IS Strategy, Management and Acquisition
Code: IS10602
AlBaha University
Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology
Department of Computer Information Systems
Program of Computer Information Systems
Level/Year: 6th Level/ 3rd Year
2
CHAPTER
The Changing Competitive
Market Environment
Introduction
3
How environment in which marketing takes place is
changing
Marketing environment can be divided into;
Competitive environment (including company, its
immediate competitors and customers)
Macro-environment (the wider social, political and
economic setting in which organizations operates
Industry vs. markets
4
Industries are collection of organizations with
technology and products in common
White good firm comprise and industry – that
make refrigerators, washing machines and so on
Markets are customer linked by their similar needs
Laundry products comprise a market – products
and services customer use to clean their clothes
A framework for macro-environmental analysis
5
Nature of change in macro-environment
Importance of understanding macro-environment is tow
fold
Market impact of change
Nature of change facing organizations is itself
changing
PEST analysis (political, economic, social, cultural and
technological)
P E S T a n a l y s i s o f t h e m a c r o -e n v i r o n me n t
6
Economic
Political Social
Technological Legal
The economic and political environment
7
The European single market and its enlargement
Single market of over 320 million consumers was
created to allow free flow of products and services
Internationalization and globalization
Foundation of OPEC, valuable raw materials
Changes in east/west relationship
Dismantling of berlin wall, liberalization of
economies, break-up of soviet union, regional
trading blocks
9
Social and cultural environment
Demographic change
‘Demographic time bomb’
The grey market
Over-60s age group make up 20% of population
The youth market
Multi-ethnic market – western societies
Changing living patterns and lifestyles
Single person households, women employment
The technological environment
12
A shortening of commercialization times of new
inventions:
Innovative marketing research companies
The internet – the global electronic communications
network
Globalization of markets
13
Increasingly becoming global market
Impact of technology
Gigantic, world-scale markets with economies
of scale
Problems for competitors that do not operate on a
global scale
Marketing strategies
15
• Global positioning
– Think globalization and focus core competencies
• The master brand
– Brand identity that links all parts of the business e.g.
Toyota, Honda
• The integrated enterprise and end-user focus
– Challenge of managing people, processes and
infrastructure to deliver value to end user
Five forces model of the
industry competition
Five forces driving cmpetition
20
Threat of new entrants
Bargaining Bargaining
Rivalry among existing power of
power of
firms in the industry buyers
suppliers
Threat of substitutes
Rivalry among existing companies
21
The rivalry is likely to be most intense where;
Competition in the industry are roughly evenly
balanced in terms of size and share
During periods of low market growth
Where exit barriers are high
Where product differentiation is low
Where fixed costs are relatively high
The threat of substitutes
23
Substitution can increase competitiveness of an
industry for no of reasons
By making existing technologies redundant
By incremental product improvement
Bargaining power of suppliers
24
Suppliers tend to have more bargaining power
where holds;
Suppliers are more concentrated than buyers
Costs of switching suppliers are higher
Supplier's offerings are highly differentiated
Bargaining power of buyers
25
Buyers tend to be more powerful in the supply chain
where the following is true
They are more concentrated than sellers
IS Strategy, Management and Acquisition
Code: IS10602
AlBaha University
Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology
Department of Computer Information Systems
Program of Computer Information Systems
Level/Year: 6th Level/ 3rd Year
2
CHAPTER
Electronic Commerce:
New Ways of Doing Business
3
Content
E-Commerce: An Overview
The E-Commerce Difference
E-Commerce for Consumers
E-Commerce Between Organizations
Objectives
4
Your investment of time and effort in this topic will result in your being
able to answer these questions:
1. What is e-commerce and how is it a part of today’s economy?
2. How does e-commerce make a difference to businesses and
consumers?
3. How does e-commerce allow businesses to create value for their
consumers?
4. How do businesses use e-commerce to enhance the products and
services that they trade with business partners, as well as to
improve their supply chain efficiency?
5
What is e-commerce?
