(SHORT
NOTES FROM STRATEGY TOOLS:
Strategic
Prioritization at http://www.mindtools.com)
Porter's Value Chain
Understanding how your company creates
value, and looking for ways to add more value, are critical elements in
developing a competitive strategy. A
value chain is a set of activities that an organization carries out to create
value for its customers. The way in
which value chain activities are performed determines costs and affects
profits.
Porter's Value Chain focuses on systems,
and how inputs are changed into the outputs.
Primary activities
relate directly to the physical creation, sale, maintenance and support of a
product or service. They consist of the following:
·
Inbound logistics
o the processes related to receiving, storing, and
distributing inputs internally
·
Operations
o the transformation activities that change inputs
into outputs that are sold to customers.
·
Outbound logistics
o the activities deliver product or service to your
customer
o things like collection, storage, and distribution
systems, and they may be internal or external to your organization
·
Marketing and sales
o the processes to persuade clients to purchase from
you instead of your competitors
o the benefits you offer, and how well you communicate
them, are sources of value here.
·
Service
o the activities related to maintaining the value of the
product or service to your customers, once it's been purchased.
Support activities
support the primary functions above. For
example, procurement supports operations with certain activities, but it also
supports marketing and sales with other activities.
·
Procurement (purchasing)
o includes finding vendors and negotiating best
prices.
·
Human resource management
o how well a company recruits, hires, trains,
motivates, rewards, and retains its workers.
·
Technological development
o relate to managing and processing information, as
well as protecting a company's knowledge base.
·
Infrastructure
o a company's support systems, and the functions that
allow it to maintain daily operations.
o Accounting, legal, administrative, and general
management are examples of necessary infrastructure that businesses can use to
their advantage.
Steps
to identify and understand your company's value chain
|
|
Step 1
Identify subactivities for each
primary activity
|
Direct activities
create value by themselves.
Indirect activities
allow direct activities to run smoothly.
Quality assurance
activities ensure that direct and indirect activities meet the necessary
standards.
|
Step 2
Identify subactivities for each
support activity
|
determine the subactivities that
create value within each primary activity
identify the various value-creating
subactivities in your company's infrastructure
look for direct, indirect, and quality
assurance activities
|
Step 3
Identify links
|
Find the connections between all of
the value activities
the links are key to increasing
competitive advantage from the value chain framework
|
Step 4
Look for opportunities to increase
value
|
Review each of the subactivities and
links
think about how you can change or
enhance it to maximize the value
|
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