1. IBM's decision to obtain computer chips and software from suppliers rather than make them itself allowed suppliers to develop their business based on IBM's reputation. However, IBM made a mistake by allowing suppliers to also sell to its competitors.
2. Changes in computer technology, such as smaller computers gaining power, presented major problems for IBM in the 1980s that may have been predictable given the evolutionary nature of changes. This highlights the difficulty of long-term strategic planning in fast-changing environments.
3. Suppliers' decisions to invest in branding proved vital as it shifted value from assemblers like IBM to suppliers of exclusive branded components like Intel and Microsoft, providing competitive advantages through lock-in.
1. IBM's decision to obtain computer chips and software from suppliers rather than make them itself allowed suppliers to develop their business based on IBM's reputation. However, IBM made a mistake by allowing suppliers to also sell to its competitors.
2. Changes in computer technology, such as smaller computers gaining power, presented major problems for IBM in the 1980s that may have been predictable given the evolutionary nature of changes. This highlights the difficulty of long-term strategic planning in fast-changing environments.
3. Suppliers' decisions to invest in branding proved vital as it shifted value from assemblers like IBM to suppliers of exclusive branded components like Intel and Microsoft, providing competitive advantages through lock-in.
1. IBM's decision to obtain computer chips and software from suppliers rather than make them itself allowed suppliers to develop their business based on IBM's reputation. However, IBM made a mistake by allowing suppliers to also sell to its competitors.
2. Changes in computer technology, such as smaller computers gaining power, presented major problems for IBM in the 1980s that may have been predictable given the evolutionary nature of changes. This highlights the difficulty of long-term strategic planning in fast-changing environments.
3. Suppliers' decisions to invest in branding proved vital as it shifted value from assemblers like IBM to suppliers of exclusive branded components like Intel and Microsoft, providing competitive advantages through lock-in.
1. IBM's decision to obtain computer chips and software from suppliers rather than make them itself allowed suppliers to develop their business based on IBM's reputation. However, IBM made a mistake by allowing suppliers to also sell to its competitors.
2. Changes in computer technology, such as smaller computers gaining power, presented major problems for IBM in the 1980s that may have been predictable given the evolutionary nature of changes. This highlights the difficulty of long-term strategic planning in fast-changing environments.
3. Suppliers' decisions to invest in branding proved vital as it shifted value from assemblers like IBM to suppliers of exclusive branded components like Intel and Microsoft, providing competitive advantages through lock-in.
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What was the strategic significance of IBM’s decision to
obtain supplies of computer chips and software from other
manufacturers rather than make them itself? This allowed the suppliers to develop their business on the basis of the reputation of IBM. The mistake made by IBM was not to buy in supplies, but to allow their suppliers to sell the same goods to competitors of IBM. As IBM established the market, it was developing a common standard – the IBM compatible computer – that was ready-made for its suppliers to use as the basis of developing their business. 2. How big a part did the change in computer technology play in IBM’s problems? Could this have been predicted by IBM? What is the significance of your answer for corporate strategy? Computer technology was one of the major problems that IBM faced during the 1980s: small computers were becoming more powerful and more easily able to compete with at least some of its products. Technology may be difficult to predict where it is revolutionary. However, in the case of IBM, it was essentially evolutionary so might have been predicted. Where something such as technology cannot be predicted, it makes it difficult to develop rigid corporate strategy for many years ahead. Prescriptive approaches may be impossible in fast changing environments. 3. How important was the decision of IBM’s suppliers to spend marketing funds on branding their products? What strategic significance does this have for the late 1990s in computer markets? It has proved vital: value added has shifted from the assembler of computer components such as IBM to the supplier of exclusive, branded supplies such as Intel and Microsoft. Branding has been a method of delivering that exclusivity: the Pentium chip and Windows 95 have locked customers into Intel and Microsoft respectively and provided real competitive advantage. 4. Can you think of any reason why companies like Hewlett- Packard continued to make profits during this period? They had differentiated products that could not be easily imitated by their competitors. They were also more innovative and used this to reduce costs, increase value for money for their customers and provide genuinely new products. Importantly, Hewlett-Packard were more adaptable as a company. The company was able to change with the market more easily than IBM. Moreover, H-P was less arrogant than IBM and more willing to work to improve its products as a result. It is important to realise that IBM’s problems were partly the result of its culture and style, just as much as technology and marketing. 