of corporate
activities.
If it is accepted that businesses do not bear the total social cost of their activities, then the exercise of
social responsibility is a way of compensating for this. An example is given by the environment. Industrial
pollution is injurious to health: if someone is made ill by industrial pollution, then arguably the polluter
should pay the sick person, as damages or in compensation, in the same way as if a construction
company had accidentally bulldozed somebody's house.
In practice, of course, while it is relatively easy to identify statistical relationships between pollution levels
and certain illnesses, mapping out the chain of cause and effect from an individual's wheezing cough to
the dust particles emitted by Factory X, as opposed to Factory Y, is quite a different matter.
Of course, it could be argued that these external costs are met out of general taxation: but this has the
effect of spreading the cost amongst other individuals and businesses. Moreover, the tax revenue may be
spent on curing the disease, rather than stopping it at its source. Pollution control equipment may be the
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 137
fairest way of dealing with this problem. Thus advocates of social responsibility in business would argue
that responsibilities of business then do not rest with paying taxes.
Is there any justification for social responsibility outside remedying the effects of a business's direct
activities? For example, should businesses give to charity or sponsor the arts? Several arguments have
been advanced suggesting that they should.
(a) If the stakeholder concept of a business is held, then the public is a stakeholder in the business. A
business only succeeds because it is part of a wider society. Giving to charity is one way of
encouraging a relationship.
(b) Charitable donations and artistic sponsorship are a useful medium of public relations and can
reflect well on the business. It can be regarded, then, as another form of promotion, which like
advertising, serves to enhance consumer awareness of the business, while not encouraging the
sale of a particular brand.
The arguments for and against social responsibility are complex ones. However, ultimately they can be
traced to different assumptions about society and the relationships between the individuals and
organisations within it.
Key term An organisation's ethical stance is defined by JS&W as the extent to which it will exceed its minimum
obligation to stakeholders and society at large.
JS&W illustrate the range of possible ethical stances by giving four illustrations.
Short-term shareholder interest
Long-term shareholder interest
Multiple stakeholder obligations
Shaper of society
138 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
(b) The responsible exercise of corporate power may prevent a build-up of social and political
pressure for legal regulation. Freedom of action may be preserved and the burden of regulation
lightened by acceptance of ethical responsibilities.
3 Corporate governance
FAST FORWARD
Corporate governance is the conduct of the organisation's senior officers. Abuses have led to a range of
measures to improve corporate governance. Non-executive directors have a particular role to play.
Key term The conduct of an organisation's senior officers constitutes its corporate governance.
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 139
3.1 The governance framework
JS&W say that the most fundamental expectations of organisations concern who they should serve and
how their direction and purposes should be determined. This is the province of corporate governance,
which is also concerned with the supervision and accountability of executives.
Key term The governance framework describes whom the organisation is there to serve and how the purposes and
priorities of the organisation should be decided.
JS&W
Few large businesses are directly managed by their owners. In the case of larger companies, the
shareholders may be numerous and unlikely to wish to take part in the management of the company,
viewing it simply as a vehicle for investment. Even where ownership is concentrated, large companies tend
to be managed mostly by professional managers who have little ownership interest, if any.
In most large commercial organisations, the situation is even more complex in that governance is
exercised through many links in a chain. Managers are accountable to more senior managers and so on,
up to the board of directors. The directors enjoy an element of autonomy, but in many cases, they will
effectively be accountable to the representatives of a few large institutional shareholders or perhaps those
of a single venture capital company. The chain of accountability may then continue, with those
representatives themselves accountable ultimately to the individual savers and investors that provide their
funds.
This separation of ownership from control has been a feature of business for over a century and brings
with it a recurring problem: the business should be managed so as to promote the economic interest of
the shareholders as a body, but the power to manage lies in the hands of people who may use it to
promote their own interests. How may such conflicts of interest be resolved and managers be made to
favour the interest of the owners, rather than their own?
This problem is not confined to the management of companies: it is the general problem of the agency
relationship and occurs whenever one person (the principal) gives another (the agent) power to deal with
his or her affairs. The relationship between principal and agent has been subjected to some quite abstruse
economic and mathematical analysis; this area of study is called agency theory. It proceeds on the basis
that principals and agents are rational utility maximisers.
Two important concepts are used to explain the things that can go wrong in the agency relationship:
adverse selection and moral hazard.
Key term Adverse selection is the making of poor choices. It occurs perhaps most often because the chooser lacks
the information necessary to make a good choice.
Adverse selection can be exacerbated in the agency relationship when the agent has an incentive to
withhold information from the principal, thus creating information asymmetry. We see this in two
important instances:
(a) Appointment of the agent: the principal attempts to appoint a competent and trustworthy agent,
but potential agents thus have an incentive to conceal any evidence there may be that they are
incompetent or untrustworthy.
140 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
(b) Assessing the agent's performance: the principal desires to reward the agent according to the
standard of their performance, but the agent controls or is able to influence the information the
principal uses to assess that performance.
Disclosure is thus a major theme in corporate governance.
Key term Moral hazard arises whenever people are protected from the adverse consequences of their actions; they
have no incentive to exercise correct judgement and are free to act in an irresponsible manner.
To protect a person from the adverse consequences of their behaviour is to encourage irresponsibility,
hence the moral dimension of the concept.
Moral hazard is not confined to principal-agent relationships. It occurs in banking, for example, when
government guarantee schemes allow bankers to make injudicious loans.
In the agency relationship, we are concerned with the use the agent makes of the authority with which they
have been entrusted. Moral hazard will exist unless at least part of the agent's remuneration is contingent
upon them making responsible use of their authority.
Agency theory is clearly relevant to the modern business organisation. The directors are the agents of the
shareholders, employed to manage the business in the shareholders' interest. To do this they are given
considerable power over the resources of the business. How can the shareholders be sure that they will
not abuse this trust?
To a lesser extent, agency theory also applies within the organisation. The directors cannot do everything:
as we have said, they must employ subordinate managers to put their plans into action. How can the
directors be sure that those subordinates are not abusing their trust?
They rely to an increasing extent on the initiative, skills, creativity and enthusiasm of quite junior members
of the organisation, since this is what creates competitive advantage. They also depend on both motivating
and empowering these employees. Therefore, the issue of trust comes to prominence.
Agency theory is thus very relevant to the fields of both performance measurement and executive
compensation. Moral hazard can be reduced by making the rewards paid to the directors and managers
contingent upon their satisfactory performance: the information asymmetry that leads to adverse
selection can be reduced by making proper information about that performance available to the
shareholders (in the case of the directors) and to the directors (in the case of the subordinate managers).
Most organisations will have some kind of governing body. In the private sector, we are used to the
concept of the board of directors; not-for-profit organisations are likely to have a board of trustees and,
possibly, an executive committee of professional managers as well; while public sector organisations will
usually have a similar body in overall charge.
The characteristics, role and functioning of boards of directors vary across the world: Michel Albert
distinguishes three typical forms of corporate governance: the Anglo-Saxon, the Rhine and the Japanese.
The first differs from the other two in that shares in such companies tend to be widely held in small
quantities, which tends to permit significant autonomy to a small number of senior managers. In the other
two models, top management is more collective in nature involving a larger team, and is responsible to a
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 141
more stable body representing outside interests, such as founding family shareholders and trade unions in
the Rhine model; and large institutions, in the Japanese models.
JS&W discuss a fourth model: this is the Latin, typical of France, Spain and Italy.
The Anglo-Saxon model
The Anglo-Saxon model is found in the UK, the US and Australasia. There is a single level of board
membership, which includes both executive and non-executive directors. The effectiveness of the non-
executive directors in curbing the power of the executives varies. The wide spread of shareholding found
in many large companies tends to limit the power of individual shareholders, though major institutional
shareholders such as pension funds are becoming more assertive.
Corporate finance emphasises the dominant position of equity and relationships with banks tend to be
contractually-based. This can lead to difficulties, since banks' own commercial considerations may lead
them to withdraw funds. Shareholders thus assume most of the burden of financial risk and limit the
extent of gearing as a result.
This kind of company tends to be very market-oriented, internationalised and able to raise and use large
amounts of capital. However, it has been criticised for being unstable, for taking a short-term view of
strategy and for poor standards of corporate governance.
The Rhine model
The Rhine model is found in such countries as Germany, the Netherlands and Switzerland; and, to some
extent, in France. The two-tier board is common (and may be mandatory), with strong employee
representation on the supervisory board and an emphasis on co-determination, or joint decision-making.
There are robust procedures for corporate governance. The supervisory board restrains the autonomy of
the managerial professionals on the lower tier board.
Such companies have a long-term strategy with stable capital investment policies. However, they tend to
be inflexible and slow to invest in new industries and international projects.
The Japanese model
Japanese business culture is respectful of consensus and rather patriarchal. Promotion to the board is
decided by the Chairman after consultation, often with interested external parties such as bankers.
Directors are expected to promote the interests of employees as a matter of course. Governance
procedures tend to be secretive and can be corrupt, with weak accountability. A very long view is taken of
industrial strategy and capital investment is stable, though there can be an element of financial
speculation. Decision-making can be very slow.
Banks have extensive shareholdings as well as making loans and take a close interest in the management
of the companies they finance. In times of difficulty, they are more likely to promote change, rather than
simply withdrawing funds.
The Latin model
The Latin model features heavy state involvement in business and industrial strategy, with consistency
between political, economic and administrative goals. Investment is very stable. However, government
involvement can lead to over-emphasis on political priorities and over-intimate relations between
directors, politicians and civil servants.
142 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
Contributing to the effective governance of an organisation is the focus of Performance Objective 4
'Governance Risk and Control' which forms part of the Practical Experience Requirement. One aspect of
this objective requires you to show how you have operated 'within governance standards, organisational
policies and internal controls set within your organisation that apply to your role or responsibilities,
including reviewing your own work to ensure it complies with the organisation's quality standards'.
Directors' involvement in the making of strategy may be limited to a stewardship role in which the board
delegates the process to full-time executives, retaining only a final approval role. When this is done, the
board must take steps to prevent the executives from pursuing their own interest, rather than those of
legitimate stakeholders.
There are a number of ways in which the board can engage in the strategic process: some of these are
discussed elsewhere in this Study Text. Directors who take part in the making of strategy must be
competent and have sufficient time to do so. They must ensure that they act independently in the interests
of stakeholders and pay proper attention to personal and collective accountability and performance
assessment.
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 143
3.3.3 Lack of adequate control function
An obvious weakness is a lack of internal audit.
Another important control is lack of adequate technical knowledge in key roles, for example, in the audit
committee or in senior compliance positions. A rapid turnover of staff involved in accounting or control
may suggest inadequate resourcing, and will make control more difficult because of lack of continuity.
Essential Performance Objective 4 'Governance Risk and Control' of the Practical Experience Requirement
ties in closely with the risks surrounding poor corporate governance. In order to claim this performance
objective you will need to 'evaluate activities in your area and identify potential risks of fraud, error or
other hazards assessing their probability and impact'.
You will also need to illustrate how you have reviewed 'the effectiveness of internal controls and
procedures to mitigate risk in your area of responsibility'.
144 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
4 The role of culture
FAST FORWARD
Culture is important, both in organisations and in the wider world. It is the knowledge, beliefs, customs
and attitudes which people adhere to. In wider society, it is affected by factors such as age, class, race and
religion, while in organisations it is defined by assumptions, beliefs and artefacts. These, in turn, are
influenced by history, management, structure and systems. The organisational iceberg concept shows
how culture relates to other aspects of the organisation. The paradigm is the common, basic assumptions
and beliefs held by an organisation's decision-makers. Combined with the physical manifestations of
culture, it makes up the cultural web.
Exam focus
An article titled 'Culture and configuration' written by Ken Garrett is available in the Technical Articles
point
section for P3 on the ACCA website. The article focuses on key models of organisational culture, which is
assumed knowledge brought forward from paper F1. Consideration is given to the interaction between
organisational configuration and culture. Henry Mintzberg's theory of organisational configuration is
covered later in this study text.
The compulsory question in the June 2013 exam focused on how an understanding of organisational
culture would have helped the newly appointed CEO of a hospital manage change. The CEO had joined the
hospital from a commercial organisation and didn't appear to appreciate the extent of the cultural
differences between the two organisations.
Through contact with a particular culture, individuals learn a language, acquire values and learn habits of
behaviour and thought.
(a) Beliefs and values. Beliefs are what we feel to be the case on the basis of objective and subjective
information (eg people can believe the world is round or flat). Values are beliefs which are relatively
enduring, relatively general and fairly widely accepted as a guide to culturally appropriate
behaviour.
(b) Customs. Customs are modes of behaviour which represent culturally accepted ways of behaving
in response to given situations.
(c) Artefacts. Artefacts are all the physical tools designed by human beings for their physical and
psychological well-being, including works of art, technology, products.
(d) Rituals. A ritual is a type of activity which takes on symbolic meaning; it consists of a fixed
sequence of behaviour repeated over time.
The learning and sharing of culture is made possible by language (both written and spoken, verbal and
non-verbal).
Knowledge of the culture of a society is clearly of value to businesses in a number of ways.
(a) Marketers can adapt their products accordingly, and be fairly sure of a sizeable market. This is
particularly important in export markets.
(b) Human resource managers may need to tackle cultural differences in recruitment. For example,
some ethnic minorities have a different body language from the majority, which may be hard for
some interviewers to interpret.
Culture in a society can be divided into subcultures reflecting social differences. Most people participate in
several of them.
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 145
Key term Organisational culture consists of the beliefs, attitudes, practices and customs to which people are
exposed during their interaction with the organisation.
Culture is both internal to an organisation and external to it. The culture of an organisation is embedded in
the culture of the wider society. Its importance to strategy is that it can predispose the organisation
towards, or away from, a particular course of action.
All organisations will generate their own cultures, whether spontaneously or under the guidance of positive
managerial strategy. Schein suggests that three aspects of culture can be distinguished in organisations.
(a) Basic, underlying assumptions which guide the behaviour of the individuals and groups in the
organisation. These may include customer orientation, or belief in quality, trust in the organisation
to provide rewards, freedom to make decisions, freedom to make mistakes and the value of
innovation and initiative at all levels.
(b) Overt beliefs expressed by the organisation and its members, which can be used to condition the
assumptions mentioned above. These beliefs and values may emerge as sayings, slogans and
mottoes, such as IBM's motto, 'Think'. They may emerge in a rich mythology of jokes and stories
about past successes and heroic failures.
(c) Visible artefacts the style of the offices or other premises, dress rules, visible structures or
processes, the degree of informality between superiors and subordinates and so on.
Management can encourage this by selling a sense of the corporate mission, or by promoting the
corporate image. It can reward the right attitudes and punish (or simply not employ) those who are not
prepared to commit themselves to the culture.
An organisation's culture is influenced by many factors.
(a) The organisation's founder. A strong set of values and assumptions is set up by the organisation's
founder, and even after he or she has retired, these values have their own momentum. Or, to put it
another way, an organisation might find it hard to shake off its original culture. Peters and
Waterman believed that 'excellent' companies began with strong leaders.
(b) The organisation's history. Johnson, Scholes and Whittington state that the way an organisation
works reflects the era when it was founded. Farming, for example, sometimes has a craft element
to it. The effect of history can be determined by stories, rituals and symbolic behaviour. They
legitimise behaviour and promote priorities. (In some organisations, certain positions are regarded
as intrinsically more 'heroic' than others.)
(c) Leadership and management style. An organisation with a strong culture recruits managers who
naturally conform to it.
(d) Structure and systems affect culture as well as strategy.
146 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
4.3 The paradigm and the cultural web
Exam focus
point The Study Guide A6(f) requires you to be able to prepare and evaluate a cultural web of an
organisation. Section C2(b) also requires you to be able to determine and diagnose the organisational
context of change using the cultural web.
A question in the December 2011 exam required students to analyse the culture of the organisation
described in the case study scenario. ACCA's answer draws on the cultural web model covered in the next
section. The cultural web provides a useful framework when analysing organisational culture, as its
component parts can be used as headings which help to structure your answer when applying it to the
scenario.
The examining team reported that the cultural web was an area of the syllabus that students appeared to
be familiar with. However, when attempting questions which require the application of a model to a
scenario, is important to avoid spending too much time purely describing the theory. Applying your
knowledge directly to the question scenario is crucial for passing paper P3. Sadly, as the examining team
highlighted, too many answers focused too much on description with limited analysis, and therefore
students gained few marks.
Stories Symbols
Control Organisa-
systems tional
structures
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 147
1 Stories The stories concern past events and people talked about inside and outside the company.
'Who' and 'what' is talked about most in these stories can often illustrate the behaviour the
organisation encourages, and the sorts of things it values.
2 Symbols The visual representations of an organisation, including logos, premises, and dress can
illustrate the nature of that organisation. Also, verbal representations like language and titles can
symbolise the nature of an organisation.
3 Power structures Who has the real power in the organisation? This may be held by one or two
key senior executives, a whole group of executives, or even a department. The key is that these
people have the greatest amount of influence on decisions, operations, and the strategic direction
of an organisation.
4 Organisational structures This includes both the formal structure defined by the organisation
chart, and the unwritten lines of power and influence that indicate whose contributions are most
valued. Structure is likely to reflect power.
5 Control systems These concern the ways the organisation is controlled. They include financial
systems, quality systems, and rewards (including the way they are measured and distributed within
the organisation). Looking at the areas which are controlled most closely can indicate what is seen
as most important to an organisation, and where most attention is focused.
6 Rituals and routines The daily behaviour and actions of people signal what is considered
acceptable in an organisation. This determines what is expected to happen in given situations, and
what is valued by management.
148 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
Cultural web Examples (based on car repair workshop)
Symbols
What language and jargon is used? Is it well Mechanics use jargon which customers don't
known and usable by all? understand to describe parts and problems
What aspects of strategy are highlighted in Adverts and leaflets say they won't be beaten on
publicity? price
Are there any status symbols? No, the boss wears an overall, like the staff
Organisational structure
Is the structure formal or informal? Flat or Flat structure: Owner, Mechanics, Receptionist.
hierarchical?
What are the formal lines of authority? The mechanics report to the owner (who is also a
mechanic by trade)
Are there any informal lines of authority? The receptionist is the owner's wife so she
discusses customer complains directly with him
Do structures encourage cooperation and Each mechanic looks after himself. There is no
collaboration? sharing of tools or jobs.
Control systems
What process has the strongest controls? Costs are very tightly controlled. Customers are
billed for all parts used.
What process has the weakest controls? Quality is not seen as important. Getting work done
as cheaply as possible is emphasised ahead of
quality.
Is emphasis on rewarding good work or penalising In their pay review, employees are judged on the
poor work? actual costs of their jobs compared to their job
quotes. Staff whose actual costs exceed quotes tend
to get smaller pay rises than those whose job costs
are lower than their quotes.
Power structures
Who has the real power in the organisation? The owner
How strongly held are the beliefs of the people The owner believes strongly in a low cost model,
with power? and is prepared to lose repeat customers in order to
keep costs down.
How is power used or abused? Knowing that their pay reviews are dependent on
cost control keeps mechanics working to this low
cost model.
What are the main blockages to change?
The owner insists that his low cost model is the best
way to run the business and won't invest in any new
equipment if it will cost lots of money to do so.
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 149
between the two. These differences indicate the changes which will need to be made to achieve the high-
performance culture that they are seeking.
In this way, the cultural web can play a significant role in change management, and changing
organisational culture.
5 Integrated reporting
Exam focus
The role of integrated reporting in communicating strategy is an important part of the P3 syllabus. It is
point
important that you are familiar with integrated reporting as exam questions may require an explanation of
how it can be used by a company featured in a question. You may also be required to comment on the
implications of introducing integrated reporting.
An article titled 'Integrated reporting' written by Ken Garrett is available in the technical articles section for
P3 on the ACCA website.
FAST FORWARD Integrated reporting is concerned with conveying a wider message on organisational performance. It is
fundamentally concerned with reporting on the value created by the organisation's resources. Resources
are referred to as 'capitals', and value is created or lost through the way in which capitals interact with one
another. The aim of integrated reporting is to encourage a holistic view when assessing organisational
performance.
Capital Comment
Financial capital The pool of funds that is:
Available to an organisation for use in the production
of goods or the provision of services
Obtained through financing, such as debt, equity or
grants, or generated through operations or
investments
150 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
Capital Comment
Manufactured capital Manufactured physical objects (as distinct from natural
physical objects) that are available to an organisation for
use in the production of goods or the provision of
services, including:
Buildings
Equipment
Infrastructure (such as roads, ports, bridges and waste
and water treatment plants)
Manufactured capital is often created by other
organisations, but includes assets manufactured by the
reporting organisation for sale or when they are retained
for its own use.
Intellectual capital Organisational knowledge-based intangibles, including:
Intellectual property, such as patents, copyrights,
software, rights and licences
'Organisational capital' such as tacit knowledge,
systems, procedures and protocols
Human capital People's competencies, capabilities and experience, and
their motivations to innovate, including their:
Alignment with, and support for, an organisation's
governance framework, risk management approach
and ethical values
Ability to understand, develop and implement an
organisation's strategy
Loyalties and motivations for improving processes,
goods and services, including their ability to lead,
manage and collaborate
Social and relationship capital The institutions and the relationships within and
between communities, groups of stakeholders and other
networks, and the ability to share information to
enhance individual and collective well-being.
Social and relationship capital includes:
Shared norms and common values and behaviours
Key stakeholder relationships and the trust and
willingness to engage that an organisation developed
and strives to build and protect with external
stakeholders
Intangibles associated with the brand and reputation
that an organisation has developed
An organisation's social licence to operate
Natural capital All renewable and non-renewable environmental
resources and processes that provide goods or services
that support the past, current or future prosperity of an
organisation. It includes:
Air, water, land, minerals and forests
Biodiversity and eco-system health
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 151
5.1.3 Interaction of capitals
Capitals continually interact with one another: an increase in one may result in a decrease another. For
example, a decision to purchase a new IT system would improve an entity's 'manufactured' capital while
decreasing its financial capital in the form of its cash reserves.
152 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
emphasis on the importance of stakeholders is central to improving the transparency and accountability of
organisational reporting.
Materiality
One of the Guiding Principles of integrated reporting requires management to disclose matters which are
likely to impact on an organisation's ability to create value. Internal weaknesses and external threats
regarded as being materially important are evaluated and quantified (where possible). This provides users
with an indication of how management intend to combat risks, should they materialise.
Conciseness
The IIRC recognises that a good Integrated Report should be concise and to the point. Users of the report
are likely to want sufficient detail to help them understand the organisation's performance and future
strategic direction, without the need to be presented with irrelevant information.
Reliability and completeness
As discussed earlier in respect of materiality, an Integrated Report requires a balanced presentation of
both positive and negative information. IIRC highlight that reliable information needs to be 'free from
material error' if it is to be useful to interested parties. This requires the organisation to have in place a
sound system of internal reporting. Furthermore, to be effective, an integrated report should be complete,
meaning that certain matters must not be omitted simply because they relate to unfavourable movements
in 'capitals'.
Consistency and comparability
A good integrated report should communicate the same type of information from period to period, eg
reporting the same KPIs year on year. To support user understanding when there have been significant
movements between periods, the Guiding Principles highlight the need for organisations to provide an
explanation for the change and to quantify this if possible.
The principle of comparability requires integrated reports to be presented to allow for easier comparison
with similar entities. Comparability in integrated reporting is particularly difficult to achieve as every
organisation is unique and will create value differently. The IIRC highlights that comparability in
information can be improved in reporting through the use of benchmarking an entity's performance
against industry metrics (KPIs) and ratios eg the percentage movement in staff training and development
programmes compared to the industry average.
The issue of comparability is further complicated as, at present, there is no compulsory requirement for
organisations to adopt integrated reporting at all.
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 153
Implications Comment
Consultancy costs Organisations producing their first integrated report
may seek external guidance from an organisation
which provides specialist consultancy on integrated
reporting. Consultancy fees are likely to be
significant.
Disclosure There is a danger that organisations may volunteer
more information about their operational
performance than intended. Disclosure of planned
strategies and key performance measures are likely
to be picked up by competitors.
The ACCA produced its first integrated report in 2011/2012, and this formed part of ACCA's annual report.
It was prepared following the guidelines of the International Integrated Reporting Council's framework.
Since this time, ACCA has continued to report on performance using the principles of integrated reporting.
In 2013/14, ACCA produced its third 'annual integrated report'.
The intentions of ACCA's first integrated report were made clear at the outset, 'we are aiming to tell a clear
and coherent story about ACCA's strategic performance and future prospects. Most importantly, we are
using this report to explain how we create value for our stakeholders primarily our members and the
place we occupy in society'.
The following section illustrates some of the key features from ACCA's integrated reports between
2011/12 and 2013/14.
Key elements from ACCA's 20112014 integrated reports
Key achievements
ACCA annually publishes its key achievements in pursuit of its objectives. ACCA's performance against its
objectives is measured through the use of a number of key performance indicators. The commentary gives
some detail as to the targets achieved and those not met.
The following extract has been amended to include ACCA's result's against it's targets since 2011/12.
Our 2015 How we Targets for What was Targets for What was Targets for What was
strategic measure 20112012 delivered in 20122013 delivered in 20132014 delivered in
objective this 201112 201213 201314
To be the Number of 154,700 Not 162,015 Not 170,650 Not
leading global members members achieved: members achieved: Members achieved:
professional 154,337 161,943 169,602
accountancy members at members at members at
body in 31.03.12. 31.03.13 31.03.14
reputation,
influence and
size
154 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
Our 2015 How we Targets for What was Targets for What was Targets for What was
strategic measure 20112012 delivered in 20122013 delivered in 20132014 delivered in
objective this 201112 201213 201314
To lead and % of 47% Achieved: 57.7% Not 44.4% Not
shape the employees 53.7% achieved: achieved:
agenda of the who
42.2% 43.1%
profession consider
that ACCA's
public
positions on
the agenda
of the
profession
promote
public value
To recruit and Number of 363,350 Achieved: 380,000 Not 381,000 Achieved:
retain our ACCA ACCA 368,145 ACCA achieved: ACCA 384,287
membership Qualification Qualification ACCA Qualification Qualification ACCA
372,248
base students students Qualification students students
ACCA Qualification
students at Qualification students at
31.03.12. students at 31.03.14
31.03.13
Stakeholders
The ACCA acknowledges its obligations to its key stakeholders. In its integrated reports ACCA highlight
how it engages with a number of groups including, members, students and employers. The 2013/14
report notes that 'one of the integrated reporting principles we have found particularly helpful is that of
stakeholder engagement. Since we moved to an integrated reporting approach, we have consulted with a
range of stakeholders on every report, asking whether it meets their needs and refining our reporting in
response to their feedback.'
Strategic focus and risk
ACCA's 2011/12 report placed a strong focus on the steps the ACCA had been taking to achieve its vision
up to 2015. This theme is continued in the 2013/14 report which introduces ACCA's new organisational
strategy up to 2020. Those factors likely to impact on ACCA's ability to achieve its objectives are covered
in a section designated to risk management.
Value creation
In addition to the traditional reporting of financial performance, the integrated reports also detail those
'capitals' regarded as being important in creating value over the long term. One capital mentioned focuses
on the role of people in the organisation.
The ACCA regard having the right people with the right skills and capabilities as being critical in being able
to deliver its strategy. Over the year, the ACCA enhanced its people capital through investments in staff
development and training programmes.
Source: The ACCA's first integrated report and subsequent annual reports can be found at:
www.accaglobal.com
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 155
5.2 Section summary
This chapter brings us to the end of Section A of the P3 syllabus, 'Strategic position'. In the next chapter,
we will start looking at the 'Strategic choices' available to an organisation. These choices obviously
depend on its current position and the various internal and external factors affecting it, which we have
looked at in Section A. The diagram below summarises these factors which shape strategic position:
Environmental Competitive
factors forces
Stakeholders, Strategic
ethics and position
culture
Internal resources
and capabilities
156 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
Chapter Roundup
Ethics is about right and wrong but it is not the same thing as law or the rules of religion. Cognitive
approaches to ethics assume that objective moral truths can be established.
Consequentialist ethics judges actions by their outcomes; deontology assumes the existence of absolute
moral principles and ignores outcomes. Natural law is about rights and duties, while virtue ethics is based
on moderation in behaviour and the idea of leading a harmonious life.
Ethical theory is not integrated: consequentialist, deontological and natural law based rules are capable of
pointing to different conclusions. Partly as a result of this, ethical dilemmas can exist at all levels in the
organisation.
Corporate ethics has three contexts.
Interaction with national and international society
Effects of routine operations
Behaviour of individuals
If constructed with care, a corporate ethical code can be valuable.
There is a fundamental split of views about the organisation's relationship with its stakeholders and the
nature of corporate responsibility.
The strong view that a range of goals should be pursued
The weak view that the business organisation is a purely economic force, subject to law
Stakeholders have an interest in what the organisation does.
An organisation's stakeholder relationships must be managed in accordance with their bargaining
strength, influence, power and degree of interest. Mendelow summarises the possibilities in his
stakeholder map. Stakeholders have three options: loyalty, exit and voice.
The extent to which an organisation recognises obligations to society in general is as much subject to
debate as its relationships with stakeholder groups.
There is particular concern over externalities, or the social and environmental costs of corporate
activities.
An organisation's ethical stance is the extent to which it will exceed its minimum obligations to
stakeholders. There are four typical stances.
Short-term shareholder interest Multiple stakeholder obligations
Long-term shareholder interest Shaper of society
Corporate governance is the conduct of the organisation's senior officers. Abuses have led to a range of
measures to improve corporate governance. Non-executive directors have a particular role to play.
Where the management of a business is separated from its ownership by the employment of professional
managers, the managers may be considered to be the agents of the owners. Agency theory is concerned
with adverse selection and moral hazard, the problems that arise as a result of the separation of ownership
and control. In many organisations, corporate governance takes the form of a chain of responsibility and
accountability.
There are four models of governance.
1 The Anglo-Saxon model is fast in action but may be short-termist and unresponsive to external
criticism.
2 The Rhine model has more robust governance and takes a long view of investment.
3 The Japanese model values consensus, takes a very long view and makes decisions slowly.
Accountability and governance may be poor.
4 The Latin model emphasises the role of the state: investment is likely to be for the very long term
but governance may suffer from political activity.
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 157
Chapter Roundup (cont'd)
The board must decide the extent of its involvement in the strategic process. If it decides on a stewardship
role, it must ensure that the organisation's activity is not directed to management's own ends, rather than
those of legitimate stakeholders. If it engages in the strategic process, it must act independently of
management and in a competent fashion.
Culture is important, both in organisations and in the wider world. It is the knowledge, beliefs, customs
and attitudes which people adhere to. In wider society, it is affected by factors such as age, class, race and
religion, while in organisations, it is defined by assumptions, beliefs and artefacts. These, in turn, are
influenced by history, management, structure and systems. The organisational iceberg concept shows
how culture relates to other aspects of the organisation. The paradigm is the common, basic assumptions
and beliefs held by an organisation's decision-makers. Combined with the physical manifestations of
culture, it makes up the cultural web.
Integrated reporting is concerned with conveying a wider message on organisational performance. It is
fundamentally concerned with reporting on the value created by the organisation's resources. Resources
are referred to as 'capitals', and value is created or lost through the way in which capitals interact with one
another. The aim of integrated reporting is to encourage a holistic view when assessing organisational
performance.
Quick Quiz
1 What is an organisation's ethical stance?
2 Stakeholders can be classified into three broad groups. What are they?
3 A stakeholder group has high interest in, but low powers over, an organisation's activities. How should the
organisation deal with that stakeholder group?
A Make sure its strategies are acceptable to it
B Make sure it is kept satisfied
C Make sure it is kept informed
D Do nothing
4 What are the six 'capitals' of integrated reporting?
5 What is corporate governance?
6 What is an externality?
7 What are the six physical manifestations of culture that make up the cultural web?
8 In the context of organisational culture what is the paradigm?
158 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
Answers to Quick Quiz
1 The extent to which it will exceed its minimum obligation to shareholders
2 Internal; connected; external stakeholders.
3 C A stakeholder group with high interest but low power does not have much ability to influence
strategy on its own, but it may be able to influence other more powerful stakeholders. It should
therefore be kept informed.
4 Financial, manufactured, intellectual, human, social and relationship, natural
5 The conduct of the organisation's senior officers
6 A social or environmental cost of the organisation's activities not borne by the organisation
7 Stories; symbols; power structures; organisational structures; control systems; rituals and routines
8 The common, basic assumptions and beliefs held by an organisation's decision-makers
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
Part A Strategic position 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting 159
160 5: Stakeholders, ethics, culture and integrated reporting Part A Strategic position
P
A
R
T
Strategic choices
161
162
Strategic choices
Introduction
In this chapter, we will examine the various strategic choices that present
themselves to the organisation. The process of selecting from these choices
should, of course, be illuminated by the analyses of environmental and internal
factors that we have already discussed.
There are two main areas to cover in our examination of strategic choices: these
are, first, the role of the corporate headquarters of an organisation that is made
up of a number of business units; and, second, the strategies available to the
business units themselves in their own separate industries and sectors. The
second area is equally applicable to smaller organisations that are, effectively,
independent businesses operating on their own account and not subject to any
form of hierarchical supervision.
163
Study guide
Intellectual level
B1 The influence of corporate strategy on an organisation
(a) Explore the relationship between a corporate parent and its business units 2
(b) Assess the opportunities and potential problems of pursuing different
corporate strategies of product/market diversification from a national, 3
international and global perspective
(c) Assess the opportunities and potential problems of pursuing a corporate
strategy of international diversity, international scale operations and 3
globalisation
(d) Discuss a range of ways that the corporate parent can create and destroy
2
organisational value
(e) Explain three corporate rationales for adding value portfolio managers, 3
synergy managers and parental developers
(f) Explain and apply the following portfolio models (the BCG growth/share
matrix, public sector matrix, the parenting matrix or Ashridge Portfolio
3
display) to assist corporate parents in managing their business portfolios.
B2 Alternative approaches to achieving competitive advantage
(a) Evaluate, through the strategy clock, generic strategy options available to an
3
organisation
(b) Advise on how price-based strategies, differentiation and lock-in can help an
3
organisation sustain its competitive advantage
(c) Assess opportunities for improving competitiveness through collaboration 3
B3 Alternative directions and methods of development
(a) Determine generic development directions (employing an adapted Ansoff 2
matrix and a TOWS matrix) available to an organisation
(b) Assess how internal development, mergers, acquisitions, strategic alliances,
and franchising can be used as different methods of pursuing a chosen 3
strategic direction
(c) Establish success criteria to assist in the choice of a strategic direction and
2
method (strategic options)
(d) Assess the suitability of different strategic options to an organisation 3
(e) Assess the feasibility of different strategic options to an organisation 3
(f) Establish the acceptability of strategic options to an organisation through
3
analysing risk and return on investment
Exam guide
This is another chapter that is packed with highly examinable material. In particular, it is very common in
business strategy exams to be confronted with a complex scenario and be required to suggest sensible
courses of action, with reasonable justification. It is very important, therefore, to understand the general
circumstances in which a particular strategic option is appropriate. It is not sufficient to be able to
describe the options without understanding when they are to be recommended. A strategy must be
appropriate to its context, and therefore any strategy you recommend in an exam answer must be
appropriate to the scenario described in the question.
The chapter concludes with a discussion of success criteria: these are the criteria against which possible
courses of action are judged and they draw together the threads of choice we emphasise above. Pay
careful attention to the nature of these criteria: they are not as simple as they might seem to be.
1 Corporate strategy
FAST FORWARD
Many large businesses consist of a corporate parent and a number of SBUs. The defining characteristic of
the corporate parent is that it has no direct contact with the buyers or competitors, its role being to
manage the overall scope of the organisation in terms of diversity of products, markets and international
operations.
Many organisations consist, essentially, of a number of strategic business units (SBUs) and a corporate
parent. Each SBU has its own products, with which it serves its own market sector, and its managers are,
to a greater or lesser extent, responsible for its overall success (or failure). In very large organisations,
SBUs may be grouped into divisions, with divisional managers providing an intermediate level of
management between the SBU and the corporate parent.
The defining feature of the corporate parent is that it has no direct contact with buyers and competitors.
Its role is generally to manage the scope of the organisation. There are two main, linked subjects for
decisions about scope.
Diversity of products and markets
International and geographic diversity
The processes involved in making and implementing these decisions are complex and the role of the
corporate parent is of very great importance to the success or failure of the organisation. In our
consideration of the corporate centre we will also, therefore, examine the ways in which it can create or
destroy value.
Exam focus
point Your syllabus is very clear in its separate treatment of the corporate parent and its SBUs, and this is also
apparent in Johnson, Scholes & Whittington's Exploring Corporate Strategy, upon which much of the
syllabus is based. You must therefore understand the differences between these two aspects of strategy
and be able to recognise which is required by question scenarios. The picture will, of course, be
complicated by the examining team possibly by presenting questions about companies that consist of a
single business unit. In this case, the strategic managers will have to develop both corporate and
business-level strategies.
The corporate parent controls the extent of product and market diversification undertaken by the
organisation as a whole. JS&W suggest three reasons why diversification may be advantageous.
(a) Economies of scope (as opposed to economies of scale) may result from the greater use of
under-utilised resources. These benefits are often referred to as synergy and can take several
forms:
(i) Marketing synergy is achieved by extending the use of marketing facilities such as
distribution channels; sales staff and administration; and warehousing. For example, the UK
Automobile Association, which is primarily a provider of breakdown services for motorists,
now offers loans to customers as well as breakdown services.
(ii) Operating synergy arises from the better use of operational facilities and personnel, bulk
purchasing, and a greater spread of fixed costs whereby the firm's competence can be
transferred to making new products. For example, although there is very little in common
between sausages and ice cream, both depend on a competence of refrigeration.
(iii) Investment synergy comes from the wider use of a common investment in non-current
assets, working capital or research, such as the joint use of plant, common raw material
inventory and transfer of research and development from one product to another.
(iv) Management synergy is the advantage to be gained where management skills concerning
current operations are easily transferred to new operations because of the similarity of
problems in the two industries.
(b) Corporate management skills may be extendible across a range of unrelated businesses. In a way
this is also a kind of synergy, in which the corporate parent represents the resource that can be
more intensively utilised. This kind of approach is commonly seen in consumer goods groups that
deploy brand management skills across a diverse range of products and markets. Virgin is a good
example.
(c) Diversification can increase market power via cross-subsidisation. A high margin business can
subsidise a low margin one, enabling it to create a price advantage over its rivals and building
market share. Eventually, it may achieve a dominant position that enables it to increase its prices
and recoup earlier group losses.
JS&W also discuss three questionable reasons that may be advanced to justify a policy of diversification.
(a) Response to environmental change can be justified as a reason to diversify if it is undertaken in
order to protect existing shareholder value by, for example, responding to the emergence of new
and threatening technology developments. However, the environmental change reasoning is
sometimes used as a cover for what is actually a move to protect the interests of top management;
typically, this will lead to ill-considered acquisitions that destroy value.
(b) Risk spreading can be a valid reason for an owner-managed business to diversify, but modern
financial theory suggests that shareholders in large corporations can manage their risk exposure
better themselves by diversifying their own portfolios.
(c) The expectations of powerful stakeholders can lead to inappropriate strategies generally. JS&W
give the example of Enron, whose strategic managers were under pressure from the stock market
to deliver continuing growth in revenues and responded with ill-considered diversification.
The argument of synergy is often used to justify related diversification. However, achieving synergy can
be difficult and requires considerable strategic skill, both to recognise synergistic potential and to achieve
it in practice. Simply undertaking more and more value activities is not necessarily a route to improved
performance: each activity undertaken must be managed in a skilful and appropriate manner. A number
of very large corporations have actually de-merged with success. Also, the management of external
relationships with suppliers, customers and collaborators is emerging as an effective alternative to
expansion.
Horizontal integration makes use of current capabilities by development into activities that are
competitive with, or directly complementary to, a company's present activities. An example would be a
TV company that moved into film production.
Vertical integration occurs when a company expands backwards or forwards within its existing value
network and thus becomes its own supplier or distributor. For example, backward integration would
occur if a milk processing business acquired its own dairy farms, rather than buying raw milk from
independent farmers. If a cloth manufacturer began to produce shirts instead of selling all of its cloth to
other shirt manufacturers, that would be forward integration.
Vertical integration has its greatest potential for success when the final customer's needs are not being
properly satisfied. If there is potential for improving the satisfaction of the end user by improving the
links in the value network, then an integration strategy may succeed. Examples would be where there is a
premium on speed, as in the marketing of fresh foodstuffs, or when complex technical features require
great attention to quality procedures.
(a) Horizontal integration. In August 2014 online retailer, Amazon, paid $970m to buy video-gaming
service Twitch. Formerly known as Twitch.tv, Twitch enables users to watch other people play
video games online. Amazon's acquisition of Twitch was in response to the emergence of
YouTube and Netflix. The purchase of Twitch enabled Amazon to reach committed gamers, and
was seen by many as a natural extension of Amazon's existing offering. Amazon's Prime service
already allows subscribers to stream television shows and movies.
3 International diversification
FAST FORWARD
Despite wide-ranging measures to liberalise trade and the resulting major growth in world trade, there has
been little globalisation of services. Language differences and restrictions on population movement
hamper the growth of international markets for labour, even when it is highly skilled.
3.1 Globalisation
Since 1945, the volume of world trade has increased. There have been several factors at work.
(a) Import substitution. A country aims to produce manufactured goods which it previously imported,
by protecting local producers. This has had limited success.
(b) Export-led growth. The success of this particular strategy has depended on the existence of open
markets elsewhere. Japan, South Korea and the other Asian 'tiger' economies (eg Taiwan) have
chosen this route.
(c) Market convergence. Transnational market segments have developed whose characteristics are
more homogeneous than the different segments within a given geographic market. Youth culture
is an important influence here.
(d) Increase in internet usage. The growth in internet usage has resulted in cheaper, faster and easier
means of global communication. This development has played a significant role in the widespread
use of e-commerce by organisations and individuals in breaking down traditional trading barriers.
This has meant a proliferation of suppliers exporting to, or trading in, a wider variety of places. In many
domestic markets, it is now likely that the same international companies will be competing with one
another. However, the existence of global markets should not be taken for granted in terms of all
products and services, or indeed in all territories.
(a) Some services are still subject to managed trade (for example, some countries prohibit firms from
other countries from selling insurance). Trade in services has been liberalised under the auspices
of the World Trade Organisation.
3.2.1 Ethnocentrism
Key term Ethnocentrism is a home country orientation. The company focuses on its domestic market and sees
exports as secondary to domestic marketing.
This approach simply ignores any inter-country differences which exist. Ethnocentric companies will tend
to market the same products with the same marketing programmes in overseas countries as at home.
Marketing management is centralised in the home country and the marketing mix is standardised. There
is no local market research or adaptation of promotion. As a result, market opportunities may not be fully
exploited and foreign customers may be alienated by the approach.
Home Depot is an American home improvement (DIY) retailer which operates large out-of-town stores
selling power tools and hardware supplies. The growth of the middle class and millions of new
homeowners in China attracted the company to enter the Chinese market in 2006.
However, only six years later the company was closing its remaining stores. Benjamin Carlson of CNBC
(2013) notes that there were several reasons for the failure. 'First was simply the timing: Home Depot
came late to China, after its competitors already had a foothold. By the time it arrived China's growth was
slowing down. Second was the nature of China's housing market. Many people buy homes for investment
and speculation, not to improve. Third was the store format. As Best Buy and other American retailers
have found, Chinese consumers don't like big, boxy warehouses far away from a city centre. Finally, and
most fatally, Home Depot tried to bring American notions of DIY to a market where labour was so cheap
that most people simply hired a handyman'.
Source:
Carlson, B. (2013) 'Why big American businesses fail in China' CNBC, 26 September 2013,
www.cnbc.com
The polycentric company believes that each country is unique. It therefore establishes largely independent
local subsidiaries and decentralises its marketing management. This can produce major increases in
turnover but the loss of economies of scale can seriously damage profitability. Such companies tend to
think of themselves as multinationals. (Later in this chapter, we introduce a slightly different polycentric
company: the transnational.)
Geocentrism and regiocentrism differ only in geographical terms: the first deals with the world as a unity,
while the second considers that there are differences between regions. Bearing this in mind, we will speak
in terms of geocentrism only, for simplicity.
Geocentrism treats the issues of standardisation and adaptation on their merits so as to formulate
objectives and strategies that exploit markets fully while minimising company costs. The aim is to create a
global strategy that is fully responsive to local market differences. This has been summed up as: 'think
globally, act locally'.
Geocentric companies use an integrated approach to marketing management. Each country's conditions
are given due consideration, but no one country dominates. A great deal of experience and commitment
are required to make this approach work. A strong, globally recognised brand is a major aspect of the
marketing approach. Geocentrically oriented companies both promote and benefit from market
convergence.
Bartlett and Ghoshal find that the pressures driving globalisation exist independently of the need for local
responsiveness; and that both vary from industry to industry. The relationship between these pressures
influences both the management orientation and the structure of the company that operates
internationally.
(a) The global company, if active in more than one industry, is likely to be organised into product
divisions with global scope. Efficiency is likely to be a key strategic competency.
(b) Companies operating in industries that require little local differentiation and at the same time are
not subject to pressure for globalisation will tend to be structured with an international or export
division.
(c) The multinational environment drives a polycentric orientation, with largely autonomous local
operating companies. Responsiveness to local demand is likely to be a key strategic competency.
(d) The transnational environment is particularly difficult to respond to. Global scale is desirable but
local conditions require differentiated approaches. The structural response may be the global
heterarchy. Each regional or national unit achieves global scale and influence within the overall
organisation by exploiting its specialised competences on behalf of the whole company. Some
headquarters functions, such as R&D may be diffused across the organisation. The role of the
global strategic apex is to promote a corporate culture and shared values that will promote co-
operation and co-ordination. JS&W call this type of company a transnational: we will discuss it in
more detail later in this Study Text.
High
Medium Low
Low
Competitive
Risk
advantage
High
Medium High
Low
Source: Kotler
(a) Market attractiveness. This concerns such indicators as GNP/head and forecast demand, and
market accessibility.
If an organisation has decided to enter an overseas market, the way it does so is of crucial strategic
importance. Broadly, three ways of entering foreign markets can be identified: indirect exports, direct
exports and overseas manufacture.
Consideration Comment
The firm's These relate to volume, time scale and coverage of market segments. Thus setting
marketing up an overseas production facility would be inappropriate if sales are expected to
objectives be low in volume.
The firm's size A small firm is less likely than a large one to possess sufficient resources to set up
and run a production facility overseas.
Mode availability Some countries only allow a restricted level of imports, but will welcome a firm if it
builds manufacturing facilities which provide jobs and limit the outflow of foreign
exchange.
Mode quality All modes may be possible in theory, but some are of questionable quality or
practicality. The lack of suitably qualified distributors or agents would preclude the
export, direct or indirect, of high technology goods needing installation,
maintenance and servicing by personnel with specialist technical skills.
Human resources When a firm is unable to recruit suitable staff, either at home or overseas, indirect
requirements exporting or the use of agents based overseas may be the only realistic option.
Market feedback In some cases, a firm can receive feedback information about the market and its
information marketing effort from its sales staff or distribution channels. In these
circumstances, direct export or joint ventures may be preferred to indirect export.
Learning curve Firms which intend a heavy future involvement in an overseas market might need
requirements to gain the experience that close involvement in an overseas market can bring. This
argues against the use of indirect exporting as the mode of entry.
Risks Firms might prefer the indirect export mode as assets are safer from expropriation.
Control needs Production overseas by a wholly owned subsidiary gives a firm absolute control
while indirect exporting offers only limited control over the marketing mix to the
exporter.
3.8 Exporting
Goods are made at home but sold abroad. It is the easiest, cheapest and most commonly used route into
a new foreign market.
Earlier in this chapter, we mentioned Porter's views on conglomerate diversification and its potential to
destroy value.
We have said that the defining feature of the corporate parent is that it has no direct contact with buyers
and competitors. How then, does it create value?
Exam focus In the December 2010 exam, 10 marks were available for explaining the three strategic rationales and for
point assessing their relevance to the company in the scenario. Despite these being relatively theoretical marks,
the examining team commented on the poor standard of answers given by candidates, with many scoring
three or less of the ten possible marks. This appeared to be due to a lack of knowledge in this area of the
syllabus.
In 2015, website consultancy.uk highlighted the findings of a report 'Corporate Headquarters 2014: From
headquarters to ahead-quarters' published by Roland Berger, the strategic consulting firm. The report
concluded that 'corporate headquarters (CHQ) are shrinking in size and underperforming relative to
expectation'. Roland Berger surveyed 130 companies, who were required to rank and describe the value
and worth generated by their corporate headquarters. The firm identified six value-added capabilities that
corporate headquarters need to possess to support six underlying fundamental functions that corporate
headquarters perform.
The report suggests that the six fundamental functions consist of providing purpose and identity,
managing the portfolio, exploiting synergies, to provide finance, ensure corporate governance, and to
report on corporate activities, Value-added capabilities were identified as consisting of providing strategic
direction, managing complexity, supporting global collaboration, strengthening innovation, ensuring
execution, and providing talent.
As consultancy.uk highlights, in recent years the role that corporate headquarters play has garnered an
increasingly poor reputation. Many firms' headquarters are being 'called upon to justify their existence to
the operating entities, and demonstrate how their functions contribute to the company's overall
performance, while minimising the resources they deploy. As a result, cost-cutting exercises, such as
decentralisation and outsourcing, have in the last few years cut into the number of personnel, with only
3.4% of personnel working at corporate head-quarters'.
The report highlights that those companies which performed the six fundamental functions well were
generally better at adding value to their performance. As consultancy.uk note 'However, once the
fundamentals are in place, more importance needs to be placed by the corporate headquarter itself into
adding value to the business.' The report notes that the categories of innovation, managing complexity
and providing talent are overlooked even by businesses that are performing well, even though these areas
are also key drivers for the future success of the business.
Source:
'Corporate headquarters should prove their added value', (2015), published by consultancy.uk:
www.consultancy.uk/news
A corporate parent of any type will have to make decisions about acquiring, nurturing and disposing of
subsidiaries.
Four major strategies can be pursued with respect to products, market segments and, indeed, SBUs:
(a) Build. A build strategy forgoes short-term earnings and profits in order to increase market share.
(b) Hold. A hold strategy seeks to maintain the current position.
(c) Harvest. A harvesting strategy seeks short-term earning and profits at the expense of long-term
development.
(d) Divest. Divestment reduces negative cash flow and releases resources for use elsewhere.
A number of strategic tools have been developed to assist the decision process. These tools help the
corporate parent to manage its portfolio of SBUs against three criteria:
(a) Balance in relation to markets and corporate needs
(b) Attractiveness in terms of profitability and growth
(c) Strategic fit, in terms of potential synergy and parenting capability
The balance and attractiveness criteria are addressed by a range of matrix-based tools; strategic fit is the
subject of a single model, the Ashridge portfolio display.
The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) developed a matrix based on empirical research that assesses
businesses in terms of potential cash generation and cash expenditure requirements. SBUs are
categorised in terms of market growth rate and relative market share.
Key term Market share: One entity's sale of a product or service in a specified market expressed as a percentage of
total sales by all entities offering that product or service.'
(a) Assessing rate of market growth as high or low depends on the conditions in the market. No
single percentage rate can be set, since new markets may grow explosively while mature ones
grow hardly at all. High market growth rate can indicate good opportunities for profitable
operations. However, intense competition in a high growth market can erode profit, while a slowly
growing market with high barriers to entry can be very profitable.
(b) Relative market share is assessed as a ratio: it is market share compared with the market share of
the largest competitor. Thus, a relative market share greater than unity indicates that the SBU is
Montanari and Bracker proposed a matrix for the analysis of services provided by public sector bodies.
This might be applied at the level of local or national government, or an executive agency with a portfolio
of services. The axes are an assessment of service efficiency and public attractiveness: naturally, political
support for a service or organisation depends to a great extent on the degree to which the public need and
appreciate it.
Ability to serve effectively
High Low
High
Public or
political need
(and therefore
support for
expense)
Low
Feel
(fit between SBU
CSFs and parental skills etc)
Alien
Low
businesses
Competitive advantage is anything which gives one organisation an edge over its rivals. Porter argues that
a firm should adopt a competitive strategy intended to achieve competitive advantage for the firm.
Competitive strategy means 'taking offensive or defensive actions to create a dependable position in an
industry, to cope successfully with ... competitive forces and thereby yield a superior return on investment
for the firm. Firms have discovered many different approaches to this end, and the best strategy for a
given firm is ultimately a unique construction reflecting its particular circumstances'. (Porter)
Key terms Cost leadership means being the lowest cost producer in the industry as a whole.
Differentiation is the exploitation of a product or service which the industry as a whole believes to be
unique.
Focus involves a restriction of activities to only part of the market (a segment).
Providing goods and/or services at lower cost (cost-focus)
Providing a differentiated product or service (differentiation-focus)
Exam focus Porter's generic strategy model is one of a handful of truly vital theories that you absolutely must master
point for your exam. Study this section with great care and understand the implications of each strategy for the
companies that might adopt them. Understanding this area of theory will not only equip you to make
sensible suggestions in your answers to many questions, it will also enable you to appreciate important
background detail in a wide range of question scenarios.
6.1.2 Differentiation
A differentiation strategy assumes that competitive advantage can be gained through particular
characteristics of a firm's products. Products may be divided into three categories.
(a) Breakthrough products offer a radical performance advantage over competition, perhaps at a
drastically lower price (eg float glass, developed by Pilkington).
(b) Improved products are not radically different from their competition but are obviously superior in
terms of better performance at a competitive price (eg microchips).
(c) Competitive products derive their appeal from a particular compromise of cost and performance.
For example, cars are not all sold at rock-bottom prices, nor do they all provide immaculate
comfort and performance. They compete with each other by trying to offer a more attractive
compromise than rival models.
How to differentiate
(a) Build up a brand image (eg Pepsi's blue cans are supposed to offer different 'psychic benefits' to
Coke's red ones).
(b) Give the product special features to make it stand out (eg Russell Hobbs' Millennium kettle
incorporated a new kind of element, which boils water faster).
(c) Exploit other activities of the value chain (for example, quality of after-sales service or speed of
delivery).
Internet dating has grown hugely in popularity over the past decade and more recently, very specialised
online dating services have begun to appear.
Uniformdating.com is one such specialised dating service which was launched to provide a dating
platform specifically for individuals working in the uniformed services, including the police officers,
firemen and women, soldiers, RAF personnel, pilots, doctors and nurses.
Uniformed personnel typically face a number of restrictions as part of their working lives, including
working difficult shift patterns, working away or being on tour. These unique circumstances can place a
significant strain on these people and the relationships they attempt to maintain. Uniformdating.com
(a) A cost focus strategy: aim to be a cost leader for a particular segment. This type of strategy is
often found in the printing, clothes manufacture and car repair industries.
(b) A differentiation focus strategy: pursue differentiation for a chosen segment. Luxury goods
suppliers are the prime exponents of such a strategy.
Ben and Jerry's ice cream is a good example of a product offering based on differentiation focus.
Porter suggests that a focus strategy can achieve competitive advantage when 'broad-scope' businesses
fall into one of two errors.
(a) Underperformance occurs when a product does not fully meet the needs of a segment and offers
the opportunity for a differentiation focus player.
(b) Overperformance gives a segment more than it really wants and provides an opportunity for a
cost focus player.
Advantages
(a) A niche is more secure and a firm can insulate itself from competition.
(b) The firm does not spread itself too thinly.
(c) Both cost leadership and differentiation require superior performance life is easier in a niche,
where there may be little or no competition.
Drawbacks of a focus strategy
(a) The firm sacrifices economies of scale which would be gained by serving a wider market.
(b) Competitors can move into the segment, with increased resources (eg the Japanese moved into
the US luxury car market, to compete with Mercedes and BMW).
(c) The segment's needs may eventually become less distinct from the main market.
The troubles at UK retailer Tesco have been well documented in recent times. The retailer had prided itself
for many years on its ability to offer different ranges of Tesco branded groceries to different buyer groups.
Perhaps the two most notable Tesco brands are the company's Finest and Everyday Value ranges, both of
which are designed to meet the needs of customers with different shopping budgets. The Tesco Finest
range offers customers differentiated products and is designed to compete with food retailers such as
Waitrose who sell higher quality, higher priced items.
By contrast the Everyday Value range is designed to appeal to price conscious shoppers, who tend be
interested in basic products due to having a smaller budget. Competitors at this end of the market include
discount retailers. It could be argued that Tesco's approach goes against the logic of Michael Porter who
famously argued that firms should ideally only pursue one generic strategy if they wanted to ensure
success. Porter suggests that a failure to do this increases the risk of becoming 'stuck in the middle'.
An article by Jennifer Rankin in The Guardian 'What's gone wrong with Tesco', suggests that Tesco's
problems are due in no small part to better positioning by competitors. Andrew Stevens, a retail analyst
with Verdict suggests that Tesco is 'stuck in the middle', he argues 'the problem is that it [Tesco] is trying
to be everything for everyone. But there is someone in each tier who is doing it better'. (The Guardian,
2013).
As Andrew Stevens notes being 'a jack of all trades and a master of none' can be particularly
troublesome.
Source:
Rankin, J. (2013) 'What's gone wrong with Tesco', The Guardian, (4 December 2013), theguardian.com
The managing director of Hermes Telecommunications plc is interested in corporate strategy. Hermes has
invested a great deal of money in establishing a network which competes with that of Telecom UK, a
recently privatised utility. Initially Hermes concentrated its efforts on business customers in the South
East of England, especially the City of London, where it offered a lower cost service to that supplied by
Telecom UK. Recently, Hermes has approached the residential market (ie domestic telephone users)
offering a lower cost service on long-distance calls. Technological developments have resulted in the
possibility of a cheap mobile telecommunication network, using microwave radio links. The franchise for
this service has been awarded to Gerbil phone, which is installing transmitters in town centres and at rail
stations.
What issues of competitive strategy have been raised in the above scenario, particularly in relation to
Hermes Telecommunications plc?
Answer
(a) Arguably, Hermes initially pursued a cost-focus strategy, by targeting the business segment.
(b) It seems to be moving into a cost leadership strategy over the whole market although its
competitive offer, in terms of lower costs for local calls, is incomplete.
(c) The barriers to entry to the market have been lowered by the new technology. Gerbil phone might
pick up a significant amount of business.
Porter's basic concept of generic strategies has been the subject of further discussion. JS&W, quoting
Bowman, describe the strategic options using the strategy clock.
The eight strategies shown on the clock represent different approaches to creating value for the customer
and each customer will buy from the provider whose offering most closely matches their own view of the
proper relationship between price and perceived benefits.
Each position on the clock has its own critical success factor, since each strategy is defined in market
terms. Positions 1 and 2 will attract customers who are price conscious above all, with position 2 giving a
little more emphasis to serviceability. These are typical approaches in commodity markets. By contrast,
strategies 4 and 5 are relevant to consumers who require a customised product.
1 7 Strategies
destined
No frills
for ultimate
Low 8
failure
Leading luxury car manufacturers are increasing the amount of technology used in their vehicles in order
to differentiate them from competitors. Shwetha Surender, Automotive and Transportation Research
Analyst with Frost & Sullivan notes 'while brand perception, price and buyer's experience remain
important; cutting edge technology under the hood, improved connectivity inside the car, and bold
aerodynamic design are factors that give a luxury car something extra that elevates and sets it apart from
the crowd'.
In an attempt to differentiate their offering from competitors car makers are focusing on enhancing the
customers' driving experience. Features such as 'display graphics and collision-avoidance systems' are
now being fitted as standard in luxury models. An article by Joe McCarthy, of marketing website Luxury
Daily, highlights that luxury car makers are now attempting to make the interfaces of in-car technology
compatible with those used on Apple devices. 'Italy's Ferrari and Germany's Mercedes-Benz are early
adopters of Apple's new CarPlay infotainment system that syncs up dashboard and wheel controls to the
consumer's Apple device. Until other automakers incorporate this system, Apple's technology is going to
give these two brands an advantage in the luxury market due to the proliferation of iPhone owners'.
Sources:
Frost & Sullivan (2014) 'Brand Differentiation to Revolutionise Global Luxury Car Market by 2020'
www.frost.com
McCarthy, J. (2014) 'Big data, smart mobility most radical trends in auto', Luxury Daily:
www.luxurydaily.com
Exam focus The December 2007 exam included a question which asked why it would be inappropriate for a company
point pursuing a differentiation strategy to move to a no-frills position. Make sure you are aware of the unique
characteristics of each type of strategy so that you can identify where they might be suitable (or
unsuitable).
TOWS matrix
SO This is a strong position. A company might look to use this strength to expand globally or develop
new products, building on its existing reputation.
ST This is a less strong position than 'SO' but an 'ST' company still has strengths it can draw on.
Consider this example: A clothing manufacturing company with an established reputation for good
quality products is now facing competition from cheap overseas competitors. The clothing
company should adopt a differentiation strategy to use its reputation and brand to try to reduce the
competitive threat. However, this strategy may not be successful if the cheap, imported clothes are
also good quality, in which case the established company will need to consider moving its
manufacturing plant abroad to a low cost location, and compete using a low price strategy.
WO A company has identified opportunities in the external environment, but internal organisational
weaknesses (for example, inadequate manufacturing capacity, or poor distribution or marketing
networks) prevent it from taking advantage of them. In this case, the company either needs to re-
engineer its processes, or collaborate with a company which has the resources it needs. If the
'WO' company has sufficient funds, it may consider acquiring a company with the resources it
needs (although it is unlikely that a 'WO' company will have sufficient funds to be able to do this).
WT A company faced with internal weaknesses and external threats may be in a precarious position
and be forced into defensive strategies, for example, restructuring, or downsizing. Alternatively, it
may look for a merger with another company, or, in the worst case scenario, it will have to go into
liquidation.
An organisation in such a defensive position can only ever use strategy to protect itself. It cannot
create success because it has neither the internal strengths nor the external opportunities needed
to do so.
Successful companies, even if they temporarily use SO, WO and WT strategies, will attempt to get into a
situation where they can work from strengths to take advantage of opportunities (SO strategy). They will
When we discussed competition in Chapter 3, we said that the business environment might be sufficiently
stable to permit a build-up of sustainable competitive advantage. Alternatively, there might be
hypercompetition and a need for rapid innovation and response to competitive moves. In Chapter 4, we
went on to consider the strategic capabilities needed under these varying conditions. We will now
consider the ways in which businesses can form strategies to respond to these two different conditions.
7.3 Lock-in
Lock-in is achieved in a market when a company's product becomes the industry standard. Direct
competitors are reduced to minor niches and compatibility with the industry standard becomes a
prerequisite for complementary products. Microsoft has achieved this position in the market for PC
operating systems and is only challenged by Linux because the latter product is free to use. Sony
regularly attempts to establish industry standards in order to achieve market dominance, with varying
degrees of success. The original Walkman became the industry standard, but the Betamax video
recording standard lost to VHS. The concept of lock-in is equally applicable to companies following
strategies of cost leadership or differentiation.
Factors affecting lock-in
(a) Perception of dominance: potential competitors and suppliers of complementary products will
only conform to an attempt to set standards if they perceive the standard-setter as dominant in the
market, usually in terms of market share.
Organisations do not only compete. Collaboration between buyers and sellers and between potential
competitors can reduce costs below those of operating independently.
(a) Buyers and sellers may collaborate to ensure high quality, share the cost of research or reduce
inventory levels, for example. Where high quality is of great importance, becoming an accredited
supplier can be difficult, but will enhance selling power.
(b) Collaboration between members of a fragmented market increases buying power, as when small
retailers co-operate to buy in large quantities.
(c) Collaboration between suppliers in an industry over such matters as marketing and research and
development can help to build barriers to entry and against substitutes.
(d) On the other hand, collaboration may be the best way to obtain entry to some foreign markets;
aspiring entrants can obtain local knowledge and access to the local infrastructure. Indeed, some
governments require entrants to take a local partner.
(e) Suppliers may collaborate with consumers for a variety of reasons: examples include self-
assembly of furniture and self-assessment of tax liability. Such co-production can help to hold
down costs and increase a sense of ownership.
(f) Knowledge sharing may be required in the public sector, as a form of best practice. Also,
collaboration may be required to improve standards, secure best value from spending or solve
problems that cut across agency boundaries.
The value chain model can be used to analyse a business's operations in order to establish where it
achieves competitive advantage through the creation of value. It can also show where there is potential
for improved value addition (especially in relationship to competitors) and where activities are being
performed that do not add value; the aim here should be to eliminate such activities, or at least to
reconfigure them so that they do contribute some value. However, using the value chain in this way, as
with using any strategic management tool, requires careful thought and sound judgement. This may well
involve the use of other strategic concepts, such as differentiation, competences and critical success
factors, focussing the strategist's attention on areas where they might be applied.
Key term Product-market mix is a short hand term for the products and services a firm sells (or a service which a
public sector organisation provides) and the markets it sells them to.
Market Product
Present
penetration development
Market
Market
New Diversification
development
Product-Market areas:
Related Unrelated
(vertical or horizontal (conglomerate
integration) diversification)
Note the resemblance between the basic Ansoff Matrix and the new product strategy matrix presented in
Chapter 4 earlier in this Study Text.
9.2.2 Consolidation
To consolidate is to seek to maintain current market share. This may be an appropriate strategy when
the firm is already the market leader; if availability of funds is limited; or when an owner-manager is
approaching retirement or wishes to avoid the loss of personal control that is a likely consequence of
growth. Also, if it seems that profitability does not correlate with market share, consolidation may be a
sensible option.
(a) Consolidation does not mean neglect. It is unlikely that competitors will halt their efforts, so the
firm must continue to enhance its market offer in order to maintain its relative position.
(b) PIMS data indicates that high product quality is important if a consolidation strategy is to
succeed. It can compensate to some extent for both a low market share and a low level of
marketing expenditure.
A large organisation in road transport operates nationwide in general haulage. This field has become very
competitive and with the recent down-turn in trade, has become only marginally profitable. It has been
suggested that the strategic structure of the company should be widened to include other aspects of
physical distribution so that the maximum synergy would be obtained from that type of diversification.
Suggest two activities which might fit into the suggested new strategic structure, explaining each one
briefly. Explain how each of these activities could be incorporated into the existing structure. State the
advantages and disadvantages of such diversification.
Answer
The first step in a suggested solution is to think of how a company operating nationwide in general road
haulage might diversify, with some synergistic benefits. Perhaps you thought of the following.
(a) To move from nationwide to international haulage, the company might be able to use its existing
contacts with customers to develop an international trade. Existing administration and depot facilities in
the UK could be used. Drivers should be available who are willing to work abroad, and the scope for
making reasonable profits should exist. However, international road haulage might involve the company
in the purchase of new vehicles (eg road haulage in Europe often involves the carriage of containerised
products on large purpose-built vehicles). Since international haulage takes longer, vehicles will be tied
up in jobs for several days, and a substantial investment might be required to develop the business. In
addition, in the event of breakdowns, a network of overseas garage service arrangements will have to be
created. It might take some time before business builds up sufficiently to become profitable.
(b) Moving from general haulage to speciality types of haulage, perhaps haulage of large items of
plant and machinery, or computer equipment. The same broad considerations apply to speciality
types of haulage. Existing depot facilities could be used and existing customer contacts might be
developed. However, expertise in specialist work will have to be 'brought in' as well as developed
within the company and special vehicles might need to be bought. Business might take some time
to build up and if the initial investment is high, there could be substantial early losses.
In September 2015 it was reported that UK retailer Tesco had sold its Homeplus business in South Korea
to Seoul-based private equity firm MBK Partners Ltd. The South Korea Herald reported that MBK Partners
Ltd had agreed to pay 7.2 trillion won (4.2bn) to acquire Homeplus making it 'the nation's largest
takeover deal'. Reporting the news The South Korea Herald highlighted the comments of Kim Kwang-il of
MBK Partners who said 'Homeplus is South Korea's leading retailer, which is profitable and has a bright
business outlook'.
Tesco's withdrawal from the South Korean market comes 16 years after it first arrived. The debt-burdened
retailer's problems in the UK have forced the company to refocus its efforts on its home market. 'Tesco
joins global retail giants, including Walmart of the US and France's Carrefour, to retreat from the Korean
market in the face of tougher competition with local chains backed by the nation's powerful
conglomerates, pulling back from formerly ambitious global expansion efforts.' (The South Korea Herald,
2015).
Source:
'MBK Partners buys Tesco's Korean unit for 7.2 tln won', (2015), published by The South Korea Herald:
www.koreaherald.com
Demerger can realise underlying asset values in terms of share valuation. ICI's demerger of its attractive
pharmaceuticals business led to the shares in the two demerged companies trading at a higher combined
valuation than those of the original single form.
Privatisation has been pursued by governments all over the world to raise funds and transform culture
and performance.
Exam focus
The compulsory question in the December 2013 exam paper required students to explain and evaluate
point
three methods of pursuing growth (internal growth, acquisition and strategic alliance) in relation to the
organisation described in the case study scenario.
In September 2015, Aggreko the Glasgow-based temporary power generation company acquired the ICS
Group, a Canadian mobile temperature control business. Aggreko had reportedly agreed to pay 18m to
acquire ICS, in a move designed to help establish the company in North American heater market. A press
release on Aggreko's website stated that 'the acquisition will not only establish Aggreko in the North
American heater market, it will also provide the company with geographic footprint in cities such as
Calgary and Winnipeg where it does not currently operate'.
Speaking of the deal Bruce Pool, Aggreko's North America Managing Director said 'this acquisition
combines the strengths of two market leaders to give our customers an unparalleled range of equipment
and services options'. Aggreko's website highlighted that the acquisition 'will add more than 60
experienced and skilled employees and more than 2,100 fleet assets.'
Source:
'Aggreko acquires ICS Group', (2015), published by Aggreko: us.aggreko.com/news-events
In 2015 The Financial Times reported that General Motors had entered into a joint venture with China's
SAIC Motor and Wulling Motor to establish a new car production plant in Indonesia.
SAIC-GM-Wuling, a joint venture between GM, Shanghai-based SAIC Motor and Wuling Motor, confirmed
that it would begin building a new factory in 2015 to manufacture Wuling brand vehicles for Indonesia
and other Southeast Asian markets, challenging Japanese carmakers' grip on the region.
Indonesia's minister for industry said that Wuling would invest $700m in an assembly plant with an initial
annual production capacity of 150,000 vehicles. According to the state Antara news agency, production is
expected to begin in 2017. Wuling declined to confirm the value or scale of the investment, saying only
that the facility's 'vehicles will be sold primarily in Indonesia, with the potential to export to other
[Southeast Asian] markets'.
With growth slowing in China's car market, the world's largest with more than 19m passenger vehicles
sold last year, Chinese automakers are eyeing export opportunities and beachheads for overseas
manufacturing facilities. After state-owned Dongfeng Motor paid 800m for a 14% stake in France's
Peugeot last year, the two companies said their strategic partnership would focus on Southeast Asian
markets.
Chinese carmakers led by private sector groups such as Geely and Great Wall have traditionally targeted
export and assembly operations in developing markets, such as Russia, Ukraine, Iran and Chile.
The more recent push by large state-owned groups such as SAIC Motor and Dongfeng represents a new
stage in the evolution of China's auto industry. Indonesia is Asia's third-largest country with a population
of 240m. GM and SAIC Motor's Wuling joint venture already sell minivans in India.
By investing in Indonesia in co-operation with SAIC and Wuling Motor, GM will have a lighter capital
expenditure burden as it attempts to gain a foothold in a market dominated by Japanese automakers,
which account for more than nine out of every 10 vehicles sold. But as multinational carmakers such as
GM and Peugeot begin to target developing markets via their China joint ventures, they will have to guard
against competition with their own brand cars. GM already sells Chevy vehicles in Southeast Asia's
largest market.
Wuling, based in the southwestern province of Guangxi, is GM's largest China joint venture. It was the
first vehicle manufacturer in China to sell 1m vehicles a year in 2009 and in 2014 increased sales 13%
to almost 1.8m units. GM's overall China sales reached 3.5m units last year. In addition to Wuling's
ubiquitous minivans, the joint venture manufactures the popular Baojun sedan.
Separately, GM and SAIC operate another 50-50 joint venture based in Shanghai.
Source:
Mitchell T. (2015) 'GM's China joint venture to build Indonesia factory' The Financial Times, 2 February
www.ft.com
Franchising is a method of expanding the business on less capital than would otherwise be possible,
because franchisees not only pay a capital lump sum to the franchiser to enter the franchise but they also
bear some of the running costs of the new outlets. For suitable businesses, it is an alternative business
strategy to raising extra capital for growth. Probably the most well-known franchisers are McDonalds,
but other franchisers include Budget Rent-a-car, Dyno-rod, Express Dairy, Holiday Inn, Kall-Kwik Printing,
Kentucky Fried Chicken, Sketchley Cleaners and Body Shop.
The franchiser and franchisee each provide different inputs to the business.
Some firms enter long-term strategic alliances with others for a variety of reasons.
(a) They share development costs of a particular technology.
(b) The regulatory environment prohibits take-overs (eg most major airlines are in strategic alliances
because in most countries including the US there are limits to the level of control an 'outsider'
can have over an airline).
(c) Complementary markets or technology.
(d) Learning. Alliances can also be a 'learning' exercise in which each partner tries to learn as much
as possible from the other.
(e) Technology. New technology offers many uncertainties and many opportunities. Such alliances
provide funds for expensive research projects, spreading risk.
(f) The alliance itself can generate innovations.
(g) The alliance can involve 'testing' the firm's core competence in different conditions, which can
suggest ways to improve it.
(h) Regulation may prevent take over.
Strategic alliances only go so far, as there may be disputes over control of strategic assets.
So far in this chapter, we have considered the broader aspects of strategy as they affect the overall stance
of the organisation. In this section, we will examine some of the options that apply most appropriately to
the strategic management of individual products or brands. An appreciation of scale is important when
considering strategy. The strategies we discuss below may be regarded as detailed strategy for a major
global organisation. On the other hand, they may constitute the essence of corporate strategy for a
smaller company.
Most of the material in this section is based on Strategic Marketing Management by Wilson, Gilligan and
Pearson.
FAST FORWARD Strategies are evaluated according to their suitability to the firm's strategic situation, their feasibility in
terms of resources and competences and their acceptability to key stakeholders groups (eg
shareholders).
Organisations must select strategies to pursue in a rational way. JS&W suggest three success criteria to
guide strategy choice:
Suitability
Feasibility
Acceptability
12.1 Suitability
Suitability relates to the strategic logic of the strategy. The strategy should fit the organisation's current
strategic position and should satisfy a range of requirements:
Exploit strengths: that is, unique resources and core competences
Rectify an organisation's weaknesses, or deal with problems identified in it
Neutralise or deflect environmental threats
Help the firm to seize opportunities
Satisfy the goals of organisation
Fill the gap identified by gap analysis
Generate/maintain competitive advantage
Involve an acceptable level of risk
Suit the politics and corporate culture
A number of techniques can be used to assess suitability. These are discussed below.
The product life cycle concept may be used to assess potential strategies.
The industry life cycle may be combined with an appraisal of the company's strength in its markets using
a life cycle/portfolio matrix. This was originally designed by consultants Arthur D Little.
12.1.4 Consistency
Strategies must be internally consistent: generic strategy, market options choice and method of
development must all work together satisfactorily. For example, a strategy of cost leadership would not be
supported by a decision to acquire a chain of luxury distributors.
12.2 Feasibility
Feasibility asks whether the strategy can be implemented and, in particular, if the organisation has
adequate strategic capability. The Ms model we looked at earlier in this Study Text can provide a
framework to use here.
Machinery Has the organisation got the machinery required to deliver this strategy? Can any
new machinery be obtained?
Make-up Is the organisational structure appropriate to the strategy?
Management Does the management team have the skills required to deliver the strategy?
Markets Does the organisation have strong enough products or a strong enough brand for
the strategy to work?
Materials Does the organisation have access to the materials required to deliver the strategy?
Men and women Will the strategy require extra staff? Will the strategy require staff to acquire new
skills? If so, how long will this take?
Methods Can the strategy be implemented, given the organisation's current production
methods (either in-house or outsourced)?
Money Can the organisation raise any finances that may be required? Will it be able to keep
up with repayments if loan funding is required?
In addition, the organisation also needs to assess whether it has the ability to deal with the likely
responses that competitors will make, and enough time to implement the strategy.
Strategies which do not make use of the existing competences and which therefore call for new
competences to be acquired, might not be feasible, since gaining competences takes time and can be
costly.
Two important financial approaches to assessing the feasibility of particular strategies are funds flow
analysis and breakeven analysis. The principles of both should be familiar to you from your earlier
studies in financial and management accounting.
12.3 Acceptability
The acceptability of a strategy depends on expected performance outcomes and the extent to which
these are acceptable to stakeholders.
(a) Financial considerations. Strategies will be evaluated by considering how far they contribute to
meeting the dominant objective of increasing shareholder wealth.
We will look at financial management decisions in more detail later in this Study Text, but there are
a number of the financial indicators which should be considered to assess the acceptability of a
strategy.
(i) Return on investment (v) Cash flow
(ii) Profits (vi) Price/Earnings
(iii) Growth (vii) Market capitalisation
(iv) EPS (viii) Cost-benefit analysis
Profitability analysis techniques include forecast ROCE, payback period and NPV, all of which
you should be familiar with. These methods should not be overemphasised.
(i) They are developed for assessing projects where cash flows are predictable. This is unlikely
to be easy with wider strategies.
(ii) There may be intangible costs and benefits associated with a strategy, such as an
enhanced product range or image or a loss of market share. Cost-benefit analysis is
probably more appropriate for dealing with such development. See below.
Shareholder value analysis has the potential to provide a more realistic assessment of overall
strategy than traditional financial measures such as NPV and forecast ROCE. This is because its
emphasis on value management and understanding the organisation's system of value drivers
requires managers to take an integrated view of current and potential future strategies and their
overall effects.
(b) Customers may object to a strategy if it means reducing service, but on the other hand, they may
have no choice.
(c) Banks are interested in the implications for cash resources, debt levels and so on.
(d) Government. A strategy involving a takeover may be prohibited under competition legislation.
(e) The public. The environmental impact may cause key stakeholders to protest. For example, out of
town superstores are now frowned upon by national and local government in the UK.
(f) Risk. Different shareholders have different attitudes to risk. A strategy which changes the
risk/return profile, for whatever reason, may not be acceptable. Financial ratio projections and
sensitivity analysis may be useful in the assessment of risk.
Cost-benefit analysis may be an appropriate approach to acceptability where intangible effects are
important, which is particularly the case in the public sector. This type of analysis attempts to put a
monetary value on intangibles such as safety and amenity so that the impact of a strategy on all parties
may be assessed.
Quick Quiz
1 What is related diversification?
2 What are JS&W's three strategic rationales for corporate parents?
3 What are the axes of the BCG matrix?
4 What are the axes of the Ashridge portfolio display?
5 What are Porter's three generic strategies?
6 What are the axes against which the strategy clock is constructed?
7 What is lock-in?
8 What are the four product-market options which are illustrated in Ansoff's matrix?
9 List three advantages of franchising.
10 What criteria are used to assess strategies?
Now try the questions below from the Practice Question Bank
221
222
Organising for
success
Introduction
The static pyramidal hierarchy has formed the basis of ideas about
organisational structure for many years. This structural form has the advantage
of being easily understood and of providing clear lines of responsibility and
communication. However, the challenges of the modern business environment
have led not only to new structural designs, but also to a complete re-
evaluation of basic assumptions about organisation structure.
223
Study guide
Intellectual level
C1 Organising and enabling success
(a) Advise on how the organisation can be structured to deliver a selected
3
strategy
(b) Explore generic processes that take place within the structure, with
3
particular emphasis on the planning process
(c) Discuss how internal relationships can be organised to deliver a selected
2
strategy
(d) Discuss how organisational structure and external relationships (boundary-
less organisations; hollow modular and virtual) and strategic alliances (joint 2
ventures, networks, franchising, licensing) and the supporting concepts of
outsourcing, offshoring and shared services, can be used to deliver a
selected strategy
(f) Explore (through Mintzberg's organisational configurations) the design of
3
structure, processes and relationships
Exam guide
Questions on structure were fairly uncommon under the old syllabus. However, JS&W's fresh approach,
emphasising processes and relationships casts a new light on this rather specialised topic and brings it
into the mainstream of strategic thinking. You cannot afford to neglect this chapter. We can expect
questions that demand input on structure, ranging from passing comment all the way up to detailed
proposals for change and development.
The structure of the organisation will be important in the context of scenario-based questions, and
ensuring harmony between structure, process and relationships will be important throughout.
Models
Mintzberg's organisational configurations (Section 5 of this chapter) are explicitly referenced in the Study
Guide and so could be specifically required in a question.
JS&W identify three major groups of challenges for twenty first century organisation structures.
(a) Flexibility of organisational design. The rapid pace of environmental change and increased levels
of environmental uncertainty demand flexibility of organisational design.
(b) Effective systems. The creation and exploitation of knowledge requires effective systems to link
the people who have knowledge with the applications that need it.
(c) Globalisation. Globalisation creates new types and a new scale of technological complexity in
communication and information systems; at the same time, diversity of culture, practices and
approaches to personal relationships bring their own new problems of organisational form.
Of these three sets of issues, the need to capture, organise and exploit knowledge is probably the most
pressing for most organisations. An important element of response to this need is therefore an emphasis
2 Types of structure
An organisation's formal structure reveals much about it.
(a) It shows who is responsible for what.
(b) It shows who communicates with whom, both in procedural practice and, to great extent, in less
formal ways.
(c) The upper levels of the structure reveal the skills the organisation values and, by extension, the
role of knowledge and skill within it.
Self contained organisations
Historically, organisational structures have tended to be 'self contained' as they are distinct from external
groups such as customers, competitors and suppliers.
JS&W review seven basic 'self contained' structural types:
Functional
Multi-divisional
Holding company
Matrix
Transnational
Team
Project
Exam focus
Students need to be aware of the clear distinction between self contained and boundary-less
point
organisational structures. We shall explore the boundary-less organisation later in this chapter.
In a functional organisation structure, departments are defined by their functions, that is, the work that
they do. It is a traditional, common sense approach and many organisations are structured like this.
Primary functions in a manufacturing company might be production, sales, finance, and general
administration. Sub departments of marketing might be selling, advertising, distribution and warehousing.
Sales Marketing
manager manager
2.1.2 Disadvantages
It does not reflect the actual business processes by which value is created
It is hard to identify where profits and losses are made on individual products
People do not have an understanding of how the whole business works
There are problems of co-ordinating the work of different specialisms
(a) Divisionalisation is the division of a business into autonomous regions or product businesses,
each with its own revenues, expenditures and profits.
(b) Communication between divisions and head office is restricted, formal and related to performance
standards. Influence is maintained by headquarters' power to hire and fire the managers who are
supposed to run each division.
(c) Divisionalisation is a function of organisation size, in numbers and in product-market activities.
Mintzberg believes there are inherent problems in divisionalisation.
(a) A division is partly insulated by the holding company from shareholders and capital markets,
which ultimately reward performance.
(b) The economic advantages it offers over independent organisations 'reflect fundamental
inefficiencies in capital markets'. (In other words, different product-market divisions might function
better as independent companies.)
(c) The divisions are more bureaucratic than they would be as independent corporations, owing to the
performance measures imposed by the strategic apex.
FAST FORWARD
Matrix structures attempt to ensure co-ordination across functional lines by the embodiment of dual
authority in the organisation structure.
Matrix structure provides for the formalisation of management control between different functions, whilst
at the same time maintaining functional departmentation. It can be a mixture of a functional, product and
territorial organisation.
A golden rule of classical management theory is unity of command: an individual should have one boss.
(Thus, staff management can only act in an advisory capacity, leaving authority in the province of line
management alone.) Matrix and project organisation may possibly be thought of as a reaction against the
classical form of bureaucracy by establishing a structure of dual command, either temporary (in the form
of projects) or permanent (in the case of matrix structure).
Matrix management first developed in the 1950s in the USA in the aerospace industry. Lockheed, the
aircraft manufacturers, were organised in a functional hierarchy. Customers were unable to find a manager
in Lockheed to whom they could take their problems and queries about their particular orders, and
Lockheed found it necessary to employ 'project expediters' as customer liaison officials. From this
developed 'project co-ordinators', responsible for co-ordinating line managers into solving a customer's
problems. Up to this point, these new officials had no functional responsibilities.
Owing to increasingly heavy customer demands, Lockheed eventually created 'programme managers',
with authority for project budgets and programme design and scheduling. These managers therefore had
functional authority and responsibilities, thus a matrix management organisation was created.
The matrix organisation imposes the multi-disciplinary approach on a permanent basis. For example, it is
possible to have a product management structure superimposed on top of a functional departmental
structure in a matrix; product or brand managers may be responsible for the sales budget, production
budget, pricing, marketing, distribution, quality and costs of their product or product line, but may have to
co-ordinate with the R&D, production, finance, distribution, and sales departments in order to bring the
product on to the market and achieve sales targets.
Product Manager A*
Product Manager B*
Product Manager C*
Product influence in
decision-making
Relative
influence
Functional influence
in decision-making
0%
Either:
Functional Dual Product
departmentation authority departmentation
structure (matrix) structure
Or:
(matrix
structure) Functional authority Product authority structure
with product managers with functional managers
or departments having or departments having
some influence some influence
Once again, the division of authority between product managers and functional managers must be
carefully defined.
Matrix management thus challenges classical ideas about organisation by rejecting the idea of one
person, one boss.
A subordinate cannot easily take orders from two or more bosses, and so an arrangement has to be
established, perhaps on the following lines.
(a) A subordinate takes orders from one boss (the functional manager) and the second boss (the
project manager) has to ask the first boss to give certain instructions to the subordinate.
(b) A subordinate takes orders from one boss about some specified matters and orders from the other
boss about different specified matters. The authority of each boss would have to be carefully
defined. Even so, good co-operation between the bosses would still be necessary.
Earlier in this Study Text, we discussed designs for global business. We now return to that topic.
In international strategy, it has been difficult to combine responsiveness to local conditions with the
degree of co-ordination necessary to achieve major economies of scale. The essence of the extreme case
of the problem is an enforced choice between a low-cost product originally specified for a single market
(typically the USA), which is potentially uninteresting or even actively shunned in other markets, and a
range of low volume, and therefore high-cost, products, each specified for and produced in a single
national market. These two cases are known as the global and the multi-domestic approaches to
organisation and they have their own characteristic organisational structures. The global approach leads to
global divisions, each responsible for the worldwide production and marketing of a related group of
standardised products. The multi-domestic approach leads to the setting up or acquisition of local
subsidiaries, each with a great deal of autonomy in design, production and marketing.
The transnational structure attempts to combine the best features of these contrasting approaches in
order to create competences of global relevance, responsiveness to local conditions and innovation
and learning on an organisation-wide scale. Bartlett and Ghoshal describe it as a matrix with two
important general features.
(a) It responds specifically to the challenges of globalisation.
(b) It tends to have a high proportion of fixed responsibilities in the horizontal lines of management.
A team-based structure extends the matrix structure's use of both vertical functional links and horizontal,
activity-based ones by utilising cross-functional teams. Business processes are often used as the basis of
organisation, with each team being responsible for the processes relating to an aspect of the business.
Thus, a purchasing team might contain procurement specialists, design and production engineers and
marketing specialists in order to ensure that outsourced sub-assemblies are properly specified, and
contribute to brand values and are promptly delivered at the right price.
3 Processes
FAST FORWARD
Control processes determine how organisations function. They may be analysed according to whether
they deal with inputs or outputs and whether they involve direct management action or more indirect
effects. Balanced scorecards are direct output-based processes.
Processes are an important part of how organisations work. JS&W analyse them into four categories
according to whether they deal with inputs or outputs and whether they operate by direct contact or
through more indirect means. You should note that all of the processes discussed here are control
processes.
3.2.3 Self-control
Control can be exercised indirectly by promoting a high degree of employee motivation. When combined
with autonomy, this can lead to both the exploitation of knowledge and effective co-ordination of activities
by individuals interacting with one another. The role of management is then not to supervise but to
provide appropriate channels for interaction, and for knowledge creation and information use.
Leadership is of fundamental importance to this technique, and depends particularly on providing role
models, supporting autonomous processes and providing resources.
Performance Objectives 13 'Plan and Control Performance' and 14 'Monitor Performance' of the Practical
Experience Requirement focus on how you have contributed to improving departmental performance. The
ACCA recognise that one approach to improving performance is through the establishment and close
monitoring of performance measures.
Financial perspective
How should we create value
for our shareholders to
succeed financially?
(includes traditional measures
such as growth, profitability
and shareholder value, with
measures set through talking
directly to the shareholders)
Customer
perspective Internal business process
To achieve our vision, What business processes
how should we appear to must we excel at to achieve
our customers ? What do Vision and strategy financial and customer
new and existing customers objectives? Aim to improve
value from us? (cost, quality, internal processes
reliability, delivery etc) and decision making
Kaplan and Norton, who first described the balanced scorecard, recognise that the four perspectives they
suggest may not be perfect for all organisations: it may be necessary, for example, to add further
perspectives related to the environment or to employment.
3.3.3 Problems
As with all techniques, problems can arise during application.
Problem Explanation
Conflicting measures Some measures in the scorecard, such as research funding and cost
reduction, may naturally conflict. It is often difficult to determine the balance
which will achieve the best results.
Selecting measures Not only do appropriate measures have to be devised but the number of
measures used must be agreed. Care must be taken that the impact of the
results is not lost in a sea of information. The innovation and learning
perspective is, perhaps, the most difficult to measure directly, since much
development of human capital will not feed directly into such crude measures
as rate of new product launches or even training hours undertaken. It will,
rather, improve economy and effectiveness and support the achievement of
customer perspective measures.
Expertise Measurement is only useful if it initiates appropriate action. Non-financial
managers may have difficulty with the usual profit measures. With more
measures to consider, this problem will be compounded.
Interpretation Even a financially-trained manager may have difficulty in putting the figures
into an overall perspective.
The scorecard should be used flexibly. The process of deciding what to measure forces a business to
clarify its strategy. For example, a manufacturing company may find that 50%60% of costs are
represented by bought-in components, so measurements relating to suppliers could usefully be added to
the scorecard. These could include payment terms, lead times, or quality considerations.
3.3.4 Linkages
Disappointing results might result from a failure to view all the measures as a whole. For example,
increasing productivity means that fewer employees are needed for a given level of output. Excess
capacity can be created by quality improvements. However, these improvements have to be exploited (eg
by increasing sales). The financial element of the balanced scorecard reminds executives that improved
quality, response time, productivity or new products benefit the company only when they are translated
into improved financial results, or if they enable the firm to obtain a sustainable competitive advantage.
The vertical vector
Kaplan and Norton's original perspectives may be viewed as hierarchical in nature, with a vertical vector
running through the measures adopted.
4 Relationships
Organisational relationships may be analysed into two categories: internal and external. Internal
relationships concerning responsibility and authority for decision-making are particularly important.
4.1.1 Centralisation
FAST FORWARD
Centralisation offers control and standardisation; decentralisation utilises talent and local knowledge.
A vital feature of the relationship between the corporate centre and its business units is how responsibility
for strategic decisions is divided between them.
There are three generally accepted possible roles for the centre:
Determination of overall strategy and the allocation of resources
Controlling divisional performance
Provision of central services
4.2.2 Research
Goold and Campbell researched the role of the centre in 16 British-based conglomerates. They
concentrated on the first two roles summarised above, which they referred to as planning influence and
control influence. The variation in these roles allowed the identification of eight distinct strategic
management styles.
Planning influence was exercised in a variety of ways, but a fairly smooth spectrum of styles was
observable, ranging from minimal, where the centre is little more than a holding company, to highly
centralised, where the managers in the business units have responsibility only for operational decisions.
Control influence was exercised by the agreement of objectives, the monitoring of results and the
deployment of pressures and incentives. This gave rise to three distinct categories of control influence:
flexible strategic, tight strategic and tight financial.
Of the eight strategic management styles they defined, Goold and Campbell found that three of them were
particularly common; each was associated with one of the three control influence categories mentioned
above and with a different degree of planning influence.
Exam focus You should note that this analysis of strategic management styles is completely separate from JS&W's
point description of the three corporate rationales, discussed earlier in this Study Text.
XYZ has over 500 profit centres (ranging from baggage handling equipment to stockings) and revenues of
7bn. Head office staff amount to 47. Each profit centre must provide the following.
(a) The annual profit plan. This is agreed in detail every year, after close negotiation. It is regarded as
a commitment to a preordained level of performance.
(b) A monthly management report, which is extremely detailed (17 pages). Working capital is outlined
in detail. Provisions (the easiest way to manipulate accounts) are highlighted.
Is XYZ a strategic planner, a strategic controller or a financial controller?
Answer
XYC is a financial controller.
Traditionally, external commercial relationships have been, to a greater or lesser extent, adversarial, in
that each organisation has attempted to obtain for itself as much as possible of the value created overall in
the value network. While this is still characteristic of most external relationships, many new ones have
been created that focus more on co-operation than rivalry. These new structures are known as boundary-
less organisations.
Boundary-less organisations are those which have structured their operations to allow for collaboration
with external parties. Building relationships with suppliers, competitors and customers should increase
the organisations flexibility to respond to change. There are various forms of boundary-less organisation,
these include hollow, modular, virtual and network organisation structures. Each is discussed in more
detail in this section.
Other boundary-less structures such as strategic alliances (joint ventures, franchising and licensing)
were discussed earlier in the Study Text.
Sportswear company, Nike has suffered over the years from a bad press due to management's decision in
the early 1990s to outsource non-core manufacturing operations to parts of the world with lower labour
costs. Nike has been accused of allowing subcontractors to get away with paying workers less than the
recognised minimum wage in some developing countries. There have also been accusations that some
outsource parties have employed children to work in manufacturing plants, often in poor working
conditions.
In part, Nike has been able to overcome some previous hostility by using the money saved through its
outsourcing operations to undertake aggressive marketing campaigns to rebuild the company's tattered
image.
Nike has also been able to get its outsource manufacturers to work with the company to improve the
conditions for their workers. As part of Nike's ongoing re-branding exercise, the company became the first
in the industry to publish a list of the factories it has agreements with.
Max Nisen highlights that, 'instead of denying every allegation, Nike has mostly managed to put the most
difficult chapter in its history behind it and other companies who outsource could stand to learn a few
things from Nike's turnaround'.
Adapted from an article:
'How Nike solved its sweatshop problem' by Max Nisen (May 2013) published on the Business Insider
website: www.businessinsider.com
4.4.5 Outsourcing
The concept of the boundary-less organisation has become increasingly possible due to the emergence of
outsourcing. Outsourcing involves an organisation contracting out certain internal business functions to a
third party. Organisations very often outsource those functions which are considered to be non-critical. As
previously mentioned, Harmon's process-strategy matrix, which we shall discuss in more detail in a later
chapter, recommends outsourcing those business processes which are of a high to low level of
complexity with a low level of strategic importance.
At its simplest, outsourcing may involve hiring in a cleaning company to maintain the upkeep of the
organisation's premises. This would remove the need for the organisation to retain its existing in-house
cleaners. Commonly, the decision to outsource is based on anticipated cost savings and the freeing up of
management time. The role of outsourcing is explored in more detail later in the Study Text.
4.4.6 Offshoring
Offshoring is a form of outsourcing that involves an external entity based in a different country providing
an organisation with a particular product or process which had previously been provided in-house.
Offshoring became particularly popular in the late 1990s when a number of well-known UK financial
institutions (banks and insurance companies) decided to set up customer call centre operations in
countries such as India. This shift saw the new call centres run by external third parties which provided
the required staff and facilities.
Advantages and disadvantages of offshoring
Advantages of offshoring Disadvantages of offshoring
Cost savings are often cited as the main motivation Quality. Allowing third party providers to act as the
behind the decision to offshore. interface between the organisation and its
customers (eg through operating a call centre)
increases the scope for quality issues to arise.
Focus on core activities. Managing non-core Public perceptions. Organisations may receive bad
functions is often regarded as a distraction which press if consumers in the home market perceive
can be alleviated by offshoring. moves to offshore operations as leading to
domestic jobs losses.
Capability. Offshoring can help organisations Loss of control. Offshoring increases the scope for
which lack expertise in delivering a particular third parties not to meet agreed service levels. This
process. highlights the need for service level agreements.
The danger here is that more management time is
spent managing the relationship with the offshore
partner.
In October 2013, RSA (formerly Royal & Sun Alliance) which owns the More Than insurance brand,
announced that it was creating 350 jobs in the UK. The move saw the company close its offshore Indian
call centres.
John Elliott, RSA's personal lines customer service director said, 'The Indian teams are brilliant at
following process transactions. But for a company trying to go from good to great service, we need
consistency and excellence. The missing ingredient has been culture, and that's something we haven't
been able to recreate in India. There are parts of the market that don't feel reassured dealing with
somebody overseas, wherever it is'.
Adapted from an article:
Hawkes, S. (2013) 'RSA brings back 350 call centre jobs back to the UK', Daily Telegraph,18 October,
www.telegraph.co.uk
4.4.8 Alliances
The very great cost advantages available from economies of scale are a major driver of expansion. Indeed,
the minimum efficient scale for capital intensive industries such as motor vehicle manufacture is so high
that operations on at least a continental scale are necessary to achieve it. Such a degree of expansion
requires huge amounts of capital; various forms of complex organisation result from the pressure to pool
resources. These include partnerships, alliances, consortia and the unintegrated structures resulting
from takeovers and mergers.
Largely driven by pressure to reduce personnel costs and to adapt to new market imperatives, there has
been an increase in the use of part-time and temporary contracts of employment. These allow rapid
downsizing in times of recession or slow growth and can save on the costs of benefits such as pensions,
holiday pay and health insurance. The growth in the proportion of the workforce employed on such less-
favourable contracts has attracted political attention but continues. It has produced the phenomenon of
the flexible firm or, as Handy calls it, the shamrock organisation.
Key term Handy defines the shamrock organisation as a 'core of essential executives and workers supported by
outside contractors and part-time help'. This structure permits the buying-in of services as needed, with
consequent reductions in overhead costs. It is also known as the flexible firm.
The first leaf of the shamrock is the professional core. It consists of professionals, technicians and
managers whose skills define the organisation's core competence. This core group defines what the
company does and what business it is in. They are essential to the continuity and growth of the
organisation. Their pay is tied to organisational performance and their relations will be more like those
among the partners in a professional firm than those among superiors and subordinates in today's large
corporation.
The next leaf is made up of self-employed professionals or technicians or smaller specialised
organisations who are hired on contract, on a project-by-project basis. They are paid in fees for results,
rather than in salary for time. They frequently telecommute. No benefits are paid by the core organisation,
and the worker carries the risk of insecurity.
The third leaf comprises the contingent work force, whose employment derives from the external demand
for the organisation's products. There is no career track for these people and they perform routine jobs.
They are usually temporary and part-time workers who will experience short periods of employment and
long periods of unemployment. They are paid by the hour or day or week for the time they work.
A fourth leaf of the shamrock may exist, consisting of consumers who do the work of the organisation.
Examples are shoppers who bag their own groceries and purchasers of assemble-it-yourself furniture.
This type of organisation provides three kinds of flexibility.
(a) Personnel costs can respond to market conditions of supply and demand for different types of
labour and to the employer's financial position.
(b) Overall personnel numbers can be changed as required.
The idea of a virtual organisation or cybernetic corporation has attracted considerable attention as the
usefulness of IT for communication and control has been exploited. The essence of the virtual
organisation is the electronic linking of spatially dispersed components.
While there is some disagreement among academics as to a precise definition of the virtual organisation, a
consensus exists with regard to geographical dispersion and the centrality of information technology to
the production process. Many also agree that the virtual organisation has a temporary character. Other
characteristics are a flexible structure and a collaborative culture.
However, an organisation is not a virtual organisation merely because it uses IT extensively and has
multiple locations. Many academics would exclude organisations that use communications extensively,
but not in a way critical to completing the production process.
Key term A virtual organisation is a temporary or permanent collection of geographically dispersed individuals,
groups, organisational units (which may or may not belong to the same organisation), or entire
organisations that depend on electronic linking in order to complete the production process.
JS&W use the term rather less rigorously, to mean any network organisation that is 'held together not
through formal structure and physical proximity of people, but by partnership, collaboration and
networking'.
Exam focus Students need to be able to discuss how organisations interact and collaborate with their customers. An
point understanding of user contribution systems and crowdsourcing are key terms that you need to learn.
FAST FORWARD
Understanding what customers want from companies is a major issue. The use of customer feedback
surveys are not new. However, advances in internet technologies have led to the development of user
contribution systems. Such systems allow for closer interaction between individuals and companies.
Crowdsourcing involves obtaining information from a large group of people often external to the
organisation for the purpose of helping to generate ideas and suggestions which can be implemented to
improve organisational performance.
Organisations have collaborated with their customers for many years through the use of feedback
questionnaires and customer satisfaction surveys. In recent times, many large organisations have created
user contribution systems as a means of extracting and collating customer contributions.
New technologies such as Web 2.0 have enabled the widespread use of user contribution systems. People
are now able to freely interact with each other and organisations by passing on information or expressing
their opinions on a company's latest products and services via websites and online forums. Interaction
Reasons Comment
By-product of purchase Individual users of a website provide data to an
organisation when making a purchase. Such data
is gathered as a by-product of the underlying
interaction, ie the purchase. When making a
purchase on eBay, this information is collected to
show how many transactions an individual has
participated in to date.
Practical solutions Websites such as Delicious.com allow users to
store and share web bookmarks. This enables
other users to access a list of useful websites.
Social rewards Users of social networking site Facebook are able
to interact with friends and family by joining an
online community.
Reputation Some users choose to interact in order to enhance
their own reputation. For example, being rated as a
top rated seller on eBay.
Self-expression Contribution systems provide individuals with the
scope to express their opinions and give feedback.
For example, shoppers on Amazon are able to leave
recommendations on purchases.
Altruism Some individuals interact in order to help others or
bring certain issues to the attention of a greater
range of people.
User contribution systems provide organisations with the opportunity to better understand customers and
their needs. Organisations can use this information to their advantage by producing enhanced products
and services, which may lead to reduced costs and help to attract further customers. This customer
acquisition can be achieved through the use of tailored marketing messages, offering discounts on certain
purchases and providing purchase recommendations.
4.4.13 Crowdsourcing
Crowdsourcing involves obtaining information from a large group of people. News agencies often ask
individuals to phone in when they are aware of breaking news stories or even traffic jams on the road.
Such information can then be used to inform and help other users.
In a commercial context, large companies are able to use internet technologies to ask online users for
creative ideas on a particular matter or to provide information which the organisation can then use to solve
particular problems.
Computer giant IBM undertakes regular collaborative exercises to allow employees and external
contributors to share their thoughts to help the company address significant challenges. This exercise is
known as an online 'jam' session. In 2015, IBM's jam events webpage offered the following explanation of
these sessions:
'An IBM jam is a guided online discussion with thousands of trusted collaborators from which we extract
insights, discoveries and decisions. Since 2001, IBM has used jams to involve its more than 400,000
employees around the world in far-reaching exploration and problem-solving. ValueJam in 2003 gave
Lack of credibility: The use of free information does have its drawbacks the use of community
generated contributions are likely to lack the credibility which would have been obtained, had input been
received from paid professionals with expertise in a particular field. Crowdsourcing may not be
appropriate when higher risk issues are debated.
Collaborators do not have to collaborate: This is an important issue for companies which use the
suggestions of others. Collaborators engage of their own free will, meaning that they have no obligation to
continue providing contributions in the future.
FAST FORWARD Henry Mintzberg's theory of organisational configuration is a way of expressing the main features by
which both formal structure and power relationships are expressed in organisations. He suggests that
there are five ideal types of organisation, each of which configures five standard components in a
significantly different way. Each component of the organisation has its own dynamic, which leads to a
distinct type of organisation. The sixth type is the missionary organisation.
Exam focus In June 2013 the compulsory question required students to discuss how an understanding of
point organisational configurations would have helped a newly appointed CEO at a hospital introduce a strategic
planning system. The examining team noted that students appeared to lack an understanding of
organisational configurations. This is an important area that students should not avoid when preparing to
sit paper P3.
Question Bureaucracy
How would a machine bureaucracy and a professional bureaucracy ensure that accounting transactions
are correctly posted?
Answer
The machine bureaucracy would devise very precise procedures and rule-books telling untrained clerks
exactly what to do in any situation.
The professional bureaucracy would employ trained and perhaps qualified accounts staff, whose
professional training would give them the expertise to make the right decision.
Exam focus
A question in the December 2010 exam asked candidates to explain how an understanding of organisation
point
configuration could have helped predict the failure of the implementation of a proposed structure in the
organisation discussed in the scenario. This question specifically referenced Henry Mintzberg's
configuration stereotypes to help student's identify what they were being asked to do. The examining team
noted that very few candidates answered this question well, with perhaps less than one in ten being
familiar with the work of Mintzberg. They also mentioned that students without this knowledge failed to
use a logical approach of focusing on the key words 'structure' 'control' and 'processes' to see that the
proposed structure would clash with the existing culture. Had they done this, they could have converted a
marginal fail into a marginal pass.
This demonstrates the importance of ensuring you are familiar with all areas of the syllabus before
attempting the P3 exam. However, this also shows the importance of stopping, thinking and applying your
own logic and wider knowledge to the scenario to produce a sensible answer when faced with an inability
to recall theoretical knowledge in the exam.
Answer
(a) Adhocracy
(b) Professional bureaucracy
There has been debate as to which of strategy and structure is the independent variable and which the
dependent. Chandler concluded that structure was determined by strategy, but it has been suggested that
once a large organisation has settled into a particular structural form, the hierarchical, communication and
Performance Time
Quick Quiz
1 What are the three components of an organisation's configuration?
2 What specific features does a transnational have?
3 What are the perspectives of the standard balanced scorecard and how do they fit together?
4 What are the three strategic management styles identified by Goold and Campbell?
5 What are the five organisational components described by Mintzberg?
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
Introduction
It will be unusual for an organisation's strategy to remain unchanged for any
appreciable period of time and the same is true of the methods and processes used
for implementing it. The influence of environmental developments is such that
strategies will inevitably change and evolve; the only question is how rapid the
change will be.
The management of change is thus an integral and important part of strategic
management and is the subject of this chapter. Following JS&W, we will start by
considering the diagnosis of change requirements. The work to be done here
consists of establishing the type of change required; exploring the organisational
context and the cultural influences involved; and analysing the forces that support or
hinder the change required.
We will then examine the impact of management style and the roles played by
managers and other agents of change. There are a number of levers of change that
managers can use and we consider these next. Finally, we consider the common
pitfalls that have hampered change programmes in the past.
259
Study guide
Intellectual level
C2 Managing strategic change
(a) Explore different types of strategic change and their implications 2
(b) Determine and diagnose the organisational context of change using Balogun 3
and Hope Hailey's contextual features model and the cultural web
(c) Establish potential blockages and levers of change 2
(d) Advise on the style of leadership appropriate to manage strategic change 2
Exam guide
It is very important to be aware that strategic change may be implicit in a scenario rather than being the
explicit subject of a question requirement. You must be able to recognise the factors that drive change and
constrain the ways in which it may be effected.
A wide range of stimuli may lead an organisation's managers to recognise the need for strategic change.
Consideration of the broader contexts of the environment and the organisation's strategic capability may
show that large scale developments are necessary; the need to put strategy into action may call for more
detailed but no less far-reaching adjustment of processes, relationships, technologies and so on. In any
event, the management of change starts with an understanding of three main considerations:
(a) The type of change required
(b) The wider context of the change
(c) Forces facilitating and blocking change
Realignment Transformation
Nature of Incremental Adaptation Evolution
change
'Big bang' Reconstruction Revolution
Types of change
(a) Adaptation is the most common type of change. It does not require the development of a new
paradigm and proceeds step by step.
(b) Reconstruction can also be undertaken within an existing paradigm but requires rapid and
extensive action. It is a common response to a long-term decline in performance.
(c) Evolution is an incremental process that leads to a new paradigm. It may arise from careful
analysis and planning or may be the result of learning processes. Its transformational nature may
not be obvious while it is taking place.
(d) Revolution is rapid and wide ranging response to extreme pressures for change. A long period of
strategic drift may lead to a crisis that can only be dealt with in this way. Revolution will be very
obvious and is likely to affect most aspects of both what the organisation does and how it does
them.
The context of change is provided by the organisational setting; this has many aspects and can therefore
be very complex. However, this complexity can be approached in a manageable way by considering it
under eight general headings proposed by Balogun and Hope Hailey. One of the eight headings is scope:
this has already been discussed. The rest are discussed below.
The headings represent a wide range of influences and the specific considerations affecting the impact of
each may vary from organisation to organisation. For example, the first on the list, time available, may be
largely determined by stakeholder sentiment in one organisation; and by anticipated political change, in
another, with different aspects of the market situation influencing both.
1.2.2 Questions
An examination of context leads to four questions.
(a) Is the organisation able to achieve the change required?
(b) Does the context affect the means by which change should be achieved?
(c) Should the context itself be restructured as a preliminary to strategic change?
(d) Will constraints present in the context make it necessary to proceed in stages?
Requirement to report
to external agencies
Complexity of producing
such reviews
Forcefield analysis
Senior (drawing on the advice of Carnall and Huczyuski and Buchanan) suggests a practical route to
applying the force field analysis idea.
(a) Define the problem in terms of the current situation and the desired future state.
(b) List the forces supporting and opposing the desired change and assess both the strength and the
importance of each one.
(c) Draw the force field diagram.
(d) Decide how to strengthen or weaken the more important forces as appropriate and agree with
those concerned. Weakening might be achieved by persuasion, participation, coercion or
bargaining, while strengthening might be achieved by a marketing or education campaign,
including the use of personal advocacy.
(e) Identify the resources needed.
(f) Make an action plan including event timing, milestones and responsibilities.
JS&W state that, typically, elements of the cultural web emerge as important forces promoting or
hindering change. The web can thus be used alongside forcefield analysis as a diagnostic tool.
2.1.2 Collaboration/participation
Collaboration, or participation, brings those affected by strategic change into the change management
process, drawing them into issue identification, prioritisation and the creation of new routines to
implement newly established strategy, for example. It may improve decision quality by bringing wider
experience and knowledge to bear. However, it may be time-consuming and it will be subject to the
influence of the existing culture and paradigm, which may limit its potential effectiveness. This approach
is both ethical, in basic deontological terms, and advantageous in practice, since it can nurture a positive
attitude, thus building both readiness and capability for change. It is suited to incremental change.
2.1.3 Intervention
Intervention is undertaken by a change agent (see below) who delegates some aspects of the change
process to teams or individuals, while providing guidance and retaining overall control. Delegated aspects
can include both design and implementation activities. Final responsibility for achieving the necessary
change remains with the change agent, but this kind of participation can build commitment and a sense of
ownership. This style is appropriate for incremental change.
2.1.4 Direction
Direction is a top-down style in which managerial authority is used to establish and implement a change
programme based on a clear future strategy. It is thus suited to transformational change. It has the
potential advantages of speed and clarity, but may lead to resistance. Its success depends in part on the
adequacy of the proposed strategy: if this is inappropriate, the best managed of change programmes will
not result in wider strategic success.
2.1.5 Coercion
Coercion is an extreme form of direction, being based on the use of power to impose change. It is likely
to provoke opposition but may be the best approach in times of confusion or crisis.
Key term A change agent is an individual or group that helps to bring about strategic change in an organisation.
JS&W (amended)
JS&W, quoting Farkas and Wetlaufer, identify five approaches to strategic leadership.
Strategy Control
Human assets Change
Expertise
3.3 Outsiders
Outsiders may contribute to the change process in a range of roles.
(a) A new chief executive may be appointed to bring a fresh point of view and break down the
constraints of the existing paradigm. A hybrid chief executive is one who has appropriate
experience of the industry, or even of the organisation, but is not part of the existing culture.
(b) New managers in other positions can enhance the capability to change and increase diversity of
opinion and practice. However, their success is likely to depend on the visible backing of the chief
executive.
(c) Consultants may be employed to fill a number of planning and facilitating roles. Like newly
appointed managers, they bring a fresh approach and are not constrained by the existing paradigm.
This enables them to challenge things that are taken for granted. Also, their appointment signals
the importance of the change process.
(d) Other external stakeholders are capable of influencing change and may have a part to play.
Many of the levers that can be used to implement change are related to aspects of the cultural web. We
will consider these in this section, but first we will consider the special case of turnaround.
4.1 Turnaround
When a business is in terminal decline and faces closure or takeover, there is a need for rapid and
extensive change in order to achieve cost reduction and revenue generation. This is a turnaround strategy.
JS&W identify seven elements of such a strategy.
4.1.7 Prioritisation
The eventual success of a turnaround strategy depends in part on management's ability to prioritise
necessary activities, such as those noted above.
4.5.1 Resources
The ability to control the allocation of resources (or even merely to influence their allocation) is recognised
as a distinct and important form of power within the organisation. It can be used, both to enable specific
developments in the change programme and, more subtly, to build support and influence that will assist
with the processes of overcoming resistance and ensuring compliance.
4.5.2 Elites
Association with respected and influential stakeholders can enhance the personal status and thus the
power base of the change agent. Similarly, association with a high status change agent can assist more
junior managers to overcome resistance to change.
Sometimes it is necessary to eliminate centres of resistance by removing people from the organisation in
order to ensure compliance with change requirements.
4.5.3 Subsystems
A power base can be established by building up networks and alliances among those sympathetic to
change. It may then be possible to outmanoeuvre and marginalise the resistance. Equally, however, it may
not; also, such manoeuvring by change agents may provoke stronger resistance. It will be useful to
analyse power and influence using the stakeholder mapping model explained earlier in this Study Text.
4.7 Tactics
The change process can be forwarded by the use of specific tactics of change management.
4.7.1 Timing
The time at which actions are taken can be selected for tactical effectiveness.
(a) A crisis can be used to justify extensive change, so monitoring a mounting crisis and delaying
action until it is ripe may enhance acceptance.
(b) Windows of opportunity may occur, as, for example, when a takeover occurs.
(c) Messages about timing must be coherent so that, for example, rapid action is not undermined by
the retention of procedures that enforce long time frames.
(d) Fear and anxiety about change as such may be reduced if unpleasant consequences can be
decoupled in time from the main change programme: an example would be a programme of
redundancy that does not commence until other change objectives such as the outcomes of
product and market reviews have been implemented.
JS&W quote Harris and Ogbonna, who identify eight unintended outcomes of change programmes.
(a) Ritualisation of change. When change programmes extend into the longer-term, there is a danger
that organisation members will come to view the initiatives as mere ritual with little real
significance.
(b) Hijacked process of change. Change initiatives can be hijacked for unintended purposes: for
example, improved technology provided to improve performance may be used simply to cut
staffing levels, defeating the overall objective.
(c) Erosion. The successful introduction of new initiatives may suffer erosion from the effects of other
events and processes, as, for example, when high staff turnover hampers staff development.
(d) Reinvention. Recalcitrant staff may reinvent the nature and implications of the change programme
in a way that accommodates previous undesirable practices. This is a failure of monitoring and
control.
(e) Ivory tower change. When change is imposed from the top-down, its proponents may be seen as
inhabiting an ivory tower, out of touch with operational reality and lacking in credibility as a result.
(f) Lack of attention to symbols. Change managers who pay insufficient attention to symbols can
both fail to make the change relevant to day to day reality and succeed in sending the wrong
messages.
(g) Uncontrolled efforts. If practical adjustments, to systems, for example, do not fit well with the
overall intent of the change programme, staff are likely to become confused and demotivated.
(h) Behavioural compliance. Apparent behavioural compliance may disguise lack of commitment.
People may appear to comply with the changes, without actually 'buying into' them.
These problems underline the complexity of the change management task. JS&W identify four specific
implications for change management.
(a) Monitoring and control are vital aspects of change management, as is the flexibility to adjust
programmes as they unfold.
(b) It is essential to understand the existing culture and its effects, since they are highly likely to
hinder planned change.
(c) It will generally be advantageous to involve the organisation's people in the change process.
(d) Change represents a major challenge and may be more difficult to implement than it seems at
first.
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
277
278
Business
process change
Introduction
This chapter is the first in which we consider the 'middle layer' of the relational
diagram of the syllabus.
Strategies are, to some extent at least, delivered by means of processes. We
have already seen how processes fit with structures and relationships in
configurations and we have examined control processes in some detail. In this
chapter, and the next, we go on to examine processes in the wider sense, the
contribution they make to organisations and strategy and, overall, how
processes may be improved and made more effective.
Furthermore, it is worth noting here that improvements to processes may also
be an important source of potential emergent strategies an area we look at in
the final chapter of this Study Text.
279
Study guide
Intellectual level
D1 Business change
(a) Explain that business change projects are initiated to address strategic
2
alignment
(b) Apply the stages of the business change lifecycle (alignment, definition,
3
design, implementation, realisation)
(c) Assess the value of the four view (POPIT people, organisation, processes
3
and information technology) model to the successful implementation of
business change
D2 The role of process and process change initiatives
(a) Advise on how an organisation can reconsider the design of its processes to 3
deliver a selected strategy
(b) Appraise business process change initiatives previously adopted by 3
organisations
(c) Establish an appropriate scope and focus for business process change 3
using Harmon's process-strategy matrix
(d) Explore the commoditisation of business processes 3
(e) Advice on the implications of business process outsourcing 3
(f) Recommend a business process redesign methodology for an organisation 2
D3 Improving the processes of the organisation
(a) Evaluate the effectiveness of current organisational processes 3
Exam guide
The syllabus places considerable emphasis on processes. This is a very practical topic and it is easy to see
that the examining team will have plenty of scope for practical questions based on it. An obvious route
would be to ask you to use the process-strategy matrix to select processes for improvement and the
process redesign methodology discussed in Section 3 to show how to proceed.
It is also important to think how business processes and business process re-engineering link to other
areas of the P3 syllabus. The diagram below illustrates some of the key linkages.
Project management
Supply chain Business Process
management Re-engineering
Information technology
(E-business opportunities)
Information technology
(Software packages, eg ERP)
Social organisations, such as businesses and government departments, are by definition open
systems.
Organisations have a variety of interchanges with the environment, obtaining inputs from it, and
generating outputs to it.
This general background is clearly linked to Porter's value chain model, which shows how the functioning
of the internal sub-systems of the organisation contribute to its overall capability to add value. The ways
in which the system and its sub-systems function constitute the organisation's processes and
relationships.
The value chain was discussed in detail earlier in this Study Text, but if you cannot remember, it you
would be well advised to review it now. The groundwork for the current emphasis on understanding
business processes was laid by Michael Porter in his value chain model.
Exam focus
The examining team has indicated that the lifecycle model should enable students to gain a greater
point
understanding of the business change concept. The lifecycle could be used to frame answers to future
examination questions.
Business change is an important issue for most organisations. To reflect this fact, the business change
lifecycle model has been included in the P3 syllabus. The lifecycle provides a broad umbrella framework
from which different process change methodologies can operate. These will be explored later in the Study
Text. The business change lifecycle model has been included to complement existing areas in the syllabus
such as project management and organisational change. The model provides a step by step framework for
considering a proposed business change project.
As with any project methodology, the business change lifecycle framework has a beginning, middle and
end. Each aspect of the framework is considered in turn throughout the next section.
Implementation Design
Source: Adapted from 'Business analysis', 2nd edition, Paul, Yeates & Cadle
1.4.1 Alignment
The external environment
A common theme in modern business concerns the need to constantly assess the external environment.
As the environment changes, management need to consider the potential impact external developments
may have on the ability of the organisation to achieve its objectives.
From time to time, businesses may be required to align (or re-align) their goals with the environment.
External regulation, or developments by competitors, will often require organisations to undertake some
form of business change in order to respond effectively. In recent years, there have been a number of high
profile cases involving companies which have failed to react to external pressures and have gone out of
business as a result.
When business change is required, organisations need to determine the most appropriate approach to
achieve it. Proposed action is often implemented through a business change project.
This case study highlights the need for organisations to continually monitor the external environment.
UK supermarket sector
Competition in the UK supermarket sector is fierce. According to Tesco, the market leader, the 'UK grocery
market was worth 163.2 billion in 2012 and is forecast to rise to 196.2 billion by 2017. Price wars and
innovation in retailing among the big four supermarkets (Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda and Morrisons) are
common.
In 1996, Tesco launched its dot.com business in response to increasing customer demand for online
shopping. When first established. Tesco.com operated from one office with a 'handful of computers', and
deliveries were made from a single store. By 2013, revenue had grown from 25m to 1.5bn.
Both Asda and Sainsbury's have followed suit in recent years, unveiling their own online shopping
websites.
Morrisons
Morrisons, the fourth largest supermarket chain for a number of years, avoided establishing its own online
presence. The Guardian highlighted that former Morrisons CEO, Sir Ken Morrison, who stepped down in
2008, was keen to shun 'new fangled fancies', in favour of 'keeping it simple: shops the same size selling
the same stuff so that costs were low and profit margins high'.
Falling behind
In recent years, Morrisons has fallen behind its main competitors. In 2013, Morrisons announced worse
than expected like-for-like sales, the Yorkshire Post reporting a decline of 5.6% compared to the previous
year, with profit forecasts reported at the lower end of market predictions.
Bottom-up change
It should, however, be noted that not all proposals for business change come directly from the external
environment. Operational staff in an organisation may also push for changes to existing business
processes in order to deliver short-term improvements. However, short-term change initiatives
implemented in a haphazard fashion can prove detrimental to the organisation's overall performance.
Proposed business change projects should be considered in relation to the organisation's overall long-
term strategy and objectives.
1.4.2 Definition
Forming the business case
Once the need for change has been established, the practicalities of defining the improvement begin. This
will lead to the establishment of a formal project team designated to explore and evaluate the available
options to achieve the desired change. This evaluation will often involve a 'gap analysis' where the project
team assess the organisation's current position and processes. 'Gaps' between the current position and
targeted end state are then revealed. The gap analysis should help to provide the project team with an idea
of the work required to implement a successful change.
Gap analysis
The 'gaps' identified will help to determine the type of business change required. For example, a process
change upgrading a company's existing website is likely to result in a relatively basic change, whereas
changes of a more complex nature will require a fundamental rethinking of existing processes. This is
known as business process re-engineering (BPR), and we will look at BPR in more detail later in this
chapter.
Gap analysis gives particular consideration to the organisation's core resources, including its people and
IT infrastructure. The project team may conduct face-to-face interviews with users of existing processes,
and may even observe staff while they work to better understand the improvements needed.
Need for a holistic view
Taking a holistic view of any proposed business change is particularly important in helping the project
team gain an understanding of how different activities and resources interact. Most business change
programmes will affect more than one area of the business.
For example, the decision to introduce a new corporate website is likely to require a focus on both the
human and technical elements. Understanding how these elements interrelate helps to raise questions that
the project team will need to consider. These could include:
Are those affected by the change likely to need training to use the website effectively?
Will customers want to use it?
Will it affect what our customers purchase from us?
On 10 January 2014, Morrisons launched its own online grocery store. Initially serving customers based
in the Midlands, deliveries were rolled out to other regions throughout 2014.
Supporting infrastructure
Morrisons made the decision to roll out its online offering by establishing an alliance with Ocado. In May
2013, it was reported that Morrisons had agreed to pay 170m to buy Ocado's distribution centre in
Dordon. The purchase agreement gave the company the right to use Ocado's delivery technology for the
next 25 years. Interestingly, Ocado will provide the staff and vehicles as part of the arrangement while
operating under the Morrison's brand name.
Morrison's chief executive, Dalton Philips, announced that the deal with Ocado moved Morrisons from a
'standing start, straight into the fast lane of online retailing'.
Customers
Morrison's online offering let customers access its site through Facebook and allowed users to import
their favourite purchases from other shops. On the day of the website's launch, Morrisons reported a
'strong interest in its dot.com offering with many thousands registering their interest'.
The decision to roll out its online shop through the use of a third party was due in part to years of under
investment in the company's IT infrastructure which had left the company trailing behind its main rivals.
Adapted from two articles:
1) 'Morrisons signs deal with Ocado to launch online service' by Graham Ruddick (May 2013) published
on The Telegraph website: www.telegraph.co.uk
2) 'Morrisons begins online food deliveries' (January 2014) published on the Morrisons website:
www.morrisons-corporate.com
Organisation
Information
Technology
People Processes
Source: Adapted from Business Analysis (2nd edition), Paul, Yeates & Cadle
Exam focus The examining team has indicated that candidates should be prepared to use the POPIT model as a
point framework for answering a question in the exam. For example, a case study could illustrate a scenario
where elements of the model have been neglected, and candidates could then be asked to assess the
impact of this on the implementation of a change project.
Usefulness of POPIT
In recent years, concern has started to grow among business analysts that too many business change
projects have failed to adequately consider the four perspectives of the POPIT model. All too often,
attention is heavily focused on the technological and process aspects of change without fully
understanding how a change will affect people and the organisation as a whole. The application of the
POPIT model forces project teams to take a far more holistic view of business change, identifying those
issues may hinder the project's success.
1.4.5 Implementation
Force field analysis
The implementation stage of business change is likely to be the most challenging. This is due to the
influence of certain stakeholder groups. Failure to gain the support and acceptance of staff may undermine
any changes.
As highlighted earlier in the Study Text, the use of a force field analysis can prove particularly useful in
identifying those forces driving and restraining change. By understanding the motives of those resisting
change, an organisation should be better placed to weaken such opposition.
Communication
The use of a communication plan which highlights the benefits of the change is likely to prove central to
overcoming resistance. Communication needs to be of a professional nature to help build confidence and
create staff 'buy in' to the new processes.
Rewards
Management may attempt to incentivise staff to embrace new processes by offering one-off payments or
flexible working conditions during the implementation stage. Longer-term incentives such as the re-
designing existing performance appraisal schemes and introducing performance-related pay, may also
help to embed a new process.
Training
This may take the form of group or one-to-one sessions where training on how to use a new process is
provided. In cases of IT enabled change, it is common for staff to be provided with technical support from
an IT help desk.
Systems
As a significant number of modern business change projects involve the use of IT, the project team should
ensure that the technology undergoes sufficient systems testing. A lack of testing and insufficient attention
to the need for data migration are common problems with IT-related process change.
Data migration is concerned with transferring existing data from one system to another. It is a common
feature of most IT system upgrade projects.
Business process re-engineering involves fundamental changes in the way an organisation functions. For
example, processes which were developed in a paper-intensive processing environment may not be
suitable for an environment which is underpinned by IT.
Why focus on processes?
Many businesses recognise that value is delivered through processes, but still define themselves in terms
of their functional roles. To properly harness the resources within a business, a clear agreement of the
management and implementation of processes is needed. Without this focus on processes:
(a) It is unclear how value is achieved or can continue to be achieved.
(b) The effects of change on the operation of the business are hard to predict.
(c) There is no basis to achieve consistent business improvement.
(d) Knowledge is lost as people move around or out of the business.
Key term Business process re-engineering is the fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business
processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical contemporary measures of performance, such as
cost, quality, service and speed.
The key words here are 'fundamental', 'radical', 'dramatic' and 'process'.
(a) Fundamental and radical indicate that BPR assumes nothing: it starts by asking basic questions
such as, 'Why do we do what we do?', without making any assumptions or looking back to what
has always been done in the past.
(b) 'Dramatic' means that BPR should achieve 'quantum leaps in performance', not just marginal,
incremental improvements.
(c) 'Process' is explained in the following paragraphs.
BPR is not automation or rationalisation. Automation is the use of computerised working methods to
speed up the performance of existing tasks. Rationalisation is the streamlining of operating procedures to
eliminate obvious inefficiencies. Rationalisation usually involves automation.
The first software-based workflow systems appeared in the early 1990s. They were essentially systems for
the automation of document flows and were based on electronic copies of scanned original documents.
The early systems had no potential for improvements to major organisation processes.
Subsequently, enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems were developed to provide a menu of
communication and control links between software application packages. ERP worked best in well-
understood applications such as accounting and inventory management. We discuss the adoption of
In 1990, Rummler and Brache published Improving Performance: how to Manage the White Space on the
Organisation Chart. As its title suggests, this book was about designing and managing business processes
as cross-functional wholes. The authors suggested that organisational process change must be
considered at three different structural levels and at the same time from three separate perspectives: there
are thus nine areas of concern, all of which must be addressed satisfactorily if a programme of process
change is to be successful.
Structural levels
(a) The organisation as a whole
(b) The process
(c) The job or performance level
Perspectives
(a) Goals and measures of achievement
(b) Design and implementation of processes
(c) Management
Effective organisations will have strong links both up and down the structural levels and across the
perspectives. For example, process goals and measures must not only relate accurately to both overall
organisational and detailed job goals and measures; they must also form part of a well-designed and
implemented process that is managed to operate efficiently.
There were a number of attempts to introduce a systematic approach to improving quality of output in the
1990s. Statistical process control, total quality management and all the implications of the Toyota
system of manufacturing fall under this general heading, as do Six Sigma, which used a statistical
approach to measurement, and ISO 9000:2000. The implementation of ISO 9000:2000 has developed
from the simple documentation and management of procedures to a more change-oriented system. At the
same time, there has been significant cross-fertilisation between these various initiatives.
Electronic data interchange was the main networking technique for integrating large-scale corporate IT
systems in the early 1990s. It was rather unwieldy and expensive to operate and so was only used by
larger companies and their more important suppliers. The growth of the internet and of its World Wide
Web aspect in particular means that similar capabilities are now available at much reduced cost. Despite
the setback caused by the bursting of the dotcom bubble, the internet has had a major effect on business
processes. Larger organisations use it to manage and circulate information, as well as making extensive
use of it for retailing, while many small businesses trade exclusively over the Web.
We will return to look at the internet and e-business more comprehensively later in this Study Text.
Extensive redesign of processes often takes place as a result of mergers and acquisitions. There has been
significant growth in this kind of process development as a result of accelerating globalisation. The
acquisition of foreign subsidiaries, in particular, usually leads to extensive work to integrate systems or to
redesign and replace them where they are incompatible.
At the same time, large scale manufacturing operations have become much more dispersed as work is
transferred to low-wage economies in order to control costs. Controlling and co-ordinating such dispersed
and complex operations have required the development of new, standardised systems.
Harmon makes several comments about the current state of the art business process change.
First, he emphasises the need to tie improvement projects to specific corporate goals: if this is not done,
the project will lose focus, develop a life of its own and solve unimportant problems as a result.
Second, he remarks on the difficulty of installing new processes when the operational staff and managers
do not support the changes involved. Considerable effort must be expended on change management,
including obtaining 'buy-in' and aligning incentives with the new processes.
The role of IT specialists is a third concern. Harmon feels that they have a special contribution to make
because of the ubiquity of IT systems within the organisation: IT specialists are increasingly required to
take a strategic view of the corporation as a whole so that they can support the line managers who have
responsibility for operating and improving business processes. At the same time it is necessary for those
line managers to understand the difficulties and concerns of the IT specialists.
1.13.1 Terminology
FAST FORWARD
Harmon suggests three terms:
Process improvement is a tactical, incremental technique.
Process re-engineering is a strategic level rethinking of core processes.
Process redesign is for intermediate scale processes that need significant change.
It is clear from the overall account given above, that there are a number of options available when the need
for process change is established. Harmon describes a tool intended to aid consideration of these options
by categorising the organisation's identified processes into four groups. This is the process-strategy
matrix, which is yet another two axis matrix.
The degree of process complexity and dynamics is plotted on the vertical axis; the horizontal axis shows
the degree of strategic importance of the process. Process 'dynamics' means the extent to which the
process is subject to adjustment in response to external stimuli. The effect of this analysis is to create four
classes of processes, each of which is amenable to a particular improvement strategy.
Exam focus Harmon's matrix could also be useful if the scenario describes an organisation which has a number of
point processes but which is not performing as well as it should. In this case you could use the matrix to
suggest which processes the organisation should concentrate on as being most important to improving its
performance.
Exam focus It is very easy to envisage that the examining team might set a question that requires you to describe how
point a specific process redesign project might proceed. If you cannot recall exactly how Harmon's
methodology proceeds, you could base your answer on the business change lifecycle model. Failing this,
do not be afraid to use your knowledge of the general principles of project management.
Harmon proposes a business process redesign methodology. It is clear from its nature that it is best
fitted to the category of work described in Section 1.13.1 (c) above. That is to say, it seems appropriate for
'middle sized processes that require extensive improvement or change'.
The methodology is over-complex for process improvement (an 'incremental technique for developing
smaller, stable existing processes'): indeed, Harmon covers process improvement in an earlier part of his
book. Nevertheless, passing reference to major strategic change suggests that he does envisage its use at
the other end of the scale, for process reengineering ('fundamental re-thinking of large scale, core
processes').
3.4 Planning
The facilitator and the redesign team need a project charter or overall plan to define the scope of their
work; this should include an account of how the process they design supports the organisation's overall
strategy and goals and how it relates to other processes and stakeholders.
Ideally, this plan will have been defined at a higher echelon of management, such as the executive
committee or the process architecture committee. If this has not been done, it will be for the project
sponsor, facilitator and the steering committee, once appointed, to develop this plan themselves. The
facilitator will then take charge of the outline plan and refine it after appropriate consultation.
The planning phase ends with the agreement of a detailed project plan, including time and cost budgets,
at the executive committee level. To reach this stage, the project sponsor, facilitator and steering group
must produce extensive documentation. This will state the project's assumptions, goals, constraints,
scope and success measures. It will outline the changes that are required and how they fit in with the rest
of the organisation. It is particularly important that resource and systems constraints are considered in
detail.
At the same time, the members of the process redesign team must be identified.
3.7 Development
This phase of the process follows the design through into all of its functional and resource implications.
New IS resources of hardware and software are specified and designed; job descriptions are created and
staff training provided; other necessary resources are acquired. The project sponsor has the role of co-
ordinating the provision of the resources needed.
At this stage, the implications of organising by processes, rather than by functions, become apparent. The
new process is more likely to be effective if it, and the staff and resources committed to it, are managed by
a process manager rather than by a group of separate functional managers. This is, therefore, the time at
which a change to a process structure is best made; this would be a major project in its own right.
The development phase ends when all the new arrangements have been tested and found satisfactory and
the new process is ready for installation.
3.8 Transition
The success of the transition phase depends on successful change management: it can be harmed or
even prevented by opposition or passive resistance. There must be support from the top and close liaison
with the managers who have to make the new process work. This may lead to revisions to the process.
Eventually, this phase merges into routine monitoring of the process for efficiency and potential further
improvements.
Exam focus
An article titled 'Outsourcing' written by Ken Garrett is available in the technical articles section for P3 on
point
the ACCA website. It would be worth taking the time to study this article.
In May 2015, it was reported that Teleperformance, an outsourcing company operating on behalf of the
UK government to process UK travel visas in Montenegro, had its centre in Podgorica shut down by
authorities after it came to light that the company had not registered for tax purposes or to operate in the
country.
In 2014, Teleperformance took over responsibility from the British Embassy for processing visa
applications in Montenegro. The British government had entered into a five year detail worth 300m with
the company to provide visa processing services in 74 different countries. Former Teleperformance
workers told The Independent 'that it had been plagued by problems from the beginning. Delays and
confusion with UK visa applications had resulted in staff being physically threatened by angry members of
the public, they said.
In one particularly embarrassing case, they said the passport of Nina Vujanovic, the daughter of
Montenegro's President Filip Vujanovic, had been accidentally sent to another visa applicant'.
The closure forced the British Home Office to put in measures to allow people to apply for visas through
other centres.
Source:
Green, C. (2015) 'UK visa outsourcing firm closed by Montengrin authorities over tax avoidance and being
found operating illegally', The Independent, 21 May 2015, www.independent.co.uk
Getting the best out of outsourcing depends on successful relationship management, rather than
through the use of formal control systems.
Successful outsourcing depends on three things.
(a) The ability to specify with precision what is to be supplied: this involves both educating suppliers
about the strategic significance of their role and motivating them to high standards of performance
(b) The ability to measure what is actually supplied and thus establish the degree of conformance with
specification
(c) The ability to make adjustments elsewhere if specification is not achieved
FAST FORWARD
There are also practical considerations relating to outsourcing.
It can save on costs by making use of a supplier's economies of scale.
It can increase effectiveness where the supplier deploys higher levels of expertise.
It can lead to loss of control, particularly over quality.
It means giving up an area of threshold competence that may be difficult to reacquire.
Exam focus A question in the June 2015 exam asked candidates to evaluate a claim made by a recently appointed
point managing director that the featured company could produce four of its products at a lower cost by
outsourcing production. The examining team noted that this 'was well answered by most candidates. The
financial analysis (which revealed the managing director's assertion was untrue) was correctly completed
by most candidates and other issues, such as contradicting the marketing message, lack of experience in
outsourcing were also well covered'.
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
Introduction
Having established a framework for the consideration of process change, we
may now proceed further into the practical detail of how to go about it. We start
with some further, simple ideas and then proceed to the main subject of this
chapter, the selection of software packages.
305
Study guide
Intellectual level
D3 Improving the processes of the organisation
(a) Evaluate the effectiveness of current organisational processes 3
(b) Describe a range of process redesign patterns 2
(c) Establish possible redesign options for improving current processes of an
2
organisation
(d) Assess the feasibility of possible redesign options 3
(e) Assess the relationship between process redesign and strategy 3
D4 Software solutions
(a) Establish information system requirements required by business users 2
(b) Assess the advantages and disadvantages of using a generic software
2
solution to fulfil those requirements
(c) Establish a process for evaluating, selecting and implementing a generic
2
software solution
(d) Explore the relationship between generic software solutions and business
2
process redesign
Exam guide
The examining team is known to be interested in software approaches to process change, so we
confidently await regular demonstrations of this interest in the form of questions that address the material
in this chapter.
As we noted earlier, Harmon recommends a management structure based on processes rather than
functions, since it is the efficiency of the organisation's processes that determine its success. In practical
terms, this can lead to a matrix structure.
This approach implies that the hierarchy of objectives should also be structured on process lines, as
should the organisation's measures of performance (we mentioned this approach early in Chapter 1).
Objectives and performance measures flow down in a co-ordinated way from mission to major processes,
to sub-processes, to activities and to individual tasks. The roles of managers at all levels are thus built
around process performance: they plan, set targets, provide training, measure performance and take
control action in terms of the processes for which they are responsible. This approach fits well with the
balanced scorecard approach.
Key term A process redesign pattern is a general approach to redesigning processes for their improvement.
FAST FORWARD
Harmon describes four basic redesign patterns.
(a) Re-engineering starts with a clean sheet of paper.
(b) Simplification eliminates redundant process elements.
(c) Value-added analysis eliminates activities that do not add value.
(d) Gaps and disconnects target problems at departmental boundaries.
The feasibility of any proposed redesign must be considered.
2.1 Re-engineering
We introduced BPR in the previous chapter, using these words: 'business process re-engineering is the
fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in
critical contemporary measures of performance, such as cost, quality, service and speed.'
The BPR approach is used when large-scale change is to be introduced. The aim is to achieve major
efficiency improvements. This pattern is hardly redesign at all, since its philosophy is to question all
assumptions and start from scratch. Re-engineering can achieve very large-scale improvements, but it is
inevitably highly disruptive and has a high risk of dramatic failure.
2.2 Simplification
Simplification is a far less radical pattern of redesign. It proceeds on the assumption that most established
business processes are likely to have developed elements of duplication or redundancy. This assumption
is probably most valid in relation to large-scale processes that cut across departmental or functional
boundaries and it is, therefore, in such instances that simplification is most likely to be fruitful approach.
The effort involved is usually moderate.
The simplification approach commences with identification and modelling of all the systems, activities
and sub-processes involved in the business process under investigation. Each element is then subject to
challenge: it may not actually be necessary; it may provide information that is available elsewhere; it may
be a bottleneck; it may repeat something done in another place. Whenever possible, activities are removed
from the process so that duplication and unnecessary complexity are gradually eliminated. This pattern is
likely to produce improvements, though their scale can vary widely, from the relatively minor to the
impressive.
When Toyota restarted production cars in the late 1940s, the prevailing western technology for producing
body panels was based on extremely careful set-up of presses and very long production runs. Set-up had
to be painstaking in order to avoid sub-standard output, some of which might not be discovered until it
had been incorporated into a part-finished car. The problem was the alignment of the press dies. These
weighed many tonnes and so took a team of specialists up to a day to reposition. In these circumstances,
very long production runs were required to make the whole process economic. This implied the use of a
large number of presses in order to provide the hundreds of different panels required and often led to
excessive inventory holdings.
Toyota was not able to use this system: it had only a few presses and could only sell a few thousand cars
each year. Taiichi Ohno, the chief production engineer, therefore developed a system using simple
adjustment mechanisms and roller mountings for the dies. This made it possible for ordinary production
workers to change dies in a tiny fraction of the time previously thought necessary. An unexpected bonus
of this approach was that, since the output panels were needed for immediate assembly, any misalignment
or other fault was discovered immediately and wastage was thus reduced.
How does this example help us? It is clear that Ohno's system of changing dies is an essential, minimal,
value-enabling preliminary to the value activity of pressing body panels; the traditional way is extremely
expensive and, with its natural consequences of over-stocking and high wastage, adds little if any value.
Bearing in mind that the overall intention is to eliminate non-value-adding activities, we may thus suggest
that where preparation and set up are concerned, we should aim to ensure that they qualify as value-
enabling activities by making them as simple and cost effective as possible.
The Toyota example illustrates another aspect of the importance of processes and process redesign. This
is the link between processes and strategy. The standard process was created in the context of the
2.5 Feasibility
The purpose of considering feasibility is not so much to find out if a proposed project can achieve its
objective as to establish whether or not it can do so in a cost-effective manner. Given sufficient resources,
most proposals that lie outside the realms of fantasy can be implemented, but not all are worth
undertaking. The feasibility study is the mechanism by which the organisation filters out proposals that
would cost too much, cause too much disruption, make excessive demands on human and other
resources or have side effects whose undesirability outweighs their advantages. The assessment of
feasibility can be broken down into a number of areas.
Case Study
Process diagram
In the previous chapter, we looked at a fictitious manufacturing company (Make-It) to illustrate the
application of Harmon's process-strategy matrix. Imagine that one of the items Make-It makes is a
wooden chair, with a cushioned seat.
Accept
Quality inspector Reject Inspect item
Reject
item
Once the diagram is complete, we can see who is responsible for what areas of the process, and whether
there are any aspects of it which can be improved. For example:
Are there any elements of duplication or redundancy?
Are there any gaps or disconnects?
Are there any activities which do not add value?
In this case, we have assumed that the carpentry work involved in carving the wood is a specialised job,
so the carpenter should not also be assembling the chair. Therefore, there is no duplication as a result of
having both a carpenter and an upholsterer involved in the process.
However, there is potential redundancy in the raw material inspection. If the storeroom manager inspected
the materials before giving them to the carpenter and the upholsterer, then they could concentrate on their
core activities of using the materials to make a chair.
