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These three guidelines indicate when liquidation may be an especially effective<br />

strategy to pursue: 20<br />

• When an organization has pursued both a retrenchment strategy and a divestitute<br />

strategy, and neither has been successful.<br />

• When an organization’s only alternative is bankruptcy. Liquidation represents an<br />

orderly and planned means of obtaining the greatest possible cash for an<br />

organization’s assets. A company can legally declare bankruptcy first and then<br />

liquidate various divisions to raise needed capital.<br />

• When the stockholders of a firm can minimize their losses by selling the<br />

organization’s assets.<br />

Michael Porter’s Five Generic Strategies<br />

Probably the three most widely read books on competitive analysis in the 1980s were<br />

Michael Porter’s Competitive Strategy (Free Press, 1980), Competitive Advantage (Free<br />

Press, 1985), and Competitive Advantage of Nations (Free Press, 1989). According to<br />

Porter, strategies allow organizations to gain competitive advantage from three different<br />

bases: cost leadership, differentiation, and focus. Porter calls these bases generic strategies.<br />

Cost leadership emphasizes producing standardized products at a very low per-unit cost for<br />

consumers who are price-sensitive. Two alternative types of cost leadership strategies can<br />

be defined. Type 1 is a low-cost strategy that offers products or services to a wide range of<br />

customers at the lowest price available on the market. Type 2 is a best-value strategy that<br />

offers products or services to a wide range of customers at the best price-value available on<br />

the market; the best-value strategy aims to offer customers a range of products or services<br />

at the lowest price available compared to a rival’s products with similar attributes. Both<br />

Type 1 and Type 2 strategies target a large market.<br />

Porter’s Type 3 generic strategy is differentiation, a strategy aimed at producing<br />

products and services considered unique industrywide and directed at consumers who are<br />

relatively price-insensitive.<br />

Focus means producing products and services that fulfill the needs of small groups<br />

of consumers. Two alternative types of focus strategies are Type 4 and Type 5. Type 4 is a<br />

low-cost focus strategy that offers products or services to a small range (niche group) of<br />

customers at the lowest price available on the market. Examples of firms that use the Type 4<br />

strategy include Jiffy Lube International and Pizza Hut, as well as local used car dealers and<br />

hot dog restaurants. Type 5 is a best-value focus strategy that offers products or services to<br />

a small range of customers at the best price-value available on the market. Sometimes called<br />

“focused differentiation,” the best-value focus strategy aims to offer a niche group of<br />

customers products or services that meet their tastes and requirements better than rivals’<br />

products do. Both Type 4 and Type 5 focus strategies target a small market. However, the<br />

difference is that Type 4 strategies offer products services to a niche group at the lowest<br />

price, whereas Type 5 offers products/services to a niche group at higher prices but loaded<br />

with features so the offerings are perceived as the best value. Examples of firms that use the<br />

Type 5 strategy include Cannondale (top-of-the-line mountain bikes), Maytag (washing<br />

machines), and Lone Star Restaurants (steak house), as well as bed-and-breakfast inns and<br />

local retail boutiques.<br />

Porter’s five strategies imply different organizational arrangements, control procedures,<br />

and incentive systems. Larger firms with greater access to resources typically compete<br />

on a cost leadership and/or differentiation basis, whereas smaller firms often compete<br />

on a focus basis. Porter’s five generic strategies are illustrated in Figure 5-3. Note that a<br />

differentiation strategy (Type 3) can be pursued with either a small target market or a large<br />

target market. However, it is not effective to pursue a cost leadership strategy in a small<br />

market because profits margins are generally too small. Likewise, it is not effective to<br />

pursue a focus strategy in a large market because economies of scale would generally favor<br />

a low-cost or best-value cost leaderships strategy to gain and/or sustain competitive<br />

advantage.<br />

CHAPTER 5 • STRATEGIES IN ACTION 151

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