Creating Profit Through Alliances - business models for collaboration E-book | Page 26

2. Alliances as strategy accelerator What competences do you have? – and need? Alliances are an important means to obtain new competences for your organisation. However, the choice to enter into an alliance should arise out of the strategy of the company. With the strategy in mind, the first question should be: what competences do you already have? And which do you still need? An internal analysis to assess your own competences should result in a list of strong and weak points. The necessary information can be derived from various sources:   In the first chapter we discussed the relationship between strategy and profitability. However, strategy can only be executed with the right resources: people, knowledge, machines, brand names or shops. In case not all resources are available for the strategy you have chosen, forging an alliance could be a way to obtain them. This chapter is about the decision to choose for a strategic collaboration. With the value engineering model, you can select which competences can best be obtained through an alliance and which not. The process of forging an alliance is summarised and to make things clearer, the definition of a partnership is introduced. The chapter closes with list of ten common forms of alliances, which will be elaborated in Chapt ers 3 and 4. 24   an analysis of your market share or sales figures; customer satisfaction surveys; but it can also be illuminating to ask your customers why they choose to purchase from you, and to ask noncustomers what you need to do to persuade them to make that choice; differences as compared to your competitors, for instance in terms of company resources, products, distribution, personnel qualifications, or the quality of your marketing; improvements that you are implementing in your company, or deteriorations as a result of personnel turnover. When identifying your strong points, there is always the risk of being insufficiently critical. The Resource Based View11 can then prove useful, by subjecting each strong point to the following questions: