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Content
• Introduction
1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer
   of imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of
   proprietary medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each
   strategy. Could it do both?
2. Should Ranbaxy focus its attention on developing markets
   or the developed markets of the USA and Europe.
3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation.
• Conclusion
• References
                                                               2
Introduction
 Ranbaxy Laboratories Limited is India's largest pharmaceutical company.

 Ranbaxy was started by Ranbir Singh and Gurbax Singh in 1937 as a
  distributor for a Japanese company Shionogi.

 Headquarters Located in Gurgaon, Haryana, India

 Incorporated on 16th June, 1961 at Delhi. Manufacture
  drugs, medicines, cosmetics and chemical products.

 In 2008 acquired by Daiichi Sankyo Japanese co.

 Global company, present in 46 countries and manufacturing ,facilities in 6
  countries


                                                                               3
1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of
imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary
medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do
both?
    Mintzberg suggests only 10%–30% of intended strategy is realized.

                 External factors (political situation, production cost, labor cost)



                                                       Emergent strategy - the
                                                       decisions that come out
                                                       from the complex
                                                       processes in which
                                                       managers interpret the
                                                       intended strategy and
                                                       adapt to changing
                                                       external situation.
    Mintzberg, H., & Waters, J. A. (1985)                                               4
1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of
imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary
medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do
both?
                                     External Environment




                       Rising
                   production cost                          Patent Act of
                                                            1970 (7 years)



             Rapid                Stiff             2005
        developments          competition                                   WTO
                                                   another
              in               in generic                                accession
                                                  Patent act
        infrastructure           market                                   in 1995
                                                  (20 years)




 (Chaudhuri, S. 2005)                                                                5
1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of
imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary
medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do
both?
   Before a suitable strategy can be found, it is helpful to consider characteristics of both products:

       – Generic drugs - Product characteristics
           • low price and high volume
           • patent free
           •trust unimportant
           • brand unimportant (e.g. asprin, paracetemol, etc.)
       – Requirement = low –cost production destination

       – Patent drugs – Product characteristics
            • High cost of R&D
            • Highly skilled R&D
            • Long time R&D (5 years minimum)
            •Trust important
            •Brand important (e.g. Glaxo, Zeneca, Pfizer, etc.)
       – Requirement – highly educated, technically advanced, high trust, well connected (with
       other complimentary pharmaceutical organisations, universities, etc.)
                                                                                                      6
1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of
imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary
medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do
both?


   Ranbaxy’s strategic resources
   • Cheap labour
   • Continuingly improving level of skills
   • IT technology
   • Acquired company and strategic alliances (ex: Germany’s Betapharm
     Arzneimittel)
   • Improvements in infrastructure




                                                                         7
1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of
imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary
medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do
both?
                     Generic Drugs                                      Patent medicines

   + low product price                                  + 10 years without taxes on patent medicines
   + high revenue                                       (in India)
   + researchers at Datamonitor predicts that the       + high potential success as improving
   patent expirations will be from now till 2016.       education level, rising IT technology
   (pick 2011-12. ex: clopidogrel bisulfate (Plavix),   + middle class as potential segment for sales
   for the first time)                                  - high investment in R&D
   -Rising production cost in India compeered to        - long period to invent and testing new product
   Newly developing countries (Indonesia, China,        - high cost of advertising
   Philippines)
   - 20 years patent protection



   (Chaudhuri, S. 2005)                                                                                 8
1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of
imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary
medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do
both?
For an organisation to obtain a sustainable competitive advantage Michael Porter suggested
that they should follow either one of three generic strategies.
   Strategy 1 Cost Leadership.   Strategy 2: Niche strategies   Strategy 3: Differentiation



        Generate profit                                               Patent product

                                           Focus on
                                         manufacturing
                                            generic

 Haberberg and Rieple, 2008
  Recommendation : Ranbaxy is rapidly loosing one of its competitive advantage such as
  low production cost as India is fast developing country, thus production cost
  increases, so to be sustainable there is a need to move manufacturing to N.D.Cs.    9
1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of
imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary
medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do
both?

   Conclusion:

   If Ranbaxy has the appropriate strategic resources, it is recommended that it:

   • Continues to produce generic drugs, possibly moving production to a
     destination where production factors are lower;

   • Begin developing new patented drugs in India.




                                                                                    10
2.Should Ranbaxy focus its attention on developing markets or the
developed markets of the USA and Europe.

Potter’s Diamond:
                                           Presence of High
                                           quality, Specialized inputs
                                           available to Firm: Skilled &
                                           Educated work force.
                                            Local availability of supporting
                                            industries in clusters than an
                                            Isolation

                                           The nature and sophistication of
                                           local customer needs


                                            The rules and incentives that
                                            govern competition: Government
                                            policies and investment programs
                                            to encourage innovation
 Potter (1990)
                                                                          11
2. Should Ranbaxy focus its attention on developing markets or the
developed markets of the USA and Europe.
  Potter’s Diamond:                Developing Countries              USA and Europe


  Firm’s structure, strategy and   High level of competition in      High level of competition in
  rivalry                          generic market, which is          generic market, which is
                                   stimulate innovation              stimulate innovation (Merck &
                                                                     Co., Inc)

  Factors conditions               Low cost of production (Russia,   High level of workers skills,
                                   China), increasing                Good infrastructure,
                                   infrastructure,                   Participation in International
                                                                     Organization (WTO,NAFTA,EU)

  Demand condition                 Growing demand, middle class      High level of life an demand


  Related and supporting           Improving level of educations     High level of education and IT
  industries                                                         technologies



   Ranbaxy should consider partnerships in Russia and China because India is
   geographically, culturally, ideologically and politically closer to Russia and China than to
   Europe or US.                                                                             12
2. Should Ranbaxy focus its attention on developing markets or the
developed markets of the USA and Europe.




  Recommendations:
   Merger and Acquisition,
    which will give access                       create TRUST and
     to foreign market                           IMAGE of the Ranbaxy
                                                 company
    and resource.
   Partnership and Strategic Alliances
     to create synergy effect.



                                                                  13
3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation.

      India’s Investment for Infrastructure in following sectors (US$ billion)




                                                                 Geiger and Rao (2009)
                                                                                         14
3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation.

      India’s Employment scale




                                                 Geiger and Rao (2009)
                                                                         15
3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation.

Global Competitive Index (GCI) today is portraying mixed picture of India’s
   competitiveness as it is constrained by few structural problems simultaneously
   having rapid economic growth being the world fastest growing economy:

   Pro ‘s                                       Con ‘s
   • Huge domestic market and rapid             • Not having very strong groundwork of
   growing middleclass boosting investment      competitiveness to sustain and accelerate
   and consumption.                             its growth in near future.

   • Sophisticated financial markets which is   • Increasing red tape and corruption in
   helping business to develops.                governmental institutions.
   • Knack for innovation with high degree
   of business sophistication .
   • Investing in vital areas of
   competitiveness which will help India
   when its value chain will move upwards.

                                                                 Geiger and Rao (2009)    16
3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation.


  • The present infrastructure is improving, especially in some areas
    (Bangalore, Mumbai and Delhi).

      –   Education
      –   Transportation                                        I
                                                                m
      –   Energy supply                                         p
                                                                r
      –   institutional and regulatory infrastructure           o
                                                                v
                                                                i
      for trials and pharmaceutical                             n
                                                                g
      – Communications

      – Heterogeneous Population.



                                                        Kapur And Ramamurti (2001),
                                                                              17
3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation.

   Conclusion :

   Following key areas efficiently tackles with the problems
      discussed earlier:

   • India does have a suitable infrastructure for innovation
     when compared in certain areas with its competing countries.
   • Also, India is at par with much more advanced economies in
     the world having vibrant democracy and favorable
     demographics trends.

   THUS, answer is YES India does have suitable infrastructure for
     innovation also, in Pharmaceutical industry.

                                                                     18
Conclusion

• Ranbaxy should consider its production on both products and
  move its manufacturing to N.D.C because production cost in
  India is increasing fast (Russia and China).

• Company should expand to developing countries as well as
  to US and Europe.

• India is at par with much more advanced economies in the
  world having vibrant democracy and favorable demographics
  trends and does have suitable infrastructure for innovation
  also, in Pharmaceutical industry.

                                                                19
References

Potter, M., (1990), The competitive advantage of nations, London : Macmillan

Mintzberg, H., & Waters, J. A. (1985). Of strategies, deliberate and emergent. Strategic
   Management Journal, p.p.257–272.

Chaudhuri, S. (2005) The WTO and India's Pharmaceutical Industry: Patent Protection,
   TRIPS, and Developing Countries, Oxford University Press Pharmacy Times, p.p.52-
   52.

Kapur , D. And Ramamurti, R., (2001), “India’s emerging competitive advantage in
   services”, Academy of management Executive , 15 (2)

Haberberg, A. and Rieple, A.,(2008), Strategic Management, Oxford university Press
   NY

Geiger, T., and Rao S.P. (2009) , “The india’s competativeness review”, world economic
                                                                                      20
   forum.
21

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Ranbaxy - Strategy management

  • 1.
  • 2. Content • Introduction 1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do both? 2. Should Ranbaxy focus its attention on developing markets or the developed markets of the USA and Europe. 3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation. • Conclusion • References 2
  • 3. Introduction  Ranbaxy Laboratories Limited is India's largest pharmaceutical company.  Ranbaxy was started by Ranbir Singh and Gurbax Singh in 1937 as a distributor for a Japanese company Shionogi.  Headquarters Located in Gurgaon, Haryana, India  Incorporated on 16th June, 1961 at Delhi. Manufacture drugs, medicines, cosmetics and chemical products.  In 2008 acquired by Daiichi Sankyo Japanese co.  Global company, present in 46 countries and manufacturing ,facilities in 6 countries 3
  • 4. 1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do both? Mintzberg suggests only 10%–30% of intended strategy is realized. External factors (political situation, production cost, labor cost) Emergent strategy - the decisions that come out from the complex processes in which managers interpret the intended strategy and adapt to changing external situation. Mintzberg, H., & Waters, J. A. (1985) 4
  • 5. 1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do both? External Environment Rising production cost Patent Act of 1970 (7 years) Rapid Stiff 2005 developments competition WTO another in in generic accession Patent act infrastructure market in 1995 (20 years) (Chaudhuri, S. 2005) 5
  • 6. 1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do both? Before a suitable strategy can be found, it is helpful to consider characteristics of both products: – Generic drugs - Product characteristics • low price and high volume • patent free •trust unimportant • brand unimportant (e.g. asprin, paracetemol, etc.) – Requirement = low –cost production destination – Patent drugs – Product characteristics • High cost of R&D • Highly skilled R&D • Long time R&D (5 years minimum) •Trust important •Brand important (e.g. Glaxo, Zeneca, Pfizer, etc.) – Requirement – highly educated, technically advanced, high trust, well connected (with other complimentary pharmaceutical organisations, universities, etc.) 6
  • 7. 1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do both? Ranbaxy’s strategic resources • Cheap labour • Continuingly improving level of skills • IT technology • Acquired company and strategic alliances (ex: Germany’s Betapharm Arzneimittel) • Improvements in infrastructure 7
  • 8. 1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do both? Generic Drugs Patent medicines + low product price + 10 years without taxes on patent medicines + high revenue (in India) + researchers at Datamonitor predicts that the + high potential success as improving patent expirations will be from now till 2016. education level, rising IT technology (pick 2011-12. ex: clopidogrel bisulfate (Plavix), + middle class as potential segment for sales for the first time) - high investment in R&D -Rising production cost in India compeered to - long period to invent and testing new product Newly developing countries (Indonesia, China, - high cost of advertising Philippines) - 20 years patent protection (Chaudhuri, S. 2005) 8
  • 9. 1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do both? For an organisation to obtain a sustainable competitive advantage Michael Porter suggested that they should follow either one of three generic strategies. Strategy 1 Cost Leadership. Strategy 2: Niche strategies Strategy 3: Differentiation Generate profit Patent product Focus on manufacturing generic Haberberg and Rieple, 2008 Recommendation : Ranbaxy is rapidly loosing one of its competitive advantage such as low production cost as India is fast developing country, thus production cost increases, so to be sustainable there is a need to move manufacturing to N.D.Cs. 9
  • 10. 1. Ranbaxy has the choice of continuing as the manufacturer of imitative generic drugs or becoming the developer of proprietary medicines. Discuss the pros and cons of each strategy. Could it do both? Conclusion: If Ranbaxy has the appropriate strategic resources, it is recommended that it: • Continues to produce generic drugs, possibly moving production to a destination where production factors are lower; • Begin developing new patented drugs in India. 10
  • 11. 2.Should Ranbaxy focus its attention on developing markets or the developed markets of the USA and Europe. Potter’s Diamond: Presence of High quality, Specialized inputs available to Firm: Skilled & Educated work force. Local availability of supporting industries in clusters than an Isolation The nature and sophistication of local customer needs The rules and incentives that govern competition: Government policies and investment programs to encourage innovation Potter (1990) 11
  • 12. 2. Should Ranbaxy focus its attention on developing markets or the developed markets of the USA and Europe. Potter’s Diamond: Developing Countries USA and Europe Firm’s structure, strategy and High level of competition in High level of competition in rivalry generic market, which is generic market, which is stimulate innovation stimulate innovation (Merck & Co., Inc) Factors conditions Low cost of production (Russia, High level of workers skills, China), increasing Good infrastructure, infrastructure, Participation in International Organization (WTO,NAFTA,EU) Demand condition Growing demand, middle class High level of life an demand Related and supporting Improving level of educations High level of education and IT industries technologies Ranbaxy should consider partnerships in Russia and China because India is geographically, culturally, ideologically and politically closer to Russia and China than to Europe or US. 12
  • 13. 2. Should Ranbaxy focus its attention on developing markets or the developed markets of the USA and Europe. Recommendations:  Merger and Acquisition, which will give access create TRUST and to foreign market IMAGE of the Ranbaxy company and resource.  Partnership and Strategic Alliances to create synergy effect. 13
  • 14. 3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation. India’s Investment for Infrastructure in following sectors (US$ billion) Geiger and Rao (2009) 14
  • 15. 3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation. India’s Employment scale Geiger and Rao (2009) 15
  • 16. 3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation. Global Competitive Index (GCI) today is portraying mixed picture of India’s competitiveness as it is constrained by few structural problems simultaneously having rapid economic growth being the world fastest growing economy: Pro ‘s Con ‘s • Huge domestic market and rapid • Not having very strong groundwork of growing middleclass boosting investment competitiveness to sustain and accelerate and consumption. its growth in near future. • Sophisticated financial markets which is • Increasing red tape and corruption in helping business to develops. governmental institutions. • Knack for innovation with high degree of business sophistication . • Investing in vital areas of competitiveness which will help India when its value chain will move upwards. Geiger and Rao (2009) 16
  • 17. 3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation. • The present infrastructure is improving, especially in some areas (Bangalore, Mumbai and Delhi). – Education – Transportation I m – Energy supply p r – institutional and regulatory infrastructure o v i for trials and pharmaceutical n g – Communications – Heterogeneous Population. Kapur And Ramamurti (2001), 17
  • 18. 3. Does India have a suitable infrastructure for innovation. Conclusion : Following key areas efficiently tackles with the problems discussed earlier: • India does have a suitable infrastructure for innovation when compared in certain areas with its competing countries. • Also, India is at par with much more advanced economies in the world having vibrant democracy and favorable demographics trends. THUS, answer is YES India does have suitable infrastructure for innovation also, in Pharmaceutical industry. 18
  • 19. Conclusion • Ranbaxy should consider its production on both products and move its manufacturing to N.D.C because production cost in India is increasing fast (Russia and China). • Company should expand to developing countries as well as to US and Europe. • India is at par with much more advanced economies in the world having vibrant democracy and favorable demographics trends and does have suitable infrastructure for innovation also, in Pharmaceutical industry. 19
  • 20. References Potter, M., (1990), The competitive advantage of nations, London : Macmillan Mintzberg, H., & Waters, J. A. (1985). Of strategies, deliberate and emergent. Strategic Management Journal, p.p.257–272. Chaudhuri, S. (2005) The WTO and India's Pharmaceutical Industry: Patent Protection, TRIPS, and Developing Countries, Oxford University Press Pharmacy Times, p.p.52- 52. Kapur , D. And Ramamurti, R., (2001), “India’s emerging competitive advantage in services”, Academy of management Executive , 15 (2) Haberberg, A. and Rieple, A.,(2008), Strategic Management, Oxford university Press NY Geiger, T., and Rao S.P. (2009) , “The india’s competativeness review”, world economic 20 forum.
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