E-commerce is the use of information systems, technologies, and
computer networks to carry out transactions in order to create or support
the creation of business value.
Note that we do not say “to buy and sell over the Internet” in our
definition;
do not want to restrict ourselves to just the Internet
want to make our definition as general as possible, so we
concentrate on transactions which we discussed in Chapter 4 and 5
and computer networks which we discussed in Chapter 2 and Field
Guide C.
E-Commerce includes all types of computer networks and all types of
transactions including electronic funds transfers and EDI over private
networks as well as retail sales and wholesale exchanges over public
networks like the Internet
Types of E-Commerce Transactions
Transaction Description Example Web sites
Business-to-consumer Online equivalent of retail www.landsend.com,
(B2C) store as well as other services www.overstock.com,
www.amazon.com
Business-to-business Electronic exchanges between www.manheim.com,
(B2B) companies www.boeing.com
Business-to- Online sales to government www.irs.gov,
government (B2G) agencies as well as online www.fedbizopps.gov,
payment of taxes App.mt.gov/bustax
Consumer-to- Electronic payment of taxes as www.irs.gov/individuals,
government (B2G) well purchasing licenses express.hsmv.state.fl.us
Consumer-to- Use of online auctions like www.ebay.com,
consumer (C2G) eBay or Yahoo! Auctions auctions.yahoo.com
6
E-Commerce and Products:
7
Physical and Electronic
Products can be divided into two primary categories:
physical and electronic.
Physical products include anything that requires an actual
shipment of a package to the buyer, eg, computer hardware.
Electronic products can be received directly over the Internet
or other computer network, eg, computer software.
E-commerce companies must have back-office elements to
handle order fulfillment and to handle returns for physical
goods,
Companies experienced in order fulfillment and returns have
tended to be successful in dealing with physical goods using
E-commerce.
The “E-Commerce Difference”
8
The use of computer networks, especially the Internet, to carry out
transactions between a variety of buyers and sellers is creating a tangible
“e-commerce difference” in our economy, especially with regard to
Technology
Competition
Strategy
Over 1 billion potential customers around the world in the marketspace due
to increasing Internet access.
Universal standards make it work the same way no matter where in the
world you might be.
E-Commerce Differences
9
Innovative uses of the Internet have produced global
competition with sellers being able to reach any potential
buyer in the world.
This is true for both the large retailers and for those selling in
niche market.
Technology has increased information density—the quality
and quantity of information about products and services.
Customers can obtain product guides, reviews, and prices
from a myriad of Web sites creating business challenges.
E-commerce and Competition
10
E-commerce is having a dramatic effect on competition between
organizations in a number of ways including:
Reducing barriers to entry
No one firm or person “owns” the entire market
Enhanced collaboration/alliances
Market niches multiply
Changed marketplace drivers (forces that make things happen in
the market, e.g., consumer preferences, number of suppliers a
business can choose from)
Business and E-commerce Strategy
11
E-commerce has changed business strategy.
A strategy is a broad-based formula for how a business is going to
compete, what its goals should be, and what plans and policies will be
needed to carry out those goals.
B2B Transactions
12
B2B transactions can be divided into two types: spot
buying and strategic sourcing.
In spot buying, purchases are made at market prices
from an unknown seller.
Companies often use spot buying to purchase
commodities, i.e., uniform in quality differing only in
price like gasoline, paper, and cleaning supplies.
In strategic sourcing, prices are set through
negotiation in a long-term relationship with a company
known to the buyer.
A company’s large-scale computer purchases often
result from strategic sourcing.
Company Centric Business Model
14
Exchange Model
15
In the exchange business model, many companies use
an exchange to buy and sell from each other through
spot-buying transactions.
