Creating Profit Through Alliances - business models for collaboration E-book | Page 23

2. Product differentiation (Porter) and Product Leadership (Treacy & Wiersema) 3. Cost Leadership (Porter) and Operational Excellence (Treacy & Wiersema) The difference between the product differentiation strategy and product leadership - as Treacy & Wiersema emphasise - lies in not introducing a product different from the rest just once, but to structure your organisation in such a way that you can introduce a distinctive product time and again. As such, they acknowledge the fact that new products too can be copied and become obsolete. The main difference between cost leadership and operational excellence lies in the fact that with operational excellence the customer's efforts in buying, using or maintaining the product are also taken into consideration. Both Porter and Treacy & Wiersema attribute competitive advantage to having the lowest price or the lowest overall costs. Differentiation in the sense of offering a different (or the best) product may at times bring advantages, but given the speed at which products are copied, it is often not a sustainable competitive advantage. Product leadership is sustainable, provided you continue to invest in new knowledge, protect that knowledge with patents as much as possible, and work on retaining your most important product developers and product managers. Cost advantages may arise in different ways: through scale, by completing the learning curve quicker than someone else, by having the right suppliers or partners, or by having a tightly-run business. They can be significant and may form a good source of profit. The question is to what extent this type of advantage is sustainable in a world where knowledge can be shared swiftly. Scale size that, according to the Boston Consulting Group, can only be achieved by being market leader, Apart from that, a product these days should not just is also possible by collaborating, or by outsourcing be different or better, but it should have a your production process to a party that is familiar differentiation that can be communicated clearly and with that line of business. This will help you complete transparently. This means that this strategic direction the learning curve faster. The suppliers and partners must be refined further as: (continuously) having a of your competitor also want to work with you and unique product or unique service (Figure 11). vice versa, and they may even introduce innovations to you first, rather than The three strategies of The three directions of What happened in the to others. Michael Porter (1980) Treacy & Wiersema (1995) internet age? Product dif ferentiation: having a better product Product leadership: continuously introducing new products The enormous diversity of products makes it hard to stand out Figure 11. Development of differentiation on product In the event a business has a broad portfolio, the criterion is that the majority of turnover is generated by unique products or services. Having a single niche product is not enough: the remainder of your portfolio will still experience price competition. Current validity  Other economic factors also play a role: economic growth, inflation, exchange rate movements and trade restrictions may lead to sudden shifts in the cost pattern. A lot of markets experience a status quo for a number of years, only to descend into a price war later. In this day and age, cost-based strategies are therefore no longer sustainable by definition (Figure 12). (Continuously) having unique products 21