BA Theories (Business Administration & Management)

Porter’s Value Chain

Value Chain

The value chain describes the categories of activities within an organisation which, together, create a product or service.

What is Value Chain?

Understanding how the company creates value, and looking for ways to add more value, are critical elements in developing a competitive strategy. Michael Porter discussed this in his influential 1985 book “Competitive Advantage,” in which he first introduced the concept of the value chain.

A value chain is a set of activities that an organization carries out to create value for its customers.

Porter proposed a general-purpose value chain that companies can use to examine all of their activities, and see how they are connected.

The way in which value chain activities are performed determines costs and affects profits, so this tool can help in understanding the sources of value for the organization. Competitive advantage can be analysed in any of these activities.

Rather than looking at departments or accounting cost types, Porter’s Value Chain focuses on systems, and how inputs are changed into the outputs purchased by consumers. Using this viewpoint, Porter described a chain of activities common to all businesses, and he divided them into primary and support activities.

For manufacturing companies, it involves activities such as procuring raw materials, the various manufacturing and marketing activities. It allows a company to easily analyse if the production can be made more efficient and it can provide more value at a lower cost.

Primary Activities

Support Activities

Part of the Internal Environment

The Value Chain is part of the internal environment of a business as it takes into account the various internal functions of an organization. The Value Chain model does consider the external environment in the sense that it recognizes that a business operates within a larger value system that includes its suppliers and customers, but primarily it focuses on the internal activities of the business.

Examples of Value Chain

Value Chain example of the airline industry.

Uses of Porter’s Value Chain

Uses of the value chain

Issues with Value Chain

Downsides of Value Chain analysis

The Value Chain only tells us about what is happening within an organisation. It can ignore key issues. As a result, a wider approach is recommended.

Related: More theories, models and frameworks by Michael Porter

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