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Business Strategy
  • Business Strategy
  • The Five Forces
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  • The Value Chain
  • Operational Effectiveness vs. Strategy
→The Value Chain
Strategy → Business Strategy →
The Value Chain
×Business Strategy
  • The Five Forces
  • Strategic Positioning
  • The Value Chain
  • Operational Effectiveness vs. Strategy

The Value Chain

Developed by Michael Porter and used throughout the world for nearly 30 years, the value chain is a powerful tool for disaggregating a company into its strategically relevant activities in order to focus on the sources of competitive advantage, that is, the specific activities that result in higher prices or lower costs.

A company’s value chain is typically part of a larger value system that includes companies either upstream (suppliers) or downstream (distribution channels), or both. This perspective about how value is created forces managers to consider and see each activity not just as a cost, but as a step that has to add some increment of value to the finished product or service.

Key Concepts

activities

The value chain is the activities involved in delivering value to customers.
 

competitive advantage

The activities, and the overall value chain in which activities are embedded, are the basic units of competitive advantage. 
 

set of choices

Strategy is reflected in the set of choices about how the activities in the value chain are configured and linked together.
 

The Value Chain

 

Best practices & the value chain

Integrating best practices into the value chain is essential. But doing things effectively is not the same as doing things differently.

Operational Effectiveness vs. Strategy
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