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Competitive Strategies
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Competitive strategies sit at the heart of business education, appearing in courses ranging from introductory microeconomics and marketing to corporate governance and international business. The topic asks how firms position themselves within their industries, respond to rivals, and sustain advantages over time. It is academically interesting because it bridges economic theory and real organizational behavior, forcing students to connect abstract principles—such as market structure, pricing power, and supplier relationships—to decisions that determine whether companies succeed or fail. Government policies further complicate the picture, making competitive strategy relevant to economics courses as well as management programs.

The papers gathered under this topic reflect a wide range of analytical approaches. Case studies dominate, with companies like Williams-Sonoma and FedEx examined to illustrate how specific strategic choices play out in practice. Comparative analyses set two or more companies side by side to evaluate their strategic positioning. Some papers take a policy-oriented angle, exploring how government regulations shape competitive behavior, while others adopt a global perspective, looking at how cultural and economic environments—such as those found in international markets—affect strategy. A smaller number of papers address organizational and human dimensions, including how workforce change and communication between supervisors and subordinates influence a company's strategic execution.

A strong essay on competitive strategies needs a focused thesis that moves beyond simply describing what a company does and instead argues why certain choices produce measurable advantages or disadvantages. Evidence drawn from financial performance, market positioning, and supplier dynamics tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating strategy as a static plan rather than an ongoing response to competitors, regulators, and market shifts—so always account for how circumstances change over time.

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Paper Doctorate
IT-led business process reengineering efforts
Business Process Re-engineering (BPR) is a type of organizational change in which processes are analyzed, and subsequently redesigned and simplified, with the aim of improving efficiency and profitability within a firm.
Paper Undergraduate
Pricing Strategy and Channel Distribution
The two most critical aspects of any marketing strategy are the pricing and distribution strategies, as they both underscore the branding, unique value proposition and position of products.
Essay Doctorate
Amazon.com a Strategic Assessment of Amazons\' E-Strategies
Amazon's remarkable ascent as one of the top online global retailers can be attributed to the foresight they had in creating a comprehensive distributed order management, Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Supply Chain Management (SCM) and e-commerce series of systems. The many other e-commerce sites that rose quickly with massive infusions of venture capital just as quick exited the market, flaming out due to a lack of system and process scalability, lack of understanding of customer dynamics, and a complete loss of focus on scalable business models. All of these factors are what caused competitors to Amazon to exit the e-commerce market either through acquisition, merger or complete exist from the market. When starting Amazon, Jeff Bezos invested heavily in the distributed order management, ERP, SCM and e-commerce integration points to book distributors initially, and then expanded into a broader product mix. This allowed the enterprise to quickly scale as volumes increased during the first five years of the company's existence. Having creating this reliable, scalable and secure platform, Mr. Bezos and the Amazon founders concentrated on creating an analytics layer throughout their architecture that could quantify customer, distributor, dealer and even competitor activity on the site (Amazon Investor Relations, 2012). This reliance on analytics also gave Amazon executives and technical staff the insight they needed to launch quickly into entirely new product categories, get the complex and often confusing task of localization right, and also create a highly popular and profitable Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud computing platform and hosting platform for Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) applications (Mitchell, 2012). From a technology standpoint the performance of Amazon today can be directly attributed to the insightful decisions made in 1994 and 1995 when the company founders prioritized the development of enterprise-wide platforms and a strong focus on analytics over spending all their time on the front-end website and its façade (Lindic, Bavdaz, Kovacic, 2012). As Jeff Bezos would later remark in interviews, by investing to create a truly world-class enterprise back-end system first, his company was freed up to fast track the actual user interface of the e-commerce sites globally at a pace that left comp[editors far behind in terms of functionality and product breadth (Amazon Investor Relations, 2012). Mr. Bezos chose in 2007 to also institute a culture of metrics that also capitalized on the nearly two decades of investment in their infrastructure (Amazon Investor Relations, 2012). Combining the global e-commerce, enterprise-tested infrastructure and the most robust set of analytics that any e-commerce provider had, Amazon was ready to begin expanding their product strategies, start offering greater options in their Amazon Web Services initiative which today is expected to be a $1B by 2015, even by conservative forecasts (Amazon Investor Relations, 2012) and also invest heavily in their state-of-the-art recommendation engine technology that seeks out products and services customers may be interested in and present them during shop[ping sessions in real-time (Sun, 2012). It's important to appreciate just how vast of an e-commerce infrastructure Amazon has in completing this analysis of their e-strategy. They have greater agility, flexibility and capability to execute than any other online retailer globally today. How they choose to use these technologies to attract new customers and keep existing ones loyal, a point the case study makes in greater detail, is predicated on the ability to get the most value from this infrastructure while still staying focused on delivering a world-class customer experience in each transaction. Based on the analysis undertaken for this case analysis, it is abundantly clear that Jeff Bezos and the executive management team are passionate about keeping the company as customer-focused as possible, including the continual selective use of technology to accentuate and strengthen the user experience online and off (Murphy, Narkiewicz, 2010). With these foundational aspects of Amazon defined, the seven areas of focus in this analysis are next presented. The overarching objective of this analysis is to understand the value of e-strategies in organizations, with Amazon being the organization of interest in the analysis. Specifically concentrating on the benefits of having an e-strategy at Amazon, defining how e-strategies contribute to Amazon's broader accomplishments, and an analysis of how Amazon aligns their e-strategy to the overarching organizational strategy as well., The analysis continues with an analysis of the key business factors that are the catalysts of the e-strategy at Amazon, followed by a suggested strategic plan for ensuring e-strategy initiatives at the company continue to lead to profitable growth. The final section of this analysis provides an assessment of the technical infrastructure needed to accomplish the proposed strategic plan. As Amazon has continually evolved its position as a global force in online retailing, its command of supply chains globally has also evolved very quickly. In the latest rankings of the highest-performing supply chains completed by Gartner, a leading research consultancy, Amazon has ranking within the top twenty five for five years running (Amazon Investor Relations, 2012). What this signals is that Amazon has progressed from relying on enterprise-wide infrastructure to compete and is now on the growth trajectory of making supply chain processes their competitive advantage.
Essay Doctorate
Health Care the Developed Worlds Are Becoming
This reference material addresses various aspects of competition within the health care industry. Particular emphasis is placed on Cardinal Health in regards to its competitive strategies versus the competition. The document provides insights into its future strategy to become more competitive with the likes of McKesson Corporation and Amerisource Bergen. The document concludes with Cardinal Health's expansion plans in China and emerging markets.
Paper Undergraduate
Car.com Case Analysis Questions There
There is a clear segmentation of the rental car industry that has focused on the need of the business traveler over the leisure or vacation traveler as the former often can expense car rental costs, even if they include…
Paper Undergraduate
Improving Diversity in Continental Airlines' Leadership Ranks
Improving Diversity in the Leadership Ranks of Continental Airlines
Essay Doctorate
Reflection on personal learning and experience
¶ … competitive strategies that can be used. The three generic strategies are to pursue cost leadership, differentiation or status as a niche product. Cost leadership reflects a strategy that emphasizes the pursuit of…
Paper Doctorate
Blue Ocean Strategy (Bos) Is a New
Blue Ocean Strategy was published initially in 2005 as "Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make the Competition Irrelevant" and since then it has become an international best seller. Managers and business executives in all parts of the globe are taking keen interest in this new concept of strategic management and are trying to implement it. BOS concept that gives the idea of creating and capturing unconcealed space of the whole market is not new. Michael Porter, Professor at the Harvard Business School and an expert in competitive strategies, has always focused on the point that successful strategy means to do things in a different way. It does not mean to do a strict competition with the other companies where everyone is doing same thing.
Essay Doctorate
Kudler Fine Foods How Does the Organization
How does the organization compete in the marketplace? What are the strengths and weaknesses of the firm?