IS Strategy, Management and Acquisition
Code: IS10602
AlBaha University
Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology
Department of Computer Information Systems
Program of Computer Information Systems
Level/Year: 6th Level/ 3rd Year
2
CHAPTER
Strategic Information Systems
Strategic Advantage and IT
Strategic Information System (SIS)
Definition
Systems that support or shape a business unit’s competitive
strategy
Competitive Advantage
An advantage over competitors in some measure such as cost, quality, or
speed
A difference in the Value Chain Data
Improving Core Competency
Employee productivity
Operational efficiency
Approach
Outwardly - Aiming at direct competition
Inwardly - Focused on enhancing the competitive position of the
firm
Strategic alliance
Strategic Information Systems (SISs)
Any information system--EIS, OIS, TPS, KMS--that changes the goals,
processes, products, or environmental relationships to help an organization gain
a competitive advantage or reduce a competitive disadvantage.
SISs provide strategic solutions to the 5 Business Pressures
strategic management
Strategic management
the way an organization maps or crafts the strategy of
its future operations
3 Elements
Long-range planning
Response management
Proactive innovation
The role of IT in Strategic Management
Innovative applications - Create innovative applications that
provide direct strategic advantage to organizations
Competitive weapons - IS(s) themselves are recognized as a
competitive weapon
Changes in processes - IT supports changes in business processes
that translate to strategic advantage
Links with business partners - IT links a company with its
business partners effectively and efficiently
Cost reductions - IT enables companies to reduce costs
Relationships with suppliers and customers -IT can be used
to lock in suppliers and customers, or to build in switching costs
New products -A firm can leverage its investment in IT to create
new products that are in demand in the marketplace
Competitive intelligence - by collecting and analyzing information
about products, markets, competitors, and environmental changes
Competitive Intelligence (cont.)
Overview
One of the most important aspects in developing a competitive
advantage is to acquire information on the activities and actions of
competitors
Collect information about market, technologies, and government’s
actions
Analyze and interpret the information
Such activities drive
Many business performance by The Internet
companies Increasing market is central to
monitor the knowledge supporting
Improving internal
activities of relationships
competitive
competitors Raising the quality of intelligence
strategic planning
Porter’s Competitive Forces Model
The model recognizes five major forces that could
endanger a company’s position in a given industry
5 major forces
The threat of entry of new competitors
The bargaining power of suppliers
The bargaining power of customers (buyers)
The threat of substitute products or services
The rivalry among existing firms in the industry
Use of the model
List players in each competitive force
Relate the major determinants of each competitive force
Devise a strategy
Look for supportive IT
The analysis
First Competitive Force - Competitor Analysis
What Drives them?
What are they Doing and can do?
What are their strengths & weaknesses?
Is Competition intense?
Second Competitive Force - Entry Barriers
If nothing slows entry of competitors competition will become intense.
Incumbent Reaction?
What Actions are required to build market share?
Production Process?
Third Competitive Force - Substitute Products
Products or services from another industry enter the market
Customers becoming acclimated to using substitutes
Is the substitute market growing?
Fourth & Fifth Competitive Force – Supply Chain
Suppliers/Buyers? Who controls the transaction?
Each element adds value – question who captures it?
Global Competition
Growth of Companies Operating in a Global Environment
Fully Global or Multinational Corporations
Companies that export or import
Companies facing competitions of low labor cost and high natural
resources
Companies with low cost production facilities abroad
Small companies that can now use EC to buy/sell internationally
Global dimensions along which management can globalize
Product
Markets & Placement
Promotion
Where value is added to the product
Competitive strategy
Use of non-home-country personnel - labor
Multidomestic Strategy: Zero standardization along the global
dimensions. Global Strategy: Complete standardization along the
seven global dimensions.
IS Strategy, Management and Acquisition
Code: IS10602
AlBaha University
Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology
Department of Computer Information Systems
Program of Computer Information Systems
Level/Year: 6th Level/ 3rd Year
2
CHAPTER
7&8
Value Creation
with Information Systems
Traditional Frameworks
3
Mid-1980s IS research - systematically explore and
document the role of information systems and IT beyond
automation of work and the creation of efficiencies
Result: strategic models focusing on competitive
positioning and competitive advantage
1. Industry analysis
2. Value chain analysis
3. Customer service life cycle analysis
Value Chain
4
As managers – you will analyze opportunities to use strategic IS to
create added value.
