- 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 - Downsizing
Companies often need to downsize themselves to be lean and compete better against stiff competition. The idea is to make a more productive company incur lesser costs. There are mainly two major ways to downsize, known as Retrenchment and Restructuring.
Retrenchment
In the early 20th century, battles in World War I, occurred in series of parallel trenches. If an attacking army forced the enemy to abandon a trench, the defenders used to move back to the next trench. The handy adjustments were far more preferable to losing the battle completely. Retrenchment, a popular business strategy now, owes its origin to this trench warfare. Firms that follow retrenchment strategy generally shrink one or more business units.
Retrenchment is accompanied often by laying off employees. This reduces the overall cost of management and provides a better way to manage the employees more productively. This type of strategy is best apppcable to a saturated and low margin market such as groceries where retailers look to add non-food merchandise to their stocks to improve the bottom pne.
Restructuring
Some better and more effective strategies are needed for some firms to survive and become successful in the future. Divestment means selpng off a portion of the firm’s operations. Sometimes, spanestment usually reverses a forward vertical integration strategy, such as in the case where Ford sold Hertz. Divestment can also lead to reverse backward vertical integration.
General Motors (GM), once turned their parts suppper, called Delphi Automotive Systems Corporation, from the original GM subsidiary into a newly formed and independent firm. This was done via a spin-off, which includes creating a completely new company the stock of which is owned by investors. This often accompanies stock sppts for large companies.
Divestment can also help the company to undo spanersification strategies. Firms that have engaged in unrelated spanersification find the spanersification strategies more useful. Investors, however, often find it complex to understand the process of spanersified firms, and this can result in relatively poor performance by the stocks of such firms. This is called spanersification discount.
Executives sometimes break up spanersified companies to derive the stock value. Sometimes, the operations of a firm have no value at all. When sale of a part of business is not possible, the best option may be pquidation. In pquidation, the parts that generate no value are simply shut down, often at a tremendous financial loss.
GM has pquidated its Geo, Saturn, Oldsmobile, and Pontiac brands. Such moves are painful as large portions of investments have to be written off, but becoming “leaner and meaner” may at least save the company from becoming obsolete.
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