paper: 3, strategic management module: 9, strategic
TRANSCRIPT
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Management Strategic Management
Strategic Competence And Capability Analysis
Module: 9, Strategic Competence And Capability Analysis
Paper: 3, Strategic Management
Prof Alka Sharma
The Business School
University of Jammu, Jammu.
Dr. Anil Gupta Senior Assistant Professor University of Jammu, Jammu 180006
Prof YoginderVerma
Pro–Vice Chancellor
Central University of Himachal Pradesh. Kangra. H.P.
Prof. S P Bansal Vice Chancellor
Maharaja Agrasen University, Baddi
Content Writer
Co-Principal Investigator
Paper Coordinator
Principal Investigator
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ITEM DESCRIPTION OF MODULE
Subject Name MANAGEMENT
Paper Name STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
Module Name/ Title STRATEGIC COMPETENCE AND CAPABILITY
ANALYSIS
Module Id 9
Pre-requisites Basic understanding of Management and its functions
Objectives Understand the organization’s internal environment.
Keywords Internal Environment, Capability, Competency,
Organisational Appraisal
QUADRANT - I
Module 1 : Concept of Strategy
1. Learning Outcomes
2. Internal Environment Understanding
3. Strengths and Weaknesses
4. Synergy and its Effects
5. Competencies
6. Organizational Capability
7. Capability Factors
8. Strategic Advantage
9. Organisational Appraisal
10. Summary
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1. Learning Outcomes
After reading this you should be able to:
Explain the need for firms to study and understand their internal environment
Define capabilities and discuss how they are developed
Describe resources and capabilities as core competencies
Discuss the importance of identifying internal strengths and weaknesses with SWOT analysis
Distinguish elements of strategic capability in organizations: resources, competences, core
competences and dynamic capabilities.
Consider how managers can develop strategic capabilities
Define strategic advantage
Explain organizational appraisal
2. Internal Environment Understanding
Internal organizational assessment is a functional assessment of financial, human resource, information
systems, and marketing strengths and weaknesses and endeavor to recognize the present and potential
competitive advantages of the firm. Effective strategic management requires an understanding of
organizational resources and competencies as well as how each contributes to the formation of
organizational strengths and ultimately to the development of a competitive advantage.
Concentrating on the uncontrollable external environment highlights the significance of adjusting to
change, fitting organizations to the bigger environment, and understanding that the standards of
accomplishment are composed outside individual business firms. Strategic decision makers need a
systematic technique for scanning their internal organization.
By planning arrangements of strength and weaknesses and figuring out which ones are aggressively
important, they can see definitely how each competitively relevant strength and weakness has the
potential for including or subtracting value. Despite the fact that the procedure can be effortlessly
adjusted to the corporate level, our goal is to give a business level method to systematically assessing
the relationship between internal strengths and weaknesses and competitive advantage. This method
takes existing thoughts and collects and incorporates them into a four-stage choice process that can be
effectively and proficiently utilized by strategic decision makers. The prescribed methodology utilizes
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the primary and support activities in value chain analysis as the space for seeking out strengths and
weaknesses, analyses every strength and weakness regarding its capacity to make or decrease
competitive advantage, and proposes particular ways firms may accomplish a more focused position in
the market place.
Components of Internal Analysis
3. STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES
Distinguishing an association's strengths and weaknesses is troublesome in light of the fact that
attributes that show up as strengths and weaknesses, on itemized examination, may have next to zero
importance for competitive advantage or disadvantage. The list of strengths and weaknesses produced
by traditional procedures is generally minimal more than a starting impression of what a firm does well
and where it needs change. The list is usually long, not very concrete, and agreed on by only a
relatively few people. In any case, even a shallow list of conceivable strengths and weaknesses is
critical to start key deduction and to center speculation on regions where the firm can actually add or
lose value. This approach requires a survey of infrastructure, human resources, technology
development, procurement, inbound and outbound logistics, operations, marketing and sales, and
service activities, financial statements, staffing standards, information resources, organization charts,
and customer and employee surveys and interviews. The findings are then compared with industry
standards and historical trends, and judgments are made as to whether the organization's performance
represents strengths or weaknesses relative to others in the strategic group.
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SWOT
SWOT examination expects to recognize the key internal and external factors seen as imperative to
accomplishing an objective. SWOT analysis groups of data into two principle classes:
•Internal factors – the strengths and weaknesses inside to the organization
•External factors – the opportunities and threats exhibited by nature outside to the organization
SWOT outlines the key issues from the business environment and the strategic capability of an
organization that are most likely to impact on strategy development. This can likewise be valuable as a
premise against which to create strategic options and assess future course of action.
So SWOT analysis is really only useful if it is comparative – if it examines strengths, weaknesses,
opportunities and threats in relation to competitors.
Strategy building
SWOT analysis can be used effectively to build organization or personal strategy. Steps necessary to
execute strategy-oriented analysis involve: identification of internal and external factors, selection and
evaluation of the most important factors and identification of relations existing between internal and
external features.
Matching and converting
One way of utilizing SWOT is matching and converting. Matching is used to find competitive
advantage by matching the strengths to opportunities. Converting is to apply conversion strategies to
convert weaknesses or threats into strengths or opportunities. An example of conversion strategy is to
find new markets. If the threats or weaknesses cannot be converted, a company should try to minimize
or avoid them. An illustration of transformation procedure is to discover new markets. In the event that
the threats or weaknesses can't be changed over, an organization ought to attempt to minimize them.
A SWOT examination ought to focus discussion on future decisions and the degree to which an
organization is fit for supporting these methodologies.
4. SYNERGY AND ITS EFFECTS
Synergy is the creation of a whole that is greater than the simple sum of its parts. The
term synergy comes from the Greek word synergos meaning "working together. As such, when two or
more individuals or associations join their endeavors, they can achieve more together than they can
independently. They can accomplish more cooperating than they can working separated. In numerical
terms, synergy is when 2 + 2 = 5.
Negative synergies additionally exist. On the off chance that there is a negative synergy, the entire is
not exactly the entirety of its parts. At the end of the day, individuals can really achieve more by
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working alone instead of cooperating. In numerical terms, a negative synergy is when 2 + 2 = 3. A
simple case is an excessively social work group that spends too much time 'team building' and not
enough time working.
Synergy impacts
The synergy impacts are troublesome (even inconceivable) to copy by competitors and hard to
replicate by their creators on the grounds that these impacts rely on upon the blend of elements with
time-changing attributes. The synergy impacts are regularly called ""synergistic benefits", representing
the direct and implied result of the developed/adopted synergistic actions. Functional activities, such as
marketing, finance, operations, human resources and development are subsystems of an organization.
Too much emphasis on a single activity reduces synergy. Internal analysis ought to consider
organisation in totality to see the "big picture" to accomplish synergetic impacts. Units turn out to be
more profitable together than autonomously.
Synergistic impacts rise up out of:
Cost saving : Cost economics to the organization.
Elimination of duplication facilities.
Effective use of available resources.
Synergetic effects are measured in terms of effects on functional activities.
Marketing synergy : It occurs when existing ,price, place, promotion support each other.
Production synergy :It occurs when new production use existing production facilities, technological
skills and human resources capabilities.
Research and development synergy: It occurs when existing R&D facilities can be used for
development of new production.
Financial synergy: It occurs when increased net revenue can be gained for a given level of investment
or a decrease level of investment is required for a given level of earning.
The combination of organizational resources, Organizational behavior and strengths/weakness lead to
synergistic effects.
5. Competencies
The most fundamental idea is that of assets. Tangible resources are the physical assets of an
organization such as plant, people and finance. Intangible resources are non-physical assets such as
information, reputation and knowledge.
Regularly, an association's assets can be considered under the accompanying four general classes:
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● Physical resources –, for example, the machines, structures or the creation limit of the organisation.
The way of these assets, for example, the age, condition, limit and area of every asset, will decide the
usefulness of such assets.
● Financial resources – for example, capital, money, debtors and creditors, and suppliers of cash
(shareholders, brokers, and so on.).
● Human resources – including the blend (for instance, demographic profile), aptitudes and learning of
representatives and other individuals in an organization’s network.
● Intellectual resources – as an impalpable asset – incorporates licenses, brands, business systems and
customer databases. A sign of the estimation of these is that when organizations are sold, a portion of
the quality is 'goodwill'. In an information based economy scholarly capital is prone to be a noteworthy
resource of numerous associations.
Such resources are surely imperative, but what an organization does – how it utilizes and conveys these
resources – matters at any rate as much as what assets it has.
The term capabilities is utilized to mean the aptitudes and capacities by which assets are conveyed
successfully through an organization’s activities and processes. While threshold capabilities are vital,
they don't of themselves make competitive advantage or the premise of superior performance. These
are subject to an association having particular or remarkable abilities that competitors will find hard to
impersonate. This could be on the grounds that the association has one of a kind assets that
fundamentally support upper hand and that others can't emulate or acquire – a long-established brand,
for instance.
