Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
Costco Wholesale Corporation is a membership-based retailer offering private label as well as branded products in a range of merchandise categories including meat, deli, bakery, and produce; home furnishings, house wares, domestics; institutionally packaged as well as dry foods; motor vehicle and related products, seasonal items, toys, sports merchandise and items, beauty aids, and electronic products; food items, alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages, and candy, to name but a few. The company additionally operates travel businesses, hearing aids centers, one-hour photo centers, optical dispensing centers, food courts, pharmacies, and gas stations in various local and international locations. With a total of 652 warehouses, 463 of them in the U.S., and the rest scattered across Australia, Korea, Taiwan, Japan, the UK, Mexico, and Canada; Costco is America's third largest retailer, and the largest membership-based warehouse entity in the world. The company faces fierce competition from BJ's Wholesale Club and Sam's club, but still manages to attract affluent and loyal customers, who return repeatedly - thanks to the thrill brought about by the constantly-changing inventory, and the discount-chic allure also referred to as the 'Costco effect'.
The Effect of Globalization and Technology Changes
Globalization translates to a higher number of both producers and consumers, increased diversity issues, higher trade volumes, a wider product variety, and of course, more intense competition. To thrive in the global market, therefore, managers have to devise ways and strategies that would enable them meet the unique interests, needs, and expectations of the different markets (Hitt, Ireland & Hoskisson, 2008). In a competitive marketplace, "only companies capable of meeting, if not exceeding, global standards typically have the capability to earn above average returns" (Hitt, Ireland & Hoskisson, 2008, p. 10).
One of the most significant benefits of the globalization of markets is reduced cost of marketing ("Global Business Environment," n.d.). To this end, a company "can make identical products for the global market and then simply design different packaging to account for the language spoken in each market" ("Global Business Environment," n.d., p. 28). Costco has employed this cost-saving strategy in its food service segment; the company's quarter pound hotdog takes the same design in all its food courts, but unlike in America, Canada, and the UK, where the hotdog is 100% beef; Australia, Mexico, and the Asian countries have theirs made of pork. This kind of saving, coupled with the fact that the company does not advertise its products have been responsible for the ever-increasing budget savings, which are a key source of competitive advantage for the company.
Like many other companies operating on a global scale, Costco uses its international sales to level uneven streams of domestic income, thereby eliminating "wide variations in sales between seasons," and subsequently steadying cash flows ("Global Business Environment," n.d., p. 29).
E-commerce is perhaps the most significant product of technology, more so for a company such as Costco, which has online sales contributing approximately 30% of collected revenue ("Global Business Environment," n.d.). In 2012, for instance, Costco collected $2 billion in revenues from its B2B online shopping site at costco.com only; and with the concept of web marketing rapidly expanding, and the internet becoming more commonplace, e-commerce will soon be the way to go. In 2005, Costco signed a deal with PhotoChannel Networks, whereby the former could offer online photo printing to its members through the PNI Digital Media Platform ("Global Business Environment," n.d.).
The company has, however, not had a smooth run in regard to technological advancement and technology changes. The same technology has been to blame for some of the highest losses the company has had to incur, with the most recent case involving a loophole that made it possible for shoppers to skirt membership fees by paying with a gift card. Differences in business regulations across countries have also posed a challenge for the company. Costco has to comply with regulations set by each of the countries it chooses to trade in; Australia, for instance, has one of the most liberal alcohol licensing policies, permitting the sale of the same on shelves within the store; Japan, on the other hand, has very strict laws governing the sale and trade of alcoholic drinks ("Global Business Environment," n.d.).
Value-Creation
The Industrial Organization Model of Above-Average Returns
The I/O model supports the long-held belief that the external environment happens to be the chief determinant of the business strategy a company selects (Hitt, Ireland & Hoskisson, 2008). The model specifies that a firm's performance depends more on the features of the industry within which it operates,...
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