There are also some potential issues in the order of the construction process. If the upholsterer makes the
seat cushion before receiving the chair frame from the carpenter, there is a risk that the size may not be
right. (There is no indication that all the chairs are made to the same size, or that the carpenter tells the
upholsterer the exact dimensions of the chair being made.) Therefore, there is potentially a disconnection
between the two processes, and we suggest this could be resolved by the upholsterer waiting until the
carpenter has finished the chair frame before making the seat cushion.
You might also question whether the final quality inspection adds value, but we have assumed it does. The
customer will only want to pay for the chair if it is well-built, and the quality inspection ensures this.
The diagram can now be redrawn to show the proposed changes:
Reject
Accept
Quality inspector Inspect item
Reject
item
However, note that before implementing these changes, management should discuss them with all the
people involved to make sure there are not any reasons which would mean the changes are not suitable or
feasible.
The use of computers to automate business processes began over half a century ago in the UK. J Lyons &
Co had made many improvements in its administrative techniques and set about developing its own
computer in association with Cambridge University. The result was the LEO 1 computer: LEO stands for
Lyons Electronic Office. LEO 1 ran its first payroll in December 1953. The LEO system was the archetypal
tailored, or bespoke, IS; not only was the software created specifically for the company's purposes, the
hardware was too.
In the forty years that followed, computers were widely utilised for a wide range of business procedures,
including the well-known manufacturing and resource control systems, MRP and MRPII. The result of this
process was the widespread acquisition of standardised software packages by large companies from the
1990s onward. These packages were originally standalone applications for such business functions as
accounting and HRM but their vendors developed their products into packages that could deal with major
parts of a business's system infrastructure in an integrated way. By extension from the MRP acronym,
these integrated systems became known as enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems.
Be prepared to contrast Harmon's reservations about standard packages with Davenport's view that
Exam focus process standards will have a positive effect on how business is conducted. There is a debate between
point those who think that packages represent best practice (eg Davenport) and those (like Harmon) who see
them as merely average practice. There is merit in both views but specific problems and context may lead
to one conclusion or the other.
Because of this generic nature, many clients insist on having their ERP software tailored to fit their own
existing systems. This is generally a mistake.
When an organisation contemplates the acquisition or development of a new IS, whether a component or
a complete system, the first stage of the project is the collection of information so that system
requirements may be firmly established. This must be done carefully and with an insistence on the
verification of data: personal impressions and opinions are of little value. Also, it may be necessary to
revisit work that has already been done in order to extend or confirm the data.
It is important that analysts have adequate face-to-face communication skills, since much of their work
will involve close contact with the staff whose work they investigate. Staff may be suspicious, taciturn or
otherwise uncooperative and analysts may have to work hard to gain their confidence. An important
aspect of this process is initial research undertaken in order to become familiar with the basics of the
business systems in use.
Skidmore and Eva describe seven techniques for fact gathering.
4.1 Interviews
Interviews allow analysts and stakeholders to meet and are thus particularly appropriate during the early
stages of investigation. Interviews are used to collect information and promote understanding of a range
of topics.
The business background and technical context and constraints
Current procedures and data flows
Known problems with the existing system
Requirements for the new system
Interviews must be carefully planned and conducted if they are to produce satisfactory results.
(a) It is important not to rush to conclusions at this early stage. Solutions based on incomplete
information are unlikely to be appropriate.
(b) Projects to introduce new systems can be unsettling for staff since they often lead to job losses
and other unwelcome changes. Interviewers must be careful to avoid any element of interrogation
or criticism and should be appreciative of interviewees' assistance.
(c) Interviewers should make comprehensive notes during interviews and write them up promptly.
(d) It is usual to start at the top with the project sponsor and work down the hierarchy through
managers to the staff that actually operate the existing system. This allows for the establishment of
an overview that is gradually supplemented with more detailed information.
(e) Interviews should take place in the interviewee's workplace. This enhances interviewee
confidence, ensures that current documents are available and allows for the initial observation of
working conditions and practices.
4.2 Questionnaires
Questionnaires do not permit the use of question types other than closed, nor do they permit the
interpretation of body language. However, they can be useful for gathering data from a large number of
geographically scattered respondents and, with careful design, may be used to assess attitudes and
aspirations. Also, they are not affected by distortions and errors introduced by the interviewer. Question
design is obviously of great importance.
(a) The questionnaire should be as short as possible and the questions should be both concise and
precise.
(b) Each question should ask for a single, separate response and not combine two queries.
(c) Leading questions, which are those that suggest a particular response, must not be used.
(d) Questions must use words and expressions that the respondents will understand immediately,
including local jargon and technical terms, where applicable.
(e) The method of response, such as box ticking or number circling, must be made clear.
Once drafted, questionnaires should be tried out on a sample of respondents to ensure that it works. This
trial should include an analysis of responses.
4.7 Workshops
Workshops are particularly useful when there are too many stakeholders to interview individually; when
project scope is unclear, as may be the case with new systems; and when there is disagreement about
system requirements. A workshop run by a skilled facilitator can resolve this kind of problem and lead to
acceptable consensus. Workshops also allow for creative interaction and can achieve more than other
methods.
A series of workshops may be required, probably starting with senior stakeholders in order to decide high-
level objectives and requirements. This stage may be followed by workshops for users to deal with more
detailed matters.
Ideally, workshops will take place off-site in order to avoid disruption.
4.8 Prototyping
Prototyping is carried out using software to present a mock-up of how the eventual system will look and
work. Users can then comment. This is very useful when the proposed system specification is very
complex or when it lacks detail or precision. Another approach is to demonstrate an existing package that
offers some of the required functionality, though it must be made clear that this is not being proposed as a
solution.
Skidmore and Eva suggest that software packages may be assessed against ten high-level categories of
requirement.
Functional requirements
Non-functional requirements
Technical requirements
Design requirements
Supplier stability requirements
Supplier citizenship requirements
Initial implementation requirements
Operability requirements
Cost constraints
Time constraints
Exam focus
Question 3 in June 2014 focused on a construction company which had purchased a new CRM software
point
package. The company had poorly executed the evaluation, selection and implementation of the software
solution. The first requirement for 15 marks asked candidates to suggest a process for evaluating,
selecting and implementing software packages and to explain how this process would have prevented the
problems experienced by the company.
The examining team noted that 'very few candidates focused on a process that encompassed evaluation,
selection and implementation. Too many answers identified a problem in the scenario and then suggested
how this might have been avoided. Such an approach did gain credit, but it tended to lead to long
disjointed answers, with much repetition and no overall coherent process'.
Score
4 No modification required
3 Up to one day's work required
2 Two to five days' work required
1 Six to ten days' work required
0 More than ten days' work required
The suppliers' scores are multiplied by the requirement ratings and the results summed up to provide a
total assessment for each of the two high-level requirements.
7.3.4 Cost
If all the tenders satisfy the cost imperative, they may be graded relative to the cheapest. Cost (and time)
trade-offs may also be assessed.
7.5 Implementation
Because packages, by their very nature, may be expected to be fully functional and because of the work
done during the assessment, it should not be necessary to include much testing in the initial
implementation. Testing is likely to be restricted to volume running, checking interfaces with other
systems and final usability checking.
Similarly, standard package documentation is unlikely to require much adjustment, though there may be
some work required to integrate it with existing process documentation.
Training in the use of the package should be provided by the vendor, though the user will be responsible
for training in the organisation's wider processes that relate to the package.
File creation and conversion are likely to be more involved, as already discussed. These are specialised
jobs and vendor assistance is likely to be necessary. Vendors may quote a low price for this service as an
inducement to buy.
Key terms Risk avoidance involves choosing not to do something that may bring about risk. For example, deciding
not to embark on a new way of working, or buying a particular software package, due to the level of
inherent risk that it would introduce.
Risk mitigation involves taking steps to either reduce the level of risk, or reduce the impact, should the
risk occur.
Risk mitigation risk reduction. Reducing the risk by changing the way that a particular activity is carried
out. For example, IT risk can be minimised by adopting a best practice apporach when aquiring or
operating IT systems.
Risk mitigation impact reduction. Some risks cannot be eliminated or reduced to an acceptable level. In
these cases, they should be mitigated by assessing the likely impact of the risk and taking steps to reduce
this impact. For example, an organisation may issue procedures for quarentining and diabling a systems
virus before it spreads throughout the system.
When buying a software package, the user can mitigate the risk in several ways.
(a) Maintain a good relationship, avoiding conflict
(b) Make supplier evaluation a continuing process to obtain early warning of potential problems
(c) Have a contingency plan to migrate to another supplier
(d) Maintain an escrow agreement
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
Information technology
329
330
E-business
Introduction
Your syllabus includes an extensive section on information technology and e-
business. This is a relatively new, rapidly expanding and fundamentally
important aspect of strategic implementation. Indeed, in many organisations, it
may be regarded as a fundamental aspect of strategy and certainly of the
business model. In this chapter and the next, we will consider this vital new
area of business.
331
Study guide
Intellectual level
C1 Organising and enabling success
(e) Discuss how big data can be used to inform and implement business 2
strategy
E1 Principles of information technology
(a) Advise on the basic hardware and software infrastructure required to 2
support business information systems
(b) Identify and analyse the general information technology controls and 2
application controls required for effective accounting information systems
(c) Analyse the adequacy of general information technology controls and 3
application controls for relevant application systems
(d) Evaluate controls over the safeguarding of information technology assets to 3
ensure the organisational ability to meet business objectives
E2 Principles of e-business
(a) Discuss the meaning and scope of e-business 2
(b) Advise on the reasons for the adoption of e-business and recognise barriers 3
to its adoption
(c) Evaluate how e-business changes the relationships between organisations 3
and their customers
(d) Discuss and evaluate the main business and marketplace models for 3
delivering e-business
E3 E-business application: upstream supply chain management
(a) Analyse the main elements of both the push and pull models of the supply 2
chain
(b) Discuss the relationship of the supply chain to the value chain and the value 2
network
(c) Assess the potential application of information technology to support and 3
restructure the supply chain
(d) Advise on how external relationships with suppliers and distributors can be 3
structured to deliver a restructured supply chain
(e) Discuss the methods, benefits and risks of e-procurement 2
(f) Assess different options and models for implementing e-procurement 2
Exam guide
We would expect aspects of e-business to be relevant to many questions, both in Section A of your exam
and in Section B. Think back to the relational diagram of the main syllabus capabilities: information
technology is in the middle tier, and so you should be asking yourself how it affects business strategy (the
top tier). At one level, you need to consider how the proper co-ordination and alignment of IT systems is
essential to support strategic implementation; but at another level, you also need to consider how IT can
shape that strategy itself through e-business and e-commerce.
We would expect that from time to time, there might be complete questions linked directly to e-business
and e-marketing.
Key term E-business has been defined by IBM as 'the transformation of key business processes through the use of
internet technologies'.
E-business processes include not only online marketing and sales, but supply-chain and channel
management; manufacturing and inventory control; financial operations; and employee workflow
procedures across an entire organisation. Essentially, e-business technologies empower customers,
employees, suppliers, distributors, vendors and partners by giving them powerful tools for information
management and communications.
There are different levels of e-business; some businesses do not need a website but deal all day with
other businesses and customers online via email and an e-marketplace. Other businesses have a website
that helps them sell their products all around the world. It is up to each business to determine what level
of e-business is right for it.
E-business is often confused with e-commerce.
(a) Any transaction with an electronic process using internet technologies is e-business.
(b) If there is a financial transaction involved with the electronic process using internet technologies,
it is e-commerce. For example, buying a book on Amazon.com is both e-commerce and e-
business. Creating a map with directions from your office to the post office on Yahoo.com is e-
business (no e-commerce is involved).
E-commerce has many aspects.
(a) Electronic ordering of goods and services that are delivered using traditional channels such as post
or couriers (indirect electronic commerce)
(b) Online ordering, payment and delivery of intangible goods and services such as software,
electronic magazines, entertainment services and information services (direct electronic
commerce)
(c) Electronic fund transfers (EFT)
(d) Electronic share trading
E-HR
Web-conferencing
E-collaboration
E-invoicing
E-procurement
Document management
Web portals
Company intranet
Email, internet, company website, remote working
Initial capability
The e-business adoption pyramid
Most businesses start with the key e-business facilities of email, internet and company websites and in
addition, many also have remote working facilities. These facilities seem to constitute the key
communication tools essential for businesses in the present technological environment.
Benefits of e-business
(a) Cost reduction in procurement and reduced headcount needed to handle consumer and business
enquiries. Cost of sales and promotion may be reduced and lower prices passed on to customers.
(b) Capability may be able to increase penetration in new countries and may help reduce the amount
of goods stored.
(c) Communication to customers can be improved with updates of product or service information.
(d) Control the website can be used to monitor interest in product or service from customers.
(e) Customer service many basic enquiries about products can be dealt with on the website.
Opening times (for stores or offices) and special offers can be promoted. This may reduce the
number of phone enquiries. Business customers can use the e-commerce system to track delivery
and manage inventory better through reducing time for ordering.
(f) Competitive advantage will be dependent on the use of e-commerce by competitors.
Exam focus
A Section B question in the December 2010 exam focused on a professional body, the Institute of
point
Administrative Accountants (IAA) which ran paper based examinations. The new Head of Education at the
IAA had proposed introducing e-assessments, allowing students to attempt papers over the internet. The
question asked students to evaluate the benefits and costs of adopting e-assessment. There were 15
marks available for providing a balanced evaluation. There was no need to refer to any specific model,
students who kept their answers practical and related the benefits and costs of the proposal back to the
scenario were able to score well.
Alibaba was set up in 1999 by a Chinese English teacher (Jack Ma), with the aim of helping small Chinese
businesses trade globally. The company has predominantly operated in China. According to Alibaba's
website, its mission is to 'make it easy to do business anywhere. We do this by giving suppliers the tools
necessary to reach a global audience for their products, and by helping buyers find products and suppliers
quickly and efficiently'.
The company boasts that it gives buyers access to hundreds of millions of products including consumer
electronics, machinery and clothing. Buyers are located in over 190 countries.
As Linda Yueh, the BBC's chief business correspondent explains, Alibaba is effectively a 'combination of
eBay and Amazon. It is an online company with multiple revenue streams that are more conventional than
a social network site. Alibaba.com is a B2B, or business-to-business, website. It links up businesses
around the world looking for suppliers. For instance, it links wholesalers to distributors around the world,
from the UK to China to the US'. Businesses can trade almost anything from olive oil to computer
components.
In 2015 Alibaba launched its own online bank offering services to smaller entities.
Adapted from two online sources:
1) 'Company overview' published on the Alibaba website:
www.alibabagroup.com/en/about/overview
2) Yueh, L. (2013) 'Alibaba: The next Facebook?' BBC, 21 June 2013, www.bbc.co.uk
B2C (Business-to-Consumer) involves businesses selling to the general public, typically through
catalogues with shopping cart software.
C2B (Consumer-to-Business) a consumer posts their project with a set budget online and within hours,
companies review the consumer's requirements and bid on the project. The consumer reviews the bids
and selects the company that will complete the project.
C2C (Consumer-to-Consumer) an excellent example of this is found at eBay, where consumers sell their
goods and services to other consumers. Another technology that has emerged to support C2C activities is
that of the payment intermediary PayPal. Instead of purchasing items directly from an unknown, untrusted
seller, the buyer can instead send the money to PayPal, who forward it to the vendor's account.
The transaction alternatives between businesses and consumers are shown in the matrix below:
Delivery by
Business Consumer
Business
eg BPP.com eg Amazon.com
Varieties of e-commerce
2.2.1 Disintermediation
Disintermediation is the removal of intermediaries in a supply chain that formerly linked a company to its
customers. Instead of going through traditional distribution channels, with intermediaries such as a
distributor, wholesaler, broker or agent, companies may now deal with every customer directly via the
internet. Dell computers have taken this option and removed any intermediaries from their downstream
supply chain (between them and their customers).
2.2.2 Examples
You can already bypass publishers to get a book printed at tiny cost through self-publishing sites such as
Lulu.com. Gambling is being changed by online sites arranging bets directly between individuals, not
through bookmakers, with Betfair being a market leader in this respect. In the UK, voice communication is
being revolutionised by enabling people to use free internet telephony systems such as Skype, rather than
BT. Even benevolent intermediaries such as libraries may be under threat if all reference books are
scanned by Google and made available to everyone.
Disintermediation may be initiated by consumers because they are aware of supply prices direct from the
manufacturer or wholesaler. Alternatively, it may be instigated by the author or creator of a work, such as
Stephen King selling his books directly to the public. There are also third party aggregators or buyer's
clubs that link consumers with producers to obtain lower prices.
Reverse auction sites that allow consumers to specify an item they wish to purchase, allowing producers
and others to bid on the item.
2.2.3 Reintermediation
Reintermediation is the establishment of new intermediary roles for traditional intermediaries that were
disintermediated. In some cases, a new element of a supply chain simply replaces a single displaced
element, such as Amazon.com replacing retailers. In other cases, a reintermediating entity replaces
multiple supply chain elements. These new intermediaries do one of two things.
(a) Provide customers with new, important value-added services not provided in the new direct
customer-supplier relationship. An example is Kelkoo, which is a shopping/price comparison
search engine.
(b) Provide customers with more efficient means of transacting business.
The ever-increasing number of 'hubs', 'portals', 'aggregators', 'clearing houses' and 'exchanges' shows
that entirely new ways of doing business are being created. Those organisations (or individuals) clever
enough to recognise the opportunities provided by the web are reinventing themselves as 'cybermediaries'
or 'infomediaries' intermediaries offering value-added services to consumers and vendors over the
internet.
2.2.5 Countermediation
Countermediation is the creation of a new intermediary by an established company in order to compete
via e-business with established intermediaries. Examples include B&Q setting up diy.com to help people
who want to do their own DIY, and Opodo.com which has been set up by a collaboration of nine European
airlines.
2.2.6 Examples
Airlines. The impact of the internet is seen clearly in the transportation industry. Airlines now have a more
effective way of bypassing intermediaries (ie travel agents) because they can give their customers
immediate access to flight reservation systems.
Travel agents. The internet has also produced a new set of online travel agents who have lower costs
because of their ability to operate without a high street branch network. Companies such as
Lastminute.com have low-cost structures which enable them to offer cheap tickets for flights, package
holidays, cruises and so forth.
Tesco has operated on the internet since 1994 and is the UK's largest internet grocery business. In 2000,
it formally launched its Tesco.com site. In addition to its online grocery business, Tesco has also
established Tesco Direct as its online marketplace for electrical appliances, home furnishings and other
non-grocery products.
Financial services. The impact of the internet is especially profound in the field of financial services. New
intermediaries enable prospective customers to compare the interest rates and prices charged by different
organisations for pensions, mortgages and other financial products. This means that the delivering
companies are losing control of the marketing of their services, and there is a downward pressure on
prices, especially for services which can legitimately be seen as mere commodities (eg house and
contents insurance).
1 Brokerage model Those that bring buyers and sellers together and facilitate transactions (often
fee based)
2 Advertising model Supported by advertising revenue, a website will provide content and services
together with advertising (eg banner ads)
3 Infomediary model Collecting data about consumers and their purchasing habits and selling this
information to other businesses
4 Merchant model Selling of goods and services on the traditional retail model
Tutorial note Section 3 of this chapter covers some fairly technical material about hardware and software. You will not
be examined specifically on this, so you do not need a detailed knowledge of it. However, you need to be
aware of the underlying ideas to appreciate that an organisation must have a suitable IT infrastructure to
support its strategy.
Also, remember that information systems and information technology can play an important role in
allowing organisations to achieve their strategic objectives overall.
Performance Objective 5 'Leadership and Management' of the Practical Experience Requirement asks you
to show how you 'work with others to recognise, assess or improve business performance, using
appropriate techniques and IT applications'.
Technology plays a central role in virtually every finance team, and professional accountants need to
recognise the importance of technology for handling information and supporting business.
The table below shows how the different components of the e-business infrastructure relate to each other.
They can be shown as different layers with defined interfaces between each layer.
NAP
3.3.1 Intranets
An intranet is an internal network used to share information. Intranets utilise internet technology and
protocols. The firewall surrounding an intranet fends off unauthorised access.
The idea behind an intranet is that companies set up their own mini version of the internet. Each employee
has a browser, used to access a server computer that holds corporate information on a wide variety of
topics, and in some cases, also offers access to the internet.
Potential applications include company newspapers, induction material, online procedure and policy
manuals, employee web pages where individuals post details of their activities and progress, and internal
databases of the corporate information store.
Intranets are used for many purposes:
(a) Performance data: linked to sales, inventory, job progress and other database and reporting
systems, enabling employees to process and analyse data to fulfil their work objectives.
(b) Employment information: online policy and procedures manuals (health and safety, disciplinary
and grievance), training and induction material, internal contacts for help and information.
(c) Employee support/information: advice on first aid, healthy working at computer terminals, training
courses offered and resources held in the corporate library and so on.
(d) Notice boards for the posting of messages to and from employees: notice of meetings, events,
trade union activities.
(e) Departmental home pages: information and news about each department's personnel and
activities to aid identification and cross-functional understanding.
(f) Bulletins or newsletters: details of product launches and marketing campaigns, staff moves,
changes in company policy, links to relevant databases or departmental home pages.
(g) Email facilities for the exchange of messages between employees in different locations.
(h) Upward communication: suggestion schemes, feedback, questionnaires.
A firewall is a security device that effectively isolates the sensitive parts of an organisation's system from
those areas available to external users. It examines all requests and messages entering and exiting the
intranet and blocks any not conforming to specified criteria.
3.3.2 Extranets
Extranets are web based but serve a combination of users. Whereas an intranet resides behind a firewall
and is accessible only to people who are members of the same company or organisation, an extranet
provides various levels of accessibility to outsiders.
Only those outsiders with a valid username and password can access an extranet: varying levels of access
rights enable control over what people can view. Extranets are becoming a very popular means for business
partners to exchange information. They can share data or systems to provide smoother transaction
processing and more efficient services for customers. An extranet may be used for a variety of purposes:
(a) To provide a pooled service which a number of business partners can access and exchange news
which is of use to partner companies and clients
(b) To share training or development resources
Firewall
Catalogue
database Wiring hub
Router
Internet
Router
Firewall Mainframe
Customer Intranet
Customer
purchase order
service
Application Layer 7 actually interacts with the operating system or application whenever the user
chooses to transfer files, read messages or perform other network-related activities
Presentation Layer 6 takes the data provided by the Application layer and converts it into a standard
format that the other layers can understand
Session Layer 5 establishes, maintains and ends communication with the receiving device
Transport This layer maintains flow control of data and provides for error checking and recovery of
data between the devices. Flow control means that the Transport layer looks to see if
data is coming from more than one application and integrates each application's data
into a single stream for the physical network
Network Combines the Physical and Data layers and routes the data between devices on the same
Interface network. It also manages the exchange of data between the network and other devices.
Internet Corresponds to the Network layer. The Internet Protocol (IP) uses the IP address,
consisting of a Network Identifier and a Host Identifier, to determine the address of the
device it is communicating with.
Transport Corresponding to the OSI Transport layer, this is the part of the protocol stack where the
Transport Control Protocol (TCP) can be found. TCP ensures that connection is
maintained and that data is transferred correctly
Application Combines the Session, Presentation and Application layers of the OSI model. Protocols
for specific functions such as email (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol, SMTP) and file
transfer (File Transfer Protocol, FTP) reside at this level.
As you can see, it is not necessary to develop a separate layer for each and every function outlined in the
OSI Reference Model. But developers are able to ensure that a certain level of compatibility is maintained
by following the general guidelines provided by the model.
Exam focus
point An article titled 'Information technology' written by Ken Garrett is available in the technical articles section
for P3 on the ACCA website. The article explores the care that organisations need to take when designing
their IT infrastructure. Consideration is given to the types of controls that organisations use in order to
safeguard their computer systems. It would be worth taking the time to study this article.
In 2013, BiometricsUpdate.com reported that the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) was
investigating the introduction of biometric security measures as part of a security overhaul. BBC's Head of
Capital Development stated, 'Access ID is currently used not biometrics yet, but we are looking at it. We
think it will be more acceptable now, as it is used in schools and colleges.'
The BBC often have freelance workers and non employees working on the premises, and one of the issues
the Head of Capital Development highlighted was how to manage a public thoroughfare which might go
through a news room.
Adapted from the article:
'BBC mulls biometric access control' by Adam Vrankuli (April 2013) published on the Biometrics Update
website: www.biometricsupdate.com
Exam focus The examining team has highlighted that those students attempting paper P3 need to understand the
point control implications that arise when using a computerised accounting system. An appreciation of the rules
which govern how accounting entries are treated when posted to the software is essential. A question may
ask you to suggest ways in which internal system controls can be improved.
Today, most organisations operate computerised accounting processes, replacing manual accounting
systems.
In many ways, the use of computerised accounting systems has helped to reduce the scope for human
error in the processing of data. As illustrated earlier in this section, accounting software correctly installed
and set up should ensure that all data input follows a standardised set of rules to ensure that entries of the
same type are treated in the same manner. For example, a good system should ensure that entries posted
to the program are sent to the correct accounts, making it impossible to post a one-sided entry, ie only
posting the debits and failing to post the credits.
Exam focus When a disaster occurs, safeguarding the organisation's IT assets is likely to be of critical importance for
point most modern businesses. The ability of the entity to respond quickly is central to ensuring the continuity
of operations. It is possible that an exam question may focus on an evaluation of an entity's disaster
recovery process.
In 2015, the details of over 37 million accounts were stolen from Canadian based extramarital affairs
website Ashley Madison and posted on the internet. The company's tagline 'life is short, have an affair'
encourages users to set up an online account with a view to meeting married individuals or people in
committed relationships.
In the event of a computer system breakdown or security breach, a good disaster recovery plan should
provide for:
(a) Standby procedures so that some operations can be performed while normal services are disrupted
(b) Recovery procedures once the cause of the breakdown has been discovered or corrected
(c) Personnel management policies to ensure that (a) and (b) are implemented properly
Contents of a disaster recovery plan
The contents of a disaster recovery plan will include the following:
Section Comment
Definition of responsibilities It is important that somebody (a manager or co-ordinator)
is designated to take control in a crisis. This person can
then delegate specific tasks or responsibilities to other
designated personnel.
Priorities Limited resources may be available for processing. Some
tasks are more important than others. These must be
established in advance. Similarly, the recovery programme
may indicate that certain areas must be tackled first.
Back-up and standby arrangements These may be with other installations, with a company that
provides such services (eg maybe the hardware vendor), or
reverting to manual procedures.
Communication with staff The problems of a disaster can be compounded by poor
communication between members of staff.
Public relations If the disaster has a public impact, the recovery team may
come under pressure from the public or from the media.
Risk assessment Some way must be found of assessing the requirements of
the problem, if it is contained, with the continued operation
of the organisation as a whole.
The disaster recovery plan is dependent on effective back-up procedures for data and software, and
arrangements for replacement and even alternative premises.
The plan must cover all activities, from the initial response to a disaster, through to damage limitation and
full recovery. Responsibilities must be clearly spelt out for all tasks.
Ideally, the plan should be tested. A simulation, ideally under normal business conditions, will
demonstrate whether hardware and software operate effectively and staff can operate under alternative
arrangements.
Hardware duplication
Hardware duplication may be required to permit a system to function in case of breakdown. The provision
of back-up computers tends to be quite costly, particularly when these systems have no other function.
Many organisations will use several similar computer systems and find that a significant level of protection
against system faults can be provided by shifting operations to one of the systems still functioning.
4 Big data
FAST FORWARD
Big data is the term used to describe the growth of structured and unstructured data. Some experts argue
that big data may be as important to business as the internet.
Laney suggests that big data can be defined by considering the three V's:
Volume
Velocity
Variety
Big data analytics refers to the analysis and identification of insights in vast quantities of data. Historically,
organisations have been restricted as to the amount of data that they can process due to the storage
limitations of existing computer systems.
McKinsey's 2011 report, 'Big data: The next frontier for innovation, competition and productivity' suggests
five ways in which big data can create value for organisations:
Creating transparency
Performance improvement
Market segmentation and customisation
Decision making
New products and services
Critics, however, argue that big data is simply the latest buzzword which has become an obsession of
business leaders and the media alike. Critics claim that big data analytics tend to be too focused on the
discovery of correlations between data sets with little interest given to the causation of such relationships.
In this section, we shall explore the role of big data in helping companies design and implement their
strategies. Section C of the syllabus refers specifically to the role of big data in informing and
implementing strategy. Due to its heavy dependence on IT systems and links with e-business, Big Data is
explored here in Chapter 11. Throughout this section, we look at the way organisations collect and use
data to support and inform the process of strategic development.
Organisations today have more transactional data than they have ever had before about their customers,
suppliers and about their operations.
More generally, the growth of the internet, multimedia, wireless networks, smartphones, social media,
sensors and other digital technology are all helping to fuel a data revolution. In the so-called 'Internet of
Things,' sensors embedded in physical objects such as mobile phones, motor vehicles, smart energy
meters, RFID tags, tracking devices and traffic flow monitors all create and communicate data which is
shared across wired and wireless networks that function in a similar way to the internet. The timing and
location of cash withdrawals from ATM machines could also be a potential source of data.
Consumers using social media, smartphones, laptops and tablets to browse the internet, to search for
items, to make purchases and to share information with other users also all create trails of data. Similarly,
internet search indexes (such as Google Trends) can be sources of data for big data analytics.
Exam focus An article titled 'Big Data' (2015) written by Ken Garrett is available in the technical articles section for P3
point
on the ACCA website. It would be worth taking the time to study this article.
In March 2014, the BBC's Matthew Wall reported on the growing emphasis that big business is now
placing on the role of big data.
It's not big, it's just bigger
Laurie Miles, Head of Analytics for big data specialist SAS, explains that 'the term big data has been
around for decades, and we've been doing analytics all this time. It's not big, it's just bigger'. Miles
highlights that, for many years, organisations held traditional structured data, which could be neatly stored
and organised in databases. However, over the last 20 years, the rise of the internet has lead to a
'proliferation of so-called unstructured data, generated by all our digital interactions, from email to online
shopping, text messages to tweets, Facebook updates to YouTube videos'. This has resulted in
increasingly large and complex data sets, which have become harder to analyse. It is predicted that 90%
of all the data in existence today has been created in the past few years.
The big challenge
The challenge for big business has been to capture and analyse these vast quantities of data, which may
be of use in a commercial context. Miles notes 'data is only as good as the intelligence we can glean from
it, and that entails effective data analytics and a whole lot of computing power to cope with the exponential
increase in volume'.
Wall reports that a significant number of large entities have already turned to big data analytics with the
aim of gaining a competitive advantage over their rivals. Proponents of big data analytics argue that the
insights gained may lead to improvements throughout the entire organisation.
'Practically, anyone who makes, grows and sells anything can use big data analytics to make their
manufacturing and production processes more efficient and their marketing more targeted and cost-
effective.'
The article draws an important distinction between the role of big data analytics compared to historic data
analysis. Big data is not just about understanding historic business intelligence, but instead combines
several 'real time' data sets, which make it increasingly useful to big businesses.
The big questions
It should be noted that the rise of big data has had its implications. Organisations looking to exploit the
opportunities presented have encountered a significant shortage of individuals with the required skills in
the job market to analyse the data. As Duncan Ross, Director of Science at Teradata, highlights: 'big data
needs new skills, but the business and academic worlds are playing catch up. The job of the data scientist
didn't exist five years or ten years ago'.
Questions have also been raised over who ultimately owns the data that organisations hold and who is
responsible for keeping such data safe from hackers. Does it belong to the individual or customer, the
company, the service provider hosting the data or the national jurisdiction where the data is held? Such
questions are unlikely to go away in the short term, as Miles highlights, it is a 'legal minefield'.
Adapted from: Wall, M (March 2014) Big data: Are you ready for blast-off? [Online] BBC www.bbc.co.uk
Exam focus
It is particularly important that you understand how big data can help to keep management informed of
point
developments which may affect the ability of the organisation to meet its objectives. This is likely to be
essential for most organisations during the implementation of its strategy.
In May 2013, Tesco, the market-leading supermarket chain, unveiled plans to save 20m a year by
exploiting the use of big data analytics to help ensure that its in-store refrigerators operate at the right
temperature. A report by Computerweekly.com highlighted the findings of a joint project between Tesco
Ireland and IBM aimed at 'optimising the performance of its in-store refrigerators'. The project used highly
sophisticated computer systems to analyse Tesco's refrigeration data.
As Goodwin highlights, 'without realising it, many Tesco stores in Ireland were running their refrigerators
at a lower temperature than necessary'. John Walsh, Tesco's Energy and Carbon Manager in Ireland,
noted that, 'ideally, we keep our refrigerators at between 21C and 23C, but in reality we found we
were keeping them colder. That came as a surprise to us'.
Tesco was able to capture this data from in-store sensors that monitor the performance of individual
refrigeration units. The sensors then process 'the data in real time, and display the results on a Google
map that shows the performance of refrigerators in more than 120 Irish stores', says Goodwin. As the
article highlights, Tesco has achieved maintenance cost savings, as engineers are now able to investigate
potential faults remotely, 'diagnose the problem and turn up with the right part. Previously, engineers
would turn up to the store, diagnose the problem and have to return to the depot to collect the equipment
they needed'.
Adapted from: Goodwin, B (May 2013) 'Tesco uses Big Data to cut cooling costs by up to 20m' [Online]
Computerweekly.com. www.computerweekly.com
The following case study outlines how companies are now using data about their customers to analyse
their competitors in order to shape their own competitive strategy.
In 2013, Donna Ferguson, writing in The Guardian newspaper, illustrated how a number of major
supermarket chains have taken to using big data as a means to better understand their rivals.
The use of in-store loyalty cards as a means of capturing data about customers and their shopping habits
to enable the effective targeting of shoppers with promotions, is not a new occurrence. Tesco's Clubcard
and Sainsbury's Nectar card schemes have been in existence for many years.
Today, retailers have started to exploit data about their shoppers by tracking purchases made by individual
debit and credit cards. As Guy-Montague-Jones of The Grocer highlights, retailers are able to 'build up a
demographic profile of you, and collect data about how loyal you are, what you buy and how much you
spend'.
Retailers that operate online shops are now able to use data about a shoppers' previous purchasing
behaviour to target individuals with particular products when they log on. Analysis of shopping patterns
are now even being used to help store managers decide what items to stock. Ferguson notes that
'Sainsbury's discovered that a cereal brand called Grape-Nuts was worth stocking despite weak sales
because the shoppers who bought it were extremely loyal to Sainsbury's, and were often big spenders'.
Furthermore, following extensive data analysis, Sainsbury's purchased the remaining 50% of Sainsbury's
bank, which it did not own, as those individuals who used the bank's services were found to 'become
more loyal and spend more in-store'.
Competitor analysis
Establishing new stores
The supermarket chain Waitrose has taken to using shoppers' Visa card data obtained in-store to analyse
which competing stores customers are using when not frequenting a Waitrose outlet. This data has been
used to help the company decide where to locate new stores. The article highlights that the data analytics
firm Beyond Analytics was hired by Waitrose to integrate 'Visa transaction data with Waitrose's own data
to figure out what proportion of potential customers were buying groceries from other supermarkets, and
the general locations of these competitors'.
Google Flu Trends was presented as a means of tracking and predicting the spread of influenza across the
US.
The programme used algorithms which identified correlations between the symptoms people searched for
online and flu symptoms. However, after providing a swift and accurate account of flu outbreaks for
several winters, in the 20123 season, Flu Trends overstated the spread of flu-like illnesses across the US
by almost a factor of two.
The cause of this problem was that ultimately Google did not know what linked the search terms with the
spread of flu, and Google's algorithms weren't designed to identify what caused what. They were simply
finding statistical patterns in the data; and as such, focused on correlation rather than causation.
One explanation of the Flu Trends failure in 20123 is that there were a number of news stories in
December about the dangers of flu, and those provoked internet searches by people who were healthy.
(d) Analysing a data set, regardless of its size is not necessarily representative of the entire data
population as a whole. The Financial Times suggests that, if an organisation wishing to understand
the public mood solely used the social networking site Twitter to analyse all of the tweets made,
this would not represent the views of all members of society. Research indicates that Twitter users
tend to be young, urban individuals.
An article by Sarah O'Connor in the Financial Times in June 2015 focused on the role that modern
wearable technology is starting to have in helping organisations to better understand the factors affecting
staff performance at work. The concept of asking employees to wear technologies which monitor their
output and whereabouts while at work (and at home) is closely linked to the concept of 'big data'.
The article highlighted a growing trend among companies to get employees to use wearable gadgets
which can be used to capture personal data on metrics such as the sleep quality, heart rate, location and
internet browsing habits. As Connor notes 'the bigger prize is to use the data from such devices to make
the workforce safer or more productive'. The article suggests that close monitoring of employees may
enable employers to better care for their workers. For example, there may be cases where captured data
shows that certain employees are becoming increasingly stressed while at work. In such instances this
should enable employers to take steps to improve the employees well-being before stress manifests itself
a more serious condition.
While the idea of capturing greater data about employees appears to have its benefits, wearable
technologies do present some significant challenges. Perhaps one of the most obvious challenges
concerns the fact that having lots of data about workers does not necessarily make it worth having. This
sentiment was echoed by Rob Symes, the owner of London start-up, The Outside View, who in 2014
tracked all of his employees with wearable technology, only to realise: 'Right, I've got all of this data, what
the hell does it mean?' Security concerns have also grown in relation to the use of wearable technologies,
as the inherent danger of stored personal data being accessed by hackers is ever present. Dave Palmer of
cyber security company Darktrace, notes 'You might think that's a bit alarmist, but what are the chances
of my watch or heartrate monitor getting hacked? The idea of the 'internet of things' is racing further
ahead in terms of functionality than in terms of security'.
The rise of wearable technology also raises some interesting legal and ethical considerations, as O'Connor
notes: 'The legal line has not been navigated yet. Lawyers say companies would have to gain the explicit
informed consent of employees before gathering personal data from wearables, and consent further to
correlate it with other data, such as performance metrics'. Even if employees are not legally required to
consent to the use of such technology in the workplace there is the danger that workers may feel an
implicit pressure to agree to their use, especially if colleagues are happy to wear them. Interestingly,
accounting firm, PwC, recently asked 2,000 UK workers, whether they would be prepared to wear a
workplace wearable, and 40% of respondents agreed that they would, with just over 50% agreeing if the
technology was being used to improve their well-being. Many of those who refused the opportunity to
embrace the technology claimed that they would not trust their employer to not use the data against them.
Source:
O'Connor, S. (2015), 'Wearables at work: the new frontier of employee surveillance', The Financial Times,
8 June 2015, www.ft.com
5.2.1 Suitability
There are a few large organisations, such as Amazon, whose overall strategy is based on e-commerce.
However, for most companies, e-commerce will be a supplement to more traditional operations, with the
website forming a supplementary medium for communication and sales. It is important that the e-
commerce strategy supports the overall strategy generally. One way of approaching this would be to
consider the extended marketing mix and the need for balance, consistency and mutual support between
the elements. A very simple example would consider the question of whether to confine the website to an
essentially communications role, or to incorporate a fully featured online shopping facility. A specialist
chain store dealing in, say, camping and outdoor equipment would expect to expand its market if it
developed online shopping. On the other hand, a manufacturer of specialist luxury goods, such as the
most expensive fountain pens, would probably have a policy of distributing through carefully selected
retailers. It is unlikely that online shopping would appeal to the target market segment: they would
probably enjoy the shopping experience and would want to try the products before they bought them.
5.2.2 Acceptability
The e-commerce strategy must be acceptable to important stakeholders. Distributors are particularly
important here. Pursuing our luxury goods example, we would expect that retailers chosen for their
attractive premises, skilled and attentive staff and air of luxury would be unhappy to find their position
usurped by a website.
5.2.3 Feasibility
Feasibility is a matter of resources. The fundamental resource is cash, but the availability of the skilled
labour needed to establish and administer a website will be crucial to the e-commerce strategy. It may be
appropriate to employ specialist consultants for these purposes.
Under this heading, we might identify the following points for consideration:
(a) The first thing to do is to try to establish precise objectives for the new strategy element. It may
not be possible to do this conclusively and consideration of objectives may have to proceed
alongside the processes outlined below, all passing through several iterations.
(b) An estimate and analysis of costs and benefits should be undertaken. This should cover all the
possible options, such as what services are to be offered, whether a full catalogue is to be put
online, whether internet selling is envisaged, whether a search function is required, and so on.
(c) A detailed budget should be prepared, probably using estimates from the cost and benefit analysis.
Where internet selling is to be offered, pricing policy must be established: there is a theory that
customers expect goods and services to be discounted when sold online, since they are aware that
administrative costs are likely to be lower than in more traditional forms of distribution.
The traditional landscape of the business environment has changed from being a marketplace to one that
is more of a marketspace an information and communication-based electronic exchange environment.
The impact of this is evident in the following changes:
(a) The content of transaction is different: information about a product often replaces the product
itself.
(b) The context of transaction is different: an electronic screen replaces the face-to-face transaction.
(c) The enabling infrastructure of transactions is different: computers and communications
infrastructure may replace typical physical resources especially if the offering lends itself to a
digital format.
The significant issue faced by managers today is one of transformation: 'How do I transform the bricks
and mortar company of yesterday to the click and mortar company of today in order to be competitive in
the inevitable digital economy of tomorrow?'
Until the emergence of e-business, IS had largely played a facilitative (and relatively peripheral) role in
business, focusing on improving operational efficiencies, cost structures, and effectiveness. Now,
however, it would be fair to claim that e-business would not be possible if it were not for the information
systems that facilitate it. The role of IS has become central to e-business.
E-business strategy is defined as the approach by which the application of internal and external electronic
communications can support and influence corporate strategy. There is a two-way relationship between
corporate and e-business strategies, with e-business strategy not only supporting corporate strategy, but
influencing or impacting it.
Differences between traditional business strategy and e-business strategy
According to Kalakota and Robinson, continuous planning with feedback has evolved as the strategy of
choice for the fluid and volatile e-environment. This method of continuous planning with feedback is
structured around four steps.
Step 1 Knowledge building and capability evaluation: identify and acquire a comprehensive
understanding/vision of customer needs. Develop a clear understanding of what capabilities
are needed in order to address the identified customer needs. Communicate this
understanding of customer needs to all employees of the organisation.
Step 2 Develop a comprehensive e-business design: this entails developing the competence to
address customer needs. If the customer wants self-service, then the business design must
provide and facilitate it.
Rayport and Jaworski suggest a four-stage model of the evolution of internet-based B2B e-commerce,
believing that, in general, an organisation goes through these stages in utilising the internet for its
business-to-business activities:
1 Emission Broadcast The company begins by creating an informational website for its clients
2 Interaction Using the internet for interaction with customers such as emails, customer
survey and feedbacks
3 Transaction
The use of the internet to take, manage and support transactions with
customers such as online ordering systems
4 Collaboration The use of the internet to provide inter-organisational activities, that can be
accessed and utilised by the company and its trading partners
The model of Rao et al suggests the following stages of e-commerce development and their
characteristics:
Stages of growth models give a better understanding of the factors influencing the strategy that an
organisation is considering and so management are able to do a more successful job of planning. The
management principles will differ from one stage to another, and different technologies, and perhaps
different areas of the organisation, are in differing stages at any one time. Therefore, these models also
make explicit the need for a portfolio of strategies to cater for these differences.
The stages approach is useful for several purposes:
(a) A small or medium sized enterprise may use it for comparison with its major competitors; it may
indicate gaps and lead to strategic actions.
Exam focus Make sure you understand how e-business affects an organisation's relationships with its customers, and
point therefore the implications it can have for restructuring the organisation's downstream supply chain. We
are going to look at supply chain management in the next part of this chapter.
Exam focus
An article titled 'The strategic use of IT' (October 2010) written by Ken Garrett is available on the ACCA
point
website. It would be worth taking the time to study this article.
In Chapter 4, we mentioned an article titled 'Value chains, value networks and supply chain management,'
also written by Ken Garrett. This is available in the Technical Articles section for P3 on the ACCA website.
The article focuses on the role of the value chain in creating value for customers and considers different
types of supply chain models. You are strongly advised to read this article.
6.2.3 IS implications
Push-based systems rely less on sophisticated IS support, since high inventory levels are used to cope
with variations in customer demand. Pull-based systems, like Just-in-Time (JIT), need accurate and quick
information on actual demand to move inventory and schedule production in the chain: therefore, they
require integrated internal systems and linkages throughout the supply chain.
A supply chain is almost always a combination of both push and pull, where the interface between the
push-based stages and the pull-based stages is known as the push-pull boundary. An example of this
would be Dell's build-to-order supply chain. Inventory levels of individual components are determined by
forecasting general demand, but final assembly is in response to a specific customer request. The push-
pull boundary would then be at the beginning of the assembly line. At this point on the supply chain
timeline, it is typically coordinated through a buffer inventory.
The value chain concept has already been described in detail earlier in this Study Text. Here is the
diagram to refresh your memory.
Key term A value network can be defined as the links between an organisation and its strategic and non-strategic
partners that form its external value chain. Activities that add value do not stop at the organisation's
boundaries.
Value network
The impact of e-business on the value network
E-business is a vital element in the value network. It will help companies deliver better services to their
customers, accelerate the growth of the e-commerce initiatives that are critical to their business, and
lower their operating costs.
Using the internet for e-business will allow customers to access price information, place delivery orders
and track shipments. The internet makes it easier for customers to do business with companies. For
example, anything that simplifies the process of arranging transportation services will help build
companies' business and enhance shareholder value. The only tools needed to take advantage of this
solution are a personal computer and an internet browser. By making more information available about the
commercial side of companies, businesses will make their website a place where customers will not only
get detailed information about the services the company offers, but also where they can actually conduct
business with the company. Ultimately, websites can provide a universal, self-service system for
customers. E-commerce functions are taking companies a substantial step forward by providing
customers with a faster and easier way to do business with them.
Value chain analysis can be used to assess the impact of IS/IT and identify processes within the value
chain where it can be used to add value.
(a) Inbound logistics covers receiving, storing and handling raw material inputs. The use of IT
includes inventory control and systems such as Material Requirements Planning (MRP), Enterprise
Resource Planning (ERP) and JIT.
(b) Operations are concerned with the transformation of the raw material inputs into finished goods or
services. IT can be used to automate and improve tasks; examples include robots, process control,
and machine tool control, Computer Aided Manufacturing (CAM), Computer Integrated
Manufacturing (CIM) and Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP).
Porter and Millar advocate five steps that senior executives may follow to take advantage of opportunities
that the information revolution has created.
Step 1 Assess information intensity. A high level of information content in either products or
processes indicates that IT can play a strategic role.
Step 2 Determine the role of IT in industry structure. IT may have the potential to radically change
the way in which the industry operates, including changing the basis of competition and
moving its boundaries.
Step 3 Identify and rank the ways in which IT might create competitive advantage. Possible
value chain-based applications include opportunities for reducing cost or enhancing
differentiation and establishing new links between activities. There may also be
opportunities to enter new market segments and to introduce new products.
Step 4 Investigate how IT might spawn new businesses. These might be based on the exploitation
of new categories of information and the sale of information-processing capacity.
Step 5 Develop a plan to exploit IT. Effectively, this is the creation of a comprehensive strategy
and has implications for most parts of the organisation.
6.6.3 Example
Filmed entertainment was once highly vertically integrated into a handful of large studios that handled
everything from production to theatrical presentation. After the Second World War, the industry was
broken into small fragments, becoming highly vertically disintegrated, with specialised firms that only
performed certain tasks such as editing, special effects, trailers and so on.
6.6.5 Example
An example of this restructuring is what has happened in the car industry. Henry Ford's original vision
included controlling as many aspects of the end vehicle production as possible; from the production of
raw materials in steel mills and rubber plantations, through all of the design, manufacturing, assembly and
distribution activities. He managed a truly vertically integrated supply chain. Today the vision for most
automotive vehicle manufacturers is to become virtual companies, owning only the brand and the
customer. The design, system development, product sourcing, logistics, and even final assembly can all
be outsourced to supply chain partners. Increasingly, the goal is to replace physical assets with
information in such a way that every member of this extended supply chain benefits. This forces the move
from an environment of hard wired integration, where relationships are at arms-length and adversarial,
even across functional boundaries within the organisation, to an environment based on negotiated
sourcing, where non-core activities are outsourced and collaborative partnerships are the norm.
Information integration
1 Co-ordinating and integrating the forward physical flow of deliveries between suppliers,
manufacturers and customers, using just-in-time, mass customisation in the supply chain or by
exploiting third party logistics
2 Backward co-ordination of information technologies and the flow of data for customers to suppliers
Information technologies allow multiple organisations to co-ordinate their activities in an effort to truly
manage a supply chain. Integration using IT includes electronic data interchange (EDI) as well as sharing
data for traditional planning and control systems.
According to Hayes and Wheelwright, if this need to develop shared operational activities is accepted, then
the strategic issues become direction, degree and balance.
(a) In which direction should integration progress, towards customers and/or towards suppliers?
(b) To what degree of integration should such activity be developed? How far should the company
take downstream or upstream integration?
(c) To what extent does each stage of the supply chain focus on supporting the total supply chain?
The fundamental concerns of direction and degree are the boundaries of the firm and whether the
organisation should broaden or narrow the span of its operations, whereas balance deals with the
resulting vertically-linked activities, in terms of how dependent the suppliers and customers are on the
firm, relative to how dependent the firm is on its suppliers and customers.
The challenges for manufacturing firms are shifting from internal efficiency to supply chain efficiency.
The outward-shifting focus to the supply chain calls for information technology support systems that can
handle information exchange between supply chain partners. The information can be integrated through
ordinary means of communications such as telephone, fax and email; it can also be integrated through
dedicated supply chain planning software.
E-business is revolutionising the way supply chains are configured and managed and, in response, many
supply chains are becoming more virtual. They are developing into looser affiliations of companies,
organised as a supply network, where direct ownership is changing dramatically.
In all sectors, e-business is increasing the pressure for supply chain responsiveness in three ways.
(a) Increased competition. Easier market entry enables new entrants to steal significant market share
at the expense of unresponsive existing suppliers.
(b) Increased volumes and speed of data. There is a requirement to gather, process and act on
massively increasing volumes of data in a rapid and intelligent manner.
(c) More demanding customer requirements. These include reduced cost, shorter lead times and
reliability of supply.
Additionally, what is not well recognised is the increased capability of customers to bypass their traditional
supplier and cut out the middle man. This threat is equally applicable right along the supply chain, with
the consumer bypassing the retailer, and businesses bypassing tiers of their suppliers. To remain in the
chain, companies do not just have to demonstrate the value they add, but also demonstrate their ability to
manage their own suppliers.
An important part of many B2B sites, e-procurement is also referred to by other terms, such as supplier
exchange.
Traditionally, e-procurement has been seen as a simple process from creation of need to placing an
electronic purchase order with a supplier and the possible payment by an electronic bank payment system
such as BACS. Today the transactional process is considered to be only part of the e-procurement
function. It includes purchasing, transportation, goods receipt and warehousing before the goods are
used. A properly implemented system can connect companies and their business processes directly with
suppliers while managing all interactions between them. This includes management of correspondence,
bids, questions and answers, previous pricing, and multiple emails sent to multiple participants.
It focuses on the complete purchasing mix, or the five rights of purchasing, which are that goods and
services must be delivered:
At the right time At the right price
In the right quantity From the right vendor
In the right quality
7.1.1 Methods
Typically, e-procurement websites allow authorised and registered users to log in using a password. The
supplying organisation will set up its website so that it recognises the purchaser, once logged in, and
presents a list of items that the purchaser regularly buys. This saves searching for the items required and
also avoids the need to key in name, address and delivery details. Depending on the approach, buyers or
sellers may specify prices or invite bids. Transactions can be initiated and completed. Once the purchases
are made, the organisation will periodically be billed by the supplier. Ongoing purchases may qualify
customers for volume discounts or special offers.
A very limited form of electronic procurement is the purchasing card, which is a paperless purchase and
payment system aimed at the end-user who can now order and pay for goods directly with a small number
of suppliers. Buyers identify themselves with their card number when placing an order; the supplier
checks the purchase card number and, if correct, authorises it with the bank. The bank pays the supplier in
2 to 5 days, and the supplier ships the goods.
Intangible Staff are able to concentrate on their prime function and there is financial
benefits transparency and accountability.
Benefits to Reduction in ordering and processing costs, reduced paperwork, improved cash
suppliers flow and reduced cost of credit control
Exam focus Nine marks were available as part of an optional question in the June 2011 P3 exam. The question
point required students to explain the principles of e-procurement and evaluate its potential application at the
company in question. This was, on the whole, answered very well by candidates with many scoring full
marks.
In terms of the options available to organisations, historically, it has been easier to implement systems
that only cover part of the procurement cycle.
For example, buyers may choose a minimal involvement such as an inventory control system or a web
based catalogue or they may integrate the entry of the order through a database workflow system. Some
networked accounting systems allow staff in the buying department to enter an order, which can then be
used by accounting staff to make payment when the invoice arrives.
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems integrate all the facilities. Such integrated business
software systems power a corporate information structure, thus helping companies to control their
inventory, purchasing, manufacturing, finance and personnel operations. They allow an organisation to
automate and integrate most of its business processes, share common data and practices across the
whole enterprise and produce and access information in a real-time environment. ERP may also
incorporate transactions with an organisation's suppliers. They help large national and multinational
companies in particular to manage geographically dispersed and complex operations. For example, an
organisation's UK sales office may be responsible for marketing, selling and servicing a product
assembled in the US using parts manufactured in France and Hong Kong. ERP enables the organisation to
understand and manage the demand placed on the plant in France.
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
Introduction
This second chapter on e-business is largely concerned with marketing aspects
and the way that various aspects of internet technology can be used to build
and maintain marketing relationships.
383
Study guide
Intellectual level
E4 E-business application: downstream supply chain management
(a) Define the scope and media of e-marketing 2
(b) Highlight how the media of e-marketing can be used when developing an
effective e-marketing plan 2
(c) Explore the characteristics of the media of e-marketing using the '6I's of
Interactivity, Intelligence, Individualisation, Integration, Industry structure 2
and Independence of location
(d) Evaluate the effect of the media of e-marketing on the traditional marketing
mix of product, promotion, price, place, people, processes and physical 3
evidence
(e) Describe a process for establishing a pricing strategy for products and
services that recognises both economic and non-economic factors. 2
(f) Assess the importance of online branding in e-marketing and compare it
with traditional branding 3
E5 E-business application: customer relationship management
(a) Define the meaning and scope of customer relationship management 2
(b) Explore different methods of acquiring customers through exploiting
electronic media 2
(c) Evaluate different buyer behaviour amongst online customers 3
(d) Recommend techniques for retaining customers using electronic media 3
(e) Recommend how electronic media may be used to increase the activity and
value of established, retained customers 3
(f) Discuss the scope of a representative software package solution designed to
support customer relationship management 3
Exam guide
This is very practical material relating to strategic implementations or, as JS&W put it, strategy into
action. As such, it could well be examined in a dedicated question requiring in-depth knowledge, probably
in Section B. However, e-business application is also likely to be relevant to many questions in Section A
of your exam.
Marketing objectives include identifying, anticipating and satisfying customer requirements profitably.
Identifying using the internet to find out customers' needs and wants
Anticipating the demand for digital services
Satisfying achieving customer satisfaction raises issues over whether the site is easy to use,
whether it performs adequately and how are the physical products dispatched
Essentially, e-marketing means using digital technologies to help sell goods or services. The basics of
marketing remain the same creating a strategy to deliver the right messages to the right people. What
has changed is the number of options available. These include pay per click advertising, banner ads, email
marketing and affiliate marketing, interactive advertising, search engine marketing (including search
engine optimisation) and blog marketing.
Though businesses will continue to make use of traditional marketing methods, such as advertising, direct
mail and PR, e-marketing adds a whole new element to the marketing mix and is a valuable complement.
It gives businesses of any size access to the mass market at an affordable price and, unlike TV or print
advertising, it allows truly personalised marketing.
The planning framework is expanded in the diagram below to show the techniques/actions that make up
each stage:
The six Is of marketing developed at Cranfield by McDonald and Wilson in 1999, summarise the ways in
which the internet can add customer value and hence improve the organisation's marketing effectiveness.
6 Is of marketing
By considering and questioning each of these aspects of new media marketing, managers can develop
plans to accommodate the characteristics of new media.
Communications can be tailored to the individual, unlike traditional media where the
same message is broadcast to everyone. As we saw in the previous chapter, the
increasing use of big data has enabled companies like Amazon to tailor their
marketing message and purchase recommendations to customers based on
purchases made by other customers with similar interests.
Intelligence Do you inform your marketing strategy with intelligence gleaned from your
operational systems at the customer interface eg, through analysis of customer
needs, segmentation, prioritising segments according to customer lifetime value etc?
The internet can be used as a low cost method of collecting marketing information
about customer perceptions of products and services. The website also records
information every time a user clicks on a link. Log file analysers will identify the type
of promotions or products customers are responding to and how patterns vary over
time.
Example
The best-known example of electronic commerce book-selling, exemplifies how the internet can be used
for an interactive dialogue with a known customer.
Websites such as Amazon.com exploit the web's interactive nature to allow the customer to search for
books on particular topics, track the status of an order placed earlier, and ask for recommendations of
books similar to their favourites, read reviews placed by other customers, and so on. The website builds
knowledge of the customer which allows it, for example, to notify them by email if a new book appears on
a topic of particular interest.
The augmented product can be extended through website information and interactivity.
Pricing can be made transparent; dynamic pricing may be used.
The global reach of the internet has great implications for place, with the creation of new
marketplaces and channel structures.
Promotion can be previously targeted via customer databases.
People can be replaced by software to a varying extent.
Processes may be automated.
Physical evidence consists of the customer's experience of using the organisation's e-marketing
tools in general and of its website in particular
Marketing on the internet brings many new opportunities not readily available or affordable using
conventional marketing methods.
The marketing mix is the combination of marketing activities that an organisation engages in, so as to best
meet the needs of its targeted market. Because of changes in the market and the behaviour of the
customers, future marketing should focus more on delivering value to the customer and become better at
placing the customer and not the product in the centre. In some texts, the 4 Ps have been renamed the
4 Cs.
Product becomes customer value
Place becomes customer convenience
Promotion becomes customer communication
Price becomes customer cost
In this section, we can show how e-commerce provides the opportunities for the marketer to vary the
seven elements of the marketing mix.
Core product
Actual product
Features
Packaging Augmented or extended product
Branding
Core product what is the core benefit the product offers? Customers who purchase a camera are buying
more than just a camera they are purchasing memories.
Actual product all cameras capture memories. The strategy at this level involves organisations branding,
adding features and benefits to ensure that their product offers a differential advantage from their
competitors.
Augmented or extended product: What additional non-tangible benefits can you offer? Competition at this
level is based around after sales service, warranties, delivery and so on.
What does buying products online offer over one-to-one sales?
(a) The ability to deliver interactivity and more detailed information through the internet is the key to
enhancing the augmented or extended product offering online.
(b) The buyer knows immediately about product features the facts, not a sales person's
interpretations.
(c) The buying process is customised for returning visitors, making repeat purchases easier.
Organisations can also offer immediately ancillary products along with the main purchase. EasyJet,
for example, can readily bundle its flights, hotels and car hire through suitable design of its
website.
1.4.5 People
The people element of the marketing mix is the way an organisation's staff interact with customers and
other stakeholders during sales and pre and post sales. Smith and Chaffey (2001) suggest that online, part
of the consideration for the people element of the mix is the consideration of the tactics by which people
can be replaced or automated.
(a) Auto responders automatically generate a response when a company emails an organisation, or
submits an online form.
(b) Email notification may be automatically generated by a company's systems to update customers
on the progress of their orders. Such notifications might show, for example, three stages: order
received; item now in stock; order dispatched.
(c) Call-back facility requires that customers fill in their phone number on a form and specify a
convenient time to be contacted. Dialling from a representative in the call centre occurs
automatically at the appointed time and the company pays.
1.4.6 Process
The process element of the marketing mix is the internal methods and procedures companies use to
achieve all marketing functions such as new product development, promotion, sales and customer
service. The restructuring of the organisation and channel structures described for product, price, place
and promotion all require new processes.
Exam focus
point Note the link here to process redesign: changes in the business structures usually need to be supported
by changes in business process.
1.4.8 Example
A university can put its reading list on a website and students wishing to purchase any given book can
click directly through to an online bookseller such as Amazon.com. The university gets a commission; the
online bookseller gets increased business; the student gets a discount. Everyone benefits except the
traditional bookshop.
Benefits of e-marketing
It promotes transparent pricing because potential customers can readily compare prices not only from
suppliers within any given country, but also from suppliers across the world.
It facilitates personalised attention even if such attention is actually administered through impersonal,
yet highly sophisticated IT systems and customer database manipulation.
It provides sophisticated market segmentation opportunities. Approaching such segments may be one of
the few ways in which e-commerce entrepreneurs can create competitive advantage.
The website can either be a separate or a complementary channel.
A new phenomenon is emerging called dynamic pricing. Companies can rapidly change their prices to
reflect the current state of demand and supply.
These new trends are creating pressure for companies. The main threat facing companies is that prices
will be driven down by consumers' ability to shop around.
Key term
Price is the value placed on what is exchanged.
Exam focus
An article titled 'Business strategy and pricing' (February 2011) written by Ken Garrett is available on the
point
ACCA website. It would be worth taking the time to study this article.
Question 2 in June 2014 required candidates to suggest a pricing strategy for an IT training company. The
question required candidates to consider both financial and non-financial matters in determining an
appropriate price for courses. The scenario set out an initial price of $750 per delegate attending a training
course. Financial details had been provided for a similar company for the purpose of calculating expected
values for use in analysing the suggested price. The examining team noted that the question was not well
answered, 'financial analysis was often limited, with little use of expected values. The non-financial
analysis was often poorly structured and was not well integrated with the financial analysis'.
The 16 marks available were given an equal weighting between the financial and non-financial
considerations. It is important that you devote sufficient time to both elements when answering questions.
Better candidates recognised this and therefore scored higher marks.
One of the most complex decisions involved in the marketing mix is deciding on the price of the product
or service. Buyers have only limited resources and have to make decisions about what they will and will
not buy. In order to do this, they consider the usefulness of the product, or the benefits they expect to
derive from it, and compare this to the cost to determine if the exchange will be worthwhile. This is what
makes price so important.
Price directly affects how well an organisation performs competitively, and is also closely linked to
the perceptions of value for money held by the customers.
If the price is too high, the exchange may not be perceived as worthwhile, and customers may not buy the
product.
If the price is too low, then one of two things could happen:
(1) The product sells well, however, the revenue per item is lower than it could be if the price were
higher, less revenue is earned which, in turn, means less profit than may be possible with a higher
price.
(2) The consumer perceives the price to be too low and interprets this as meaning quality has been
compromised. The customer does not buy the product at all.
1.5.2 Assessing the target market's evaluation of price and its ability to buy
The second stage involves understanding the amount that an individual will pay for something. This
depends on a number of factors.
(a) Type of product people will be more sensitive to changes in the price of food than they are to
changes in the price of new cars. This may be for two reasons. Firstly, food is a necessity, whereas
a car is a luxury. Secondly, this may be due to the percentage of income spent on such goods.
(b) Target market business travellers are less concerned about train prices than those travelling for
leisure purposes.
(c) Purchase situation people are willing to pay more for soft drinks and popcorn at a cinema than
they would in a supermarket.
The key to this stage is to understand the buying power of the customers, and also how important one
product is to them over another. Value for money perceptions of the customer are important here.
Price
D2
D1
D3
Quantity
This relationship will hold true so long as all other factors remain constant. However, the other factors in
the marketing mix also affect demand. If one of those other factors changes, this may cause the demand
curve to shift, as illustrated by D2 and D3 in the diagram above. The direction of the shift will depend on
what the other factor is and its impact on demand.
The steepness of the demand curve will be determined by the price elasticity of demand. The more
sensitive demand is to changes in price, the more elastic demand is said to be. For example, demand for
basic food items and utilities might be relatively inelastic. This means that changes in the price only have
a slight effect on the demand for these products and the demand curve will be steep. They are essential
items that will still be demanded, even when prices rise. The change in demand is less than proportional to
the change in price. Demand for more luxury products, such as exotic holidays on the other hand, is more
elastic. This means that if the price increases, the fall in demand will be greater than proportional to the
increase in demand and therefore total revenue for the product will fall. This demand curve will be much
flatter.
Inelastic demand Elastic demand
Price Price
D2
D1
Quantity Quantity
However, not all products conform to this model. Some products, such as designer clothing, sell better
the higher the price. This is because the price is associated by the customer with high quality and
exclusivity. A fall in price would cause the item to be within the price range of more people, and as such
no longer 'exclusive', and so demand would fall. The demand curve for products such as this is shown as
follows.
Price
P3
P2
P1
Q2
Q1
Quantity
The marginal cost curve is typically U-shaped. This is because marginal costs decrease as output
increases due to economies of scale. However, at some point diseconomies of scale (eg more supervision
and larger workforce) appear and marginal costs begin to rise.
Marginal revenue is the change in total revenue that occurs when one more unit is sold.
Due to the downward sloping demand curve faced by most organisations, the only way additional units
can be sold is through the lowering of prices. Therefore, each additional product sold provides less
revenue than the previous one. When marginal revenue falls to zero, the sale of more units actually harms
the profits.
Profit is maximised where marginal cost equals marginal revenue. Up to this point, the additional
revenue generated per unit is more than the additional cost. After this point, the additional cost exceeds
the additional revenue.
Unfortunately, in reality the cost (supply) and revenue (demand) change regularly and rapidly. However, it
is still beneficial to organisations to have an understanding of the relationship between the marginal cost
and marginal revenues when setting prices of existing products.
Marginal analysis offers little help in the pricing of new products as costs and revenues will not yet be
established.
Break-even analysis
The break-even point is the point at which the costs of producing a product equal the revenue made from
selling it. It is important to know how many units are required to break-even when determining the price.
Revenue
Profits
Break-even Point
Total Cost
Fixed Costs
Losses
Quantity
The problem with break-even analysis is that it focuses on recovering costs and breaking even, rather than
on how to achieve a pricing objective, eg a return on investment or percentage of market share.
Negotiated The final price is established through bargaining between the seller and buyer. This
pricing is common for products such as houses and cars as well as for second-hand items.
Secondary One price is set for the primary market and another (usually lower) price is set for
market pricing another market. This might be used by a restaurant that offers cheap deals for eating
earlier in the evening.
Periodic Temporarily reducing prices on a systematic basis, for example many retailers hold
discounting January and summer sales. The disadvantage of these is that, due to their
predictable pattern, customers learn to expect the reductions and wait to make their
purchases then.
Random Temporary reductions are made as above but on an unsystematic basis. This means
discounting the customer cannot predict when the sales are likely to be and so will purchase in
line with their own requirements rather than waiting for the reductions to be made.
Price skimming The price is set at the highest possible price that customers who most desire the
product will pay. This provides the most flexible base price as demand is not very
price sensitive at the introductory stage of a new product. For example, when flat
screen TVs were first introduced they were extremely expensive compared to regular
TVs. Now that they have become the norm, their price has fallen dramatically. By
setting the price at the highest level possible, a lot of profit can be made from sales
of only a few units to customers who desperately want to be the first to own a new
product. This high profit helps organisations recover the high research and
development costs they will have faced in the run up to its launch and will probably
have limited production capacity, so will need to earn a higher revenue per unit.
Penetration A price is set below the prices of competing brands in order to penetrate a market
pricing and produce a larger unit sales volume. This approach is less flexible than price
skimming as it is harder to raise than to lower a price. Often a penetration price may
be used for a product after first skimming the market with a higher price.
Penetration pricing is most useful where it is believed that competitors could easily
enter the market.
Product-line pricing
Product-line pricing means establishing and adjusting prices of multiple products within a product line.
There are four main ways of doing this.
Psychological pricing
Psychological pricing encourages customers to base their decisions on emotional, rather than rational,
responses. There are seven key techniques for doing this.
Reference pricing This involves pricing a product at a moderate level and then positioning it next to a
more expensive model or brand.
Bundle pricing Packaging two or more complementary products and selling them for a single price,
which is usually lower than they would cost if both items were purchased separately.
Examples could be shampoo and conditioner, or hand wash and hand cream. This
kind of pricing is also common in travel services, banking and car sales.
Multiple-unit Two or more identical products are packaged together and sold for a single price,
pricing usually at a lower price than it would cost to purchase a single unit. Examples are
tins of baked beans and bars of soap.
Everyday low A consistent low price (rather than regular discounting) is set for a product that is
prices (EDLP) sufficiently below the prices of competitors for customers to feel that they are
receiving a good deal. The benefits of using EDLP are that the organisation incurs
less promotional expenditure and has greater stability in sales. Procter and Gamble
and Wal-Mart both use EDLP.
Odd/even pricing Some customers prefer odd number pricing, ie would be more likely to buy a
product costing $99.99 than a product of $100. Some customers are not fooled by
the 'saving' and prefer to pay an even price $20, rather than $19.99. Fewer
organisations adopt the even pricing approach.
Customary Prices are set based mostly on tradition, eg telephone calls from call boxes in the UK
pricing cost the same for years. This was dealt with by BT by altering the number of units
but keeping the price the same, so although your money ran out quicker, you still
perceived it to cost the same as it always had.
Prestige pricing Prices are set artificially high to give the product a 'quality' image. Holidays, cars,
electrical and beauty products are often priced in this way.
Professional pricing
Professional pricing is used by people who are very skilled or experienced in their particular field to price
their services. Rather than setting their fees based on their time and involvement, they may set a standard
fee, regardless of the problems involved in carrying out the work. Recruitment agency fees provide an
example of how this could be used if the price was a set percentage of the salary negotiated for the
selected candidate. Professionals have an ethical responsibility not to overcharge unknowing customers.
Promotional pricing
The pricing is related to a short-term promotion of a particular product. There are four ways that this can
be done.
Special event Advertised 'sales' or price cutting that is linked to a holiday, season or event to
pricing increase sales volume.
Comparison Setting a price at a specific level and comparing it to a higher price. This higher price
discounting could be the previous price of the product, the recommended retail price. This
technique is regularly used. If overused, customers stop believing that the higher
price is the normal price.
Key term A brand is a name, symbol, term, mark or design that enables customers to identify and distinguish the
products of one supplier from those offered by competitors.
A brand is a tool which is used by an organisation to differentiate itself from competitors. For example,
what is the value of a pair of Nike trainers without the brand or the logo?
The value of brands in today's environment is phenomenal. Brands have the power of instant sales; they
convey a message of confidence, quality and reliability to their target market, which is particularly
important in e-commerce where there are often concerns over privacy and security.
These customer touch-points combine to build a good brand presence. However, screen-based delivery
adds a new level of complexity to the problem. For the first time, customers are interacting in machine-
mediated experiences, as opposed to human-mediated. How can a machine be made to express a
company's positive brand attributes, like respect and reliability, the same way a person does?
There are essential elements common to both traditional media and new screen-based systems. A
successful brand, online or off, represents an entire customer experience. In a bricks-and-mortar
environment this includes such matters as: how the customer is welcomed into the store; how products
are packaged and presented and how staff and customers interact.
These elements can be translated to the online shopping experience to include the e-tailer's home or
welcome page website design and page navigation and online support.
Exam focus A question requirement in the June 2013 exam asked students to evaluate how the organisation described
point in the case study scenario could use a CRM system to acquire and retain customers. The examining team
was disappointed to report that many students did not appear to be familiar with the use of CRM.
Dave Chaffey outlines three phases of CRM in e-business and e-commerce management:
Customer selection
Customer selection
2.1.2 Intermediaries
Many businesses sell to intermediaries rather than to the end consumer. Some deal with both categories;
they have to recognise that the intermediary is just as much a customer as the eventual consumer. We
have discussed the impact of the strategic customer elsewhere in this Study Text. Intermediaries who do
not take title to goods are equally worthy of consideration. Examples are manufacturers who maintain their
own sales organisation but appoint agents in geographically remote areas and companies who combine
autonomous operations with franchising. While it is reasonable to give the highest priority to the needs of
the ultimate consumer and insist on some control over the activities of the intermediary, it must be
recognised that intermediaries will only perform well if their own needs are addressed. For instance, a
selling agent who has invested heavily in inventory after being given exclusive rights in an area should be
consulted before further investment demands are made by the launch of a new product.
The Ritz Carlton Hotel makes a point of observing the choices that guests make and recording them. If a
guest requests extra pillows, then extra pillows will be provided every time that person visits. At upmarket
retailers, personal shoppers will record customers' preferences in sizes, styles, brands, colours and price
ranges and notify them when new merchandise appears or help them choose accessories.
Techniques to achieve acquisition include traditional online mass media techniques and specialised online
techniques.
(a) Search engine registration and directories provide an index of content on registered sites that can
be searched by keyword. Skilled website design can put a supplier high up among search results.
(b) Newsgroups and forums providing expert opinion and useful help are a way for businesses to
communicate with their peers and customers in an informal environment.
(c) Newsletters allow an organisation to send news about the company, new products or services and
any new information that has been posted on the website.
(d) Link building and partnership campaigns can greatly benefit a business, significantly boosting its
online presence. Reciprocal links are an exchange of links between two site owners. Types of link
building include article and press release syndication, email campaigns and directory submission.
Affiliate networks are based on paying commission on sales referred from other sites.
(e) Viral marketing is about creating a buzz about products or services. Viral marketing relies on word
of mouth or, in the online sense, getting people to share the online application with others. This
can be achieved by providing webpages that can easily be sent to other people, for example. For
businesses, viral marketing can emphasise the value of their goods or services, promote special
offers and generate interest in the business or their products and services through word of mouth.
(f) Banner advertising is similar to advertisements seen in newspapers and magazines. They are the
graphical strips commonly seen across the top of website pages. Many companies use banner
advertising in affiliate programs, emails and related websites. Depending on what medium is
chosen to place the banner, the organisation could pay by impression, mile, click or action.
An important part of the marketing process is to understand why a customer or buyer makes a purchase.
Without such an understanding, businesses find it hard to respond to the customer's needs and wants.
Research suggests that customers go through a five-stage decision-making process in any purchase. This
is shown in the diagram below:
Need
recognition
Purchase Information
evaluation search
Purchase Evaluation of
decision alternatives
Market structure Fewer buyers but larger purchases Many buyers with smaller purchases
Demand largely derived from consumer
demand, eg car industry buys steel
because consumers buy cars
Type of purchase Purchase products to meet specific Purchase products to meet individual or
business needs want a customised family needs
product package
Purchase from intermediaries
Emphasise economic benefits
Type of buying Business purchases involve a more Buy on impulse or with minimal
decision complex decision-making process with processes
formal, lengthy purchasing policies.
Communication Existing customers can be contacted Promoting the website uses methods
differences directly. Information is placed on the such as banner ads and search engines
web to support customers and
encourage loyalty
Website content should be tailored to
the needs of users, influencers and
deciders
Much has been written about how to attract customers using search engines, indexes, portals and other
advertising media, but far less has been written about how to persuade them to remember any site and
return to it when they need another item or, in particular, to return to that site when they do not need
anything but may be susceptible to impulse purchases. This factor has been called stickiness. Trying to
attract 'sticky customers' (customers who will bring repeat business) is a crucial goal for many online
businesses.
Customer retention marketing is a tactically-driven approach based on customer behaviour. It is the core
activity going on behind the scenes in:
Relationship marketing
Loyalty marketing
Database marketing
Permission marketing consumers giving their consent to receive marketing information
improves the targeting and relevance of promotional messages, thus improving response and
conversion rates
2.5.1 Personalisation
Database, document generation and web technologies have improved the ease and sophistication of
targeting and personalisation of contact between organisations and customers. Here are some examples.
(a) Allowing users to customise web pages for their personal interests and tastes
(b) Making individually-targeted product offers and recommendations based on browsing/buying
behaviour
(c) Sending personally addressed and targeted-content messages to customers
(d) Encouraging users/customers to form virtual communities (for example, using chat rooms,
discussion boards and newsgroups)
2.5.2 Extranets
For many companies, extranets are still only web-based systems that provide password-protected areas
allowing users (customers, resellers) to fill out forms or perform simple online transactions. HTTP-based
extranets allow companies to deliver information through a browser interface but offer very limited ability
to interact with core business systems and applications.
On the customer side, extranets offer secure tunnels to remote databases, which let users access
inventory data, examine special discounts, view delivery status, research products, place and fulfills
orders, and collaborate via a secure internet connection. By opening customer access in this way,
extranets offer businesses a significant customer retention opportunity the customer is almost literally
attached to the business.
Communities of purpose
where members share
a common objective
Some sites are inherently sticky because they serve a particular natural community, for example, a fan
club or football team. These will generate their own news regularly and will be visited frequently by both
dedicated and lukewarm adherents without special stimulus. Other sites are also going to attract regular
visitors because of their nature, such as Amazon, eBay and Loot, whose primary purpose is well known
and is of frequent use for certain people. Revenue there comes from direct sales or commission on
transactions, or even from advertisers based on the number of visitors.
CRM is concerned with the creation, development and enhancement of individualised customer
relationships with carefully targeted customers and customer groups.
Paul Postma, in The New Marketing Era, highlights two major shifts in the way customer information is
used in the new marketing era:
(a) 'In a traditional market approach, people have all sorts of ideas about the target group, or they
think up some obvious target group for a certain product. Without a marketing database, people
are able to approach this target group only as a generic whole, by choosing the correct advertising
medium and tailoring the creative ideas to the prescribed target group. In the new approachwe
no longer calculate the market from within the company, but instead communicate, listen and
record. The database will teach us what the market has to say'
(b) 'In the new marketing era, we are shifting from derivative and self-reported information to
behavioural analysis Information technology makes it possible to determine behaviour, even at
an individual level, and even in mass markets. This information is by far the most trustworthy when
forecasting future behaviour.'
Project Method
Identify the best customers Use RFM analysis (Recency of the latest purchase, Frequency of
purchases, and Monetary value of all purchases) to determine which
customers are most profitable to market to
Develop new customers Collect lists of potential customers to incorporate into the database
Tailor messages based on Target mail and email based on the types and frequency of purchases
customer usage indicated by the customer's purchase profile
Recognise customers after Reinforce the purchase decision by appropriate follow-up
purchase
Cross-sell related and Use the customer purchase database to identify opportunities to suggest
complementary products additional products during the buying session
Personalise customer Online purchase data can prompt customer service representatives to
service show that the customer is recognised, their needs are known and their
time (for example, in giving details) is valued
Eliminating conflicting or Present a coherent image over time to individual customers however
confusing communications different the message to different customer groups. (For example, don't
keep sending 'dear first-time customer' messages to long-standing
customers!) Remember the Integrated Marketing Communications
approach
New data management techniques have been developed to provide marketers with better and quicker
access to data analysis.
The increasing amount of time people spend each day using websites such as Facebook and Twitter is
now being reflected in the growing efforts of advertisers to embrace social media.
A report in The Economist (2015) notes that 'not so long ago social media marketing was something that
brand managers might ask their summer interns to deal with. Today it has become a pillar of the
advertising industry'. According to the report around two billion people worldwide now use social media
websites. The attraction of using social media for many companies focuses on the ability to gain an insight
about individual users by collecting vast quantities of data about them (eg age, consumption patterns).
This data enables advertisers to directly target their marketing message at users. Targeting consumers in
this way is allowing advertisers to produce highly individualised marketing messages, with many now able
to tailor their adverts to fit individual preferences and needs.
The Economist report highlights the examples of American firms, Chevrolet, the car maker and Lowe's a
chain of home improvement stores. Chevrolet 'sent ads to the Facebook pages and Twitter feeds of people
who had expressed an interest in, or signing up to test-drive, a competitor's vehicle'. Meanwhile, Lowe's
'ran a campaign on Facebook in which users were sent one of several dozen versions of its ad, depending
on which part of their homes they had mentioned on social media'.
Source:
The Economist, (2015) 'A brand new game', 29 August, www.economist.com
Developing ideas Also, by allowing web users to provide feedback and share ideas, Web 2.0 is
encouraging a model in which people outside an organisation can have an impact on that organisation's
strategy.
In this way, the internet becomes, in effect, a research tool, where companies can find out about
customers' opinions about products and services. Web 2.0 allows businesses to aggregate opinions from
many different individuals to guide idea generation and strategic decision making.
Consequently, customer networks and social interaction have become much more important in marketing.
In September 2013, the accountancy firm Grant Thornton published a report titled 'Social media risks and
rewards'. The report identified four main risks that businesses face when using social media to
communicate with customers:
(1) Damage to brand reputation
(2) Disclosure of proprietary and/or confidential information
(3) Corporate identity theft
There are three aspects of CRM that can each be implemented in isolation from one another:
(a) Operational CRM provides support to front office business processes, including sales, marketing
and service. Each interaction with a customer is generally added to a customer's contact history,
and staff can retrieve information on customers from the database as necessary. Many call centres
use some kind of CRM software to support their call centre agents.
(b) Collaborative CRM covers the direct interaction with customers. This can include a variety of
channels, such as internet, email, automated phone/Interactive Voice Response (IVR).
Quick Quiz
1 The SOSTAC planning framework can be used to develop a marketing strategy. What does SOSTAC stand
for?
2 What are the six Is of marketing?
3 What are the four ways an online brand be created?
4 What are the three phases of CRM identified by Chaffey?
5 What are the five phases of making a purchase?
6 What is scalability?
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
Project management
427
428
Project management
Introduction
Project management is an important aspect of putting strategy into action. In
the first place, many organisations' business consists largely of projects: civil
engineering contractors and film studios are two obvious examples. Secondly,
even where operations are more or less continuous, the need for continuing
strategic innovation and improvement in the way things are done brings project
management to the forefront of attention. Finally, even relatively low-level, one-
off projects must be managed with a view to their potential strategic
implications.
Project management is also very closely linked to business process change and
information technology issues. For example, major changes in technology are
usually implemented through projects and project management.
429
Study guide
Intellectual level
F1 The nature of projects
(a) Determine the distinguishing features of projects and the constraints they
2
operate in
(b) Discuss the implications of the triple constraint of scope, cost and time
2
(c) Discuss the relationship between organisational strategy and project
2
management
(d) Identify and plan to manage risks 2
(e) Advise on the structures and information that have to be in place to
3
successfully initiate a project
(f) Explain the relevance of projects to process re-design, e-business systems
2
development and quality initiatives
F2 Building the business case
(a) Describe the structure and contents of a business case document 2
(b) Analyse, describe, assess and classify benefits of a project investment 3
(c) Analyse, describe, assess and classify costs of a project investment 3
(d) Evaluate the costs and benefits of a business case using standard techniques
3
(e) Establish responsibility for the delivery of benefits 2
(f) Explain the role of a benefits realisation plan 2
F3 Managing and leading projects
(a) Discuss the organisation and implications of project-based team structures 2
(b) Establish the role and responsibilities of the project manager and the project
2
sponsor
(c) Identify and describe typical problems encountered by a project manager
2
when leading a project
(d) Advise on how these typical problems might be addressed and overcome 3
F4 Planning, monitoring and controlling projects
(a) Discuss the principles of a product breakdown structure
2
(b) Assess the importance of developing a project plan and discuss the work
3
required to produce this plan
(c) Monitor the status of a project and identify project risks, issues, slippage
2
and changes
(d) Formulate response for dealing with project risks, issues, slippage and
2
changes
(e) Discuss the role of benefits management and project gateways in project
2
monitoring
F5 Concluding a project
(a) Establish mechanisms for successfully concluding a project 2
(b) Discuss the relative meaning and benefits of a post-implementation and a
2
post-project review
(c) Discuss the meaning and value of benefits realisation 2
Exam guide
The examining team has indicated that the importance of project management will be recognised, both by
Section B questions which deal with it explicitly, and also through issues in the Section A scenario. It is
possible that topics that have been examined in the old syllabus Paper 2.1 Information systems, such as
project initiation, project slippage, project completion and risk management, will re-emerge in your exam
in a more complex and substantial form.
You should also remember that project management is also linked very closely to the business process
change and IT issues dealt with by your syllabus. Its treatment here builds on the syllabus for Paper F1
Accountant in Business, Section E, which deals with leading and managing individuals and teams.
Models
The Study Guide for this chapter does not refer to any specific models of project management, and so no
specific models will be explicitly required by a question.
However, note the way the Study Guide emphasises the practical aspects of project management,
suggesting that these practical applications will be important in answering exam questions on project
management.
Key terms A project is 'an undertaking that has a beginning and an end and is carried out to meet established goals
within cost, schedule and quality objectives'. (Haynes, Project Management)
Resources are the money, facilities, supplies, services and people allocated to the project.
In general, the work which organisations undertake involves either operations or projects. Operations and
projects are planned, controlled and executed. So how are projects distinguished from 'ordinary work'?
Projects Operations
Have a defined beginning and end Ongoing
Have resources allocated specifically to them, although Resources used 'full-time'
often on a shared basis
Are intended to be done only once A mixture of many recurring tasks
An activity that meets the first four criteria above can be classified as a project, and therefore falls within
the scope of project management. Whether an activity is classified as a project is important, as projects
should be managed using project management techniques.
Common examples of projects include:
Producing a new product, service or object
Changing the structure of an organisation
Developing or modifying a new information system
Implementing a new business procedure or process
Key term Project management: Integration of all aspects of a project, ensuring that the proper knowledge and
resources are available when and where needed, and above all to ensure that the expected outcome is
produced in a timely, cost-effective manner. The primary function of a project manager is to manage the
trade-offs between performance, timeliness and cost.
The objective of project management is a successful project. A project will be deemed successful if it is
completed at the specified level of quality, on time and within budget.
Constraint Comment
Quality The end result should conform to the project specification. In other words, the
result should achieve what the project was supposed to do
Budget The project should be completed without exceeding authorised expenditure
Timescale The progress of the project must follow the planned process, so that the 'result' is
ready for use at the agreed date. As time is money, proper time management can
help contain costs
Quality, cost and time are regarded as the yardsticks against which project success is measured. It is
common to add a fourth constraint, scope, and even to use it to replace quality as a fundamental
constraint and target. The scope of a project defines all the work that is to be done and all the deliverables
that constitute project success. Under this analysis, the quality constraint is restricted to a narrower
meaning and the difference between scope and quality becomes the difference between doing a job and
doing it well or badly.
The process involved in project management can be summarised in the figure below. (We will look at
these processes in more detail throughout this chapter.)
Take
corrective action
Perform
tasks
Compare actual
progress to
project plan Measure
progress
Project management can be a core strategic competence for companies working in such industries as
consulting and construction. Such companies must ensure that they maintain and improve their project
management abilities if they are to continue to be commercially successful.
Kerzner describes a five level project management maturity model of continuous organisational
improvement in the methodology of project management. Organisations should aspire to progress to the
highest level, which is a state of continuous improvement. The five levels need not necessarily follow one
another in a linear fashion: they may overlap, but the degree of overlap allowed is reflected in the risk
associated with the overall process.
Level 1 Common knowledge
The importance of project management to the organisation is understood and training in the
basic techniques and terminology is provided.
Level 2 Common processes
The processes employed successfully are standardised and developed so that they can be
used more widely, both for future projects and in concert with other methodologies such as
total quality management.
Level 3 Singular methodology
Project management is placed at the centre of a single corporate methodology, achieving
wide synergy and improving process control in particular. A separate methodology may be
retained for IS matters.
Level 4 Benchmarking
Competitive advantage is recognised as being based on process improvement and a
continuing programme of benchmarking is undertaken.
Level 5 Continuous improvement
Benchmarking information is critically appraised for its potential contribution to the
improvement of the singular methodology. Organisations such as this strive for project
management excellence. Common characteristics at this level of project management
maturity are the creation of lessons learned after each project and the application of lessons
learned from previous projects into subsequent projects.
Models such as Kerzner's are a guide to progress; in particular they indicate corporate training needs and
career development routes for project managers.
The need for continuous improvement is necessary because, despite best efforts, many projects fail. By
analysing the reasons for the failures and identifying the lessons learned, the chances of future success
can be improved. Taking the lessons learned forward into future projects helps avoid similar mistakes and
to strengthen and improve both the project management and management processes.
Key term Strategic project management is the process of managing complex projects by combining business
strategy and project management techniques in order to implement the business strategy and deliver
organisational breakthroughs. Grundy and Brown
The link between strategy and project is most clearly seen in the concept of the breakthrough project.
Breakthrough projects are a feature of the Japanese technique of hoshin or 'breakthrough management'.
Hoshin requires that there should be not more than three concurrent breakthrough projects. This has
distinct advantages.
Resources are concentrated where they will do the most good
Projects of marginal value are avoided
Managerial attention remains focussed
The link from strategy to project management is a process influenced by both internal and external
change. Vision gives rise to ideas for strategic breakthroughs. These lead to the establishment of
strategic programmes and these, in turn generate strategic projects.
Projects may be thought of as having a lifecycle. This concept is useful for understanding the processes
involved in project management and control, since the resources required and the focus of management
attention vary as projects move from one stage to the next.
Fishbone analysis
Performance
CAD/CAM drivers
system Top
70% of staff management
well qualified commitment
Existing plan s
Current activities
Time
Now
Gap analysis
Project
scope
Time Cost
The iron triangle
We discussed the strategic importance of stakeholders earlier in this Study Text. Fairly obviously, where a
project is of strategic significance, stakeholders will be considered at several points during the
development of the strategy. The stakeholder concept can also be applied to the management of projects
of less overall significance. This would form part of that strategic approach to project management
advocated by Grundy and Brown.
It is important to understand who has an interest in a project, because part of the responsibility of the
project manager is communication and the management of expectations. An initial assessment of
stakeholders should be made early in the project's life, taking care not to ignore those who might not
approve of the project, either as a whole, or because of some aspect such as its cost, its use of scarce
talent or its side-effects. Each stakeholder's degree of interest in and support for (or opposition to) the
project should be estimated.
Exam focus A question in the June 2015 exam featured a public sector project in which the mayor of a town had set up
point a project to reduce traffic congestion at traffic lights. Following the election of a new mayor, with her own
transport policy, she wished to change the existing project. Candidates were asked to discuss the changes
that would need to be made to the project initiation document (project charter) to reflect the new mayor's
vision of the project. As this requirement illustrates, it is important that you understand the purpose and
elements that form the project charter. The examining team noted that the question was 'relatively well
answered, although many answers were not well structured and some strayed outside of what might be
expected within a terms of reference.'
Exam focus Prepare your own summary of the activities and processes involved in project selection, definition, and
point initiation, mentioning each one just once. This will provide you with essential information for dealing with
any question that involves the early stages of a project.
Key term A business case is a key document for a project. It is used to propose a course of action to senior
management for their consideration.
Exam focus An article titled 'Project management business cases and gateways' written by Ken Garrett is available in
point the technical articles section for P3 on the ACCA website. It would be worth taking the time to study this
article.
3.1.1 Introduction
The introduction defines the scope and objectives of the change and provides the necessary background
information to illustrate why the business case is being put forward. It may also describe the methods
used in developing the business case and thank key contributors to the study.
3.1.9 Recommendations
This section should summarise the business case and clearly state the decisions that senior management
are being asked to take.
Some projects are more successful than others at delivering benefits. To understand why this is,
observation of methodologies used in projects was carried out and the benefits management approach
was developed. This approach aims to avoid the loss of achievable benefits as well as to realise more
extensive benefits than from previous investments. It is possible that this approach may also reduce costs,
as those costs which deliver nothing of value can be eliminated.
Benefits management has much in common with change management and the business process change
lifecycle model as it recognises that the way in which a major change is managed must be appropriate to
the content of the change and the context of the organisation involved.
Benefits management is not a one-off process; it will be revised constantly throughout the life of the
project. It is made up of five key stages as shown by the following diagram.
1 Identify and
structure
benefits
The first stage of the diagram, identifying and structuring benefits, is important for inclusion in the
business case. The point of the business case is to secure funding by demonstrating the benefits for the
organisation that the project will bring.
The purpose of identifying and structuring benefits is to:
Establish agreed objectives for the investment
Identify all the potential benefits that may arise if the objectives of the investment are met
(including where in the organisation it will occur)
Understand how those benefits could be realised
Determine ownership of the benefits
Determine how the benefits can be measured to prove they have occurred
Identify any issues that could delay the project or cause it to fail
Produce an outline business case to decide whether to proceed with the project or stop investment
at this stage
A business case should be based on the ability to measure each benefit and on specific evidence that
enables the level or size of each expected improvement to be estimated. It should aim to express benefits
in financial terms so that the overall expected return of the investment can be calculated. However, not all
benefits can be quantified in this way.
However, all benefits can be measured in some way. Benefits can be classified as observable,
measurable, quantifiable and financial.
Key terms Observable benefits are those which are measured by experience or judgement. 'Soft' benefits such as
staff morale fall into this category.
Measurable benefits relate to an area of performance that could be (or already is being) measured, but it
is not possible to quantify how much performance will increase as a result of the change.
Quantifiable benefits are those where the level of benefit that will result from the change can be reliably
forecast based on the evidence in place.
Financial benefits are quantified benefits that have had a financial formula (such as cost or price) applied
to them to produce a financial value for the benefits.
Exam focus The examining team has stressed the importance of understanding the different ways that benefits can be
point classified.
An article titled 'Project management business cases and gateways' (April 2011) written by Ken Garrett
is available in the technical articles section for P3 on ACCA's website. It would be worth taking the time to
study this article.
As we have seen with project benefits, predicting costs can also be difficult particularly as some (such as
those associated with making business changes) may not be recorded. Types of costs that should be
included as part of the project cost assessment include:
Purchase costs such as hardware, software, consultancy and materials
Internal systems development costs such as developing/purchasing software
Infrastructure costs. These are costs that are incurred exclusively for the new system
Costs of carrying out the business changes should be included to provide a complete financial
view of the investment. This includes costs such as training, recruitment, redundancy, refitting
buildings and so on
Ongoing costs. These are the permanent costs involved in the new ways of working. They should
be either explicitly stated as additional costs or netted off against the benefits
We can see from this that a project will include both capital and operational costs.
Key term Capital expenditure acquires or produces an asset whose value continues to be used (or consumed) over
several financial years.
Operating costs refer to any expenditure on things whose value is used up within the same financial year.
The majority of capital expenditure is likely to occur at the start of the project and prior to implementation.
This could involve expenditure on items such as building new facilities, refits and refurbishment, new
technology and systems and so on.
Operating expenditure can be non-recurrent, such as consultancy fees, or can be recurrent, such as staff
salaries. Recurrent operating expenditure could continue long after the project has been completed and
the finished solution implemented.
Recurrent operating costs are as relevant to the business case as the capital and non-recurrent operating
costs incurred during the project itself. However, it is easy to overlook such costs as part of 'business as
usual'. If such costs would not be incurred if the project did not go ahead, then those costs must be built
into the business case if it is to be a true representation of the worth of the project.
When investment decisions are made, an outlay of economic value (usually cash) is made in anticipation
of future benefits. The outlay is usually large and is incurred at the start of the process. The benefits do
not occur until later and then generally arrive in a number of smaller amounts over a period of time.
Investment decisions are important to businesses because they involve large amounts of resource, and
once the investment has been undertaken, it can be difficult and expensive to pull out of it.
Given this, it is important that investment proposals are properly appraised before they are taken on. There
are four key methods that are used for investment appraisal, they are:
Accounting rate of return (ARR)
Payback period (PP)
Net present value (NPV)
Internal rate of return (IRR)
All of these are valid methods which are used by many organisations.
For a project to be acceptable, it must achieve a target ARR as a minimum. It is likely that this target would
be based on the Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) perhaps of similar prior projects, or of the industry
average.
If there are a number of competing projects that achieve the minimum ARR, the one that would be
selected is the one with the highest ARR.
ARR has two main advantages:
Consistent with the overall approach to measuring business performance (ROCE)
Gives the result expressed as a percentage, managers generally feel comfortable with this
There are also several problems in using ARR:
(a) Ignores the time factor. For example, if two projects that require the same outlay give the same
total return over five years, then ARR would rank them equally. However, it may be that in one the
returns are concentrated in year 1 and in the other the returns are concentrated in year 5. A rational
investor would prefer the one that gave the most returns quickly however, ARR overlooks this.
(b) Is based on profits not cash. When measuring performance over the whole life of a project, cash is
more important because it is used to acquire resources and for distribution to owners. Accounting
profit is more appropriate for reporting achievement on a periodic basis, eg a year or half-year.
Cash is more appropriate over the long term.
(c) ARR can create problems when considering competing investments of different size. This is
because it deals with percentages. It would suggest that the best project to invest in would be the
one with the biggest percentage return; however, it may be far better to select the project with the
biggest absolute return.
Arrow wants to buy a new item of equipment. Two models of equipment are available, one with a slightly
higher capacity and greater reliability than the other. The expected costs and profits of each item are as
follows.
Equipment item Equipment item
X Y
Capital cost $80,000 $150,000
Life 5 years 5 years
Profits before depreciation $ $
Year 1 50,000 50,000
Year 2 50,000 50,000
Year 3 30,000 60,000
Year 4 20,000 60,000
Year 5 10,000 60,000
Disposal value 0 0
ARR is measured as the average annual profit after depreciation, divided by the average net book value of
the asset.
Which item of equipment should be selected if the company's target ARR is 30%?
Answer
Item X Item Y
$ $
Total profit over life of equipment
Before depreciation 160,000 280,000
After depreciation 80,000 130,000
Average annual profit after depreciation 16,000 26,000
Average investment = (capital cost + disposal value)/2 40,000 75,000
ARR 40% 34.7%
Both projects would earn a return in excess of 30%, but since item X would earn a bigger ARR, it would
be preferred to item Y, even though the profits from Y would be higher by an average of $10,000 a year.
Exam focus A question in the June 2011 exam asked for a critical evaluation of comments made by the owner of an
point events company which organised folk music festivals. Students were required to evaluate the investment
appraisal technique used (NPV) in selecting one of two IT projects. To perform well on this question,
students needed to demonstrate an understanding of payback period calculations, discount rate and IRR.
An asset costing $120,000 is to be depreciated over ten years to a nil residual value. Profits after
depreciation for the first five years are as follows.
Year $
1 12,000
2 17,000
3 28,000
4 37,000
5 8,000
How long is the payback period to the nearest month?
Answer
Profits before depreciation should be used.
Year Profit after depreciation Depreciation Profit before depreciation Cumulative profit
$'000 $'000 $'000 $'000
1 12 12 24 24
2 17 12 29 53
3 28 12 40 93
4 37 12 49 142
5 8 12 20
(120 93)
Payback period = 3 years + 12 months
(142 93)
= 3 years 7 months
1 Interest lost. If the organisation has the funds in its control, then it could invest them and earn
interest. The longer the funds are tied up in an investment, the longer the organisation does not
have access to them and hence, the longer they will be unavailable to earn interest.
2 Risk. Investing in something that will bring about future benefits is risky the benefits actually
received may not be in line with what was expected. A degree of risk is accepted in all project
investments. The greater the risk, the higher the rate of return is expected.
3 Inflation. Money loses purchasing power over time as a result of inflation; a dollar now is worth
more than a dollar in a year's time.
NPV recognises the time value of money by working out the present value of future returns (ie if the cash
flows from the investment were received today, how much would they be worth?).
The present value is worked out using the equation
actual cashflow
PV of a cashflow =
(1+r)n
n = year of cashflow
r = the opportunity investing cost of capital expressed as a decimal (rather than a percentage)
The NPV is the sum of all the cashflows associated with a project, less the cost of the original investment.
Investments that return a positive NPV should be accepted. If several competing investments all have
positive NPVs, then the one with the highest NPV should be selected.
NPV is a better method for investment appraisals than either the IRR (see below) or the PP. This is for a
number of reasons.
Timing. NPV takes account of the time value of money by discounting future cashflows to arrive at
a present value of those cashflows. The net benefit after finance costs have been met is identified.
Completeness. This method considers all future cashflows, regardless of when they will occur.
Although it treats them differently depending on when they are expected to occur, every cashflow is
taken into account.
Alignment with business objectives. NPV is the only method of investment appraisal that produces
an output that relates directly to the amount of wealth generated for shareholders.
Question NPV
Slogger has a cost of capital of 15% and is considering a capital investment project, where the estimated
cash flows are as follows.
Year Cash flow
$
0 (ie now) (100,000)
1 60,000
2 80,000
3 40,000
4 30,000
Required
Calculate the NPV of the project, and assess whether it should be undertaken.
Note. The discount factor for any cash flow 'now' (time 0) is always 1, whatever the cost of capital.
The PV of cash inflows exceeds the PV of cash outflows by $56,160, which means that the project will
earn a DCF yield in excess of 15%. It should therefore be undertaken.
NPV
($)
IRR
If the discount rate itself is zero, the NPV would be the sum of the net cash flows, ie no account would be
taken of the time value of money. When the discount rate increases, there is a corresponding decrease in
the NPV. The NPV is zero where it crosses the horizontal axis.
If we determine a cost of capital where the NPV is slightly positive, and another cost of capital where it
is slightly negative, we can estimate the IRR by using the interpolation method. The interpolation
method assumes that the NPV rises in linear fashion between the two NPVs close to 0. The real rate of
return is therefore assumed to be on a straight line between the two points at which the NPV is calculated.
The IRR interpolation formula to apply is:
P
IRR = A + (B A) %
P N
where A is the (lower) rate of return
B is the (higher) rate of return
P is the NPV at A
N is the NPV at B
A company is trying to decide whether to buy a machine for $80,000 which will save costs of $20,000 per
annum for five years and which will have a resale value of $10,000 at the end of year 5.
Required
If it is the company's policy to undertake projects only if they are expected to yield a DCF return of 10% or
more, ascertain using the IRR method whether this project should be undertaken.
Answer
The first step is to calculate two net present values, both as close as possible to zero, using rates for the
cost of capital which are whole numbers. One NPV should be positive and the other negative.
Choosing rates for the cost of capital which will give an NPV close to zero (that is, rates which are close
to the actual rate of return) is a hit-and-miss exercise, and several attempts may be needed to find
satisfactory rates. As a rough guide, try starting at a return figure which is about two thirds or three
quarters of the ARR.
Annual depreciation would be $(80,000 10,000)/5 = $14,000.
The ARR would be (20,000 depreciation of 14,000)/( of (80,000 + 10,000)) = 6,000/45,000 = 13.3%
Two thirds of this is 8.9% and so we can start by trying 9%.
Try 9%. Year Cash flow PV factor PV of cash flow
$ 9% $
0 (80,000) 1.000 (80,000)
15 20,000 3.890 77,800
5 10,000 0.650 6,500
NPV = 4,300
This is fairly close to zero. It is also positive, which means that the real rate of return is more than 9%.
We can use 9% as one of our two NPVs close to zero, although for greater accuracy, we should try 10%
or even 11% to find an NPV even closer to zero if we can. As a guess, it might be worth trying 12% next,
to see what the NPV is.
Try 12%. Year Cash flow PV factor PV of cash flow
$ 12% $
0 (80,000) 1.000 (80,000)
15 20,000 3.605 72,100
5 10,000 0.567 5,670
NPV = (2,230)
This is fairly close to zero and negative. The real rate of return is therefore greater than 9% (positive
NPV of $4,300) but less than 12% (negative NPV of $2,230).
Note. If the first NPV is positive, choose a higher rate for the next calculation to get a negative NPV. If
the first NPV is negative, choose a lower rate for the next calculation.
IRR has some features in common with NPV: all cash flows are taken into account, and the timing of the
cashflows is handled logically. However, there are a number of problems associated with IRR:
IRR does not relate directly to shareholder wealth
IRR ignores the scale of investment so is not appropriate for comparing investments of different
size
IRR can also be unreliable where there are projects with unconventional cash flows, such as
positive and negative cashflows in different years of the project's life. This can cause there to be
several IRRs, or none at all, for a particular investment
IRR generally gives similar results to the NPV, but is viewed as an inferior approach due to the inherent
problems listed here.
Exam focus Investment appraisal was specifically examined in an optional question of the June 2011 P3 exam. The
point question asked the candidates to critically evaluate a number of statements made in the scenario about
investment appraisal. This was an unpopular question choice, suggesting that candidates are not confident
in this area. Make sure you are familiar with the characteristics and limitations of each of the methods, and
have a strong understanding of benefit classifications and their potential use in investment appraisal.
Once the costs and benefits of a project have been identified, an owner should be assigned to each
individual benefit before it can be stated in the business case. The owner should be an individual who
gains the advantage inherent in the stated benefit and therefore is willing to work with the project team to
ensure the benefit is realised.
Key term A benefit owner is an individual or group who will gain advantage from a business benefit and who will
work with the project team to ensure that benefit is realised.
The benefit owner will work with the project team, either personally or through the resources he or she
has to ensure the benefit is realised. However, the benefit owners cannot be considered to be solely
responsible for realising the benefit, since the changes necessary to deliver the benefit may need to be
undertaken by others outside their sphere of control or influence. People who do this are known as
change owners.
Key term A change owner is an individual or group who will ensure that an identified business or enabling change is
successfully achieved.
The change owner should be the individual who is responsible for the area in which the identified change
resides. The change owners may not be personally responsible for making the changes, but they are
accountable for the changes being effected successfully. They must be committed to the project, dedicate
sufficient personal time and knowledge to planning and managing the changes, and be influential enough
to ensure the necessary resources are made available to carry out the changes.
A single change owner is best, if there are multiple change owners, change can be difficult to achieve as
the responsibilities for resolving any problems that may arise may become unclear.
After the benefits have been quantified (or otherwise measured) and allocated to owners, the business
case will need to identify how those benefits will be realised. This can be done by including a benefits
realisation plan as part of the business case for the investment. The aim of this plan is to demonstrate
how the identified benefits will be measured, taken forward and achieved. It will identify factors that will
indicate when the change has been successful and the benefits are being realised, and will illustrate
everything that has to happen in order for this to occur.
The benefits realisation plan will involve:
Full descriptions of each benefit and change with responsibilities for delivery defined and agreed
Measures, and where possible, expected values, for each benefit
Measurements to establish the current baseline
Agreed ownership of all the changes and actions in place to address issues that may affect the
achievement of changes
Evidence or criteria to be used to assess whether each change has been successfully carried out
Complete and documented benefits dependency network identifying all the benefit and change
relationships
The plans should also clearly define the drivers for change.
Key term Drivers are forces acting on an organisation which require it to make changes either to what it does or
how it conducts its business activities.
Drivers for change can be either internal or external, but are specific to the context in which the
organisation operates. They should be described in sufficient detail to ensure there is an understanding for
the need for change and the implications of not taking action to respond to the drivers.
Drivers must be strategic to the future of the whole organisation, not just specific functions or
departments. Localised priorities are often found to be in conflict with the overall best interests of the
organisation. A business case will be greatly strengthened if it can demonstrate that it is linked to the
priorities of the senior management of the organisation.
D
R
I
V
E
R
S
Source: 'Benefits Management: Delivering Value from IS & IT Investments', Ward and Daniel
Once the drivers, investment objectives and business benefits have been identified, it is necessary to
identify the changes to the ways individuals and groups work that will be needed for the potential benefits
to be realised. Each benefit should be considered in turn and the necessary changes should be identified
and described on the benefits dependency network.
The changes that need to be made can be categorised as business changes or enabling changes.
Business changes are the new ways of working that will be permanently required, such as new roles and
responsibilities, new or refined processes or new governance arrangements.
Enabling changes are one-off changes that may be required in order for the business changes to be
brought about, or may be related to bringing in the new system. Examples might include training, process
mapping and process design, decommissioning of legacy systems and definition of new roles and
responsibilities.
Following on from the identification of the business changes and enabling changes, the information
systems and technology required need to be considered. These are known as IS/IT enablers. The
identification of the IS/IT enablers may lead to further changes, particularly enabling changes, to be
required. If so, they need to be added to the relevant part of the network.
This process may also highlight that the organisation does not actually need to invest in any new IS or IT.
It is often found that the changes could be undertaken, and many of the benefits realised with current
systems.
This network identifies several benefits, such as improved patient experience and reduced unit cost per X-
ray. However, it also shows that if the system can be used to transmit test results back to GPs and update
patient records, then additional benefits could also be expected. An example might be that patient
treatment could be started sooner, as the doctor will be quicker informed of the patient's condition.
Working back towards the left, we can see the required changes to IT/IS in order to achieve these benefits.
The diagram also highlights the dependency of some of the benefits on resources or capabilities outside
the project, such as having an expert available to interpret the results of the X-ray,
Source: Ward and Daniel: Benefits Management
The unique nature of each project means that careful planning is an essential component of project
management. Many project costs, time overruns and outright failures can be traced to failures of planning.
Project management as a discipline is commonly associated with fairly clearly defined issues such as
preparing for a conference, organising an office move or installing a new IT system. Projects such as
these can be of strategic importance, but even when they are, there is often an unspoken assumption that
once the go-ahead is given, the job of project management is essentially one of detailed planning,
organisation and control, with, perhaps, a little trouble-shooting thrown in. It is important to understand
that this is unlikely to be the case with truly strategic projects: with projects such as the turnaround of an
underperforming division or an initial move into a foreign market, project management and strategic
management are likely to merge into one another. As a corollary, we can say that at the level of the
strategic project, project planning is likely to make use of a strategic planning approach. A failure to think
strategically is likely to lead to project failure.
Key term Project budget. The amount and distribution of resources allocated to a project.
Building a project budget should be an orderly process that attempts to establish a realistic estimate of the
cost of the project. There are two main methods for establishing the project budget: top-down and
bottom-up.
Top-down budgeting describes the situation where the budget is imposed from above. Project managers
are allocated a budget for the project based on an estimate made by senior management. The figure may
prove realistic, especially if similar projects have been undertaken recently. However, the technique is
often used simply because it is quick, or because only a certain level of funding is available.
In bottom-up budgeting the project manager consults the project team, and others, to calculate a budget
based on the tasks that make up the project. WBS is a useful tool in this process.
A Gantt chart, named after the engineer Henry Gantt who pioneered the procedure in the early 1900s, is a
horizontal bar chart used to plan the time scale for a project and to estimate the resources required.
The Gantt chart displays the time relationships between tasks in a project. Two lines are usually used to
show the time allocated for each task, and the actual time taken.
The chart shows that at the end of the tenth week, Activity 9 is running behind schedule. More resources
may have to be allocated to this activity if the staff accommodation is to be ready in time for the
changeover to the new system.
Activity 4 had not been completed on time, and this has resulted in some disruption to the computer
installation (Activity 6), which may mean further delays in the commencement of Activities 7 and 8.
A Gantt chart does not show the interrelationship between the various activities in the project as clearly as
a network diagram (covered later in this chapter). A combination of Gantt charts and network analysis will
often be used for project planning and resource allocation.
Network analysis, also known as Critical Path Analysis (CPA), is a useful technique to help with planning
and controlling large projects, such as construction projects, research and development projects, and the
computerisation of systems.
CPA aims to ensure the progress of a project, so the project is completed in the minimum amount of
time. It pinpoints the tasks on the critical path, which is the longest duration sequence of tasks in the
project; a delay to any of these tasks would delay the completion of the project as a whole. The technique
can also be used to assist in allocating resources such as labour and equipment.
Exam focus Critical path analysis is employed in most complex projects but it is a specialised process and you will not
point be required to use it in the exam.
Key term A resource histogram shows a view of project data in which resource requirements, usage, and
availability are shown against a time scale.
A simple resource histogram showing programmer time required on a software development program
follows:
Some organisations add another bar (or a separate line) to the chart showing resource availability. The
chart then shows any instances when the required resource hours exceed the available hours. Plans
should then be made to either obtain further resource for these peak times, or to reschedule the work
plan. Alternately, the chart may show times when the available resource is excessive, and should be
redeployed elsewhere. An example follows:
Some project managers have only one major responsibility: a specific project. However, anyone
responsible for a project, large or small, is a project manager. As a result, many project managers, will
have routine work responsibilities outside their project goals, which may lead to conflicting demands on
their time.
The role a project manager performs is, in many ways, similar to those performed by other managers.
There are, however, some important differences, as shown in the table which follows.
Duty Comment
Outline planning See above for project definition and initiation
It is also possible to view the process of project management as having five stages:
Initiation Controlling
Planning Completing
Leadership
The first, second, fourth and fifth of these phases correspond closely to the phases of the project life
cycle, which was discussed earlier in this chapter. The third phase, leadership, forms a major part of the
subject matter of this section.
To perform these duties and meet these responsibilities, a project manager requires a wide range of skills.
As in other forms of management, different project managers have different styles of leadership. There is
no single best leadership style, as individuals react differently to different styles on different occasions.
The key is adopting a style that suits both the leader and the team, and that is appropriate to the current
situation.
The leadership style adopted will affect the way decisions relating to the project are made. Although an
autocratic style may prove successful in some situations, such as very simple or repetitive projects, a
more consultative style has the advantage of making team members feel more a part of the project. This
should result in greater commitment.
Not all decisions will be made in the same way. For example, decisions that do not have direct
consequences for other project personnel may be made with no (or limited) consultation. A balance needs
to be found between ensuring decisions can be made efficiently, and ensuring adequate consultation.
A lot of the material covered in this section was introduced in the F1 syllabus. At P3 you may be required
to apply your knowledge of teams and appropriate leadership styles in a scenario context. If you are not
comfortable with this material, you should look back to the F1 material to refresh yourself with it.
Key term A group is any collection of people who perceive themselves to be a group.
Unlike a random collection of individuals, a group shares a common sense of identity and belonging. They
have certain attributes that a random crowd does not possess.
(a) A sense of identity. There is awareness of membership and acknowledged boundaries to the group
which define it.
(b) Loyalty to the group, and acceptance within the group. This generally expresses itself as
conformity or the acceptance of the norms of behaviour and attitudes that bind the group together
and exclude others from it.
(a) Work organisation. Teams combine the skills of different individuals and avoid complex
communication between different business functions.
(b) Control. Fear of letting down the team can be a powerful motivator, hence teams can be used to
control the performance and behaviour of individuals. Teams can also be used to resolve conflict.
(c) Knowledge generation. Teams can generate ideas.
(d) Decision-making. Teams can be set up to investigate new developments and decisions can be
evaluated from more than one viewpoint.
(e) Communication. Team work can enhance the flow of information.
(f) Social needs. People generally have a need for company and social interaction.
Management can operate on both givens and intervening factors to affect the outcomes.
Member Role
Co-ordinator Presides and co-ordinates: balanced, disciplined, good at working through others
Shaper Highly strung, dominant, extrovert, passionate about the task itself, a spur to
action
Plant Introverted, but intellectually dominant and imaginative; source of ideas and
proposals but with disadvantage of introversion
The specialist joins the group to offer expert advice when needed. Notice that one team member may play
two or more roles.
7 Controlling projects
FAST FORWARD
Progress reports should report progress towards key milestones. Slippage may be managed with a
number of options, including incentives, working smarter, extra resources and rescheduling. Project
changes must be carefully considered, communicated, documented and controlled. Risk management
involves risk assessment and recording, and action to reduce, avoid, transfer or absorb risks.
Key term A gateway is a project review point at which certain criteria must be met before the project can pass
through the gateway and proceed to the next stage.
Gateways and benefits management should be incorporated into formal monitoring of projects in order to
ensure that the project has remained on track, and any problems can be identified and rectified before they
get out of hand. In order to ensure the benefits defined at the outset are realised, progress towards these
should be reviewed and any further benefits identified. Any benefits that are no longer feasible or realistic
should be recorded and the relevant steps taken to revise the benefits management plan.
The business case will also have to be revisited at these points. As we noted earlier, the business case is
not a one-off event, it is a living document that develops along with the project. Projects must pass certain
tests, particularly in relation to their business viability, in order to pass through these gateways and be
allowed to proceed to the next stage.
Gateways are particularly helpful for identifying scope creep.
Key term Scope creep relates to uncontrolled changes in the scope of a project.
If the project has been poorly defined, or is not controlled sufficiently, the scope of the project can steadily
grow until it is dramatically different from that planned at the outset. This can cause significant delays in
the project as well as causing it to exceed its intended budget.
Gateways have a number of other benefits. They are a useful expectations management tool, and they
allow project sponsors and senior management to review their project investments as they proceed. If
necessary this allows them to deflect resources to more successful projects.
The frequency and contents of progress reports will vary depending on the length of, and the progress
being made on, a project. The report is a control tool intended to show the discrepancies between where
the project is, and where the plan says it should be. A common form of progress reports uses two
columns one for planned time and expenditure and one for actual. Any additional content will depend on
the format adopted. Some organisations include only the raw facts in the report, and use these as a basis
for discussion regarding reasons for variances and action to be taken, at a project review meeting. Other
organisations (particularly those involved in long, complex projects) produce more comprehensive
progress reports, with more explanation and comment.
The report should monitor progress towards key milestones.
Key term A milestone is a significant event in the life of the project, usually completion of a major deliverable.
A progress report may include a milestone slip chart which compares planned and actual progress
towards project milestones. Planned progress is shown on the X-axis and actual progress on the Y-axis.
Where actual progress is slower than planned, progress slippage has occurred.
INITIATION
Actual time
2
Planned time
On the chart above, milestones are indicated by a triangle on the diagonal planned progress line. The
vertical lines that meet milestones 1 and 2 are straight showing that these milestones were achieved on
time. At milestone 3 some slippage has occurred. The chart shows that no further slippage is expected as
the progress line for milestone 4 is the same distance to the right as occurred at milestone 3. The
progress report should also include an updated budget status such a report could adopt the format
shown in the following example.
When a project has slipped behind schedule, there are a range of options open to the project manager.
Some of these options are summarised in the following table.
Action Comment
Do nothing After considering all options it may be decided that things should be
allowed to continue as they are
Add resources If capable staff are available and it is practicable to add more people to
certain tasks it may be possible to recover some lost ground. Are extra
funds available to hire more staff? Could some work be subcontracted?
Work smarter Consider whether the methods currently being used are the most suitable
for example, would prototyping be more effective at eliciting requirements?
Replan If the assumptions that the original plan was based on have been proved
invalid, a more realistic plan should be devised
Reschedule A complete replan may not be necessary it may be possible to recover
some time by changing the phasing of certain deliverables
Introduce incentives If the main problem is team performance, incentives such as bonus
payments could be linked to work deadlines and quality. This is a positive
incentive. In some cases, poor team performance may need to be
addressed through more negative responses, for example, disciplinary
action if staff are not working to the level required of them. Note:
performance issues need not be limited to in-house staff. They could
equally relate to contractors or suppliers, in which case the project manager
will need to introduce incentives (positive or negative, as appropriate) to
improve their performance
There are also two specific courses of action a project manager should consider if a project starts to slip
dramatically, but has a fixed deadline and so cannot be delayed. These are fast-tracking and crashing.
7.3.1 Fast-tracking
Fast-tracking involves taking activities that are normally done in sequence, and doing them in parallel
instead (for example, starting construction alongside the design phase, instead of waiting for the design
phase to be completed before beginning construction).
Note, however, that while fast-tracking can accelerate a project, it also involves the risk of increased costs
and reworking later. For example, if the design is changed before it is finalised, yet some construction
work has already been done, the change of design may result in having to re-do some of that construction
work.
7.3.2 Crashing
Crashing involves assigning additional resources to the critical path. For example, if one person was
working on a twelve day activity on the critical path, and it was essential to reduce the path length to eight
days, a second person could be added to work on the activity.
Note that the second person may not be as efficient as the first or have all the right skills, and so he or she
might need to work eight days just to reduce the path length by four (from twelve to eight).
Crashing usually leads to an increase in the cost of the project, but this may be considered an acceptable
trade-off for getting the project back on schedule. However, an organisation should still aim to minimise
the incremental cost incurred as a result of crashing.
High M H VH
Potential impact
Med L M H
Low VL L M
Threat likelihood
As well as being an important part of your syllabus for this exam, project management is also likely to be
an important part of your ongoing role as an accountant. Performance objective 5 'Leadership and
management' requires you to 'manage yourself and resources effectively and responsibly, contributing to
the leadership and management of your organisation to deliver what is required to meet stakeholder needs
and priorities'. Among those activities listed by ACCA to demonstrate how you have meet this objective are
creating a project plan, and participating in a project team using a project management methodology.
Exam focus A question in the December 2011 exam asked students to explain the purpose of a post-project review,
point post-implementation review and a benefits realisation review. The question then asked for an evaluation of
the problems and lessons that should be learned from a project aimed at replacing a physical ordering
system with an electronic system.
Key term The completion report summarises the results of the project, and includes client sign-off.
On project completion, the project manager will produce a completion report. The main purpose of the
completion report is to document (and gain client sign-off for) the end of the project.
The report should include a summary of the project outcome.
(a) Project objectives and the outcomes achieved
(b) The final project budget report showing expected and actual expenditure. If an external client is
involved, this information may be sensitive the report may exclude or amend the budget report
(c) A brief outline of time taken compared with the original schedule
The completion report will also include provision for any continuing issues that will need to be addressed
after completion. Such issues would be related to the project, but not part of the project. An example of
such an issue would be a procedure for dealing with any bugs that become apparent after a new software
program has been tested and approved.
Responsibilities and procedures relating to any such issues should be laid down in the report.
The manager may find it useful to distribute a provisional report and request feedback. This should
ensure the version presented for client sign-off at the completion meeting is acceptable to all parties.
A more detailed review of the project follows a few months after completion, the post-completion audit.
The review considers the success of the project by asking the following.
(a) Was the project achieved on time and within budget?
(b) Was the management of the project as successful as it might have been, or were there bottlenecks
or problems? This review covers:
(i) Problems that might occur on future projects with similar characteristics.
(ii) The performance of the team individually and as a group.
In other words, any project is an opportunity to learn how to manage future projects more effectively.
The post-project review should involve input from the project team. A simple questionnaire could be
developed for all team members to complete, and a reasonably informal meeting held to obtain feedback,
on what went well (and why), and what didn't (and why).
In 2008, the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) launched the Digital Media Initiative (DMI) project.
The project aimed to modernise the BBC's existing production operations, moving the corporation away
from the use of video tape towards digital production.
In 2013, the project was abandoned after years of technical problems in getting the technology to work
and delays in reporting on the project's progress. In an article published on the BBC website in February
2014, the corporation reported that the estimated project cost was 125.9m.
The Guardian newspaper, highlighting the findings of a National Audit Office inquiry, reported that the
deteriorating fortunes of DMI were not adequately reported, either within management or, critically, to the
BBC Trust. A 'code red' warning of the imminent project failure for example, from the BBC's own internal
project management office from February 2012 wasn't reported to the trust until July that year.
The BBC Director General (the most senior executive officer at the organisation) at the time had believed
that the technology was being used on programmes including the early evening 'One Show'.
A later report by the National Audit Office reported that 'the BBC had hoped to save 98m by introducing
the new system. However, the final estimate of the benefits it brought to the BBC was zero. The report
blamed the project's failure on confusion, a lack of planning and insufficient scrutiny'.
Commenting on the National Audit Office report, Margaret Hodge MP of the Public Accounts Committee
(the body which overseas UK government spending) wrote, 'this report reads like a catalogue of how not
to run a major programme. The BBC needs to learn from the mistakes it made and ensure that it never
again spends such a huge amount of licence fee payer's money with almost nothing to show for it'.
The BBC responded, saying it had adopted new procedures for managing big projects in the light of the
problems with the DMI project.
Adapted from two online articles:
1) 'Mark Thompson apologises over project failure at BBC', (February 2014) published on the BBC
website: www.bbc.co.uk
2) 'BBC's Digital Media Initiative failed because of more than poor oversight', by Steve Hewlett (February
2014) published on The Guardian website: www.theguardian.com
This information should be formalised in a report. The post-project review report should contain:
(a) A summary should be provided, emphasising any areas where the structures and tools used to
manage the project have been found to be unsatisfactory.
(b) A cost-benefit review should be included, comparing the forecast costs and benefits identified at
the time of the feasibility study with actual costs and benefits.
(c) Recommendations should be made as to any steps which should be taken to improve the project
management procedures used.
Lessons learned from this review should be fed back into project management standards to ensure future
projects do not repeat the same mistakes.
At the end of the project, the finished solution will be implemented into the organisation. Sometime after
this solution has been deployed a post-implementation review should be carried out. The timing of this
will depend on the specific situation. However, typical periods range from six weeks to six months.
Key term
Post-implementation reviews are assessments of the completed working solution.
The post-implementation review focuses more specifically on the product that was produced by the
project. It is carried out for three main reasons.
Exam focus Make sure you understand the difference between a post-project review and a post-implementation
point review. The post-project review focuses on the project itself and the way it was carried out. The post-
implementation review focuses on the actual product that is produced as a result of that project.
This was examined in December 2011 where six marks were available for explaining the purpose of each
of a post-project review, a post-implementation review, and a benefits realisation review. This straight-
forward test of theoretical knowledge was, in a number of cases, not well answered.
A further twelve marks were then on offer for applying this knowledge to the scenario in order to identify
the problems and lessons that should be learnt from a post-project review and a post-implementation
review of the system implemented in the scenario.
Lessons learnt that relate to the way the project was managed should contribute to the smooth running of
future projects.
A starting point for any new project should be a review of the documentation of any similar projects
undertaken in the past.
Advantage Comment
Enables quick re-planning Estimates can be changed many times and a new schedule produced
almost instantly. Changes to the plan can be reflected immediately.
Document quality Well-presented plans give a professional impression and are easier to
understand.
Encourages constant The project manager is able to compare actual progress against planned
progress tracking progress and investigate problem areas promptly.
What if? analysis Software enables the effect of various scenarios to be calculated quickly
and easily. Many project managers conduct this type of analysis using
copies of the plan in separate computer files leaving the actual plan
untouched.
Another advantage is that the software is able to analyse and present the project information in a number
of ways.
Now try the questions below from the Practice Question Bank
Finance
489
490
Finance
Introduction
The role of the finance function and that of the accountant in business is changing.
This evolution is due to a growing expectation that finance professionals should not
just communicate performance but play an active role in helping to shape strategy.
Finance may be regarded as the fundamental business resource, since it provides
access to all other more specific resources, to the extent that they are available. The
organisation's financial position will form a major part of the strategic position and
will also constitute a strong influence on the process of strategic choice, for
example, in assessing the acceptability and feasibility of different options. The
consequences of strategic actions will also be financially evaluated. Finance is
therefore relevant to all three of strategic position, strategic choice and strategic
action and so has inherent strategic significance.
The majority of the material in this section of the Study Text should be familiar to
you from your previous studies, so dealing with it should be a matter of revision and
consolidation on knowledge.
491
Study guide
Intellectual level
G1 The link between strategy and finance
(a) Explain the relationship between strategy and finance 3
(i) Managing for value
(ii) Financial expectations of stakeholders
(iii) Funding strategies
(b) Discuss how the finance function has transformed to enabling an 2
accountant to have a key role in the decision-making process from strategy
formulation and implementation to its impact on business performance
G2 Finance decisions to formulate and support business strategy
(a) Determine the overall investment requirements of the business 2
(b) Evaluate alternative sources of finance for these investments and their 3
associated risks
(c) Efficiently and effectively manage the current and non-current assets of the 2
business from a finance and risk perspective
G3 The role of cost and management accounting in strategic planning and
decision making
(a) Evaluate budgeting, standard costing and variance analysis in support of 3
strategic planning and decision making
(b) Evaluate strategic and operational decisions, taking into account risk and 3
uncertainty (Including using decision trees)
(c) Evaluate the following strategic options using marginal and relevant costing 3
techniques.
(i) Make or buy decisions
(ii) Accepting or declining special contracts
(iii) Closure or continuation decisions
(iv) Effective use of scarce resources
(d) Evaluate the role and limitations of cost accounting in strategy development 2
and implementation, specifically relating to:
(i) Direct and indirect costs in multi-product contexts
(ii) Overhead apportionment in full costing
(iii) Activity-based costing in planning and control
G4 Financial implications of making strategic choices and of implementing
strategic actions
(a) Apply efficiency ratios to assess how efficiently an organisation uses its 2
current resources.
(b) Apply appropriate gearing ratios to assess the risks associated with 2
financing and investment in the organisation.
(c) Apply appropriate liquidity ratios to assess the organisation's short-term 2
commitments to creditors and employees.
(d) Apply appropriate profitability ratios to assess the viability of chosen 2
strategies.
(e) Apply appropriate investment ratios to assist investors and shareholders in 2
evaluating organisational performance and strategy.
In this section, we explore how the traditional role of the finance function and that of the finance
professional is continuing to evolve. In recent times there has been a noticeable shift in the role that
finance plays in modern organisations, moving away from being a mechanism for simply reporting on
performance, to taking on a broader advisory and strategic role.
The following extract was taken from a report, 'The complete finance professional 2013' published by
ACCA. The report outlined findings from ACCA's global survey of CFO's on the skills and capabilities they
see as being most relevant to their role. ACCA's research provides a useful insight into how the role of the
finance professional is changing.
'Today's business environment is particularly challenging; public debt, currency instability, emerging
market growth, commodity price rises, ongoing funding challenges and a broadening risk exposure
present an uncertain climate.
Managing the multitude of risks faced, supporting strategic decision-making that drives sustainable long-
term value, and simply controlling the organisation effectively are difficult but ever more important finance
priorities for finance leaders.
For Chief Financial Officers and the finance functions they lead, the rules of the game have changed. The
finance journey has seen the role of the function evolve from back office to centre stage in supporting
organisations create and protect value. It has taken place against the backdrop of a global economy which
is increasingly volatile and complex, more competitive, higher risk and rebalancing between west and east.
Many of the challenges and priorities that face the finance function are very evident in the aftermath of the
financial and economic crisis in 20082009; in particular, the desire for sustainable wealth creation. The
finance function has a critical role to play in helping deliver this ambition but it necessitates a subtly
different type of finance leadership that is needed in global finance functions today.
A defining hallmark of finance leadership post-crisis has been the need for balance between the pursuit of
growth and appropriate control of the organisation; in essence supporting the business to drive
sustainable growth. Today's CFOs must bring a wealth of capabilities to the top finance job, and they must
demonstrate a balanced finance understanding.
In practical terms, what do we mean by balanced finance leadership? Finance leaders have an important
role to play in supporting the organisations strategy and partnering with the business effectively, but to do
this sustainably the business first and foremost must be effectively controlled. Sustainable value creation
requires effective risk management processes because poor risk management approaches are counter to
creating longer term value; it requires strong financial management of the organisation because the
inability to protect and maximise the funds the business creates is not consistent with long-term wealth
creation; it requires CFOs to develop financial strategies that are beneficial in the longer term, knowing that
most eyes will be on quarter-by-quarter results; it calls into play an adept understanding of the
implications of poor investment decision-making in a complex investment landscape; it necessitates a
clear understanding of past and possible future performance measurement; it mandates the need for
strong governance of the organisation, and of course ensuring its regulatory responsibilities are met. This
balanced finance stewardship is the building block of sustainable value creation in today's competitive
business environment'.
Source: 'The complete finance professional 2013' report can be found on the ACCA website at
www.accaglobal.com
As ACCA's report highlights, the ever changing business environment requires finance professionals to
support organisations in a far broader sense. In the context of developing business strategy, perhaps the
most important of these job roles is the provision of information and analysis on which decisions are
based. A key part of the modern accountant's role is to work closely with the business to improve decision
making and to enhance the business' ability to create value.
This change in the focus of the modern accountant's role also reflects an increasing recognition that high
quality decision-making is becoming critical to superior business performance and may form the basis of
a competitive advantage.
Key term Strategic management accounting is a form of management accounting in which emphasis is placed on
information about factors which are external to the organisation, as well as non-financial and internally-
generated information.
Strategic management accounting has to bridge a gap between financial reporting, on the one hand; and
the uncertainties of the future, on the other. We can now go on to identify the success factors of a
strategic management accounting system. It should:
Aid strategic decisions
Close the communication gap between accountants and managers
2.2.2 Conglomerates
A large company is likely to seek a balanced portfolio of businesses at different stages of their lives. It is
important that such conglomerates consider the overall risk profile of their operations. They should then
adjust their funding strategy using the ideas illustrated above.
4 Cash forecasts
FAST FORWARD
Cash forecasting should ensure that sufficient funds will be available when needed, to sustain the
activities of an enterprise at an acceptable cost.
Cash forecasts (or budgets) are used to plan the structure of an organisation's finances.
How much cash is required? How long it is required for?
When it is required? Whether it will be available from anticipated sources
A company must know when it might need to borrow and for how long, not just what amount of funding
could be required.
5 Financing requirements
FAST FORWARD
Cash deficits will be funded in different ways, depending on whether they are short- or long-term.
Businesses should have procedures for investing surpluses with appropriate levels of risk and return.
5.1 Deficiencies
Any forecast deficiency of cash will have to be funded.
(a) Borrowing. If borrowing arrangements are not already secured, a source of funds will have to be
found. If a company cannot fund its cash deficits, it could be wound up.
(b) The firm can make arrangements to sell any short-term marketable financial investments to raise
cash.
(c) The firm can delay payments to suppliers, or pull in payments from customers. This is sometimes
known as leading and lagging.
Because cash forecasts cannot be entirely accurate, companies should have contingency funding,
available from a surplus cash balance and liquid investments, or from a bank facility. The approximate size
of the contingency margin will vary from company to company, according to the cyclical nature of the
business and the approach of its cash planners.
Forecasting gives management time to arrange its funding. If planned in advance, instead of a panic
measure to avert a cash crisis, a company can more easily choose when to borrow, and will probably
obtain a lower interest rate.
7 Bank loans
FAST FORWARD
Bank loans tend to be a source of medium-term finance, linked with the purchase of specific assets.
Interest and repayments will be set in advance.
8 Loan capital
8.1 Loan stock
FAST FORWARD
The term bonds is used to mean the various forms of long-term debt a company may issue, such as loan
stock, which may be redeemable or irredeemable.
Key term Loan capital (or loan stock) is made up of debentures and other long-term loans to a business.
Loan capital or stock has a nominal value, which is the debt owed by the company, and interest is paid at
a stated coupon on this amount. For example, if a company issues 10% loan stock, the coupon will be
10% of the nominal value of the stock, so that $100 of stock will receive $10 interest each year. The rate
quoted is the gross rate, before tax.
Key term Stock is an amount of fully paid up capital, any part of which can be transferred.
Unlike shares, debt is often issued at par, ie with $100 payable per $100 nominal value. Where the coupon
rate is fixed at the time of issue, it will be set according to prevailing market conditions given the credit
rating of the company issuing the debt. Subsequent changes in market (and company) conditions will
cause the market value of the bond to fluctuate, although the coupon will stay at the fixed percentage of
the nominal value.
Exam focus A question in the December 2013 exam focused partly on the benefits of introducing a formal budgeting
point process to address inaccurate forecasting at the company featured in the case study scenario. The
examining team noted that many students failed to explain the benefits of budgeting in relation to the
scenario. It is important that you relate your answer back to the information provided; otherwise you are in
danger of producing a general response which attracts few, if any, marks.
Improve performance
Be most effective when they are demanding, yet achievable; though if they are unrealistically
demanding, performance may deteriorate
Are most effective when the managers have participated in the setting of their own targets
Performance Objective 13 'Plan and Control Performance' focuses on your involvement with budgets in
the workplace. To claim this objective you need to illustrate how you have coordinated, prepared and used
budgets, selecting suitable budgeting models.
We have just seen that budgets are short-term business plans that are expressed mainly in financial terms.
They are often constructed of standards. A standard is a carefully predetermined quantity target which
can be achieved in certain conditions. Budgets and standards are similar in the following ways.
(a) They both involve looking to the future and forecasting what is likely to happen, given a certain set
of circumstances.
(b) They are both used for control purposes. A budget aids control by setting financial targets or limits
for a forthcoming period. Actual achievements or expenditures are then compared with the budgets
and action is taken to correct any variances where necessary. A standard also achieves control by
comparison of actual results against a predetermined target.
As well as being similar, budgets and standards are interrelated. For example, a standard unit production
cost can act as the basis for a production cost budget. The unit cost is multiplied by the budgeted activity
level to arrive at the budgeted expenditure on production costs.
There are, however, important differences between budgets and standards.
Budgets Standards
Gives planned total aggregate costs Shows the unit resource usage for a single task, for example,
for a function or cost centre the standard labour hours for a single unit of production
Can be prepared for all functions, Limited to situations where repetitive actions are performed
even where output cannot be and output can be measured
measured
Expressed in money terms Need not be expressed in money terms. For example, a
standard rate of output does not need a financial value put on it
Note. (F) denotes a favourable variance and (A) an unfavourable or adverse variance.
In this example, the variances are meaningless for the purposes of control. All costs were higher than
budgeted but the volume of output was also higher; it is to be expected that actual variable costs would be
greater those included in the fixed budget. However, it is not possible to tell how much of the increase is
due to poor cost control and how much is due to the increase in activity.
Similarly, it is not possible to tell how much of the increase in sales revenue is due to the increase in
activity. Some of the difference may be due to a difference between budgeted and actual selling price but
we are unable to tell from the analysis above.
For control purposes, we need to know the answers to questions such as the following:
Were actual costs higher than they should have been to produce and sell 8,200 Darcys?
Was actual revenue satisfactory from the sale of 8,200 Darcys?
Instead of comparing actual results with a fixed budget which is based on a different level of activity to
that actually achieved, the correct approach to budgetary control is to compare actual results with a
budget which has been flexed to the actual activity level achieved.
Suppose that we have the following estimates of the behaviour of Penny's costs:
(a) Direct materials and direct labour are variable costs.
(b) Production overhead is a semi-variable cost, the budgeted cost for an activity level of 10,000 units
being $25,000.
(c) Administration overhead is a fixed cost.
(d) Selling prices are constant at all levels of sales.
Solution
The budgetary control analysis should therefore be as follows.
Fixed budget Flexible budget Actual results Variance
Production and sales (units) 7,500 8,200 8,200
$ $ $ $
Sales revenue 75,000 82,000 (W1) 81,000 1,000 (A)
Direct materials 22,500 24,600 (W2) 23,500 1,100 (F)
Direct labour 15,000 16,400 (W3) 15,500 900 (F)
Production overhead 22,500 23,200 (W4) 22,800 400 (F)
Administration overhead 10,000 10,000 (W5) 11,000 1,000 (A)
70,000 74,200 72,800 1,400 (F)
Profit 5,000 7,800 8,200 400 (F)
(a) The savings in resource costs/lower than expected sales revenue (a net total of $400 as indicated
by the difference between the flexible budget and the actual results).
(b) The effect of producing and selling 8,200 units instead of 7,500 units (a gain of $2,800 as indicated
by the difference between the fixed budget and the flexible budget). This is the sales volume
variance.
Exam focus It is important that you are able to use flexed budgets and variance analysis in order to help you identify
point where problems lie in an organisation.
Also notice that adverse variances may not necessarily indicate problems. For example, consider a
publishing company who has an adverse variance against their print budget (actual costs higher than
budgeted costs). While this could indicate a problem in the printing processes, it could equally just be due
to their being a greater demand for books, causing more books to be sold and therefore higher print costs
to be incurred.
Decision trees can be very helpful tools for making strategic and operational decisions. Each branch of the
tree represents the different outcomes that may occur. In order for the decision tree to be useful, each
outcome should be assigned a probability and expected value. This is so that we can evaluate how likely
each outcome is to occur, and what will be achieved, should that outcome actually occur. Let us first recap
the basic concepts of probability and expected values before we go on to look at how these can assist
decision making by incorporating them into decision trees.
11.1 Probability
Probability is a measure of likelihood and can be stated as a percentage, a ratio, or more usually, as a
number from 0 to 1. It is a measure of the likelihood of an event happening in the long run, or over a large
number of times.
Number of ways of achieving desired result
Probability of achieving the desired result =
Total number of possible outcomes
Mutually exclusive outcomes are outcomes where the occurrence of one of the outcomes excludes the
possibility of any of the others happening. For example, you can't roll one dice and score both 5 and 6
simultaneously.
The probability of mutually exclusive events occurring can be calculated by adding the probabilities
together. For example, the probability of rolling a dice and scoring either a five or a six can be determined
by adding together the probability of rolling 5 and the probability of rolling 6.
1/6 + 1/6 = 2/6
Independent events are events where the outcome of one event in no way affects the outcome of the
other events. For example, simultaneously rolling a dice and tossing a coin. The probability of throwing a 5
and getting heads on the coin can be found by multiplying the probabilities of the two individual events.
1/6 1/2 = 1/12
The general rule of addition for two events, A and B, which are not mutually exclusive, is as follows.
Probability of (A or B) = P (AUB) = P(A) + P(B) P(A and B)
For example, in a standard pack of 52 playing cards, what is the probability of selecting an ace or a spade?
Ace = 4/52
Spade = 13/52
Ace of spades = 1/52
Therefore, the probability of selecting an ace or a spade is:
4/52 + 13/52 1/52 = 16/52 = 4/13
Dependent or conditional events are events where the outcome of one event depends on the outcome of
the others. The probability of two dependent events occurring is calculated by multiplying the individual
probabilities together. Contingency tables can be useful for dealing with conditional probability.
For example, the probability of rolling a six, followed by another six is:
1/6 1/6 = 1/36
Decision trees are diagrams which illustrate the choices and possible outcomes of a decision.
A decision tree is a pictorial method of showing a sequence of interrelated decisions and their expected
outcomes. Decision trees can incorporate both the probabilities of, and values of, expected outcomes.
Decision trees provide a clear and logical approach to problem solving by:
Showing all possible choices as branches on the tree
Showing all possible outcomes as subsidiary branches on the tree
Decision trees begin with a decision point, usually represented by a square, and the various choices
branch off from this, flowing from left to right.
If the outcome for any of those choices is certain, then the branch of the decision tree for that alternative
is complete.
If the outcome of a particular choice is uncertain, then the various possible outcomes must be shown.
This is done by inserting an outcome point on the branch. This is symbolised by a circle. Each possible
outcome will then branch out from that outcome point. These are known as subsidiary branches.
The probability of each outcome occurring should be written on the branch of the tree that represents that
outcome.
Cost 6
0.7
Sales 10,000
0.8
Cost 8
Launch 0.3
Cost 6
0.7
Sales 15,000
0.2
Cost 8
Dont launch 0.3
Decision A
0.7
Decision B
Decision X
Decision C
0.3 Decision D
Decision Y
In this tree, a choice between A and B, or else a choice between C and D will be made, depending on the
outcome which occurs after choosing X.
The decision tree should be in chronological order from left to right.
High 0.3
+1,000
Market Medium 0.5
E +200
Low 0.2
Positive 200
C
0.6
Abandon
B +50
Test
100
Negative Market
A D 600
0.4
Abandon
+50
Abandon
+50
Revenue
Profits
Break-even Point
Total Cost
Fixed Costs
Losses
Quantity
Fixed costs
Break-even point:
Sales revenue per unit variable costs per unit
The bottom part of this formula, sales revenue-variable costs, is known as the contribution per unit.
The margin of safety is the extent to which the planned volume of output or sales lies about the break-
even point.
The relationship between contribution and fixed costs is known as operational gearing. An activity with
high fixed costs compared with its variable costs is said to have high operational gearing. Increasing the
level of gearing makes profits more sensitive to changes in the volume of activity.
Key term Relevant costs are any cost that is relevant to a particular decision. All fixed costs are irrelevant to the
decision because they will be the same whatever decision is made.