It is, in any case, more probable that an organization accomplishes competitive advantage in light of
the fact that it has distinctive, or core competences. The concept of core competences was developed
most prominently, by Gary Hamel and C.K. Prahalad. Core competences are taken to mean the
aptitudes and capacities by which assets are conveyed through an organization’s activities and
processes such as to achieve competitive advantage in ways that others can't impersonate or get.
Assembling these ideas, the outline contention is that - To survive and thrive an organization needs to
address the difficulties of the environment that it faces. Specifically it must be fit for performing
regarding the basic achievement calculates that emerge from requests and needs of its clients. The vital
capacity to do as such is subject to the assets and the abilities it has. These must reach a threshold level
in order for the organization to survive.
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6.Organizational Capability
Distinctive writers, managers and consultants use diverse terms and ideas in clarifying the significance
of organizational capability. Strategic capability can be characterized as the assets and abilities of an
association required for it to survive and flourish.
Developing strategic capabilities
There are distinctive ways in which managers may create strategic capabilities:
● Adding and evolving capabilities. Capabilities can be included, or changed so they turn out to be all
the more strengthening of results that convey against critical success factors.
● Extending capabilities. Administrators may recognize strategic capabilities in one territory of the
business, maybe client administration in one geographic specialty unit of a multinational, that are not
present in different specialty units. They might then seek to extend this throughout all the business
units. The capabilities of one part of an organization might not be easily transferred to another because
of the problems of managing change.
● Stretching capabilities. Managers may see the chance to construct new items or administrations out
of existing abilities. Without a doubt, assembling new organizations along these is the basis of related
diversification.
● Entrepreneurial bricolage. Strategic capabilities may be fabricated by misusing assets, aptitudes and
learning that have been overlooked or dismissed by others; in reality this is regularly what business
visionaries who grow new plans of action do.
● Ceasing exercises. The current activities not central to the delivery of value to customers can be
done away with, outsourced or reduced in cost.
● External capability development. There may be methods for looking so as to create abilities
remotely. For instance, managers may try to create or learn new capacities by procurement or by going
into alliance and joint ventures.
7.Capability factors
One of the greatest difficulties in building capacity models is motivating individuals to move from
utilitarian considering (the things we do) to ability considering (the capacity we need to do things). The
reason this is so troublesome is that organizations for the most part make hierarchical capacities around
abilities so they frequently look fundamentally the same. For instance, most organizations have an
advertising ability and a showcasing capacity where the vast majority of the promoting ability dwells.
For example, most organizations have marketing capability and a marketing function where most of
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the marketing capability resides. Even when marketing is distributed across different lines of business
we still think of it as a function first.
Here are five key capabilities each organization ought to have:
Leadership: Leadership is considered as an arrangement of individuals at the highest point of the
organization yet it is really an aptitude that can, and ought to, exist at each level. Leadership is the
capability to inspire and propel individuals to satisfy a mission. At the highest point of the association
authority incorporates coordinating others while at lower levels it is proficient through affecting others.
At the top of the organization leadership includes directing others while at lower levels it is
accomplished through influencing others. A company’s leadership performance has a lot to do with
how much the organization can accomplish in a given amount of time.
Collaboration: Collaboration effort is the capacity to work beneficially with others. At the low end of
execution, coordinated effort gives the capacity to successfully separate complex assignments and
disperse the parts over a gathering of individuals or organizations. At higher levels of performance
collaboration creates organizational synergy, producing a performance boost where the whole is
greater than the sum of its parts
Adaptability: Products, services, organizations, companies, and even whole industries go back and
forth instant. Adaptability is the organization’s capacity to surrender the current abilities, procedures,
and innovations that have prompted its past achievement and make new aptitudes and methodologies
that guarantee achievement tomorrow. Organizations should be versatile just to survive and highly
adaptable if they expect to thrive
Creativity: The issues we confront today are a great deal more mind boggling and time-basic than
those of the past. They frequently can't be tackled by savage constrain alone. Creativity depicts the
organization’s capacity to think distinctively and permit diverse deduction to impact every day and key
choices. At the low end of the performance curve organizations can be trapped in tradition and best
practices, unable to solve persistent problems. At the high end they are often challenged to prioritize
among numerous new ideas.
Innovation: goes past imagination to transform inventive thoughts into reality. It is the capacity to
make an interpretation of a decent idea into a convincing worth suggestion that others are willing to
support and invest in. At the point when advancement capacity is high, organizations go past
imaginative items to outline creative procedures, hierarchical structures, administration practices, and
job engagement approaches.
These five capacities pervade the whole association and each person. Practical units can be set up to go
about as focuses of perfection that support and energize the improvement of these capabilities. Each of
these abilities is fundamental for a high-performing association.
