- Strategic Management - Process
- Strategic Management - Types
- Strategic Management - Introduction
- Strategic Management - Home
Strategic Leadership
The External Environment
- Mapping Strategic Groups
- Judging the Industry
- Analyzing the External Environment
- Organization & Environment
Organizational Resources
- Company Assets: SWOT Analysis
- Other Performance Measures
- The Value Chain
- Intellectual Property
- The Resource Based Theory
Business Level Strategies
Aiding Business Level Strategies
International Marketing Strategies
- International Markets - Competition
- International Strategies - Types
- Drivers of Success and Failure
- Pros & Cons
Cooperative Level Strategies
- Portfolio Planning
- Downsizing Strategies
- Diversification Strategies
- Vertical Integration Strategies
- Concentration Strategies
Strategy and Organizational Design
- Legal Forms of Business
- Organizational Control Systems
- Creating an Organizational Structure
- Organizational Structure
Strategic HR Management
Strategic Management Resources
- Strategic Management - Discussion
- Strategic Management - Resources
- Strategic Management - Quick Guide
Selected Reading
- Who is Who
- Computer Glossary
- HR Interview Questions
- Effective Resume Writing
- Questions and Answers
- UPSC IAS Exams Notes
Strategic Management - Cost Leadership
Cost leadership, a concept by Michael Porter, illustrates a method to affirm and manage the competitive advantage. Cost leadership, basically, refers to the lowest cost of operation in the industry.
The cost leadership is a result of company efficiency, size, scale, scope and accumulated experience (the learning curve). A cost leadership strategy aims to utipze scale of production, well defined scope and other economies such as a good purchasing strategy, producing highly standardized products, and using modern and current technologies.
In the recent years, an increasing number of companies have chosen a strategic mix to attain market leadership. These mixed patterns consider simultaneous effects of cost leadership, superior customer service and product leadership.
Price leadership is a different concept. A company may become lowest cost producer, yet not the cost leader. A company can have a higher than average profitabipty in case of price leadership. The cost leaders do not compete only on price and are very effective in competition, having a low cost structure and management.
Examples
Ikea − The Swedish company, Ikea, has revolutionized the furniture industry. Ikea sources its products in low-wage countries and offers basic level of service. Ikea does not assemble or depver furniture. While this is a bit more complex than traditional retailers, it allows Ikea to offer lower prices and attain cost leadership.
Wal-Mart − Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. has a strategy of everyday low prices to attract customers. The idea of everyday low prices is to consistently offer products at an attractively cheaper rate than competitors, rather than depending only on sales. Wal-Mart has a large scale and efficient supply chain. They also source products from cheaper yet better domestic supppers and from the low-wage foreign markets. Therefore, the company can sell their items at low prices, profiting off thin margins but high volume.
McDonald s − The restaurant industry runs on low margins where it is difficult to compete with a cost leadership marketing strategy. McDonald s has a strategy of offering basic fast-food meals at low prices. They have a spanision of labor that allows it to recruit and train freshers rather than trained cooks. It also repes on few managers. These savings in various processes allow the company to offer its foods for bargain prices. McDonald’s, the global restaurant chain, uses a distinctive hiring strategy to be the cost leader.
Southwest Airpnes − The airpne industry profits come from charging high ticket prices. Southwest Airpnes challenged this concept by marketing itself as a cost leader. Southwest offers the lowest prices possible by being more efficient in its operations. They minimize time planes spend on the tarmac in order to keep them flying and to keep profits up. They also offer less thrills to customers, but is able to pass the cost savings.
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