5. Use the five key elements of strategy to evaluate IBM’s corporate strategy. What conclusions do you draw for these and added value? Sustainability: the company’s strategy was only partially sustainable over time. It worked well at the mainframe level but not for smaller computers. Distinctiveness: the small computers had no distinctive features beyond being branded and sold by the largest computer company in the world. This gave them some advantages but they were not technically as advanced nor as cheap to produce as their competitors. Competitive advantage: this was in decline over the years. Exploitation of linkages between the organisation and its environment: IBM never really exploited the linkages that it undoubtedly had in earlier years with, for example, its suppliers and its customers. It allowed others to muscle in and take share. Vision: the IBM vision was very clear in earlier years but seemed to be one of catching up during the 1980s. By contrast, other companies had a much clearer sense of their direction and purpose. Strengths 1. First mover in cloud computing solutions for enterprises. IBM has moved to cloud computing in 2007 with its “Blue Cloud” program, which was designed to offer hardware and software solutions for enterprises that were willing to have their own private cloud. Since then the company has become the first reference point for enterprise cloud solutions in the cloud market. Unlike many other companies in the cloud market, the company has been offering the broadest range of software and services in one place. 2. Brand reputation. IBM has a significant market reach all over the world in all of the markets it operates. Company has also been awarded as #1 company for leaders; #1 green company worldwide; #2 most respected company; #5 most admired company; and has received many more awards This has resulted in a very positive and strong brand reputation. According to Interbrand, IBM brand was value at $75.5 billion in 2012 and was the 3rd most valuable brand in the world. Brand reputation significantly influences consumers’ decision to buy the product and IBM clearly benefits from that. 3. Diversified business. IBM segments its business into 4 divisions: Hardware, Software, Services and Financing. In 2000, the company was earning 35% of its income from hardware sales, where profit margins are low and future market growth is slow or negative. IBM has diversified from hardware to software business, which is expected to generate 50% of company’s income by 2015. This shift will result in lower impact of the negative trends in hardware market and higher profitability from sales of software and services. The company has also diversified geographically and now earns more than 60% of its income from outside US. IBM heavily invests into China and the rest of Asia to increase the geographic diversity of its income. 4. Strong competency in acquisitions. Over the last 13 years, from 2000 to 2012, IBM has acquired more than 140 companies in strategic areas including analytics, cloud, security and commerce. This has led to substantial growth in software and consulting offerings from IBM and established the company as a leading software and consulting provider for enterprises. IBM also expects to invest $20 billion over the next two years on acquisitions to strengthen its product portfolio even further. Company’s competence in successful acquisitions is the key advantage other companies, like HP, currently lack. 5. Integration of products and services. IBM offers hardware (servers, storages), software (enterprise content, service and information management) and services (cloud, software, data centers) all related to each other, which enable the company to provide one stop solution for enterprises and integrated product for the customers. Weaknesses 1. Expensive service and software solutions. IBM offers expensive integrated custom solutions for enterprises that want to build reliable IT infrastructure in their companies. This often involves buying hardware, software and services from IBM at the same time, which is very costly expenditure for any size of enterprise. Such an infrastructure investment is often postponed in times of uncertainty or slowing economy growth. This weakness was evident over the last few years, when IBM struggled to cross sell its products and saw decreasing revenues in the same period. 2. Focus mainly on customized products. IBM focuses on providing customized solutions for large and medium enterprises. This is a very profitable business model but captures only a small share of the market. The rest of the market is often satisfied with off-the- shelf software products and services. The lack of these products makes IBM less approachable by the rest of the market, where competitors like Oracle and SalesForce thrive. Opportunities 1. Expand services and software divisions. IBM provides various services (cloud, security and infrastructure) and enterprise solutions (servers, networking and storage), which are the most profitable IBM’s businesses at the moment. The company should focus on growing these divisions as they promise better growth opportunities and higher profit margins. 2. Increasing demand of cloud based services. The cloud computing market is expected to grow by an average of 22% each year from 2011 to 2020. By 2020, the market is expected to reach $240 billion value. Currently, IBM is offering many services related with cloud computing and is well positioned to benefit from the growing market. Threats 1. Increasing competition in cloud computing market. Cloud computing market is new and lucrative market that has a lot of growth potential. The possible profits attract many newcomers and startups and threaten to take the market share from the incumbent IBM. 2. Slowing growth of world economy. As mentioned earlier, IBM sales heavily depend on the enterprises’ willingness to make huge investments into IT infrastructure, which is far from the first option during the times of slow economy growth. While this scenario is not forecasted for the whole world during 2013 and 2014, some regions, like Europe, will still struggle to grow.