"IT'S GREAT TO BE HAPPY, BUT IT'S EVEN BETTER TO BRING HAPPINESS TO OTHERS"

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Wednesday, 16 December 2015

CHAPTER 2 - IDENTIFYING COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE

What is competitive advantage ?
  • a product or service that an organization's customers place a greater value on than similar offerings from a competitor.
  • unfortunately, CA is temporary because competitors keep duplicate the strategy.
  • then, the company should start the new competitive advantage.
Michael Porter's Five Forces Model

Buyer Power
  • high - when buyers have many choices of whom to buy.
  • low  - when their choices are few.
  • to reduce buyer power (and create competitive advantage), an organization must make it more attractive to buy from the company not from the competitors.
  • best practices of IT-based - loyalty program in travel industry (e.g. rewards on free airline tickets or hotel stays).
Supplier Power
  • high - when buyers have few choices of whom to buy from.
  • low - when their choices are many. (best practices of IT to create competitive advantage, e.g. B2B marketplace - private exchange allow a single buyer to posts it needs and then open the bidding to any supplier  who would care to bid. Reverse auction is an auction format in which increasingly lower bids).
Threat of Substitute Products & Services
  • high - when there are many alternatives to a product or service.
  • low - when there are few alternatives from which to choose.
  • ideally, an organization would like to be on a market in which there are few substitute of their product or services.
Threat of New Entrants
  • high - when it is easy for new competitors to enter a market.
  • low - when there are significant entry barriers to entering a market.
  • entry barriers is a product or service feature that customers have come to expert from organization to compete and survive.
  • best practices of IT - e.g. new bank must offers online paying bills, acc monitoring to compete.
Rivalry among existence competitors
  • high - when competition is fierce in a market.
  • low - when competition is more complacent.
  • best practices of IT - wal-mart and its suppliers using IT-enabled system for communication and track product at aisles by effective tagging system.
The Three Generics Strategies

Cost Leadership
  • becoming a low-cost producer in the industry allows the company to lower prices to customers.
  • competitors with higher costs cannot afford to compete with the low-cost leader on price.
Differentiation
  • create competitive advantage by distinguishing their products on one or more features important to their customers.
  • unique features or benefits may justify price differences and stimulate demand.
  • ex : i-care by Proton.
Focused Strategy
  • target to a niche market
  • concentrates on either cost leadership or differentiation.




The Value Chains - Targeting Business Processes
  • supply chain - a chain or series of processes that adds value to product & service for customer.
  • add value to its products and services that support a profit margin for the firm.

Friday, 11 December 2015



IT is everywhere in business. Understanding IT provides great insight to anyone learning about business.

Information Technology’s Impact on Business Operation.  Organization typically operate by functional areas or functional silos.   Functional areas are interdepends


Information Technology Basics

  • -          Information technology (IT) – A field concerned with the use of technology in managing and processing information. IT is an important enabler of business success and innovation
  • -          Management information system (MIS) – A general name for the business function and academic discipline covering the application of people, technologies and procedures to solve business problems. MIS is a business function, similar to Accounting, Finance, Operations and Human Resources.


-          When beginning to learn about information technology it is important to understand
·         Data, information and business intelligence
·         IT resources
·         IT cultures

-          Data, information and business intelligence
·         Data is a raw facts that describe the characteristics of an event
·         Information is a data converted into a meaningful and useful context.
·         Business intelligence is an applications and technologies that are used to support decision making efforts.

-          IT Resources
·         People use
·         Information technology to work with
·         Information

-          IT Cultures
·         Organizational information cultures include;


  • Information-Functional Culture – Employees use information as a means of exercising influence or power over others. For example, a manager in sales refuses to share information with marketing. This causes marketing to need the sales manager’s input each time a new sales manager’s input each time a new sales strategy is developed.
  • Information-Inquiring Culture – Employees across departments search for information to better understand the future and align themselves with current trends and new directions.
  • Information-Discovery Culture – Employees across departments are open to new insight about crisis and radical changes and seek ways to create competitive advantages.
  • Information-Sharing Culture – Employees across departments trust each other to use information (especially about problems and failures) to improve performance.


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