What is a set of firms emphasizing similar strategic dimensions and using a similar strategy?

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Glossary
Chapter 2
Competitor intelligence Competitor intelligence is the set of data and information the firm gathers to better understand and better anticipate competitors’ objectives, strategies, assumptions, and capabilities.
Complementors Complementors are the network of companies that sell complementary goods or services or are compatible with the focal firm’s own product or service.
Demographic segment The demographic segment is concerned with a population’s size, age structure, geographic distribution, ethnic mix and income distribution.
Economic environment The economic environment refers to the nature and direction of the economy in which a firm competes or may compete.
General environment The general environment is composed of dimensions in the broader society that influence an industry and the firms within it.
Global segment The global segment includes relevant new global markets, existing markets that are changing, important international political events, and critical cultural and institutional characteristics of global markets.
Industry An industry is a group of firms producing products that are close substitutes.
Industry environment The industry environment is the set of factors that directly influences a firm and its competitive actions and competitive responses: the threat of new entrants, the power of suppliers, the power of buyers, the threat of product substitutes and the intensity of rivalry among competitors.
Opportunity An opportunity is a condition in the general environment that, if exploited, helps a company achieve strategic competitiveness.
Physical environment segment The physical environment segment refers to potential and actual changes in the physical environment and business practices that are intended to positively respond to and deal with those changes.
Political/legal segment The political/legal segment is the arena in which organizations and interest groups compete for attention, resources, and a voice in overseeing the body of laws and regulations guiding the interactions among nations as well as between firms and various local governmental agencies.
Socio-cultural segment The sociocultural segment is concerned with a society’s attitudes and cultural values.
Strategic group A strategic group is a set of firms emphasizing similar strategic dimensions to use a similar strategy.
Technological segment The technological segment includes the institutions and activities involved with creating new knowledge and translating that knowledge into new outputs, products, processes, and materials.
Threat A threat is a condition in the general environment that may hinder a company’s efforts to achieve strategic competitiveness.
What is a set of firms emphasizing similar strategic dimensions and using a similar strategy?

Chapter 3: Evaluating the External Environment

  1. Understand what strategic groups are.
  2. Learn three ways that analyzing strategic groups is useful to organizations.

The analysis of the  in an industry can offer important insights to executives. Strategic groups are sets of firms that follow similar strategies (Hunt, 1972; Short et al., 2007). More specifically, a strategic group consists of a set of industry competitors that have similar characteristics to one another but differ in important ways from the members of other groups (Figure 3.25 “Strategic Groups”).

What is a set of firms emphasizing similar strategic dimensions and using a similar strategy?
Figure 3.25 Strategic Groups [Image description]

Understanding the nature of strategic groups within an industry is important for at least three reasons. First, emphasizing the members of a firm’s group is helpful because these firms are usually its closest rivals. When assessing their firms’ performance and considering strategic moves, the other members of a group are often the best referents for executives to consider. In some cases, one or more strategic groups in the industry are irrelevant. Subway, for example, does not need to worry about competing for customers with the likes of The Keg and Earls. This is partly because firms confront : factors that make it unlikely or illogical for a firm to change strategic groups over time. Because Subway is unlikely to offer a gourmet steak as well as the experience offered by fine-dining outlets, they can largely ignore the actions taken by firms in that restaurant industry strategic group.

Second, the strategies pursued by firms within other strategic groups highlight alternative paths to success. A firm may be able to borrow an idea from another strategic group and use this idea to improve its situation. During the recession of the late 2000s, mid-quality restaurant chains such as Mr. Mikes and Swiss Chalet used a variety of promotions such as coupons and meal combinations to try to attract budget-conscious consumers. Firms such as Subway and Quiznos that already offered low-priced meals still had an inherent price advantage over Mr. Mike’s and Swiss Chalet;  however, there is no tipping expected at the former restaurants, but there is at the latter. It must have been tempting to executives at Mr. Mike’s and Swiss Chalet to try to expand their appeal to budget-conscious consumers by experimenting with operating formats that do not involve tipping.

Third, the analysis of strategic groups can reveal gaps in the industry that represent untapped opportunities. Within the restaurant business, for example, it appears that no national chain offers both very high-quality meals and a very diverse menu. Perhaps the firm that comes the closest to filling this niche is the Cheesecake Factory, a chain of approximately 150 outlets in the United States and one location in Canada (Toronto), whose menu includes more than 200 lunch, dinner, and dessert items. The Keg already offers very high quality food; its executives could consider moving the firm toward offering a very diverse menu as well. This would involve considerable risk, however. Perhaps no national chain offers both very high quality meals and a very diverse menu because doing so is extremely difficult. Nevertheless, examining the strategic groups in an industry with an eye toward untapped opportunities offers executives a chance to consider novel ideas.

Examination of the strategic groups in an industry provides a firm’s executives with a better understanding of their closest rivals, reveals alternative paths to success, and highlights untapped opportunities.

  1. What other colleges and universities are probably in your school’s strategic group?
  2. From what other groups of colleges and universities could your school learn? What specific ideas could be borrowed from these groups?

References

Hunt, M. S. (1972). Competition in the major home appliance industry 1960–1970. (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). Harvard University, Cambridge, MA

Short, J. C., Ketchen, D. J., Palmer, T., & Hult, G. T. (2007). Firm, strategic group, and industry influences on performance. Strategic Management Journal, 28, 147–167.

Image descriptions

Figure 3.25 image description: Strategic Groups.

Strategic groups are sets of firms that follow similar strategies. Understanding the nature of strategic groups within an industry is important in part because the members of a firm’s group are usually that firm’s closest rivals. Below we illustrate several strategic groups in the restaurant industry

The perceived quality and breadth of menu of different restaurants
Breadth of MenuLow Perceived QualityMedium Perceived QualityHigh Perceived Quality
SmallKFC, New York Fries, Beaver Tails Tim Horton’s, Subway, Quiznos n/a
MediumBurger King, White Spot, McDonald’s n/a The Keg, Earle’s, Montana’s Cookhouse
LargeDenny’s, iHop Swiss Chalet, Mr. Mikes, East Side Mario’s n/a

[Return to Figure 3.25]

Which of the following describe the set of businesses that follow similar strategies in the same industry?

Groups of businesses that follow similar strategies in the same industry are called strategic groups, and it is important that a manager know the other firms in their strategic group.

What is strategic group in strategic management?

A strategic group is a concept used in strategic management that groups companies within an industry that have similar business models or similar combinations of strategies.

What are examples of strategic groups?

A simple example of a strategic group would be the fast-food restaurant chains in the foodservice industry. Other strategic groups in this industry include fine-dining restaurants, cafes, and family restaurants among many others.

Which of the following is this set of factors that directly influences a firm and its competitive actions and responses?

the set of factors that directly influences a firm and its competitive actions and competitive responses: the threat of new entrants, the power of suppliers, the power of buyers, the threat of product substitutes, and the intensity of rivalry among competitors.