When making these decisions, the key strategic objective should be the enhancement of shareholder
wealth. As these decisions are short-term, the wealth will normally be increased by trying to generate as
much net cash inflow as possible.
As fixed costs are ignored, marginal cost (the cost of producing one additional unit) usually equals the
variable cost per unit. This will be true unless there is a step in the fixed costs, in which case that step, or
increment, will be included as well as the variable costs.
Marginal analysis is useful in four key areas of decision making:
Accepting/rejecting special contracts
Determining the most efficient use of scarce resources
Make-or-buy decisions
Closing or continuation decisions
Solution
The fixed costs are not relevant to this decision as they will be incurred regardless of whether or not the
contract is accepted.
To determine whether the contract should be rejected or accepted, we must establish whether it would
make a contribution
$
Additional revenue per unit 15.60
Additional cost per unit 14.40 (12 + $2.40)
Additional contribution per unit 1.20
For 400 extra units, the additional contribution will be (400 $1.20) $480.
Since no additional fixed costs are incurred, the business will be $480 better off by accepting, rather than
refusing, this contract.
This leaves unsatisfied the market demand for a further three units of product A and 30 units of product C.
Solution
Shark Ltd should produce the component internally as this is $5 per unit cheaper than contracting out to
Ray Ltd.
How would the answer to the above differ if Shark Ltd had no spare capacity and could only produce the
component internally by reducing its output of another of its products. Shark Ltd will lose contributions of
$12 from the other product.
Answer
The relevant cost of internal production in this case would be
$
Variable cost of production of the component 15
Opportunity cost of lost production of the other product 12
27
In this case, Shark Ltd would subcontract the component to Ray Ltd as this would be $7 per unit cheaper
than it would cost to produce the components internally.
This suggests that if the cat furniture department was closed, the company as a whole would be $9,000
more profitable per year.
This shows the cat furniture department actually makes a positive contribution of $37,000 and should not
be closed. (Closing this department would make the company as a whole $37,000 worse off per year.) The
fixed costs would continue to be incurred, whether or not the department is closed.
13 Full costing
FAST FORWARD
Full cost is the total amount sacrificed to achieve a particular objective. All running costs of a particular
facility are part of the cost of output of that facility. Where there is more than one product, costs are split
into direct and indirect costs. The direct costs are easily assigned to products. To determine the full cost a
fair proportion of the indirect costs, or overheads, must also be allocated to each product.
Full cost is the total amount sacrificed to achieve a particular objective. It includes all amounts sacrificed,
so all costs related to the production of the product or provision of the service would be included as part
of the full cost.
Full costing works on the basis that all the costs of running a particular facility, eg a factory, are part of the
cost of the output of that facility. For example, the rent is unlikely to change if we produce one more unit
of the product. The cost per unit will therefore decrease as output increases and therefore is an important
element of the cost of each unit of output.
Full costing is widely used in practice and can be a useful tool for assisting managers in decision making.
It can be helpful in a number of ways, including:
Pricing and output decisions: full cost information allows managers to make decisions based on the price
charged to the customer and the number of units required.
Exercising control: budgets are typically prepared on a full-cost basis and so actual performance based on
full costs can be easily compared to the plans to identify, and take measures to address, any discrepancies
between actual and planned performance.
Assessing relative efficiency: full costs can allow managers to compare their current processes with the
cost of alternative methods of working, or the cost of operating in a different location. This can give
managers an insight into the most efficient way of operating and so provide a basis for decisions related
to the processes to be followed, or the location of a plant.
Assessing performance: Profit and income are important performance measures for an organisation and
provide a basis for many decisions for managers. To measure profit, or income, the sales revenue needs
to be compared to the associated expenses. One major expense will be the cost of making the product or
service itself, ie the full cost.
The traditional cost accumulation system of absorption costing was developed in a time when most
organisations produced only a narrow range of products (so products underwent similar operations and
consumed similar proportions of overheads). Also, overheads were only a very small fraction of total
costs, because direct labour and direct material costs accounted for the largest proportion of the costs.
In addition, labour was at the heart of production with machinery only really used to support direct labour,
so the market was relatively uncompetitive (due to limited transport links and technology), and the costs
of information processing were high. The benefits of a more accurate system of overhead allocation would
probably have been relatively small.
The world of industrial production has now fundamentally changed. Machines are at the heart of much
production, a high proportion of costs are now made up of overheads (direct labour may now only
account for as little as 5% of a product's cost), and organisations operate within a highly competitive
international market. It therefore now appears difficult to justify the use of direct labour or direct material
as the basis for absorbing overheads or to believe that errors made in attributing overheads will not be
significant.
Traditional costing systems, which assume that all products consume all resources in proportion to their
production volumes, tend to allocated too great a proportion of overheads to high volume products (which
cause relatively little diversity and hence use fewer support services) and too small a proportion of
overheads to low volume products (which cause greater diversity and use more support services). Activity
based costing (ABC) attempts to overcome this problem.
Key term Activity based costing (ABC) involves the identification of the factors which cause the costs of an
organisation's major activities. Support overheads are charged to products on the basis of their usage of
the factor causing the overheads.
FAST FORWARD
Ratios provide a means of systematically analysing financial statements. They can be grouped under the
headings profitability, liquidity, gearing and shareholders' investment. It is important to calculate
relevant ratios and to take into account the limitations of ratio analysis.
Exam focus Try not to be too mechanical when working out ratios, and think constantly about what you are trying to
point achieve. You will only obtain credit in the exam for calculating ratios that are relevant.
The compulsory question in the December 2013 exam required students to consider whether a company
specialising in the sale of small electrical machines and tools to trade and domestic customers should
acquire a similar entity based overseas. The question provided students with key financial data relating to
the acquisition target as well as data regarding the post-acquisition performance of two entities which the
company had purchased previously.
The examining team commented that a significant number of students did not make enough use of this
data, tending to use it superficially and failing to use the numbers to tell the story of each organisation's
performance. Students were confident in calculating basic ratios, but failed to go further and expand on
the practical considerations of acquiring an overseas target, eg the company lacked experience in
operating in a foreign country.
It is therefore critical that you apply the financial data provided and make the numbers 'talk' as this
provides you with evidence to support the practical points you raise.
Such ratio pyramids help in providing for an overall management plan to achieve profitability, and allow
the interrelationships between ratios to be checked.
Exam focus Although you will have encountered most or all of the ratios that we are about to define before, make sure
point you know how to calculate them in the exam. One suggestion is to list all the ratios you need to know on a
single sheet of paper and go through that sheet repeatedly, until you are confident you can calculate all the
ratios.
Whether the company has made a profit or a loss on its ordinary activities
By how much this year's profit or loss is bigger or smaller than last year's profit or loss
It is impossible to assess profits or profit growth properly without relating them to the amount of funds
(the capital) employed in making the profits. An important profitability ratio is therefore return on capital
employed (ROCE), which states the profit as a percentage of the amount of capital employed. Profit is
usually taken as profit on ordinary activities before interest and taxation (PBIT), and capital employed is
shareholders' capital plus long-term liabilities and debt capital. This is the same as total assets less
current liabilities.
Although the net profit margin is the same for both years at 10%, the gross profit margin is not.
28,000 45,000
Year 1 = 40% Year 2 = 45%
70,000 100,000
Is this good or bad for the business?
Expenses as a % of sales 30 35
Net profit as a % of sales 10 10
Gross profit as a % of sales 40 45
It is also worth commenting on the change in turnover from one year to the next. Strong sales growth will
usually indicate volume growth as well as turnover increases due to price rises, and volume growth is one
sign of a prosperous company.
(b) When a company is earning only a modest profit before interest and tax, and has a heavy debt
burden, there will be very little profit left over for shareholders after the interest charges have been
paid.
Example:
Suppose that two companies are identical in every respect, except for their gearing. Both have assets of
$20,000 and both make the same operating profits (profit before interest and tax: PBIT). The only
difference between the two companies is that Nonlever Co is all-equity financed and Lever Co is partly
financed by debt capital, as follows:
Nonlever Co Lever Co
$ $
Assets 20,000 20,000
10% Bonds 0 (10,000)
20,000 10,000
Ordinary shares of $1 20,000 10,000
Because Lever has $10,000 of 10% bonds it must make a profit before interest of at least $1,000 in order
to pay the interest charges. Nonlever, on the other hand, does not have any minimum PBIT requirement
because it has no debt capital. A company, which is lower geared, is considered less risky than a higher
geared company because of the greater likelihood that its PBIT will be high enough to cover interest
charges and make a profit for equity shareholders.
Prior charge capital is long-term loans and preferred shares (if any). It does not include loans repayable
within one year and bank overdraft, unless overdraft finance is a permanent part of the business's capital.
An interest cover of 2 times or less would be low, and it should really exceed 3 times before the
company's interest costs can be considered to be within acceptable limits. Note that it is usual to exclude
preference dividends from interest charges.
(a) Net annual cash inflow is the amount of cash which the company has coming into the business
each year from its operations. This will be shown in a company's statement of cash flows for the
year.
(b) Total debts are short-term and long-term payables, together with provisions for liabilities and
charges.
Obviously, a company needs to earn enough cash from operations to be able to meet its foreseeable debts
and future commitments, and the cash flow ratio, and changes in the cash flow ratio from one year to the
next, provides a useful indicator of a company's cash position.
In practice, a current ratio comfortably in excess of 1 should be expected, but what is comfortable varies
between different types of businesses.
The quick ratio, or acid test ratio, is:
Current assets less inventory
Current liabilities
This ratio should ideally be at least 1 for companies with a slow inventory turnover. For companies with a
fast inventory turnover, a quick ratio can be less than 1 without suggesting that the company is in cash
flow difficulties.
Solution
20X8 20X7
572.3 523.2
Current ratio = 1.14 = 1.24
501.0 420.3
453.3 414.2
Quick ratio = 0.90 = 0.99
501.0 420.3
329.8 285.4
Receivables' payment period 365 = 58 days 365 = 58 days
2,065.0 1,788.7
119.0 109.0
Inventory turnover period 365 = 29 days 365 = 31 days
1,478.6 1,304.0
236.2 210.8
Payables' turnover period 365 = 58 days 365 = 59 days
1,478.6 1,304.0
As a manufacturing group serving the construction industry, the company would be expected to have a
comparatively lengthy receivables' turnover period, because of the relatively poor cash flow in the
construction industry. It is likely that the company compensates for this by ensuring that they do not pay
for raw materials and other costs before they have sold their inventories of finished goods (hence the
similarity of receivables' and payables' turnover periods).
The company's current ratio is quite low, but we do not know what the industry average is. It is possible
that this position is comfortable for the construction industry.
Interest payable
Interest yield =
Market value of loan stock
Walter Wall Carpets Co made profits before tax in 20X8 of $9,320,000. Tax amounted to $2,800,000.
The company's share capital is as follows.
$
Ordinary share (10,000,000 shares of $1) 10,000,000
8% preference shares 2,000,000
12,000,000
Answer
$
Profits before tax 9,320,000
Less tax (2,800,000)
Profits after tax 6,520,000
Less preference dividend (8% of $2,000,000) (160,000)
Earnings 6,360,000
Number of ordinary shares 10,000,000
EPS 63.6c
Quick Quiz
1 What do JS&W consider to be the three main issues in strategic finance?
2 What is the name of the type of risk associated with gearing?
3 How might a company fund a forecast cash deficiency?
4 What are the advantages of using retained profits as a source of equity funds?
5 What is loan capital?
6 What is the formula for capital employed used in the ROCE calculation?
7 What is operating gearing?
8 Is inflation relevant to the calculation of ROCE?
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
People
545
546
Human resource
management
Introduction
This chapter looks at a number of human resource management topics. In
Section 1, we look at the various aspects of leadership. We will then move on
to look at how the people within the organisation contribute to its success. We
will do this by exploring the range of approaches used to manage the
workforce's efforts. These approaches are job design (Section 2), HRM and
knowledge work (Section 3) and staff development (Section 4).
547
Study guide
Intellectual level
(Note that section H of the syllabus is underpinned directly by knowledge
gained in F1, Accountant in Business. Students are expected to be familiar
with the following Study Guide subject areas from that syllabus: A1, A2, B1-
B3, D1, and D4-D6)
H1 Strategy and people: leadership
(a) Explain the role of visionary leadership and identify the key leadership traits 3
effective in the successful formulation and implementation of strategy and
change management.
(b) Apply and compare alternative classical and modern theories of leadership 3
in the effective implementation of strategic objectives.
H2 Strategy and people: job design
(a) Assess the contribution of four different approaches to job design (scientific
3
management, job enrichment, Japanese management and re-engineering)
(b) Explain the human resource implications of knowledge work and post-
2
industrial job design
(c) Discuss the tensions and potential ethical issues related to job design 2
(d) Advise on the relationship of job design to process re-design, project
3
management and the harnessing of e-business opportunities
H3 Strategy and people: staff development
(a) Discuss the emergence and scope of human resource development,
succession planning and their relationship to the strategy of the 2
organisation
(b) Advise and suggest different methods of establishing human resource
3
development
(c) Advise on the contribution of competency frameworks to human resource
3
development
(d) Discuss the meaning and contribution of workplace learning, the learning
3
organisation, organisation learning and knowledge management
Exam guide
There is considerable practical detail in this chapter and it is easy to envisage a complete question
covering these principles and how to embody them in a work situation.
You may also face a scenario where process redesign or information technology has an impact on job
design. Be aware of the implications of different organisational structures for job design.
Paper F1, Accountant in Business, includes a section called 'Leading and managing individuals and
teams'. This forms an important background to the material below.
Exam focus
point Note that whereas questions on leadership in F1 tested factual recall, questions in P3 will be context-
based. For example, the scenario might indicate a leader behaving in a certain way and you will have to
diagnose whether that behaviour is appropriate, using your knowledge of leadership styles but also
analysing other areas of the business: the teams being led, organisational culture, the products and
services being provided, organisational competencies and so on.
FAST FORWARD
The study of leadership has produced a wide range of theories; these may be analysed into four main
groups.
Trait theories Contingency theories
Behavioural theories Transformational theories
5.5
(middle road)
1.3.1 Adair
Adair's action-centred, or situational model sees the leadership process in a context made up of three
main variables, all of which are interrelated and must be examined in the light of the whole situation.
These are task needs, the individual needs of group members, and the needs of the group as a whole.
The total situation dictates the relative priority that must be given to each of the three sets of needs.
Effective leadership is identifying and acting on that priority to create a balance between the needs. Adair's
model is unusual in that it integrates both the needs of the individual and the dynamics of the group.
1.3.2 Fiedler
Fiedler found that people become leaders partly because of their own attributes and partly because of the
nature of the situation they find themselves in. Leadership style depends on the personality of the leader,
which is fixed. The extent to which the situation favours the leader depends on three things.
(a) Position power. This is the same thing as organisational authority.
(b) Task structure. Work is easier to organise and accountability easier to determine when the task is
clear, well defined and unambiguous. The quality of performance is difficult to control when the
task is vague and unstructured.
(c) Leader-subordinate relations. The leader's task is eased when subordinates have trust and
confidence in him or her.
Fiedler found that a task-oriented approach was most productive when the situation was either very
favourable to the leader or very unfavourable. In less extreme cases, a more people-centred approach
was more effective.
Question Leadership
Think of a business leader who you are familiar with, and identify the reasons which you think have
contributed to their success. What leadership qualities and behaviours do they show?
There are two articles available on the ACCA website both written by Ken Garrett which explore some of
Exam focus the key theories explored in this chapter. The article titled 'Strategy and People' considers the importance
point of employees in devising strategic plans. The second article 'Job design' focuses on the origins of the
concept and explores the ethical considerations of job design. It would be worth taking the time to study
both of these articles.
The importance of job design as a managerial responsibility has been apparent ever since there have been
organised societies. Adam Smith described the economic advantages of job specialisation in The Wealth
of Nations; in the later nineteenth century, organising a structure of tasks and jobs was identified by Fayol
as one of the functions of management. A little later, Frederick Taylor founded his business and the
approach still known as Scientific Management on the careful consideration and control of individual job
content and technique.
Your syllabus requires us to consider four different approaches to job design:
Scientific Management The Japanese model
Job enrichment Re-engineering
2.4 Re-engineering
We looked at business process change in more detail earlier in this Study Text, including a discussion of
business process re-engineering (BPR) as it affects job design. You should refer to our earlier discussion
and consider how BPR may be said to fit into the job design spectrum.
When we discussed ethics, we dealt with two important matters that are directly related to job design.
(a) One formulation of the categorical imperative is that people should not be treated simply as
means to an end, but as an end in themselves.
(b) Natural law theory imposes a duty to respect the rights of others.
All job design must attempt to reconcile two forces that tend to work in opposition to one another.
(a) The need to break work up in order to exploit specialisation and the division of labour so as to
maximise productivity
(b) The need to integrate and control the highly differentiated activities that result from (a)
From the point of view of the worker, specialisation can produce fragmented, unsatisfying work and poor
social interaction, which, combined with its resultant control-based style of management, leads to low
levels of motivation and commitment.
Scientific Management was based on extremes of specialisation and management control and ignored the
potential psychological effects on the work force. Later developments have produced a different balance.
We discussed organisational learning and knowledge management earlier in this Study Text, when we
were considering strategic capability. You should refer back in order to refresh your memory.
Recent years have seen a shift of manufacturing to low-cost sites in developing countries and a
consequent decline in the West. As a result, service industries have become far more important to the
economies of developed countries. This trend has been accompanied by the recognition of the knowledge
worker as a vital feature of modern business. This has two important implications:
(a) Knowledge is recognised as a vital asset and crucial to business success. Organisations must
therefore acquire, organise, manage and exploit knowledge if they are to survive.
(b) This vital asset, knowledge, fundamentally exists in the brains of knowledge workers and is
controlled by them. If the organisation is to benefit, its workers must be organised and managed in
a way that will stimulate both learning and creativity.
These factors have led to a shift away from the classic bureaucratic structure of management and
organisation, which was built around the careful planning and control of procedures and operations, to a
looser, 'post-modern', 'post-bureaucratic' or 'post-industrial' approach that emphasises information
sharing, flexibility and empowerment.
4 Staff development
FAST FORWARD
Human resource development should be seen as an investment in strategic capability since it improves
both skills and commitment. It may be approached top-down, in the form of human capital theory, or
bottom-up through empowerment. In the UK, governments encourage rather than enforce HRD efforts,
despite concerns about low levels of skills. This voluntarist approach has led to an emphasis on useful,
workplace competence-based qualifications.
The traditional personnel management function of training is now supplemented and may be replaced by
the wider concept of human resource development (HRD).
(a) The view of training as a cost is being replaced with a view of HRD as an investment in strategic
capability. This view also highlights that people are a resource, so HRD plays a crucial role in how
those resources are used, managed, controlled and motivated to create competencies in key
business processes.
(b) Investment in employee learning and recognition of the competitive advantage conferred by
upgraded skills triggers the creation of an internal market in such qualities with consequent
implications for other HR activities such as recruitment, retention and reward.
(c) Organisations seeking to benefit from employee loyalty and commitment find that HRD can enable
employees to contribute to the development and success of strategy and operations.
This wider vision of HRD can link to the organisation's strategy in two ways: these correspond to the
traditional 'top-down' model of strategy as a controlled response to environmental change and the
emergent or 'bottom-up' model.
(a) Under the top-down model, the organisation's senior managers are responsible for recognising
new, more general and wide-ranging environmental factors that mandate HRD effort. For example,
technological developments may lead to the recognition of a skills gap and the need for staff
training.
(b) Under the bottom-up model, empowered employees recognise individual gaps in skills, knowledge
or capability and take steps to resolve them through discussion, co-operation and the development
of new methods. An example would be the improvement of a product as a result of customer
contact and internal consultation and action.
It is appropriate for organisations to utilise both approaches, though this requires senior management
effort to reconcile them and enable them to work in a synergistic fashion, rather than interfering with each
other.
A traditional view of the place of HRD in strategic management is that it responds to imperatives
generated by the strategic management process, whatever form that takes. Some HRD professionals
would argue that HRD should be a major component of that process in order to create a learning culture
as a basis for more effective strategy. This is not yet a popular approach in the UK.
Key term Competencies, in the sense used here, are 'the required outcomes expected from the performance of a
task in a work role, expressed as performance standards with criteria'. Gold
Exam focus
An article titled 'Competency frameworks' (2009) written by Gareth Owen is available in the technical
point
articles section for P3 on the ACCA website. It would be worth taking the time to study this article.
Competency frameworks are concerned with the behaviour that is relevant to the job, and the effective (or
competent) performance of that job.
The emphasis on workplace performance reflects the human capital approach to HRD.
The qualifications themselves are called national vocational qualifications (NVQs) in England and Wales,
and Scottish vocational qualifications (SVQs) in Scotland. There has been criticism of the N/SVQ approach
because of their emphasis on outcomes measured against standards rather than on knowledge and
understanding. It has also been suggested that they have simply added to the number of qualifications
available rather than rationalising them overall.
In order to qualify as an ACCA member, you not only have to pass your exams but also have to
demonstrate your practical experience. ACCA's Practical Experience Requirements are a framework
for recording achievement, allowing you to demonstrate your competence against a number of
performance objectives. In this way, the practical experience requirements could be considered as a
competence framework.
Key term Succession planning is undertaken in order to ensure continuity in the organisation's leadership. It
involves the systematic identification, assessment and development of managerial talent at all levels.
Quick Quiz
1 What are the three desirable psychological states that job enrichment is intended to produce?
2 What elements of the Japanese production model does Bratton identify as influencing the Japanese
approach to job design?
3 What effects will the move to knowledge work have on the organisation?
4 How does human capital theory view the cost of HRD?
5 What are competencies?
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
Strategic development
567
568
Strategic
development
Introduction
We have covered a great deal of ground in this Study Text, but nearly all of our
discussion has related to specific ideas that may be used when developing
strategy; that is to say, we have concentrated on tools, models and techniques
that may be used to create answers to specific strategic problems. We have
said very little about the wider processes by which an overall strategy is
designed. This final chapter attempts to round off our consideration of
business strategy by looking at the ways in which strategies come into
existence.
There are two principal classes of strategies: the intended and the emergent.
We will start by contrasting these classes and discussing their relationship.
Then we will look at each in more detail. The final sections of this chapter will
examine some challenges and more general concepts relating to strategy
development.
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Study guide
Intellectual level
C3 Understanding strategy development
(a) Discriminate between the concepts of intended and emergent strategies. 3
(b) Explain how organisations attempt to put an intended strategy into place. 2
(c) Highlight how emergent strategies appear from within an organisation. 3
(d) Discuss how process redesign, and e-business can contribute to emergent 2
strategies.
(e) Assess the implications of strategic drift and the demand for multiple 3
processes of strategy development.
Exam guide
This may seem a rather theoretical chapter at first, but it is important that you realise that in the real world,
strategies often emerge rather than develop via some neatly ordered process. Therefore, the material
covered here may well appear in many examination case studies. Also, Section 5 has some detail on
specific strategic challenges that could be useful in dealing with the kind of complex scenario typical of
Section A questions.
However, this final chapter also draws together all the theories and issues we have looked at in this Study
Text to describe how business strategies develop.
Remember that the areas shown in the middle row of the rational diagram of the syllabus business
process change, e-business can help shape an organisation's business strategy, and by discussing
emergent strategies, this chapter reminds us of that.
It is important that you have an integrated view of the syllabus when you sit the P3 examination.
You will recall that in Chapter 1 of this Study Text, we explained the way that JS&W analyse strategy into
three main elements: strategic position, strategic choices and strategy into action.
(a) The strategic managers must attempt to understand the organisation's strategic position.
(b) Strategic choices are about scope, the direction and method of development and how to achieve
competitive advantage.
(c) Strategies must be made to work in practice. Major issues here include structuring, enabling and
change.
This analysis is written in terms of management: that is to say, as though strategy is a project that
managers work on and bring to completion in a deliberate and logical fashion. Understanding of strategic
position informs strategic choice: together they create an intention. The next stage, strategy into action is
about how we realise that intention.
Strategy by intention
Emergent strategy
Realised strategy
Intended strategy
Unrealised strategy
The development of intended strategies is associated with strategic planning systems. JS&W use the
phrase 'systematised, step-by-step, chronological procedures' in their discussion of this idea. Typically,
such a system will proceed in a linear fashion, starting from mission and objectives and working through
to implementation and the feedback of performance review. Such a system is illustrated on the next page.
Stakeholder expectations
Strategic Quantified measures
analysis
STRATEGY
IMPLEMENTATION REVIEW &
Resource planning CONTROL
Operations plans
Strategic Structure
Culture
implementation Change
Functional strategies ACTUAL PERFORMANCE
When you look at the detail of this model, you will recognise much that we have discussed in this Study
Text. However, for the purposes of our current discussion, the important thing about this diagram is not
the way it draws together a number of related ideas, but that it represents the traditional view of how
strategy is actually made: it is a representation of a corporate subsystem that would have staff,
managers, offices and interactions with other corporate systems.
The idea that strategy should be made in this way is no longer popular for reasons that will be reviewed
later in this section, but it does have its advantages, both for determining what the strategy should be and
in implementing it.
Realised strategy can emerge as well as arise from intention. However, this is not a random process:
emergent strategies require extensive management if they are to be successful.
Key term Strategic drift occurs when strategies progressively fail to address the strategic position of the
organisation and performance deteriorates. JS&W
JS&W suggest that strategic drift arises because of the tendency to prefer small adjustments to large
ones. If performance deteriorates, the first reaction will be to impose tighter control over implementation.
If this is ineffective, a new strategy may be developed. However, this will take place within the constraints
of the cultural web. By the time the organisation's leaders understand and accept that cultural change is
required, it may be too late.
Key term The political view of strategy development is that strategies develop as the outcome of processes of
bargaining and negotiation among powerful internal or external interest groups (or stakeholders).
The political view is reasonable, in that powerful executives are likely to defend and seek to extend their
power and influence. It is probable that both information flows and strategic analysis will therefore be
influenced by political manoeuvres. Existing strategies and potential challengers will become identified
with particular factions and the outcome of strategic choice may amount to victory and defeat if
compromise is not reached. It is reasonable to view the political processes of negotiation as a kind of
emergent or incremental approach to making strategy.
Nevertheless, the political process is equally capable of leading to significant innovation, as powerful
managers seek new ideas to enhance their own power.
Exam focus We have said that emergent strategies are to be contrasted with intended strategies in that they come
point about as a result of the everyday activities decisions and processes that take place at all levels of the
organisation. In this context, it is important to remember the relational diagram of your syllabus: process
change, quality initiatives and e-business are both the important elements of strategic implementation and
sources from which unintended strategies are likely to emerge.
We have examined a wide range of means of arriving at strategy and considered the advantages and
disadvantages of each. The picture is complex and somewhat obscure, but we may offer some comments
on the idea of strategic method, based, as usual, on JS&W.
(a) There is no single correct way to develop a strategy. This is important because it highlights the
importance of context. For example, we would expect the way strategies develop in a rapidly
Our discussion above raises some challenges and implications for the management of strategy
development.
Exam focus Part of a Section B question in June 2015 required candidates to analyse the performance of a music
point company based in a developed country, from 1965 to the present day. Candidates were required to show
how strategic drift had affected the company's performance. The examining team's report highlighted that
this question was not well answered by candidates. 'Too many answers simply consisted of re-iterated
facts from the case study, not presented in any context of analysis.' To score well on this requirement
candidates needed to use the detail in the scenario to illustrate how strategic drift had occurred. The
examining team noted that many answers made no reference to the concept of strategic drift even though
this was specifically asked for.
Key term A learning organisation is capable of continual regeneration from the variety of knowledge, experience
and skills of individuals within a culture that encourages mutual questioning and challenge around a
shared purpose or vision. JS&W
A learning organisation emphasises the sharing of information and knowledge, both up and down the
normal communication channels, and horizontally, through social networks and interest groups. It
challenges notions of hierarchy and managers are facilitators, rather than controllers. Such an
organisation is inherently capable of change. The concept has much in common with that of logical
incrementalism. The challenge is to combine the advantages of rational planning with the resilience and
adaptability provided by the learning approach.
Simple Complex
Static
Historical analysis and Decentralisation and
forecasting specialisation
Business
Information Project Financial
and process
technology management analysis
change
(E) (F) (G)
(D)
People (H)
The diagram illustrates the importance of having an overall strategic perspective (position, choice, action)
but also highlights the need for all the components of an organisation to fit with, and support, that
strategy. The middle and bottom layers of the relational diagram show this.
However, remember the double headed arrow between the top and the middle layers indicates that as well
as being planned (top-down), strategy can also emerge (middle-up) from the operational activities of an
organisation.
Effective strategy is both planned and emergent. Good plans are the foundations of any strategy, but the
real story lies in how the strategy unfolds, and how the various parts of an organisation react and adapt to
what is happening around them.
Quick Quiz
1 The sources of realised strategy may be divided into two categories. What are they?
2 How might intended strategies be developed?
3 Theorists have described several sources of emergent strategies. What are they?
4 What is strategic drift?
5 Can you recommend a single mode of strategy development that will be satisfactory under all conditions?
Now try the question below from the Practice Question Bank
This question is actually a case study question with an extensive scenario. This brings together many of the
themes that you have studied throughout this text book and is included to give you an idea as to the length of
question you will be likely to face in the compulsory Section A of your P3 exam.
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584
1 Bartok Fuel 20 mins
Bartok Fuel is a private company run by two brothers, David and Sean Bartok. The company was founded
fifty years ago by their father, Gerald, who started life with a petrol station and car repair workshop. After
some years, Gerald expanded by buying a tanker and starting to distribute household fuel to customers.
This part of the business has grown successfully and now has some 15 tankers and an annual turnover of
$30m.
Fifty years ago the car repair business included the manufacture of car windscreens. From this grew an
element of the business, called Bartok Glass, which now makes sealed glass window units for the
construction industry and has a turnover of about $8m.
Over the years Gerald had purchased a number of sites from which petrol was sold. These sites are still
owned by the company but are now leased to other companies and used for a variety of purposes. The
original garage no longer exists, but the company still operates a car dealership and repair workshop in
the centre of Erewhon, a large town in the country Oceania. This part of the business started fifteen years
ago and for some time was fairly profitable, particularly when it was a luxury car dealership run by
Gerald's younger son, Sean. However, due to changes in the market place, the luxury car franchise had to
be sold and the business now sells budget cars.
The fuel distribution and glass businesses continue to be fairly profitable under the management of the
older brother David, but the car business is facing hard times. The car retail business is notoriously cut-
throat, with margins as low as 23% and very high targets set by the manufacturers. The car dealership
also deals in second hand cars and this area is slightly more profitable. This division now employs about
50 people.
David is the managing director of the company and at a recent board meeting he put forward a number of
proposals for improving the profitability of the car dealership and garage. One suggestion is that the site
should be sold for its development potential and the car dealership brought to an end.
A further option brought up by David is the potential for entering the emerging market for fuel distribution
in the distant country of Arcadia. He has recently met an Arcadian entrepreneur who was visiting Oceania,
who is making considerable profits in this area and is looking for investment from a new partner. David is
very keen on this option and is trying to push it through.
Required
(a) Describe the approach to strategy that Bartok Fuel has adopted in the past.
(b) What factors should the Board consider before making any decisions on the proposals to dispose
of the Erewhon site for development and to enter the Arcadian fuel distribution market?
3 EMS 16 mins
The Environment Management Society (EMS) was established fifteen years ago by environment
practitioners who felt that environmental management and audit should have its own qualification. EMS
has its own Board who report to a Council of eight members. Policy is made by the Board and ratified by
Council. EMS is registered as a private limited entity.
EMS employs staff to administer its qualification and to provide services to its members. The qualification
began as one certificate, developed by the original founding members of the Society. It has since been
developed, by members and officers of the EMS, into a four certificate scheme leading to a Diploma. EMS
employs a full-time chief examiner who is responsible for setting the certificate examinations which take
place monthly in training centres throughout the country. No examinations are currently held in other
countries.
If candidates pass all four papers they can undertake an oral Diploma examination. If they pass this oral
they are eligible to become members. All examinations are open-book one hour examinations, preceded
by 15 minutes' reading time. At a recent meeting, EMS Council rejected the concept of computer-based
assessment. They felt that competence in this area was best assessed by written examination answers.
Candidate numbers for the qualification have fallen dramatically in the last two years. The Board of EMS
has concluded that this drop reflects the maturing marketplace in the country. Many people who were
practitioners in environmental management and audit when the qualification was introduced have now
gained their Diploma. The stream of new candidates and hence members is relatively small.
Consequently, the EMS Board has suggested that they should now look to attract international candidates
and it has targeted countries where environmental management and audit is becoming more important. It
is now formulating a strategy to launch the qualification in India, China and Russia.
However, any strategy has to recognise that both the EMS Board and the Council are very cautious and
notably risk averse. EMS is only confident about its technical capability within a restricted definition of
environmental management and audit. Attempts to look at complementary qualification areas (such as soil
and water conservation) have been swiftly rejected by Council as being non-core areas and therefore
outside the scope of their expertise.
Required
Internal development, acquisitions and strategic alliances are three development methods by which an
organisation's strategic direction can be pursued. Explain the principles of internal development and
discuss how appropriate this development method is to EMS. (8 marks)
13 DRB 49 mins
DRB Electronic Services operates in a high labour cost environment in Western Europe and imports
electronic products from the Republic of Korea. It re-brands and re-packages them as DRB products and
then sells them to business and domestic customers in the local geographical region. Its only current
source of supply is ISAS electronics based in a factory on the outskirts of Seoul, the capital of the
Republic of Korea. DRB regularly places orders for ISAS products through the ISAS website and pays for
them by credit card. As soon as the payment is confirmed ISAS automatically emails DRB a confirmation
of order, an order reference number and likely shipping date. When the order is actually despatched, ISAS
send DRB a notice of despatch email and a container reference number. ISAS currently organises all the
Shirtmaster division
Total sales 14.8 12.6 10.3 11.7 12.0 13.5
Gondour sales 14.3 12.0 9.9 10.9 11.0 11.5
Overseas sales 0.5 0.6 0.4 0.8 1.0 2.0
Cost of sales 11.1 9.8 8.2 9.1 9.4 10.1
Gross profit 3.7 2.8 2.1 2.6 2.6 3.4
Marketing 1.5 1.3 1.0 1.5 1.7 2.0
Distribution 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.3
Administration 1.3 1.2 1.1 1.2 1.2 1.3
Net profit (0.3) (0.7) (0.8) (1.0) (1.3) (1.2)
Inventory 2.0 2.2 3.0 2.7 2.5 2.0
Employees 100 100 98 98 99 100
Corporate Clothing
division
Total sales 10.2 11.2 11.1 11.8 12.4 13.2
Cost of sales 6.6 7.0 7.0 7.2 7.4 7.7
Gross profit 3.6 4.2 4.1 4.6 5.0 5.5
Marketing 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2
Distribution 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.5 0.6
Administration 0.5 0.6 0.6 0.7 0.7 0.8
Net profit 2.5 3.0 2.9 3.2 3.6 3.9
Inventory 0.9 1.0 0.8 0.8 0.9 1.0
Employees 84 84 80 79 77 75
Required
(a) Assess the strategic position and performance of the Shirtmaster Group and its divisions over the
20X320X5 period. Your analysis should make use of models where appropriate. (20 marks)
(b) Both divisions have recognised the need for a strategic alliance to help them achieve a successful
entry into Catopian markets.
Critically evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of the divisions using strategic alliances to
develop their respective businesses in Catopia. (15 marks)
(c) The Shirtmaster division and Corporate Clothing division, though being part of the same group,
operate largely independently of one another.
Assess the costs and benefits of the two divisions continuing to operate independently of one
another.
(15 marks)
(Total = 50 marks)
Part (a)
There would appear to be no real evidence of any formal strategic planning in the past. There is no
mention of any mission statement or objectives for the company. The company seems to have moved
from a garage and workshop into fuel distribution and glass manufacture almost by accident. These
developments might have emerged from patterns of behaviour rather than any planning process and it
could be argued that the company illustrates the emergent strategy model. However, there is also an
element of logical incrementalism as the business has not strayed far from its origins but has taken small
steps into new areas where it already has some knowledge and expertise.
It could also be argued that only a small number of strategic options were ever considered and the options
that have been taken in the past have perhaps simply been accepted as satisfactory rather than embraced
as ideal.
Part (b)
Each of the two strategies being considered requires very different considerations from the board.
If the Erewhon site is sold for its development potential, this will clearly be a boost to the company's cash
flow. However, as we have no information about the company's current financial position, we cannot
comment as to whether this is an element of the decision to sell. Nevertheless, the board must consider
what use can be made of the funds received. It may be that the two options are related in David's mind
and the funds from the sale of the Erewhon site are to be earmarked for investment in Arcadia. In any
case, the sale should only be considered further if it seems likely that the income can be invested in a way
that will generate a higher return than the garage business currently achieves.
If the Erewhon site is to be shut down there are also considerable human resource issues to be
addressed. The division employs 50 people who must either be made redundant or be re-employed in
other areas of the business. In either case, the cost of redundancy payments or of retraining must be
taken into account. The car dealership appears to be a fairly stand-alone element of the business but it
must also be considered whether its closure will have any knock-on effects on the other parts of the
company.
The proposed expansion into Arcadia is fraught with potential problems. Bartok Fuel has always been an
Oceania based business and therefore expansion abroad is a major issue. The results of a PEST analysis
would be daunting. The company has no experience of doing business in Ardacia and it knows nothing of
local business conditions or regulations. Language and culture are likely to present major difficulties.
All this is partially countered by the existence of a partner who knows the market and the culture of
Arcadia, but Bartok Fuel will still be making something of a leap in the dark. In fact, they would be wholly
dependent on the probity, efficiency and goodwill of their partner. It would appear that the company's only
real contribution will be to provide risk capital and the brothers must ask themselves if they really see that
as their area of expertise they are not running a bank, after all.
2 National advantage
Porter notes that some nations' industries succeed more than other in terms of international competition.
He does not suggest (as the D4D Prime Minister rightly notes) that countries as such are competitive, but
that various factors support or inhibit the ability of the industries and firms within them to compete
successfully on the international stage. Porter's 'diamond' model suggests that the degree of competitive
advantage enjoyed by different nations results from the interaction of four basic factors.
3 EMS
The decline in the number of people taking the qualification appears to be a reflection of the maturity of the
marketplace. The large pool of unqualified environmental managers and auditors that existed when the
qualification was launched has now been exploited. There are now fewer candidates taking the
examinations and fewer members joining the EMS. The organisation's response to this has been to look
for international markets where it can promote the qualifications it currently offers. It hopes to find large
pools of unqualified environmental managers and auditors in these markets.
The scenario suggests that EMS currently has relatively limited strategic ambitions. There is no evidence
that EMS plans to develop new qualifications outside its current portfolio. Indeed, attempts to look at
complementary qualifications (such as soil and water conservation) have been rejected by Council. Hence,
expansion into new strategic business markets does not appear to be an option.
4 Natalia Norman
Part (a)
Top tips. The great advantage of careful market segmentation is that it permits a precise determination of
the marketing mix variables. This saves money and allows the firm to make best use of its competences.
However, make sure you apply your knowledge of market segmentation to the specific problems
represented by the scenario, rather than simply suggesting generic bases which can be used for market
segmentation.
Easy marks. Part (a) is about segmentation methods and is worth fifteen marks overall, which can be
expected to break down into seven for suggesting the bases and eight for saying why segmentation is a
good idea. Thus we might expect three marks for proposing three bases and saying a little about the
relevance of each, with another three (or possibly four) for deeper discussion. Our discussion of each of
the bases we have chosen illustrates this approach, progressing from the name of the base through its
relevance to its wider implications or applications.
Segmentation would be Natalia's first step towards a more active relationship with her existing and
potential customers. If she knew who they were in more detail she could design her market offering in a
way that would improve her own efficiency while also providing increased customer satisfaction.
The simplest form of segmentation is probably geographical. Natalia's potential market could be very
simply split into domestic and overseas, for instance. Indeed, she probably does this already, in a sense,
since she must make appropriate arrangements for the extra complications of shipping to foreign
customers. Geographical segmentation would be necessary if Natalia wished to sell in other ways than via
the internet, perhaps by issuing catalogues, since the styles of knitwear offered would have to appeal to
varying local tastes.
Geographical segmentation becomes much more useful when it is combined with demographic
information. This geo-demographic segmentation would enable Natalia to target segments defined by
such variables as place, age, sex, income and social class. A consideration of these variables might for
instance lead her to concentrate her marketing effort on older, affluent people in specific metropolitan
areas. This would have immediate implications for design, quality, promotion, price and distribution.
Part (a)
Main factors in the external environment
The environment of an organisation is everything outside the boundaries of the organisation.
Organisations are by definition open to the environment: it is the source of their inputs; it is the destination
of their outputs; and it sets constraints over what the organisation can do. Some argue that the
environment is increasingly a source of uncertainty for organisations, and that it is becoming harder to
read. The degree of uncertainty it causes results from its complexity and the rate of change.
Hofer and Schendel argue that the very purpose of strategy is to secure some sort of environmental fit.
This might be an extreme position, as it implies reaction to the environment rather than activity to shape
environmental forces. However, any formal strategic planning process takes the environment into account.
As far as the general environment is concerned, we can analyse PEST and competitive factors.
Political and legal factors
Firebridge Tyres Ltd (FTL) operates in a stable political environment. Agreements between governments
have opened up international markets, not only to FTL but to its competitors: however GTC does not want
FTL to increase its exports outside Europe. There is no shortage of car service stations, a fragmented
industry, so political interference is unlikely. Local government might determine the siting of certain
activities. FTL is indirectly affected by government transport policy, if this affects the demand for and use
of cars.
Economic factors
In the UK, tyres must be checked annually, as part of the MOT testing process. The overall level of
economic activity determines transport use, which influences wear and tear of tyres. However, in times of
hardship, people will be less likely to buy the premium brand range preferring to go for the lower cost
Freeway range, cheaper overseas tyres, or even retreads. The general level of prosperity also influences
Top tips. While this question clearly has an important ethical slant, it is important to deal with the
commercial impact of the proposed courses of action. If you feel your experience has not prepared you to
do this, think in terms of stakeholder theory and ask yourself what connected stakeholders like customers
are reasonably entitled to expect and how you would react to these ploys.
Do not spend more than a minute on dealing with the report form requirement: a suitable heading and,
perhaps, numbered paragraphs are all that are required. A short introductory paragraph giving the reason
for the report is a good way to get started.
REPORT
To: Board Members, Nadir Products plc
From: A Consultant
Date: XX/XX/XX
Subject: Proposed adjustments to turnover reporting
You asked me to comment on the commercial and ethical implications of suggestions that had been made
about the value of this year's turnover. There was concern that a current decline in sales will adversely
affect the level of bonuses paid to senior staff.
My first comment is that the assumption behind the suggestions appears to be wrong. The aim of the
bonus scheme was surely to provide an incentive for senior staff to take appropriate action to improve
performance. If performance has not improved, it would be perverse to adjust the numbers so that they
receive the bonuses anyway. There is an element of moral hazard here: if the bonuses are in effect
guaranteed and not dependent on improved performance, the incentive effect disappears and the scheme
might as well be abandoned.
I understand that there is concern that staff will be adversely affected by the downturn in sales value.
However, I must point out the questionable nature of the suggestions from an ethical point of view. It is
likely that the detailed proposals will create a conflict of interests since each has the potential to
disadvantage shareholders. It would be ethically inappropriate to pursue any course of action that reduced
shareholder value in order to enrich senior staff.
I will now examine the individual proposals.
Discount for additional sales. A discount is an unexceptional sales promotional device that may be used, for
instance, to increase or defend market share or to shift excess inventory. It has a cost, in the form of reduced
margin, and it is a matter of commercial judgement to decide whether the benefit is greater than the cost. It
may also have the effect of merely bringing sales forward in time, so that later trading periods suffer.
Of the three suggestions, this is the most defensible. However, it is quite indefensible if it is undertaken
solely in order to boost bonuses, because of the conflict of interest discussed above.
Bringing forward scheduled orders is a form of window dressing. Your auditors will deploy checks on
such activities as a matter of course, and may succeed in detecting this. The accounts would then have to
be adjusted, since there is no commercial justification for the practice. It can be seen as detrimental to
shareholders since the reported profit would be overstated and, while this may have a positive effect on
share value in the short term, were it ever discovered, it would bring into question the company's
corporate governance. Such a scheme is also likely to irritate customers who may respond by delaying
payment and even seeking a new supplier. This would clearly disadvantage the company.
This suggestion is unacceptable on both ethical and practical grounds.
Warning of possible price rises. I take it as read that there are no actual plans to raise prices? If this is the
case, to say that such plans exist is untruthful and therefore inappropriate for a company that wishes to
maintain high ethical standards. Further, to hide behind a form of words such as 'there may be price rises'
would be equally dishonest, since the intention would be to create a specific, incorrect impression in
7 Arragon Antennas
Part (a)
Top tips. We answer the first part of this question largely in terms of Porter's generic strategies. This is
because of the nature of the scenario. There is mention of price sensitivity, to which cost is related; the
market is clearly highly specialised, so the idea of a niche approach is relevant; and finally, the products
tend to be highly differentiated.
It would be possible to take a product-market growth vector approach, but that model would not be so
appropriate. We are given no information relevant to market penetration; product development is clearly
going on anyway; market development and diversification are high-risk strategies for such a specialised
company working in such high technology. Generally, Ansoff's model is most useful for less specialised
companies, particularly those working in consumer products and services.
The possible solution of a reorganisation of the industry, however, could be applied just as easily to an
analysis using the product-market model.
Top tips. Arragon Antennas is a manufacturing company, so the basic 4 Ps mix is what is required here.
With a question like this, do not dwell too much on background explanations. Cut to the chase and make
as many good valid points as you can. You don't need to know anything about aircraft communication
systems. But you do need to be generally aware of the differences between consumer and industrial
marketing.
Product
The product element of Arragon's marketing mix is relatively simple. A firm's product may be viewed as a
solution to a customer's problem. Arragon's products are therefore of two basic types: the newly
developed and very high-value added antennas designed for new aircraft; and the standard antennas
produced either for use as spares or for supply to other businesses.
Quality is clearly a major issue affecting both types of product, because of the requirements of aircraft
safety. The standard antennas must be produced to existing precise specifications, while the new designs
must satisfy strict performance requirements before they are released to service.
Packaging is also likely to be important. Spares, in particular, must have a long shelf life and may be
transported to any part of the world. The packaging will have to provide substantial protection against
climatic variables such as heat and humidity, as well as against impact and abrasion.
Price
We are told that prices in the industry are generally high and that co-operation between suppliers is not
unusual. While presumably not engaging in price-fixing, it seems that the small group of suppliers in the
industry tend not to compete on price. It is likely that winning contracts for new systems design is likely to
depend far more on long-term relationships with customers and proven technical quality. In the spares
market, it would seem that Wizzomatic's arrival may shake up the existing rather cosy arrangements, both
as far as supplies direct to users and subcontract manufacturing are concerned. So long as variable costs
can be covered, Arragon may feel it can cut its prices in these markets in order to maintain its
manufacturing capacity in being.
Arragon will have to establish exactly which of Wizzomatic's products are acceptable substitutes for its
own and where there are gaps in Wizzomatic's standardised range. Those gaps can then be exploited with
higher prices.
Promotion
Arragon's products are complex, expensive and sold to industrial buyers, so the company's main
promotional effort is likely to go into personal selling by experienced sales engineers. There is also likely
to be attendance at trade fairs and a small amount of reminder advertising in the specialist press. Public
relations effort is likely to be minimal and also concentrated on the specialist press.
Distribution
Distribution to aircraft manufacturers is likely to be direct to the end user, without any use of
intermediaries. The subcontract work will also go direct to the purchasers. Distribution of aftermarket
spares may involve the use of intermediaries, since the products are highly standardised technically and
may be sold globally without modification. Since the products are expensive, regional or national
intermediaries may be able to provide a service by investment in spares inventories.