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An organization is partitioned into diverse functional areas for simplicity of comprehension and
analysis. In actuality organization capacity elements don't exist or work in isolation. Individual
capability factors within a functional area, and across different areas work in tandem, in cohesion and
combination in the internal environment of the organization.
Organization Capabilities is a net consequence of the diverse types of interaction occurring inside the
organization.
8. Strategic advantage
Strategic advantage is the most fundamental and persistent advantage that the target companies possess
over its competitors over the very long term. These advantages or disadvantages are generated by the
company’s actions.
For Example: Wal-Mart strategic advantage of interest is their low costs. Their dependably have the
most reduced costs, which puts any competitor off guard when contrasted straightforwardly with Wal-
Mart. Coca-Cola has their image name, which permits them to charge higher costs for comparable
items.
Short term advantages or disadvantages are not useful for a long-term investor. Additionally,
externally-generated advantages or disadvantages are better categories as price triggers (opportunities
or threats), because they can move the stock price over the short-term, but not the long-term.
FRAMEWORK FOR DEVELOPMENT OF STRATEGIC ADVANTAGE
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9.Organizational appraisal
The procedure of watching an organizations inward environment to distinguish the strengths and
weaknesses that may impact the organization’s capacity to accomplish objectives. A firm can exploit
its chances effectively, contingent upon its corporate qualities. It can be said that the corporate abilities
of the firm turn into the point of convergence for its execution and survival. They play a crucial role,
both in identifying the strategy and its success. Corporate abilities go beyond sales, profit and net
worth. It is concerned with the perspective and outlook of the firm.
Corporate strategy at last means a coordinating amusement between environmental opportunities and
organizational strengths to gain competitive advantage. Evaluation of organizations strengths and
weaknesses is also called Corporate Appraisal. The internal environment of an organization includes
forces that operate inside the organization with specific implications for managing organizational
performance. Internal environmental factors, unlike external environmental factors come from within.
These factors, collectively defined both trouble sports that need strengthening and the core
competencies that the firm can build.
STARTEGIC ADVANTAGE
ORGANIZATIONAL CAPABILITIES
COMPETENCIES
SYNERGETIC EFFECTS
STRENGTHS & WEAKNESSES
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOUR
ORGANIZATIONAL RESOURCES
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An organization can better investigate the amount of activity may value or contribute fundamentally to
shape a compelling procedure by methodically looking at its internal environtment.
METHODS & TECHNIQUES USED FOR ORGANIZATIONAL APPRAISAL
BCG, GE Matrix , PIMS, McKinsey 7S
Balanced Scorecard
Competitive Advantage Profile
Strategic Advantage profile
Internal Factor Analysis
10. Summary
Internal environment understanding: Internal organizational assessment is a functional
assessment of financial, human resource, information systems, and marketing strengths and
weaknesses and attempt to identify the present and potential competitive advantages of the
firm. Strategic decision makers need a systematic technique for scanning their internal
organization.
SWOT:
o internal factors – the strengths and weaknesses internal to the organization
o external factors – the opportunities and threats presented by the environment external to
the organization
SWOT analysis can be used effectively to build organization or personal strategy.
Synergy effects: A synergy is where the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. In other
words, when two or more people or organizations combine their efforts, they can accomplish
more together than they can separately.The combination of organizational resources,
Organizational behavior and strengths/weakness lead to synergistic effects.
Tangible resources: are the physical assets of an organization such as plant, labor and finance.
Intangible resources: are non-physical assets such as information, reputation and knowledge.
Competences: The term competences is used to mean the skills and abilities by which
resources are deployed effectively through an organization’s activities and processes
Organizational capability: Strategic capabilitycan be defined as the resources and competences
of an organization needed for it to survive and prosper.
Dynamic capabilities: The strategic capabilities that achieve competitive advantage in dynamic
conditions are dynamic capabilities, by which an organization builds the ability to renew and
recreate its strategic capabilitiesto meet the needs of a changing environment.
Developing strategic capabilities
o Adding and changing capabilities.
o Extending capabilities.
o Stretching capabilities.
o External capability development.
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Capability factors
o Financial Capability
o Marketing Capability
o Operations Capability
o Personnel Capability
o Information Management Capability
o General Management Capability
Here are five essential capabilities every organization should have:
Leadership, collaboration, adaptability, creativity, innovation.
Strategic advantage: Strategic advantage is the most fundamental and persistent advantage that
the target companies possess over its competitors over the very long term
Organizational appraisal: The process of observing an organizations internal environment to
identify the strengths and weaknesses that may influence the organization's ability to achieve
goals