The value chain model identifies:
Primary activities
Support activities
Support Firm
Activities Infrastructure
HR
Management
Technology
development
Procurement
Inbound Operations Outbound Marketing and Service
logistics logistics sales
Primary Margin
Activities
5
Primary Activities
Those directly related to value creation
They are:
Inbound logistics
Operations
Outbound logistics
Marketing and Sales
Support Activities
6
Those not directly related to the transformation
process
They are necessary to enable it.
They are:
Firm infrastructure
HR management
Technology development
Procurement
Value Chain and Role of Information Systems
7
Managers need to identify, understand, and analyze the
activities of the firm
The objective is to enhance or transform them using
Information Systems
Marketing
& Sales
After Stay
Guest Stay Service
Procurement Production
The Customer Service Life Cycle (CSLC)
8
Objective:
To map the relationship between a firm and its customers
To identify the stages where customers:
Are unsatisfied or
Receive substandard service
Provide ideas as to how:
To improve customer service through the use of the
advanced IT
or the deployment of IT-dependent strategic
initiatives.
9
Four Phases of CSLS
Phase 1: Requirements
Establish requirements:
Customer identifies a need for a firm’s product/service
Specify:
Customer details the characteristics of product or service of
interest
10
Phase 2: Acquisition
Select a source:
The customer identifies where to acquire the product or
service from
Internet is a new source that reduces vendor’s distribution
costs
Ordering:
The customer requests the product or service
Authorize and pay for:
The customer issues payment
Acquire:
The customer begins using the product or service
Evaluate and accept:
The customer ensures that the product or service meets
specifications and the stated objectives of use
Phase 3: Ownership
11
Integrate:
The customer adds the product
or service to the existing inventory
of resources
Monitor use and behavior:
The customer ensures that the
product or service remains in
working order
Upgrade:
The customer modifies or
improves the product or service
as needed
Maintain:
The customer services the
product or service as needed
The firm can use such
opportunities to avoid
dissatisfaction and provide
outstanding service
12
Stage 4: Retirement
Transfer or dispose:
The customer will needs to transfer, resell, return, or
dispose of the product or service
Account for:
The customer needs to evaluate the experience provided
by the product or service
The customer needs to measure the costs associate with
ownership of the product or service
13
Virtual Value Chain(VVC)
Designed to map the set of Adopts the same logic as the
sequential activities that enable physical value chain
a firm to transform: VVC recognizes info as the entity
Raw data in input into being transformed (the value of
Higher value information in which is being enhanced) through
output the chain of activities
Gather Organize Select Synthesize Distribute
14
Five Activities
Gather:
Collecting and accumulating information
Organize:
Storing the gathered data in a way that makes later retrieval and
analysis simple and effective.
Select:
Identifying and extracting the needed data from the data repository
Synthesize:
Packaging information so that it can be readily used by the
intended consumer for the specific purpose to which it is directed
Distribute:
Transmitting the appropriately packaged information to its
intended user or customer.
Three Classes of Strategic Initiatives
15
Visibility:
The ability to “see through” organizational processes
previously treated as black box
Mirroring Capabilities:
The ability of transforming physical activities into
information-based ones
Efficiency
Effectiveness
Performance
New Digital Value:
Creating relationship with the customer
Increasing Customer willingness to pay
Creating new value in the form of new
information enabled products or services.
Personalization Strategy
16
Repeated interactions
Returning customers
Rewards Strategy
17
Product and service purchased frequently.
Products are fairly standardized
Difficult to tailor them to specific customer requests
18
Acquisition Strategy
Low theoretical repurchase frequency
High degree of customization
Data-Driven Strategic Initiatives
19
Identify relevant Transaction Processing Systems (TPS)
Narrow the scope of the analysis and focus on the
systems that hold relevant data
Inventory currently available data
Identify the underlying data tracked in the natural
course of business
Talk to power users
Conceptualize initiatives
Generate and brainstorm ideas
Don’t evaluate feasibility or financial viability yet