Topic 3 - A Strategic Perspective - EDITED
Topic 3 - A Strategic Perspective - EDITED
Topic 3 - A Strategic Perspective - EDITED
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
PLANNING (ITS 582)
3.0 STRATEGIC PERSPECTIVES
Information Systems (IS) and Information Technology (IT)
Information Technology (IT) Strategy
Information System (IS) Strategy
Corporate Strategy
Business Strategy
Strategic alignment
• Strategic Planning
– Long-range goals and policies for resource allocation
– E.g... What new products should be offered
defined
Semi-structured
Has some structured aspect
Unstructured
All phases of decision making process are unstructured
What is IT Strategy?
IT Strategy
sets direction for IT function in an organization
provides the infrastructure, services and is activity based and is more focused
on the technology.
addresses provision of IT capabilities and resources (HW, SW, Telco) and
services (operations, systems development, and support).
helps create shareholder value - it helps maximize the return on IT investments.
Information Technology Strategies
IT strategy should covers current planned and future plan to ensure both the
existing investment in technology is maintained and fully exploited, and new
beneficial capabilities are provided
It provides support for the business directions and helps achieve the
Business Strategy
Organizational IS Strategy
Strategy
Customer demands comprise the wants and needs of the individuals and
companies who purchase the products and services available in the marketplace.
Organizational capabilities include the skills and experience that give the
corporation a currency that can add value in the marketplace.
Information System Strategies :
Business Strategy (cont.)
Cost Leadership :
The organization aims to be the lowest-cost producer in the
marketplace.
The organization enjoys above-average performance by
minimizing costs.
Only one cost leader exists within an industry.
Example : Through mass distribution, economies of scale,
and IS to generate operating efficiencies, Wal-Mart
epitomizes the cost-leadership strategy.
Information System Strategies :
Business Strategy (cont.)
Porter’s Generic Strategies Model
Differentiation :
The organization qualifies its product or service to appear unique in the
marketplace and identifies which qualitative dimensions are most important to its
customers, and then finds ways to add value along one or more of those
dimensions.
In order for this strategy to work, the price charged customers by the differentiator
must seem fair relative to the price charged by competitors.
E.g. : Progressive Insurance is able to differentiate itself from other automobile
insurance companies by breaking out of the industry mold. Its representatives are
available 24/7 (i.e., 24 hours a day, 7 days a week) to respond to accident claims.
They arrive at an accident scene shortly after the accident with powerful laptops,
intelligent software, and the authority to settle claims on the spot. This strategy
spurred Progressive’s growth and widened its profit margins
Information System Strategies :
Business Strategy (cont.)
Porter’s Generic Strategies Model
Focus :
Allows an organization to limit its scope to a narrower segment of the market and
tailor its offerings to that group of customers.
This strategy has two variants:
cost focus, in which the organization seeks a cost advantage within its segment,
differentiation focus, in which it seeks to distinguish its products or services within
the segment.
This strategy allows the organization to achieve a local competitive advantage,
even if it does not achieve competitive advantage in the marketplace overall.
Example :
Marriott International – The check-in kiosks
Ritz-Carlton – use CRM known as CLASS
Information System Strategies :
Business Strategy (cont.)
Information System Strategies :
Organizational Strategy
Organizational IS Strategy
Strategy
END OF TOPIC 3 - PART I
TO BE CONTINUED ..
Organizational Strategy
Corporate Strategy
Business Strategy
Functional
Strategy
Provides the framework for the business style that reflects the business
strategy and, in turn, does so much to influence the business strategy,
particularly the extent of outsourcing, diversification, scale and scope
© Sy. Ruzaini S. A., UiTM
Corporate Strategy
•Concern with:
Reach: These are the problems that are corporate responsibilities; they may
include identifying the overall goals of the corporation, the types of businesses
in which the corporations should be involved and the way in which the business
will be integrated and managed.
Competitive Contact: This shows where in the corporation competition is to
be localized.
Managing business activities and business interrelationships: In this
stage, the corporate strategy seeks to develop synergies by dividing and
coordinating employees and other resources from corner to corner business
units, finding financial resources across business units, and using business
units to balance other corporate business activities.
Management Practice: In this stage, the corporations make a decision how
business units are to be governed - through straight corporate interventions
(centralization) or through more or less autonomous governance
(decentralization) that relies on persuasion and rewards.
1. Single-business.
2. Related diversification.
3. Unrelated diversification.
This calls for a organization to rely on only one single business, product, or
service for all its revenue.
Advantage : The firm can concentrate all its resources and expertise on that
one product or service.
Related Diversification :
The most common corporate strategy calls for the firm to operate in several different
businesses, industries, or markets at the same time. However, the operations are
related to each other in some fundamental way. Most of the time, this type of strategy
permits the organization to leverage a distinctive competence in one market in order
to strengthen its competitiveness in others. The goal of related diversification and the
basic connection linking different operations often are defined in the firm’s mission
statement.
Unrelated Diversification :
Example : Hewlett-Packard and Texas Instruments are two firms that compete in various segments of
the electronics industry, that employ generic strategies in many of their product lines.
Marketing Industrial and some consumer markets Consumer and industrial markets
Strategy High-tech, custom products High-volume, low-cost standard products
Premium price, lag experience curve Low price,push experience curve
Promote quality/ realiability/ service Promote availability/ price
Production Small plants Large plants for large volume
Strategy Small batch / job-shop technology Mass production technology with
Build capacity with demand automation and robotics
Build capacity ahead od demand
R&D First to market with new products Improve existing products in proven
Strategy Primarily product R&D markets
Features and quality driven Both product and process R&D
Design or product performance Cost driven
Design for cost reduction
© Sy. Ruzaini S. A., UiTM
Business Strategy
At the business unit level, the strategic issues are less about the
coordination of operating units and more about developing and sustaining a
competitive advantage for the goods and services that are produced. At the
business level, the strategy formulation phase deals with:
Deals with the single SBU and how, by coping with its industry environment,
it can successfully contribute to the corporate strategy
It should have an identifiable and definable product range, market segment
and competitor set.
A useful way of classifying business strategies (Porter, 1985):
Cost leadership or differentiation of products
May encompass an entire market or be focused upon a particular
segment of it
Each SBU will have its own coherent business strategy.
The functional level of the organization is the level of the operating divisions
and department.
The strategic issues at the functional level are related to business
processes and the value chain.
Functional level strategies in marketing, finance, operations, human
resources and R&D involve the development and coordination of resources
through which business unit level strategies can be executed efficiently and
effectively.