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Introduction to Engineering Business Management module Applicable for 2024 and beyond. Key Themes: Systems thinking, strategy, marketing, competition. Ideal for quick revision! This business management document systematically progresses from core concepts (firm operations, inputs/outputs) through environmental analysis (PEST/SWOT) to strategic applications. Covers marketing (5Ps), product strategy (order winners vs qualifiers), cost analysis (life cycle costing), and competitive frameworks (Porter’s Five Forces, BCG Matrix), concluding with diseconomies of scale. Ideal for engineering students mastering commercial strategy.
Typology: Lecture notes
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A company can be modelled as a system, which converts inputs into outputs, and is affected by the external environment. There are a number of factors of production
The general global trend for businesses is: Developing World = Goods or Products Developed World = Services There are three main types of business:
Natural Resources Labour Capital Information Entrepreneurship Inputs Transformation Outputs Core Services Products or Services Value-Added Services Information Problem Solving Sales Support Field Support Physical Location Exchange Storage Physiological Informational
§ Technological Environment
Corporate: What type of business is it? What markets are they in? What purchasing and supply chain strategies are used throughout the firm? What infrastructure is in place? Overall decisions about CORE COMPETENCIES and DIVERSIFICATION , as well as the overall structure. Business: -‐ Strategic Business Unit (a profit center which focuses on product offering and market segment) How can the SBU compete in a market? What products and services do they offer? Where to locate? How to finance within corporate constraints? What supply chain structure? Operation: Focus on products, markets and how to achieve corporate and SBU objectives. Manage capacity, locate facilities, manage technology, people, values. Design of facilities and infrastructure.
Vision : Where do we want to get? (simple one line inspirational aspiration) Mission: What business are we in? (a brief paragraph outlining the company, its direction, values and policies) Values: How do we do business? Objectives : Translate the Vision, Mission and Values into operational terms Functional/Operational strategy Corporate strategy Business strategy i.e. Marketing Engineering Finance IT Manufacturing Personnel
There are two main categorisations for identifying external opportunities and threats, PEST or STEEPLE. P olitical E conomic S ocial T echnological S ocial T echnological E conomical E nvironmental P olitical L egal E thical SWOT ANALYSIS S trengths & W eaknesses (from internal analysis) and O pportunities & T hreats (from external analysis) Internal analysis needs to protect and develop a firm’s CORE COMPETENCIES. Core competencies are the collective learning of the organisation. They give a firm its key competitive advantages because:
The corporate planning model was created for large firms. It provides a set of linear steps for a central corporate planning team to follow to develop the strategy. There is emphasis on rigorous analysis of a stable external environment. Middle and Lower level managers implement but do not develop the strategy. Because the business environment is turbulent, strategies are devised but realised in different directions to the original direction, requiring the business to respond quickly to change. It involves all levels of managers so that strategies can emerge, bottom-‐up and top-‐down. Define Alternatives Implement Analyse Current Situation & Gaps Choose Strategy Assumptions PLANNING GAP Strategic Fit & Strategic Choice
SWOT Strength/ Weakness Internal to Firm Opportunity/ Threat External to Firm Objectives Strategy and Programme Formulation Implementation Feedback and Control
5 P’s of the Marketing Mix PRODUCT PRICE PACKAGING PROMOTION PLACE Product
Risk is quantifiable, uncertainty is not. Therefore companies may expect to be able to manage the risk, but the uncertainties can present problems. Goal of market leaders It is important to realise that every business aspires to become the market leader – but that may be achieved by being a pioneer or by being a follower. MARKET FOLLOWERS OR LAGGERS ‘Market followers’ or ‘market laggers’ can benefit by learning quickly from mistakes made by the market pioneers, as a result of market uncertainties , technological uncertainties or legal uncertainties
Life Cycle Costing for all units from the OEMs ( Original Equipment Manufacturer’s) viewpoint
% of Life-Cycle Cost
High intensity is associated with: