Throughout this course, you will work in a CLC group on a strategic case analysis project. This project consists of different parts you will complete each week that build on each othe
Throughout this course, you will work in a CLC group on a strategic case analysis project. This project consists of different parts you will complete each week that build on each other.
Go to the Strategy Club website and review the "Sample Strategic Plan for Sanderson Farms" (2020), and "Juniper Networks" (2020) under the student resources section. This sample strategic plan is an example of what your completed strategic case analysis should look like at the end of the course.
Part I: Marketing Expenses Versus Rival Firms
Create a data table to illustrate the marketing expenses vs. rival firms by doing the following:
- Step 1: Go to the Investor Relations page on your company’s (Chick-Fil-A) website as well as two of its primary competitor’s websites and download the three form 10Ks for the respective firms.
- Step 2: Look in the Table of Contents of each Form 10K to find the pages that reveal the three firms' marketing or advertising expenditures.
- Step 3: Prepare a comparative data table to consolidate this information.
- Step 4: Prepare a report (250- 500 words) to suggest implications for your company in terms of marketing or advertising expenditures going forward as needed to implement strategies.
Juniper Networks – A Sample Strategic Planning Analysis
Table of Contents
Introduction |
4 |
Current Vision Statement |
4 |
Proposed Vision Statement |
4 |
Current Mission Statement |
4 |
Proposed Mission Statement |
5 |
Current Status of Industries |
5 |
Overview of the Firm |
8 |
Competitive Profile Matrix (CPM) |
9 |
Financial Statements and Historical Ratios |
10 |
Internal and External Factor Evaluations |
14 |
Proposed Strategies Developed from SWOT Matrix |
18 |
Strategic Position and Action Evaluation (SPACE) |
19 |
Boston Consulting Group Matrix (BCG) |
21 |
Internal-External Matrix |
22 |
Grand Strategy Matrix |
24 |
Quantitative Strategic Planning Matrix |
25 |
Recommendations |
28 |
Explanations for Recommendations |
29 |
Organizational Chart |
31 |
Proposed Organizational Chart |
32 |
Perceptual Map |
33 |
Firm Valuation |
34 |
EPS-EBIT Analysis |
35 |
Projected Financial Statements |
39 |
Projected Financial Ratios |
41 |
Retained Earnings Table |
42 |
Epilogue |
42 |
Introduction
Founded in 1996, Juniper Networks designs, develops, and sells products and services for high-performance networks to enable customers to build scalable, reliable, secure and cost-effective networks for their businesses while achieving agility and improved operating efficiency through automation. Juniper Networks is headquartered in Sunnyvale, California and incorporated in Delaware. Company common stock is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the abbreviation JNPR. Juniper Networks currently employs over 10,000 employees in 109 offices across 47 countries. Annual revenue as of 2019 was $4.45 billion.
Current Vision Statement
We exist to solve the world’s most difficult problems in networking technology. We bring simplicity to networking with products, solutions, and services that connect the world.
Proposed Vision Statement
We exist to make the technology needed to power communications simply through innovative engineering, meeting the needs of today and the future.
Current Mission Statement
A company of innovators, we believe that creating simplicity through engineering is the highest form of innovation. From our first release, the ground-breaking M40 router, to today’s end-to-end advancements in network security, automation, performance, and scale, our drive to move beyond the constraints of complexity has expanded the reach of networks everywhere. We’ve enabled our customers to connect to everything and empower everyone in ways that have literally changed the world.
In the profusion of new technologies such as IoT, big data, and multi-cloud, complexity is the new hard problem. And complexity is on the wrong side of progress.
With the strength of our resolve, we’ll champion the evolution of the cloud and once again change the world.
Simple is our obsession.
Simple is powerful.
And simple always starts with engineering.
Proposed Mission Statement
Our employees continue to build on a legacy of innovation (9) centered on meeting the ever-changing needs of our customers (1). We seek to provide the flexible, automated, and secure solutions (2) necessary to connect devices of all types to one another (4) with simplicity through innovative engineering (7). We have been the first to deliver needed products and advancements since our founding, and we will continue to ethically deliver products (6) for the future that ensure our continued work (5) of enabling our customers to connect to everything and empower everyone (3) in ways that will continue to literally change the world. (8) [94 words]
(1) Customers
(2) Products or services
(3) Markets
(4) Technology
(5) Survival, growth and profitability
(6) Philosophy
(7) Distinctive competence
(8) Public Image
(9) Employees
Current Status of Industries
Juniper Networks is primarily involved in the Telecommunication Networking Equipment Industry. This industry manufactures wired (voice and data) telecommunications equipment, including telephone switching systems, telephones and answering machines, data bridges, routers, modems and gateways. In addition, over the past 10 years, the industry has increasingly focused on manufacturing internet protocol-based telecommunications and networking equipment. (IBISWorld report 33421). The forecast for this U.S. industry is future decline as other countries continue to build capacity to deliver the same products at a lower price.
The Telecommunication Networking Equipment Industry is found in the “Decline” section of the Indicative Industry Life Cycle indicating shrinking economic importance:
Juniper Networks is also involved in the Software Publishing industry, primarily through their creation, distribution, and service of the Junos Operating System which powers their hardware offerings. Software publishers disseminate licenses to customers for the right to execute software on their own computers. Operators in this industry market and distribute software products and may also design the software, produce support materials and provide support services. Rising private investment in computers and software stimulated demand from businesses, while rising disposable income levels encouraged consumers to spend on software as well. Moreover, new internet-based solutions and the increasing popularity of mobile devices have triggered an explosion of mobile software applications. From 2020 to 2025, industry revenue is estimated to rise at an annualized rate of 6.4% to $293.1 billion. In 2020, the industry is anticipated to endure subdued revenue growth of only 1.9%, as the COVID-19 (coronavirus) outbreak reduces consumer spending and private investment levels.
Software publishers are often highly profitable despite the prevalence of software piracy, ongoing litigation and an expensive workforce. Over the past five years, publishers have focused on strategic acquisitions and product development, with large software publishers regularly acquiring smaller operators with specialties in high-growth, niche markets. Additionally, most operators have switched to the software-as-a-service (SaaS) model to stabilize cash flows. This model makes it more affordable to buy software products, enticing smaller and cash-strapped companies to make purchases while also facilitating easy scalability and frequent software updates.
Projections of the industry from 2020 to 2025 suggest the growing ubiquity of software in daily activities and the rise of predictive analytics and artificial intelligence software will benefit the industry by expanding software publishers' product offerings and potential markets. For example, connected cars, smart appliances and automated logistics services are all expected to continue integrating with the daily activities of US consumers and businesses. Mobile computing devices are also providing new platforms on which operators can compete, while cloud computing is opening a wider array of software possibilities for mobile phones and tablets that are no longer hampered by low storage capacities. Additionally, demand for security software to protect data is expected to rise, especially after high-profile cybercrimes gripped the nation in recent years. Altogether, revenue is expected to rise at an annualized rate of 2.4% to $329.9 billion over the five years to 2025.
The Software Publishing Industry is firmly in the “Quantity Growth” quadrant of the Indicative Industry Life Cycle indicating smaller growth of economic importance spread across many new companies:
Overview of the Firm
Juniper Networks is at a pivotal point in its history. Many investments that have been years in the making are ready to begin seeing returns such as completing a stock buyback program, paying down debt, all while expanding its portfolio of offerings. However, key metrics such as Net Revenue and Net Income have continued to decline, and Juniper Networks faces competitors with significantly more resources in a difficult and competitive environment. The following pages will detail the position of Juniper Networks and formulate strategies for the future.
Competitive Profile Matrix (CPM)
Below is a Competitive Profile Matrix for Juniper Networks comparing the firm to two of its primary rival firms: Arista Networks and Cisco.
Juniper Networks is not performing poorly in the market overall, but it’s composite 2.07 CPM Matrix compared to Cisco’s 3.82 and Arista Networks’ 3.05 indicates that its rivals are performing better on the variables critical to the telecommunication manufacturing industry. Finding a distinct, competitive advantage that separates it from the companies in the upper echelon of the industry has thus far alluded the firm. With its two primary competitors consistently delivering on critical success factors more successfully, Juniper Networks must evaluate its strategic plan to adjust its current trajectory.
Financial Statements and Historical Ratios
What quickly stands out from an analysis of the financial statements is the downturn in revenue and net income. The firm has made recent strategic decisions to expand its product portfolio, reduce debt, and increase its dividend payout in the past three years. This is an ambitious set of goals, but those investments have yet to yield the necessary results to Total Revenue and Net Income. The primary issue facing the firm at this time is a trend of shrinking revenue in its largest division: Product. Juniper Networks needs these recently acquired assets to quickly begin yielding appropriate returns.
On the positive side, the firm enjoys above average standings on debt ratios related to the industry, as well as an operating margin three times above the industry average. They facilitate this by primarily outsourcing the manufacturing of the equipment, allowing them to hold down costs. This strategy is not without its drawbacks, as those manufacturers may shift to other vendors with no long term contracts and are subject to supply chain issues that Juniper can do little to resolve. Tariffs and other foreign policy decisions made by the leaders of the countries in which these manufacturers exist can also cause the price per unit to increase, leading to ambiguity in the margins and harming financial planning.
The next three years will be critical for Juniper Networks. The strategy of deep investment in the product portfolio along with a reputation as a shareholder centric firm necessitate the market respond to their offerings quickly if they are to be successful. Finding capital from other sources is possible, but less desirable as the risk of this firm is currently higher than its primary competitors due to the revenue trends and equity positions of the firms.
Internal Factor Evaluation (IFE) and External Factor Evaluation (EFE) Matrices
The Internal Factor Evaluation (IFE) Strengths for Juniper Networks are as follows:
The Internal Factor Evaluation (IFE) Weaknesses for Juniper Networks are as follows:
The External Factor Evaluation (EFE) Opportunities for Juniper Networks are as follows:
The External Factor Evaluation (EFE) Threats for Juniper Networks are as follows:
Some key points to note: A key weakness of Juniper Networks relates to a 2015 FBI investigation around an international and embarrassing security breach that was never publicly resolved. This weakness is directly related to a key opportunity of consumer expectations of privacy and security combined with a key threat of the increasing annual corporate security breaches.
Long term, the U.S. Telecommunications industry is in decline and Juniper Networks does not have the resources to continue to attempt to do so many things for so many types of customers. A distinctive competence must be identified, pursued, and achieved. The Software Publishing Industry is growing and represents a set of intriguing opportunities that will be discussed in the strategic plans listed below.
Proposed Strategies Developed From SWOT Matrix
Strength-Opportunity (SO) Strategies
Weakness-Opportunity (WO) Strategies
Strength-Threat (ST) Strategies
Weakness-Threat (WT) Strategies
The best strategies for continued growth of Juniper Networks will be discussed in the Recommendations section below. But one strategy listed above should occur regardless of any other decision that will be made. That strategy is the Weakness-Opportunity Strategy of achieving a 3rd party certification for outstanding security practices and auditing. With security breaches increasing every year and security being the top concern of consumers per industry surveys, Juniper Networks must publicly address the 2015 security breach and subsequent FBI investigation. This certification would position them to positively communicate their proficiencies in this area, with validation from an external, unbiased party. This will address a key weakness, capitalize on an emerging opportunity, and ensure a growing threat is mitigated.
Strategic Position and Action Evaluation (SPACE) Matrix
The SPACE Matrix further illustrates Juniper Network’s need to solidify a sound strategy moving forward. Juniper Networks does have the resources to use its internal strengths to take advantage of external opportunities, overcome internal weaknesses, and avoid external threats. However, Juniper Networks is also very close to the very center of the matrix, indicating that near future events could quickly remove that flexibility and force them into more undesirable choices. That could quickly cause Juniper shift strategies out of necessity rather than careful and measured planning.
BCG Matrix
The BCG Matrix continues the theme of an inflection point for Juniper Networks. The Product division is just below the industry average in sales growth rate, and is toward the bottom of market share. Coupled with an overall declining industry, this is a concerning position.
Both the Product and Service Divisions need to focus on increasing Market Share, but Juniper Networks may lack the resources to do that in both divisions without significant costs due to restructuring or debt. Market share increase will only be seen by achieving a competitive advantage above other firms in the space. The trajectory of the Software Publishing Industry likely makes the Service Division the better choice for future development.
Internal-External (IE) Matrix
Juniper Networks’ two divisions are primarily positioned to suggest the firm’s focus should be on Market Penetration and Product Development. But the placement of these divisions are very close to requiring an alternative strategy, and these underlying stories will be discussed in the following paragraphs.
Product: The placement of this division illustrates the difficult choices facing Juniper Networks in the near future. Current positioning suggests that Juniper Networks must choose between one of two paths. The first would primarily be concerned with increasing market share via market penetration and developing the product to either dominate in cost or differentiation. In considering the results of the SWOT analysis and industry trends, Juniper Networks would be best serviced to focus on product differentiation of connecting all devices through a centralized solution if this strategy is chosen. The second strategy would suggest the firm refocus this division’s core business and become less diversified. This would cause Juniper Networks to divest from less profitable portions of the product division, such as routing, and focus on the growing industry trend of cloud computing.
Service: The placement of this division illustrates its relative strength in the market. With the proper internal focus, this could be shifted into an intensive growth strategy including a focus on market penetration, market development, or product development. Doing this would mean that even if external forces outside of the firm’s control were to impact the division it would still remain in a favorable position with similar goals for long-term success. This would primarily be done through leveraging the Junos Operating System similarly to a company like Redhat, making the Linux distribution of JunosOS available to other vendors. The strength of the software would be turned to delivering an integrated solution for wearables and connected homes through 5g and cloud compatible software and infrastructure.
Grand Strategy Matrix
The Grand Strategy Matrix shows the divisional positions of the firm relative to two evaluative dimensions: 1) Competitive Position and 2) Market (Industry) Growth. It is helpful to understanding the attractiveness of available strategies available to the firm.
Juniper Networks Product Division represents the primary industry of the firm, and its placement on the Grand Strategy Matrix speaks to a need for bold action. Unfortunately, Juniper Networks does not have the high cash flow levels characteristically present with a strongly positioned firm with a favorable competitive position in a growing market, meaning a new and correct strategy is paramount to their continued success.
In contrast, the Service firm is in a more favorable position of a rapidly growing market, but an evaluation of their present approach to the market is needed to increase Juniper’s competitive position. Juniper Networks must determine why they are ineffective and how they can change to improve competitiveness.
A consistent theme has appeared in all matrices and analyses of Juniper Networks relative to their markets. The Product Division is responsible for the majority of the revenue, but it represents a declining industry and Juniper Networks has thus far been unable to create a clear, distinctive product related advantage to separate itself in the market. The revenue for this division has declined for three years in a row. By contrast, the Service Division has a growing share of the revenue having increased for three years in a row. It is also in a growing industry, less dependent on manufacturers and supply chains that are either outside of the firm’s control or raise the operating costs of production. All of the analyses done have resulted in two distinct strategies for Juniper Networks that will be discussed in the section below.
Quantitative Strategic Planning Matrix (QSPM)
Two proposed strategies stood out as potentially beneficial for the long-term success of Juniper Networks: 1. A shift away from being primarily involved in the Telecommunications Industry into the Software Publishing Industry over the next 5 years.
This would be accomplished by refocusing the core of the product division away from routing and switching technologies. Those resources would be redeployed to:
a. Grow the service division’s offering of the Junos OS, making it available to all vendors instead of a proprietary offering only available on Juniper’s hardware.
b. Focus on the Cloud product line across all customer verticals and divisions.
c. Development and domination of the Product Division’s security technologies to be embedded into all offerings.
2. A focus on Cloud solutions and technologies, divesting from other portions of the portfolio to fund and power this effort.
This strategy would move away from routing technologies in the product division which have shown a steady decline for the firm and focus on growing industrial trends. Those resources would be redeployed to:
a. Focus on the Switching and Cloud product lines across all customer verticals and divisions.
b. Development and domination of the Product Division’s security technologies to be embedded into all offerings.
Long-term success is best found in the decision to shift Juniper Networks primarily into the Software Publishing Industry with a composite score of 4.25. The shift to Software Publishing, with a focus on licensing and servicing the Junos OS on other platforms with a focus on Cloud and 5g technologies, wearables, and connected homes would place the firm in a strategic position to capitalize on long-term industry trends and growth while removing it from long-term risks and declines. An alternative strategy would involve a narrowed focus on specific products and services, particularly Cloud solutions, with a composite score of 2.80. Juniper Networks is in a desirable position to perform this transition by properly employing a series of strategic initiatives that will be discussed in detail in the Recommendations section to follow.
Recommendations
Explanations for Recommendations
1. Estimation for an initial certification provided from FedRAMP (Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program) certification costs. For Juniper Networks, this is the desired accreditation to pursue. Verification costs range between $250,000 and $750,000 depending on the compliance deficiencies encountered. An allocated $750,000 is used to yield a conservative cost structure. Subsequent allotments gathered from the cost of similar 3rd party verification programs such as PCI-1 or SOC-2 Compli
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