Top tips. This is a wide ranging question and, perhaps, therefore, somewhat daunting. Remember that
with this type of question there will be a lot of easy marks for explaining the basics. For example, a list of
strengths and weaknesses would glean quite a few marks, though not 50%.
In order to score well on this question you must do two slightly different things when you are applying
your knowledge to the scenario: use the setting to illustrate your theory; and suggest ways in which the
theory might be used to make improvements.
Thus, for example, we say that the internal transfer and promotion from within policy is an example of the
way that relatively junior managers can obtain good experience of real business problems. Similarly, we
say that the detailed monthly reporting might be over-restrictive in its effects and, on examination, might
prove to be unnecessarily expensive.
Notice also that we begin with a comment about the very nature of UP's business, which you might think
is a matter over and above the question of its organisation. Don't forget that there is scope in this exam
for this sort of digression if you make it relevant to the scenario.
Divisionalisation is a common form of organisation structure in large organisations, especially those that
encompass a wide variety of products, technologies and geographical locations. UP seems to qualify
under all three of these categories. The form has been found to allow for overall control from the corporate
headquarters without drowning it in the detail of micromanagement at long range.
The diversity of the company's operations is itself worthy of comment from a strategic point of view.
There is obviously a tradition of having widely different operations and it is possible to discern some
potential for synergy, in agriculture and retailing, for instance. However, the organisation is committed to
managing a very wide range of technologies and markets and it may be that its lacklustre financial
performance is linked to a lack of specialist knowledge among its senior managers. The policy of moving
managers from division to division, while generally good for their personal development may actually
hamper the progress of the more specialised operations.
It is generally considered that conglomerate diversification only adds value when the expertise of the
corporate headquarters is such that its allocation of capital is more effective than would be achieved by a
normally efficient capital market. Whether this is the case with United Products must be subject to some
doubt. The less profitable divisions are protected from the disciplines of the market by the corporate HQ,
while those with good prospects may find themselves starved of funds.
UP clearly displays one disadvantage of the divisional form. There is a tendency for the divisions to be
more bureaucratic than they would be as independent organisations in order to service the demands of the
corporate HQ's control procedures. UP takes this to an extreme, demanding monthly reports and carrying
out frequent functional inspections rather than encouraging a responsive autonomy by the use of simple
key performance indicators. The probable effect of this is to stifle the creativity and sense of ownership
that flow from greater autonomy. This is most likely to be visible in the divisions that operate in complex,
unstable environments, such as film-making, publishing and fashion retailing. A side effect is the
absorption of an excessive degree of divisional revenue in management charges for HQ and in the
divisional bureaucracies themselves.
Another problem of divisionalisation was referred to by Mintzberg as the pull to balkanise. This is the
natural desire of the division heads for independence from central control. In an organisation like UP, with
its rather bureaucratic approach, this might take the form conforming to the letter of the rules but
manipulating activities and finances. So long as the reporting parameters fall within set limits, it may be
possible to conceal unauthorised ventures for a long time, possibly with unfortunate consequences.
A final comment might be made about the mixture of divisional types: there are both product divisions and
geographical divisions. This might be a sensible response to UP's geographical range and variety of
products. On the other hand it might be a source of confusion and conflict between geographical and
product based managers for control of particular operations. This will be particularly apparent when new
Top tips. The idea of virtuality has become very fashionable and people tend to use the term rather
loosely. The definition we give is academically correct. Be sure that you do not confuse the virtual
organisation with Handy's concept of the shamrock organisation, which is merely an organisation that
makes extensive use of self-employed and temporary staff in order to be able to control its labour costs in
times of economic slowdown.
The idea of a virtual organisation or cybernetic corporation has attracted considerable attention as the
usefulness of IT for communication and control has been exploited. The essence of the virtual
organisation is the electronic linking of spatially dispersed components.
Such an organisation is a temporary or permanent collection of geographically dispersed individuals,
groups, organisational units (which may or may not belong to the same organisation), or entire
organisations that depend on electronic linking in order to complete the production process.
However, an organisation is not a virtual organisation merely because it uses IT extensively and has
multiple locations. Many organisations fall into that category.
Also, organisations that make extensive use of temporary and self-employed labour are not necessarily
virtual organisations because of that, though they may have some virtual characteristics.
UP almost certainly uses extensive IT systems for its internal communications. It would be surprising if it
did not have an internal email system and it may well have a corporate intranet. However, it clearly has
activities that are very real as opposed to virtual, such as its agricultural, extractive, manufacturing and
retailing operations.
Of the activities we are told about, electronic design is perhaps the one most suited to the virtual
approach. It may be possible for design engineers to work in isolation, using computer aided design
equipment and communicating by email. However, where the design work requires a team effort, co-
ordination may become a problem.
Publishing may also be a candidate, depending on the nature of what is published. Authors of books are
likely to work alone, and editors may be able to do the same, as may their assistants and other specialists
such as proof readers and indexers. The transmission of entire texts by electronic means is quite feasible
and some specialist books are published by being printed on demand from computer memory.
9 Auto Direct
Top tips. You must think hard about the wording of this question. Superficially, it asks you for a summary
of change management strategies in a particular context, which would be a large job to do properly, but
offers only twelve marks. The implication is that you must not descend into too much detail about any
particular model or approach.
Business Process Re-engineering (BPR) is the fundamental rethinking and radical design of business
processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical contemporary measures of performance, such as
cost, quality, service and speed.
In other words, BPR involves significant change in the business rather than minimal or incremental
changes to processes. This is essentially different from procedures such as automation where existing
processes are simply computerised. Although some improvements in speed may be obtained, the
processes are essentially the same. For example, the local warehouse could use EDI to send an order to
the supplier, which may be quicker than email. However, the process of sending the order and receiving
the goods to the warehouse is the same.
Using BPR, the actual reasons for the business processes being used can be queried, and where
necessary replaced with more efficient processes. For example, rather than inventory being ordered from
the store via the central warehouse, the supplier could monitor inventory in each store using an extranet.
When goods reach re-order level, the supplier is aware of this and can send goods directly to the store.
Not only does this provide inventory replenishment much more quickly, it is also more cost effective for
the supplier as the central warehouse effectively becomes redundant.
11 Fashion retailer
Top tips. Fashion retailing is a fairly specialised job. However, we all have some experience of it from the
customer's side of the counter. Don't be afraid to make some educated deductions about, for instance, the
need for careful inventory control when a wide range of goods is moving rather quickly.
An organisation's value-creating activities must be mutually supporting.
Part (a)
Paul's business is in the fashion clothing industry with 20 retail stores but little integration between the
stores. This part of the fashion industry operates with very slim margins and with profitability not keeping
pace with the increase in turnover, Paul realises that he must operate in a more cost-conscious manner.
The computer system is currently underused and is operating in a passive manner, simply providing basic
information rather than contributing to the business competitive advantage in any way.
We can use Porter's value chain model to consider how the IS function can be applied to help provide
Paul with a competitive edge in his business.
Pauls firm will only be as strong as the weakest link in its value chain. The IS investment will be
worthwhile if it can be used to reduce costs or to differentiate Paul's business from the others in the
industry sector.
Primary activities
Inbound logistics
This relates to the purchasing function and the storage of inventory and distribution to the stores. An IS
system can help with inventory control levels, economic ordering and efficient distribution routings.
Operations
IS can be used to monitor the performance of each store with details being provided about profitability,
inventory levels, inventory turnover, expense levels, staff absences and so on. IS could also be used to
analyse the different consumer demand profile in different locations in order to help each store ensure that
it has sufficient inventories of the type of sales made in its store.
Outbound logistics
This element of the chain concerns distribution to customers and is more relevant in a manufacturing
industry. In Paul's business there will not be much distribution to customers but the system may be able
to produce a customer database to assist with marketing and promotions.
Marketing and sales
Paul could use IS to indicate customer purchasing patterns for different stores and to develop databases
for promotions. Internet retailing is a possibility, though it would create a fulfilment problem.
Service
This area of the chain is to do with the provision of service to the customers and it is not likely that IS can
be of much use here although it could be used to monitor, control and facilitate transfers between stores.
Top tips. This question puts e-commerce firmly into a strategic context. IT and the internet pervade the
modern business organisation and so it should be possible for you to offer sensible comments upon this
basis. The main advantages and disadvantages of an e-business strategy that you put into your answer
must be applicable to Good Sports' own business situation. It is not a foregone conclusion that
involvement in e-commerce will be unequivocally beneficial. There a several strategic issues to consider
such as the familiar framework of 'suitability, acceptability and feasibility'. Porter's generic strategies are
also brought into this question.
Easy marks. Depends on how well you know the e-business material in Chapter 11. If you have a good
knowledge of e-business you should be able to identify a number of advantages and disadvantages.
REPORT
To: Alan and Bob, Good Sports Limited
From: Strategic consultant
Date: XX/XX/XX
Subject: E-Business strategy
Introduction
Very few businesses can afford to ignore the potential of the internet for driving forward strategy and
activity. The markets that Good Sports operates in are being affected by the development of e-business.
Small enterprises such as this one can gain access to customers on a global scale, which only relatively
13 DRB
Part (a)
14 Project initiation
Top tips. You may find it easier to structure your answer with headings for each problem you identify, and
then in two separate paragraphs, answer the two parts of the question. This should ensure that actions to
resolve the problem are included in your answer.
Leadership style
(a) The leadership style of the manager is tending to be autocratic; that is team members are being
told what to do without the opportunity to discuss the decisions being made. This leadership style
tends to be appropriate for staff who need a lot of guidance through a project.
(b) In this situation, most of the staff have professional qualifications, indicating that they are able to
think though problems for themselves and monitor their own work effectively. A more appropriate
management style would be participative. Dave could discuss the work to be done and then let staff
carry out this work. This approach would benefit staff by providing them with more responsibility
and benefit Dave by freeing up more time to monitor the overall progress of the project.
Lack of communication
(a) The cancelling of project meetings can have an adverse effect on morale, as well as making
communication between the team members more difficult. While it appears that more work will be
carried out on the project, if staff feel that they are not being communicated to, or that they cannot
discuss problems, then overall work efficiency is likely to suffer.
(b) This problem is easy to resolve; Dave should re-introduce the team meetings and apologise for
making the mistake of cancelling them in the first place. This will provide an appropriate channel of
communication and help team members realise it was not their fault that the meetings were
cancelled.
Lack of project updates
(a) The other problem with cancelling team meetings is that project team members will not be aware
of how the project is progressing overall. Team members may not feel motivated to work harder if
they perceive that other members are not 'pulling their weight'. The possibility of conflicts within
the team suggest that morale and trust may be low, and so motivation may be an issue.
(b) Re-introducing the team meetings will assist communication and help all team members to see
how the project is progressing. When all team members can see that everyone is working hard,
then this will have a positive impact on morale and the overall amount of work being done.
15 Educational Institution
Top tips. The key to (a) was recognising the range of requirements that the Institution now has to fulfil
the needs of different stakeholders and the different objectives that should be met. You would have limited
the marks you could earn if you had not discussed publicity of objectives. In (b) we have provided
answers for all the measures, although you were only asked to discuss a selection. You need to think
carefully about what could distort the measures used and how they might prompt action.
Part (a)
(i) Different stakeholders
At present the government is the most important external stakeholder. However the government
will become less important and private sector users more important as the proportion of income
derived from private sector courses increases. In addition the Institution will also have to take into
account the interests of staff (internal stakeholders) and public sector students.
Links between financing and objectives
The cash limits set by the government relate to the effectiveness of the Institution's operations.
The limits that the Institution has to meet are determined by what its outputs are in terms of
research publications and quality. The Institution will have to take into account the methods of
measuring these non-financial objectives.
Use of finance
Fulfilling the government's requirements (and therefore obtaining finance) is the most important
current objective. However the Institution should also consider how it makes the best use of the
finance it obtains, and here financial objectives become important. It should be looking to
minimise costs as far as possible. The Institution should have the objective of choosing the most
economical option that does not compromise the achievement of the non-financial objectives. The
Institution should also have the objective that the expenditure it undertakes produces the
maximum return in terms of meeting the non-financial objectives.
This company seems to have operated more like a soviet than a business. No doubt there has been much
job-satisfaction, but the company's ability to compete and add value has deteriorated.
A participatory style of management has been shown in many studies to enhance personal motivation and
commitment to the organisation's mission. This occurs via the process of internalisation, whereby the
members of the workforce adopt the corporate goal as their personal goal. This can lead to better
industrial relations, higher quality and better service. However, there is no conclusive evidence that such
an approach necessarily leads to improved overall performance. This is borne out by the situation at
Coxford Doors.
Andrew Smith's style of management is likely to bring the focus that has been missing in the past. He will
no doubt speed up the decision making process (probably by making most decisions himself) plan
effectively and issue clear instructions. Confusion and delay should be reduced and control enhanced. This
will improve the business's responsiveness and ability to satisfy customers.
However, Andrew Smith is likely to encounter resistance from a work force used to proceeding according
to its own ideas of what is appropriate. Morale and loyalty are both likely to suffer from the loss of
autonomy. There is likely to be a lack of co-operation and, possibly, active resistance to the new order.
The commercial position might deteriorate further as a result.
Even if there is acceptance that the trading position demands change it is unlikely to be wholehearted. A
strong undercurrent of resentment may be created, resurfacing at some time in the future, perhaps when
the commercial situation has improved.
Routine changes are harder to sell than transformational ones if they are perceived to be unimportant and
not survival-based.
Culture change is perhaps hardest of all, especially if it involves basic assumptions. This is certainly the
case at Coxford Doors. However, the necessary preconditions for change are in place. Andrew Smith is
himself an outsider, prepared to challenge and expose, in a visible way, the existing behaviour pattern; his
appointment will act as a trigger; and alterations to the power structure will be an inherent part of his
actions.
The unfreeze stage is likely to include extensive communication and consultation processes, but the
objective must be kept in sight; concern for proper treatment of employees must not be allowed to subvert
the overall aim.
Change is the second stage of the process and is mainly concerned with introducing the new, desirable
behaviours and approaches. This will involve retraining and practice to build up familiarity and experience.
Individuals must be encouraged to take ownership of the new ways of doing things. For this to happen
they must be shown to work.
Refreeze is the final stage, involving consolidation and reinforcement of the new behaviour. Positive or
negative reinforcement may be used, with praise, reward and sanctions applied as necessary.
It will be important for Andrew Smith to retain control of the process at all times, since the company's
history of participative management will tend to undermine his move towards a firmer style. He must
make it clear from the outset that change must take place, while remaining flexible on the detail and the
style of its introduction. It would be advisable to aim for an intermediate style of management, in which
the workforce retain a voice. Operational control must be improved, but it should not be necessary to
move to a completely autocratic way of doing things.
Top tips. Although you are provided with a lot of financial information your focus must be on the strategic
position of the group and its divisions, rather than on calculations and numbers themselves.
The question is all about gaining an understanding of the key trends, and this includes analysing the
separate performances of the two divisions. Your findings are likely to inform your answers to later parts
of the question.
Easy marks. The figures should indicate to you that the two divisions are performing very differently. If
you work through the key features of each division you should be able to identify a number of strengths,
weaknesses, opportunities and threats from the material given in the scenario.
Tutorial note. We have included all the figures from the question and added in key percentages so that we
can then use them in our answer.
You should not replicate all the data in the exam; simply calculate the key percentages, ratios or trends
and then use them in your analysis.
Shirtmaster division:
Total sales 14.8 12.6 10.3 11.7 12.0 13.5
Gondoir sales 14.3 12.0 9.9 10.9 11.0 11.5
Trend in total sales 15% 18% 14% 3% 13%
Overseas sales 0.5 0.6 0.4 0.8 1.0 2.0
Cost of sales 11.1 9.8 8.2 9.1 9.4 10.1
Cost of sales % 75% 78% 80% 78% 78% 75%
Gross profit 3.7 2.8 2.1 2.6 2.6 3.4
Gross profit % 25% 22% 20% 22% 22% 25%
Marketing 1.5 1.3 1.0 1.5 1.7 2.0
Distribution 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.3
Administration 1.3 1.2 1.1 1.2 1.2 1.3
Other costs % 27% 28% 28% 31% 33% 34%
Net profit (0.3) (0.7) (0.8) (1.0) (1.3) (1.2)
Net profit % 2% 5% 8% 9% 11% 9%
Inventory 2.0 2.2 3.0 2.7 2.5 2.0
Employees 100 100 98 98 99 100
The results and forecast for the two divisions indicate that the Shirtmaster Group is a composite of two
very different performances by the totally separate divisions. These divisions are operating in very different
markets, with very different strategies and very different results. For the group as a whole, sales have
declined to 20X5 and net margins are struggling to get into double figures.
The Shirtmaster division is dragging down the performance of the entire group. The overall group net
profit margin of 10% in 20X5 masks the fact that the Shirtmaster division suffered a net loss, while
Corporate Clothing recorded a net profit margin of 26%.
Using the information from the scenario to consider the Shirtmaster value chain, for example, Tony
Masters' strategy of being an integrated shirt manufacturer carrying out all the activities needed to design,
manufacture and distribute its shirts is in doubt, because most of its competitors have recognised the
commercial sense in outsourcing production to cheaper and more flexible manufacturers overseas.
There is no competitive advantage in retaining production in the higher cost Gondour, particularly when
the company has no other point of differentiation (such as recognised high style or fashion) for its
products.
The premium end of the shirt market, its historical focus, has changed since the days of Shirtmasters'
earlier success and the division now needs to change to respond to a new market structure with new
participants in the value system.
The figures indicate that Shirtmaster's reliance on small retailers has seen the costs of its support
activities (marketing, distribution and administration) take up a huge part of its turnover (19% in 20X5,
and forecast to rise still further to 23% by 20X8).
Trips to buy cloth from foreign suppliers have resulted in large inventories of expensive cloth, around a
month's worth of sales being held at any one time. Meeting the demands of its many small customers is
therefore having a real impact on marketing, manufacturing and distribution costs. High inventory levels
will also have an adverse impact on the business's working capital requirements.
Making reference to Porter's five competitive forces, the key ones at work are the rivalry between the
shirt makers, and the increased buying power of customers in the industry the specialist retail outlets
and supermarkets. To accommodate these forces, Shirtmaster may have to consider the possibility of
making own brand shirts for the supermarkets so that it can expand its market.
The effect of these problems is revealed in selected aspects of performance, when compared to the
Corporate Clothing division:
The measures above reflect a balanced scorecard approach to performance analysis. On all measures,
Corporate Clothing is a stronger performer and this must be due to its focus on the customer, through its
willingness to embrace the realities of its market, invest in appropriate technology and take close note of
customer needs. The contrast with Tony's 'pet' division, Shirtmaster, could not be more stark, and should
serve to impress upon the senior management of the group the need to give more strategic responsibility
to managers possessing the necessary detachment to manage Shirtmaster more effectively.
Part (b)
Top tips. Begin your answer by defining a strategic alliance, and outlining its advantages and
disadvantages. We have concentrated upon the suitability of a joint venture for this answer. Apply the
advantages and disadvantages to the circumstances of Shirtmaster and Corporate Clothing and use your
answers to part (a) to examine the suitability of each company. You should answer large scenario
questions in order, as your answers to one part may inform the content of a later part, as is the case here.
Johnson, Scholes and Whittington define a strategic alliance as 'where two or more organisations share
resources and activities to pursue a strategy'. Alliances can be particularly attractive to smaller firms such
as Shirtmaster, or where expensive new technologies or markets are being developed and the costs can be
shared. One particular form of strategic alliance is the joint venture, whereby two or more firms join forces
for manufacturing, financial and marketing purposes and each has a share in both the equity and the
management of the business.
Particular advantages to Shirtmaster and Corporate Clothing of the pursuit of such an alliance are the
following.
(a) Share costs. As the capital outlay is shared, joint ventures can be especially attractive. The joint
operation may lead to economies of scale that mean that costs can be reduced.
(b) Cut risk. A joint venture can reduce the risk of government intervention if a local firm is involved.
(c) Alliances provide close control over marketing and other operations, as both companies have a
strong interest in ensuring that processes are effective.
(d) Overseas joint ventures provide local knowledge. Alliances are commonly entered into where, as in
this scenario, a company is seeking to expand overseas.
(e) Synergies. One firm's production expertise, for example, can be supplemented by the other's
marketing and distribution facility. In this way, particular competences can be exploited for the
good of the whole alliance.
(f) Learning. Alliances can also be a learning exercise in which each partner tries to learn as much as
possible from the other, particularly about local markets.
(g) Technology. New technology offers many uncertainties and many opportunities. Such alliances
provide funds for expensive research projects, spreading risk.
Top tips. This is a complex question. The existence of the two divisions largely reflects the origins of the
two family businesses, and the divisions have grown and developed separately. Think about the
advantages and disadvantages of divisionalisation and how these are currently manifested in the
Shirtmaster group. Does divisionalisation make sense for the management of these businesses? Their
products may be along the same lines, but their trading conditions and circumstances are very different.
Divisionalisation has some advantages, notably focusing the attention of subordinate management on
business performance and results. It therefore can provide a good training ground for junior managers in
the individual divisions. It also enables proper concentration on particular product-market areas in this
case, shirts and workwear.
Problems can arise, as in this scenario, with the power of the head office, and control of resources. It
appears that Tony Masters has more emotional commitment, and presumably more management time, to
devote to Shirtmaster at the expense of Corporate Clothing.
Mintzberg believes there are inherent problems in divisionalisation, many of which are actually those of
conglomerate diversification. In the Shirtmaster group, it could be that each business might be better run
independently. The different businesses might offer different returns for different risks which shareholders
might prefer to judge independently.
There does not appear to be any common effort between the divisions, with no sharing of resources
apparent from the scenario details. While both are in the clothing market, their respective value systems
run very differently. Information systems are also likely to operate independently. This may be leading to
duplication of effort and waste of resources.
629
630
Note: Key Terms and their page references are given in bold
, Index 631
Complex buying behaviour, 411
C2B (Consumer-to-Business), 337 Complexity, 578
C2C (Consumer-to-Consumer), 337 Computer games, 58
C2G (Citizen-to-Government), 338 Concentrated marketing, 78
Capabilities, 93 configuration, 225
Capital expenditure, 449 Conglomerate diversification, 168, 204
Capital requirements, 53 Conglomerate, 168
Capital, 39 Consequentialist ethics, 127
Cash budget, 503 Consolidation, 199
Cash cows, 183 Consortia, 205
Cash flow ratio, 536 Consultants, 267, 574
Categorical imperative, 128 Consumer generated content, 417
Category killers, 187 Consumer goods, 73
Central services, 180 Contingency funding, 504
Centralisation, 236 Contingency plan, 479
Chaffey, D, 385 Contingency, 479
Challenge, 65 Continuity planning, 353
Change agent, 265 Continuous improvement, 557
Change and performance J curve, 253 Continuum of leadership styles, 549
Change control, 477 Contract manufacture, 177
Change management, 265, 293 Control process, 232
Change owner, 457 Control, 335, 556, 557
Change, 260 Controls over data input, 351
Channel management, 333 Controls over logical access, 350
Channel structures, 338 Controls over physical access, 349
Characteristics of strategic decisions, 6 Cookies, 416
Charismatic leaders, 267 Core competences, 93
Chart of accounts, 352 Core competencies, 94, 105, 208
Chief executive, 267 Core employees, 30
Client/server architecture, 345 Core Product, 391
Closed system, 281 Corporate appraisal, 119
Cobra report, 291 Corporate culture, 203
Co-branding, 405 Corporate ethical code, 130, 157
Cognitivist theories, 127 Corporate ethics, 130
Collaboration, 197 Corporate governance, 135, 139, 143
Collaborative CRM, 419 Corporate parent, 165, 179
Collective intelligence, 417 Corporate portfolio, 182
Commercial auctions, 334 Corporate social responsibility, 136
Commercial organisation, 94 Corporate strategy, 10
Communication backbones, 343 Correlation, 47
Communication, 335, 468 Cost drivers, 369
Comparative advantage, 39 Cost efficiency, 94
Competence based qualifications, 561 Cost focus strategy, 189
Competence frameworks, 561 Cost globalisation, 38
Competences, 93, 97 Cost leadership, 78, 186, 187, 191, 92
Competencies, 92, 93, 561 Cost leadership, differentiation or focus, 58
Competitive advantage, 39, 175, 186, 335, 341, Cost reduction, 335
560 Cost-benefit analysis, 214, 310
Competitive environment, 52, 59, 341 Countermediation, 338, 340, 393
Competitive forces, 52, 57 Coupon, 507
Competitive products, 187 Crisis, 237
Competitive rivalry, 56, 58, 94, 95 Crisis stabilisation, 268
Competitive strategy, 186 Critical success factors, 25, 79, 191, 198
Competitors, 25
Cross-subsidisation, 166
Complementary exporting, 177
Crowdsouricng, 245, 246
Complementary products, 83
Crystal glass industry, 42
Completion Report, 480 Cultural control, 248
632 Index
Cultural environment, 30 Disruptive power, 291
Cultural processes, 233, 575 Distintermediation, 393
Cultural web, 147, 263 Diversification, 200
Culture, 31, 145, 262, 336 Diversified form, 250
Currency risk, 175 Diversity, 169
Current ratio, 536 Divestment, 202
Customer analysis, 81 Dividend cover, 540
Customer lifecycle, 83 Dividend yield, 538
Customer portfolio, 80 Divisional form, 250
Customer profitability analysis, 82 Divisionalisation, 226, 227, 250
Customer profitability, 82 Document analysis, 316
Customer Relationship Management (CRM), Dogs, 183
406 Drivers, 458
Customer service, 335, 385 Drivers of change, 25
Customer specific marketing, 415 Du Pont system of ratio analysis, 532
Customers, 54, 73, 79, 81, 94 Dual authority, 229
Customs, 145 Dynamic capabilities, 97
Cyber security, 350 Dynamic pricing, 395
Cycle of competition, 25, 65
Earnings per share, 538
Data, 98 E-business, 333
Data migration, 319 E-business adoption pyramid, 335
Data mining, 415 E-business strategy, 365
Data warehouse, 101 E-commerce, 333
Database marketing, 415 E-commerce infrastructure, 342
Databases, 243 E-commerce strategy, 364
Datamining, 101 Econometric models, 51
Davenport and Short, 290 Economic environment, 29
Deadweight cost of administration, 561 Economic growth, 33
Debt ratios, 534 Economies of scale, 28, 94, 176, 198, 203
Decentralisation, 236, 237, 578 Economies of scope, 166
Decision-making unit, 74 Electronic business, 333, 378
Decline, 108 Electronic Data Interchange (EDI), 375, 380
Definition, 284 Electronic data interchange, 293
Delayering, 271 Electronic Fund Transfers (EFT), 333
Delta model, 196 Electronic mail, 345
Demand conditions, 40 Electronic share trading, 333
Demand-led convergence, 51 Elkington, J, 36
Demerger, 202 Email, 335, 410
Demography, 30 Email databases, 386
Deontology, 128 Email marketing, 385
Design requirements, 318 E-marketing, 385
Design, 95 E-marketing mix (6 Is), 388
Deskilling, 554, 561 E-marketing plan, 386
Development, 112 Emergent strategy, 18, 571, 574
Diamond, 39 Employee learning, 560
Differentiated marketing, 78 Empowerment, 253, 558
Differentiation focus strategy, 189 Enforced choice, 215
Differentiation strategies, 192 Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), 377
Differentiation, 186, 187, 191, 195 Enterprise resource planning, 291, 312
Direct changeover, 320 Entrepreneurial structure, 248
Direct exporting, 175, 177 Environment, 10, 25
Direct marketing, 394 Environmental change, 166
Disaster recovery, 353 Environmental costs, 35
Discounts, 82 Environmental feasibility, 310
Disintermediation, 338 Environmental performance, 35
, Index 633
Environmental protection policy, 34 First pass selection, 322
Environmental protection, 33 Five competitive forces, 52
Environmental risk screening, 34 Five Cs, 172
Environmental taxes, 35 Five forces, 25, 188
Environmental uncertainty, 26 Flexibility, 318
Environment-related management accounting, Flexible firm, 244
35 Flexible manufacturing, 556
Envisioning, 179 Focus, 186, 188
E-procurement, 375 Focussed differentiation, 193
Equity, 505 Follower strategy, 111
Equity share capital, 505 Forcefield analysis, 262
Equity shares, 505 Forecast, 503
ERP, 312 Forecasting a cash surplus, 504
Escrow agreements, 324 Forecasts, 42
E-tailers, 339 Forming, 472
Ethical dilemmas, 127, 129 Forums, 340
Ethical relativism, 127 Forward integration, 167
Ethical stance, 138 Four Ps, 71
Ethics, 127 Franchising, 205, 206
Ethnocentrism, 170 Functional organisation, 225
Eurostar, 54 Functional requirements, 318
Evolution, 261, 265 Functional structure, 225
Exit barriers, 56, 201
Experience curve, 95
Expert system, 101
G2B (Government-to-Business), 338
Explicit knowledge, 100 G2C (Government-to-Citizen), 338
Exponential smoothing, 50 G2E (Government-to-Employee), 338
Exporting, 172, 176 G2G (Government-to-Government), 338
Export-led growth, 169 Gantt chart, 464
Extended marketing mix, 72 Gantt charts, 483
Extended product, 391 Gap analysis, 284
Externalities, 137 Gaps and disconnects, 309
Extortion, 130 Gateway, 475
Extranet, 101, 341, 344, 345, 378 Gearing ratio, 535
Gearing, 534
Generic strategies, 186
Factor conditions, 39 Generic strategy, 58
Failure strategies, 194 Geocentrism, 171
Fan clubs, 340 Geographical, 75
Feasibility, 211, 213, 232, 309, 364 Ghoshal and Bartlett, 243
Feedback, 556 Gifts, 130
Fiedler, 552 Global company, 172
Fighting back, 65 Global competition, 38
File creation, 319 Global heterarchy, 173
Finance, 11 Globalisation, 37, 169
Financial, 447 Goals, 6, 7, 9
Financial control style, 239 Golden fleeces, 184
Financial control, 248 Goold and Campbell, 238
Financial feasibility, 310 Governance framework, 140
Financial intermediaries, 340 Government policy, 38
Financial management, 502 Government, 58
Financial services, 340 Graphical User Interface (GUI), 343
Firewall, 101, 344 Grease money, 130
Firm infrastructure, 104 Green issues, 34
Firm strategy, structure and rivalry, 40 Green pressure groups, 34
First mover, 95 Group, 470
First mover advantage, 196 Group roles, 471
634 Index
Groupthink, 473 Innovation and competitive advantage, 110
Groupware, 101 Insiderisation, 172
Growth vector matrix, 198 Intangible products, 16
Intangible resources, 93
Habitual buying behaviour, 411 Integrated reporting, 150
Integration, 389
Hammer and Champy, 290 Intelligence, 389
Harmon, 307 Intended strategy, 570
Harmon's process-strategy matrix, 294 Interactive advertising, 385
Harris and Ogbonna, 272 Interactive digital television, 347
Heartland businesses, 185 Interactivity, 389
Hersey and Blanchard, 552 Interdependence of organisations, 243
Hierarchical structure, 253 Interest cover, 535
Hierarchy of objectives, 8 Interest yield, 538
Holding company, 226, 227 Internal development, 203
Hollow organisation structure, 240 Internal marketing, 394
Home country orientation, 170 International Standards Organisation, 341, 346,
Horizontal integration, 167 378
Human capital theory, 560 Internet, 173, 293, 343, 344
Human relations, 555, 558 Internet Protocol (IP), 346
Human resource management, 11, 104 Intervention, 179
Human resources, 39, 119 Interviews, 314
Hybrid chief executive, 267 Intranet, 101, 341, 344, 378
Hybrid strategy, 192 Intrapreneurship, 114
Hypercompetition, 66, 97, 195, 196 Investment decision-maker, 466
Hypercompetitive strategy, 197 Investment synergy, 166
Invitation to tender, 322
Icarus paradox, 575 IP address, 346
Immanuel Kant, 128 IT and, 291
Immigration, 170
Impact reduction, 324 J anis, IL, 473
Imperatives, 318 Japanese model of corporate governance, 142
Implementation, 288, 323 Job content, 555
Import substitution, 169 Job design, 554, 561
Imposed strategy, 574 Job enlargement, 555
Improved products, 187 Job enrichment, 555, 558
Inbound logistics, 104 Job losses, 271
Incentives, 385 Job rotation, 555
Independence of location, 389 Joint ventures, 177, 205
Indirect exporting, 175, 176
Individualisation, 389
Industrial market, 75, 76 K alakota and Robinson, 365
Industrial markets, 73 Kall-Kwik, 206
Industry, 25, 51 Kanban, 557
Industry life cycle, 66, 211 Key customer analysis, 81
Industry scenarios, 44 Key drivers of change, 37
Industry standard, 195 Key factor, 92
Industry structure, 389 Key performance indicators, 80
Inflation, 540 Knowledge, 39, 98
Information, 98 Knowledge management, 97
Information intensity matrix, 372 Knowledge work, 33, 559
Information systems, 11, 204 Kotler, 75
Information technology, 57 KPIs, 80
Infrastructure, 39 Kvaerner, 36
In-house development, 313
Initial implementation requirements, 319
Innovation, 66, 106, 110, 113, 203
Labour, 170
, Index 635
Latin model of corporate governance, 142 Market processes, 236
Le Shuttle, 54 Market segmentation, 75
Lead generation, 385 Market segments, 25, 83
Leader strategy, 111 Market share, 81, 182, 198
Leadership, 146, 233, 266, 575 Market strategy, 341
Leading indicators, 51 Market, 25, 73
Lean production, 556 Marketing, 11, 71, 113, 203, 333
Learning, 203, 208, 578 Marketing and sales, 104
Learning curve, 95, 176, 187 Marketing audit, 80
Learning organisation, 97, 577, 578 Marketing mix, 71
Leasing, 243 Marketing synergy, 166
Least squares regression analysis, 47, 48 Mashups, 417
Legal environment, 36 Matrix, 251
Levels of strategy, 10, 20 Matrix organisation, 228, 470
Licensing agreement, 205 Matrix structure, 228, 229, 230
Life cycle, 35, 78 Maturity, 108, 552
Life cycle analysis, 211 McDonald and Wilson, 388
Life cycle/portfolio matrix, 211 McGregor, 551
Lifestyle segmentation, 75 Measurable, 447
Lifetime costs, 95 Medium-term forecasting, 51
Limiting factor, 92 Megatrends, 363
Linear regression analysis, 45 Mendelow's matrix, 134
Linkages, 104 Mergers, 204
Loan capital, 507 Middle line, 248, 250
Loan stock, 507 Milestone, 475
Lock-in, 195 Military analogies, 65
Logical incrementalism, 575, 578 Mintzberg, H, 137, 248, 256
Long-term direction, 5 Mission, 6, 9, 146
Lotus Notes, 101 Mission statement, 7
Low price strategy, 192 Missionary organisation, 252
Luxury goods, 170 Modes of entry, 175
Lynch, 198 Modular organisation structure, 239, 241
Moral hazard, 141
Machine bureaucracy, 249 Moving averages, 50
Multi-disciplinary teams, 471
Machine cells, 557 Multi-divisional structure, 227
Macro scenarios, 43 Multinationals, 15
Macro-environment, 25 Multi-skilling, 558
Malls, 339 Mythology, 146
Management by exception, 470, 479
Management by objectives, 8
Management of change, 253 National vocational qualifications, 561
Management of relationships, 243 Natural law, 128
Management style, 146 Neo-human relations, 555
Management synergy, 166 Network Access Points, 343
Management team, 341 Network diagram, 464, 483
Managerial grid, 550 Network marketing, 394
Market attractiveness, 174 Network organisations, 243
Market convergence, 169 Networks, 270
Market development, 200 Networks of influence, 270
Market globalisation, 37 New product development, 112
Market growth rate, 182 New product strategies, 111
Market opportunity, 341 No frills strategy, 192
Market options matrix, 198 Non-cognitivism, 127
Market penetration, 199 Non-functional requirements, 318
Market position, 209 Non-substitutability, 96
Market power, 166 Norming, 472
636 Index
Not-for-profit organisations, 15 Personnel management, 560
Not-for-profit services, 51 PERT, 465
PESTEL, 25, 27
Philips, 203
Objective, 6, 9 Physical evidence, 72, 395
Observable, 447 Physical resources, 39, 92
Observation, 316 Pilot operation, 320
Office automation systems, 100 PIMS, 110, 183
Offshoring and shared servicing, 241 Place, 72
Offshoring, 241 Planning processes, 233
Ohmae 5Cs, 172 Planning, 556
One-to-one marketing, 415 Point of Presence (POP), 343
Online transaction, 386 Policies and standards of behaviour, 6
Open system, 281 Political hot boxes, 184
Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) standard, Political processes, 576
346 Political risk, 29, 175
Operability requirements, 320 Political view, 576
Operating adhocracy, 251 Politics, 270, 576
Operating core, 248, 249 Polycentrism, 171
Operating costs, 449 POPIT model, 281, 286
Operating gearing, 535 Portals, 339
Operating synergy, 166 Porter, 186
Operational CRM, 419 Porter and Millar, 371
Operational strategies, 11 Porter, M, 39, 52, 102, 186
Operations, 104 Porter's diamond, 39
Opportunities, 83, 119 Portfolio managers, 180
Options generation, 574 Position audit, 91
Ordinary shares, 505 Post-implementation reviews, 481
Organic growth, 203
Postma, P, 414
Organisation, 33
Post-project review, 480
Organisational buying behaviour, 74
Power, 270
Organisational configuration, 225
Power games, 576
Organisational culture, 146
Power structures, 270
Organisational development, 341
PR, 394
Organisational iceberg, 146
Price, 72, 392, 396
Organisational knowledge, 97
Price/Earnings ratio, 538
Organisational learning, 97
Price-based strategies, 192, 195
Outbound logistics, 104
Primary activities, 104
Output controls, 233
Primary working group, 471
Outsourcing, 95, 239, 241, 255, 298
Principles of BPR, 290
Overseas branches, 172
Process, 395
Overseas manufacture, 175, 177
Process commoditisation, 298
Overseas production, 172, 177
Process improvement, 294
Process redesign, 294
Packaged holidays, 32 Process redesign methodology, 296
Paradigm, 147, 260, 269 Process redesign pattern, 307
Parallel running, 320 Process reengineering, 294
Parental developers, 180 Process research, 112, 113
Patterns in information, 98 Processes, 72, 225
Pay Per Click advertising, 385 Procurement, 104
People, 72, 394 Product, 71, 391
Performance targets, 233 Product class, 107
Performing, 472 Product development, 200
Peripheral employees, 30 Product differentiation, 53
Permission marketing, 412 Product form, 107
Personalisation, 413 Product innovation, 66
Personality, 472 Product life cycle, 66, 107, 108, 109, 211
, Index 637
Product portfolio, 107 Ratio analysis, 530
Product positioning, 78 Ratio pyramids, 532
Product research, 112 Rayport and Jaworski, 366
Production, 11, 203 Real options, 215
Production possibility curve, 33 Realisation of the benefits of change, 288
Product-market mix, 198 Realised strategy, 570, 574
Product-market strategy, 198 Reconstruction, 261, 265
Professional bureaucracy, 249 Reduction, 479
Profit margin, 533 Redundancy payments, 56
Progress report, 475 Redundancy programmes, 271
Project, 431 Regiocentrism, 171
Project Board, 466 Regression analysis, 47
Project Budget, 463 Reinforcing cycles, 253
Project champion, 466 Reintermediation, 338, 339, 393
Project change procedure, 477 Related and supporting industries, 40
Project co-ordinators, 228 Related diversification, 167
Project Evaluation and review technique (PERT), Relationship marketing, 407, 412
465 Relationships, 225, 236
Project management, 432, 485 Relative market share, 182
Project management software, 483 Relevant costs, 523
Project manager, 466, 467 Renewable and non-renewable resources, 35
Project manager responsibilities, 467 Research and development, 11, 112, 113
Project owner, 466 Research techniques, 317
Project sponsor, 466 Resource, 97
Project stakeholders, 441, 449 Resource allocation routines, 575
Project teams, 559, 574 Resource audit, 91
Project-based structure, 231 Resource histogram, 465
Promotion, 72, 393 Resource-based strategy, 92
Promotional mix, 394 Resources, 10, 91, 431
Protocol analysis, 316 Response, 65
Protocol stack, 347 Return on capital employed, 532
Prototyping, 316 Revenue model, 341
Psychographic segmentation, 75 Revolution, 261, 265
Public policy on competition, 28 Rhine model of corporate governance, 142
Public sector portfolio matrix, 184 Ringelmann effect, 471
Public sector star, 184 Risk, 175, 214
Public sector, 15, 94, 233 Risk assessment matrix, 478
Publisher websites, 340 Risk avoidance, 324
Pull model, 368 Risk management, 478
Pure research, 112 Risk mitigation, 324
Purpose, 6 Risk reduction, 324
Push model, 367 Risk register, 478
Risks of poor corporate governance, 144
Rituals, 31, 145
Qualitative forecasting, 45 Rivalry amongst current competitors, 52, 56
Quality, 432, 555 Robustness, 96
Quality control, 468 Rollback analysis, 520
Quality improvement methods, 292 Routines, 269
Quality methods, 557 Rummler-Brache methodology, 292
Quantifiable, 447
Question marks, 183
Questionnaires, 315
Sales growth, 534
Quick ratio, 536 Sales promotion, 394
Sales support, 394
Scale economies, 53
Rao et al, 366 Scenario, 25, 43
Rarity, 96 Scenario building, 43
638 Index
Scientific Management, 554, 555, 558 Stereotypical configurations, 248
Scope creep, 475 Stock, 507
Scottish vocational qualifications, 561 Stock market ratios, 532, 538
Screening process, 175 Storming, 472
Search bots, 339 Strategic alliances, 208, 239
Search engine marketing, 385 Strategic analysis, 574
Search Engine Optimisation, 417 Strategic apex, 248, 579
Search engines, 339, 409 Strategic business units, 165
Seasonal variations, 48, 50 Strategic capability, 9, 12, 91, 95, 118, 195,
Second pass selection, 323 560
Secondary ratios, 533 Strategic change, 260, 574
Sector, 25, 51 Strategic choices, 12, 570
Segment attractiveness, 77 Strategic control, 9, 238
Segment validity, 77 Strategic control style, 238
Segmentation, 73, 407, 411 Strategic customer, 79, 83
Segmentation bases, 75 Strategic drift, 18, 575, 577
Segmentation of the industrial market, 76 Strategic gaps, 83
Segmentation variables, 75 Strategic group analysis, 70
Self contained, 225 Strategic groups, 25, 70, 83
Self-control, 233 Strategic intent, 9
Semi-closed system, 281 Strategic leadership, 266
Services, 169 Strategic management accounting, 82, 495
Set-up costs, 556 Strategic management styles, 238
Shamrock organisation, 243, 244, 248 Strategic planning, 238
Shared servicing, 242 Strategic planning process, 7
Shaw and Stone, 415 Strategic planning systems, 571
Shopping goods, 73 Strategic position, 12, 570
Simple structure, 248 Strategic project management, 435
Situation analysis, 260 Strategic space, 71
Six Is, 388 Strategies for market challengers, 210
Size, 226, 250 Strategies for market followers, 210
Skidmore and Eva, 314, 317 Strategies for market leaders, 210
SLEPT, 27 Strategies for market nichers, 210
Small businesses, 15 Strategy as design, 16, 17
SMART objectives, 8 Strategy as experience, 16, 17
Social feasibility, 310 Strategy as ideas, 16, 18
Social loafing, 471 Strategy clock, 191
Social needs, 555 Strategy into action, 13, 570
Social networking, 416 Strategy lenses, 16
Social responsibility, 131 Strategy, 4, 5, 6
Socio-demographic, 76 Strengths, 119
Software engineering, 292 Structure, 146, 225
Software installation, 320 Stuck-in-the-middle strategy, 189
Software package solution, 419 Styles of change management, 264
Software packages, 313, 317, 321 Subcultures, 32, 145
Specialisation, 558 Substitutes, 58, 83
Stages of e-commerce development, 366 Succession planning, 562
Stakeholder concept, 407 Suitability, 211, 364
Stakeholder mapping, 134 Supervision, 233
Stakeholder theory, 133 Supplier citizenship requirements, 319
Stakeholders' objectives, 131 Supplier stability requirements, 318
Stakeholders, 131, 166, 214, 267, 268 Supply chain management, 367, 372, 373, 379,
Standard cost, 510 380
Standard costing, 510 Supply chain, 367, 379
Standardisation, 250 Supply costs, 94
Stars, 183 Supply-led convergence, 51
STEEPLE, 27 Support activities, 104
, Index 639
Support staff, 248, 250 Transparent pricing, 395
Sustainability, 35 Travel agents, 340
Sustainability Ltd, 36 Trend line, 48
Sustainable competitive advantage, 95, 195 Tuckman, 472
Sustaining competitive advantage, 195 Turnaround, 267
Switching costs, 53 Turnover periods, 537
SWOT analysis, 119, 120
Symbolic processes, 269
Symbols, 269
Uncertainty, 578
Synergy, 166, 200 Undifferentiated marketing, 78
Synergy managers, 180 Unique resource, 92
System, 281 Unique resources, 92, 93
System architecture, 341, 342, 378 Universal Mobile Telephone System (UMTS),
System implementation, 320 348
Systems theory, 281 Unrealised strategy, 571
Unrelated diversification, 168
User contribution systems, 245
T acit knowledge, 97, 100 User generated content, 417
Tagging, 417 User groups, 340
Takeover, 214 User training, 320
Tangible resources, 93 Utilisation of indivisibilities, 95
Tannenbaum and Schmidt, 549 Utilitarianism, 128
Target market segments, 268
Target marketing, 78
Taylor, F, 554
Value activities, 102, 103, 369
TCP/IP protocol stack, 341, 347, 378 Value chain, 102, 197, 369
Team, 471 Value creation, 179
Team-based structure, 231 Value destruction, 180
Teambuilding, 433, 468 Value drivers, 369
Technical feasibility, 310 Value network, 370
Technical requirements, 318 Value proposition, 341
Technological environment, 32 Value system, 105
Technological innovations, 203 Value trap businesses, 185
Technologies, 333 Value-added analysis, 308
Technology development, 104 Values, 6, 146
Technostructure, 248 Variance, 510, 513
The hybrid accountant, 494 Variance analysis, 510
The value network, 105 Vertical disintegration, 373
Theory X and Theory Y, 551 Vertical integration, 167, 373
Theory Y, 551 Viral marketing, 409
Threat from substitute products, 54 Virtual and network organisational structures,
Threat of new entrants, 52 239
Threat of substitute products, 52 Virtual integration, 373
Threats, 83, 119 Virtual organisation, 245
Threshold capabilities, 93 Virtual resellers, 340
Threshold competence, 94 Virtual teams, 243
Threshold competences, 93 Virtue ethics, 129
Threshold resources, 93 Vision, 9
Time and cost constraints, 321 Visual identity, 405
Time horizon, 573 Vocabulary of strategy, 8
Time series analysis, 48
Top-down budgeting, 463 Waste minimisation schemes, 35
Total quality, 557 Weaknesses, 119
TOWS matrix, 120, 194 Web 2.0 technologies, 416
Transactional leaders, 266 Web-based communities, 416
Transference, 479 Website evaluators, 340
Transnational, 173, 248 Weirich, 120
640 Index
Weirich's TOWS matrix, 120 Work study, 554
What if? analyses, 484 Workflow systems, 291
WiFi Internet access, 348 Workshops, 316, 574
Wireless Application Protocol (WAP), 348 World Wide Web, 341, 343, 378
Wireless commerce, 347 Written questions, 315
Withdrawal, 201
, Index 641
Index
Notes
Notes
Notes
Notes
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