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"Crafting Competitive Strategy"
By Alan Procter
Former Research Director, MacMillan Bloedel
October 25, 2002
at 11:00 a.m. in the Kress Auditorium at IPST
Abstract:
The old-fashioned skills of cautious accounting, attention to
detail and above all, a strong sense of strategy are the new
business priorities. Modern business tools will now be more
important if the emerging new breed of analytical business leaders
is to prosper in the harsher world of a slow recovery. According to
the classic thinking of Michael Porter at the Harvard Business
School, crafting a competitive strategy is about establishing
differences, creating new strategic positions and making
trade-offs. Strategic positioning means performing different
activities from rivals’ or performing similar activities in
different ways.
Furthermore, the unique linkage of such strategic positions
throughout an organization creates a strong locked-in
“strategy blueprint” that is difficult to copy. A
unique software-supported business tool will be described that
facilitates the creation of innovative strategy blueprints. Dell,
Southwest Airlines, Ikea and Starbucks are well-known examples of
“best in class” for successful strategic positioning in
cost-minimizing business sectors. Is there an example from the Pulp
and Paper Sector? “Strategies for taking the hill won’t
necessarily hold it” said Amar Bhide, Business Professor at
Columbia.
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Lecture page
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