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Showing posts with label restructuring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label restructuring. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2013

SURVIVAL STRATEGY

When to adopt survival strategies? What are the routes of survival strategy? What is liquidation ?
 
SURVIVAL STRATEGY 
 
When the company is on the verge of extinction, it can follow several routes for renewing the fortunes of the company. These are discussed in the following sections. 
 
Divestment 
 
An organization divests when it sells a business unit to another firm that will continue to operate it. Threatened with bankruptcy between 1979 and 1982, Chrysler sold its U.S. Army tank division to General Dynamics, its Air Temp air conditioning unit to Fedders, and its European distribution units to Peugeot/Citroen. The purpose was to focus only on the U.S. auto market- its main market. In our country, the TATA group has, in some form or the other, been realigning its portfolio since the early 1990s. But in the past few years it had done this in a more structured manner. The divestment of Tomco and Tata Steel’s cement plant was a conscious decision. It was Tata Steel’s decision to concentrate on steel and get out of the cement business. As for Tomco, the company had reached a point where it required immediate attention, not only in financial terms but in terms of management as well. The group felt that it did not have the requisite managerial skills in the specific area where Tomco operated and hence decided to hive it off. 
 
Spin-Off
 
In a spin-off, a firm sets up a business unit as a separate business through a distribution of stock or a cash deal. This is one way to allow a new management team to try to do better with a business unit that is a poor or mediocre performer. For instance, Indian Rayon and Industries Ltd (IRIL), an Aditya Birla group enterprise, has decided to spin-off its insulators business under Jaya Shree Insulator Division, in favour of a new company - Vikram Insulators Private Ltd (VIPL). The net assets of Rs 92.98 crore of the insulators division were transferred in favour of VIPL and a 50:50 joint venture with the Japanese insulators giant - NGK Insulators Ltd - was forged. The joint venture with NGK Insulators Ltd was proposed in order to upgrade the quality of the existing insulators and to develop new and more technically advanced insulators. 

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Friday, January 25, 2013

TURNAROUND STRATEGY


TURNAROUND STRATEGY
 

Turnaround is a strategy adopted by firms to arrest the decline and revive their growth. A turnaround situation exists when a firm encounters multiple years of declining Financial performance subsequent to a period of prosperity (Bibeault, 1982; Hambrick & Schecter, 1983; Schendel et al., 1976; Zammuto & Cameron, 1985). Turnaround situations are caused by combinations of external and internal factors (Finkin, 1985; Heany, 1985; Schendel et al., 1976) and may be the result of years of gradual slowdown or months of precipitous financial decline. The strategic causes of performance downturns include increased competition, raw material shortages, and decreased profit margins, while operating problems include strikes and labour problems, excess plant capacity and depressed price levels. The immediacy of the resulting threat to company survival posed by the turnaround situation is known as situation severity (Altman, 1983; Bibeault, 1982; Hofer, 1980). Low levels of severity are indicated by declines in sales or income margins, while extremely high severity would be signaled by imminent bankruptcy. The recognition of a relationship between cause and response is imperative for a turnaround process and hence, the importance of properly assessing the cause of the turnaround situation so that it could be the focus of the recovery response is very important. 
 

Turnaround Process 
 
The Turnaround Process begins with a depiction of external and internal factors as causes of a firm’s performance downturn. If these factors continue to detrimentally impact the firm, its financial health is threatened. Unchecked financial decline places the firm in a turnaround situation. A turnaround situation represents absolute and relative-to-industry declining performance of a sufficient magnitude to warrant explicit turnaround actions. A turnaround is typically accomplished through a two stage process. The initial stage is focused on the primary objectives of survival and achievement of a positive cash flow. The means to achieve this objective involves an emergency plan to halt the firm’s financial haemorrhage and a stabilization plan to streamline and improve core operations. In other words, it involves the classic retrenchment activities: liquidation, divestment, product elimination, and downsizing the workforce. Retrenchment strategies are also characterized by the revenue generating, product/market refocusing or cost cutting and asset reduction activities. While cost cutting, asset reduction and product/market refocusing are easy to visualize, the idea of revenue-generating is best captured by a strategy that is characterized by increased capacity utilization, and increased employee productivity.
 

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RETRENCHMENT STRATEGIES


RETRENCHMENT STRATEGIES

Retrenchment is a short-run renewal strategy designed to overcome organizational weaknesses that are contributing to deteriorating performance. It is meant to replenish and revitalize the organizational resources and capabilities so that the organization can regain its competitiveness. Retrenchment may be thought as a minor surgery to correct a problem. Managers often try a minimal treatment first-cost cutting or a small layoff-hoping that nothing more painful will be needed to turn the firm around. When performance measures reveal a more serious situation, more drastic action must be taken to restore performance.

Retrenchment strategies call for two primary actions:


1.   Cost cutting and
2.   Restructuring.

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