O&E: Positioning School Flashcards
(6 cards)
1
Q
What premises from Design school and Planning school did Positioning school add:
A
- Emphasis on the importance of the strategies themselves (not just the process).
- Opened up the prescriptive side for detailed investigation.
2
Q
What are revolutionary ideas of the positioning school:
A
- Only certain strategies are desirable in each industry.
- Organizations aim to occupy defensible positions against competitors.
- Easily defended positions lead to higher profits → more resources → growth opportunities.
- Belief in environmental determinism: the environment dictates how to gain competitive advantage.
3
Q
What are the key premises of the Positioning School?
A
- Strategy making is a controlled, conscious process (like Planning School).
- Strategies are fully developed, deliberate, formalized, then implemented.
- Best suited for stable environments.
- Focus on strategy content (what strategy is, not just how).
- There are a limited number of generic strategies.
- Only certain positions in an industry are desirable and lead to higher profits.
- Strategies are generic, identifiable marketplace positions.
- Analysts are important, but CEO is still the main strategist.
4
Q
What are the three waves of the Positioning School?
A
- Early Military Writings
- Consulting Imperatives (1970s)
- Empirical Work (1980s)
5
Q
What are the 4 kinds of positioning school research?
A
- Single Static: Focus on one generic strategy and find favorable industry conditions.
- Cluster Static: Combine individual strategic positions into integrated strategies.
- Single Dynamic: Study effects of a single change (e.g., first mover advantage, game theory).
- Cluster Dynamic: Analyze clusters of relationships in a changing environment (most complex).
6
Q
What are the main critiques of the Positioning School?
A
- Focus is too economic
- Context is limited
- Strategy is developed in offices
- concern too narrow, fails to be nuanced.
- Separates thinking from acting.
- Overfocus on competition
- No room for new market creation.