Original article from the Flevy business blog can be found here:
http://flevy.com/blog/industry-value-chain-understand-its-importance-and-application-to-the-mining-industry/
Most would be familiar with the term “value chain.” However, it is interesting to note that there are many standpoints from which it is viewed. One key perspective is its customer oriented/focused approach. According to it, all that a firm does or is planning to do in terms of products/services, operations, logistics and support functions should flow from its understanding of the market place, essentially industry, customers, and competition. We will use the term product to encompass services also in the rest of the article.
The environment and industry in which the firm functions is an essential element in determining the market’s attractiveness in terms of present and likely future demand, ease of doing business, as well as the level of competition. In this sense, it is the environment and industry in which the firm operates that will in-turn determine the firm’s strategy in terms of the market segments to serve, products to offer, operations to perform (production, logistics, marketing & selling and after sales service), and the most effective method to do it. The enablers to these key or primary activities (see Figure 1) also need to be configured and these are termed as support activities–human resources development, financial management & accounting, technology & information system, other firm administration activities etc. The term value is used to indicate that it is these set of activities which create value for the customer, the firm is aspiring to serve–the price that he/she/it is willing to pay for the product given the benefit/utility perceived or realized by using it. The strategy will also consider how direct and indirect competition is delivering and/or is looking to deliver this value. And then this value has to be delivered in a most cost effective way to ensure good profitability or margin.
Cash Payment 9602870969 Escort Service in Udaipur Call Girls
Industry Value Chain: Understand its Importance and Application to the Mining Industry
1. Industry Value Chain: Understand its
Importance and Application to the Mining
Industry
Contributed by Ganesh Rajagopalan on November 17, 2015 in Operations & Supply Chain,
Strategy, Marketing, & Sales
Most would be familiar with the term “value chain.” However, it is interesting to note that
there are many standpoints from which it is viewed. One key perspective is its customer
oriented/focused approach. According to it, all that a firm does or is planning to do in terms
of products/services, operations, logistics and support functions should flow from its
understanding of the market place, essentially industry, customers, and competition. We will
use the term product to encompass services also in the rest of the article.
The environment and industry in which the firm functions is an essential element in
determining the market’s attractiveness in terms of present and likely future demand, ease of
doing business, as well as the level of competition. In this sense, it is the environment
2. and industry in which the firm operates that will in-turn determine the firm’s strategy in terms
of the market segments to serve, products to offer, operations to perform (production,
logistics, marketing & selling and after sales service), and the most effective method to do it.
The enablers to these key or primary activities (see Figure 1) also need to be configured and
these are termed as support activities–human resources development, financial management
& accounting, technology & information system, other firm administration activities etc. The
term value is used to indicate that it is these set of activities which create value for the
customer, the firm is aspiring to serve–the price that he/she/it is willing to pay for the product
given the benefit/utility perceived or realized by using it. The strategy will also consider how
direct and indirect competition is delivering and/or is looking to deliver this value. And then
this value has to be delivered in a most cost effective way to ensure good profitability or
margin.
4. This larger environment in which the firm is seen to operate is many a times termed as the
‘value system’ which essentially is the ‘industry value chain’ as against the firm’s “value
chain.” The firm value chain becomes a part of the larger industry value chain (see Figure 2
below).
5. Figure 2. Industry Value Chain.
Anyone associated with a given industry, be it the product manufacturer/service provider,
supplier to these entities, product distributors, financial institutions, consultants, analysts, and
such other players and stakeholders will be able to deliver better, reliable, and more
consistent results/outputs if their focus is not just the firm concerned (internal or firm focus),
but also larger industry value chain (firm’s linkages to external dynamics). For an effective
achievement of the performance objectives set by such entities and individuals associated
with a given industry, a good insight into the industry value chain is therefore imperative.
Mining Industry Value Chain
Let us take the example of mining industry value chain to illustrate it.
Figure 3 brings out the types of mined materials and their importance in our lives while
Figure 4 provides an overview of the key stages in the mining industry value chain.
8. For a more in-depth discussion on the Mining Industry Value Chain, take a look at this 232-
slide presentation developed by the author: Mining Industry Value Chain Insights. The
figures in this article have been taken from this deck.
A very broad description of these stages would be as follows:
1. Prospect – Can also be called early stage exploration and is a low impact activity.
Involves identification of land containing promising mineralization for a more
detailed examination. Geologists use their knowledge of ore genesis and occurrence to
carry out the investigation.
2. Explore – The most promising of the prospects identified become targets for a
detailed exploration program or an advanced exploration program. The information
gathered during exploration is used to assess the size, quality and distribution of a
mineral deposit and to determine whether there is the potential (i.e. commercial
viability) for it to be mined.
3. Establish feasibility – The objective is to establish the feasibility that extraction is
reasonably justified i.e. economically mineable/viable. Based on it the firm commits
9. to the project and seeks to arrange/raise funds and/or get funding commitments to
start the mine development work and other subsequent processes.
4. Mine & Move – The process of developing the mine infrastructure, deploying the
required equipments, removal of mineral resources from the earth and the
transportation of broken rock of desired grade (called ore) from source to processing
destination.
5. Extract & Process – Extraction of saleable products from industrial mineral/metal
ore & further processing of these saleable products (where applicable or possible) into
higher value added products.
6. Market & Sell – Taking the product to the customers in terms of awareness,
availability, quality, customization, pricing, payment/contractual terms, supply
logistics and other such related activities enabling revenue and profit generation.
A firm in this industry may span across all the stages or it may be a part of some of the
connected stages. The risks that the firms that operate in the upstream stages such as
prospecting & exploration take are very high and fall as we move downstream. While
technology to assess the size and grade of ore body (the part of the earth’s surface or deeper
10. parts being prospected/explored that contains the minerals in the desired quantity & grade)
during the upstream stages have become high and sophisticated it still carries a fair amount of
uncertainty and estimation error which can be known only when the actual mining starts. This
process itself can take up to 2 to 10 years or some times more.
The range of firms that operate this industry could be from what are called as juniors to
seniors to large global firms. Consultants & contractors with various types of specialization
are also key players.
The legal and social environment in which mining firms operate can be truly challenging.
The processes involved in getting various tenements can be lengthy running into years and
compliance norms and procedures are complicated. Community and government
interventions can be high.
Most products that this industry generates are industrial products (business to business sale)
barring some precious metals which may be sold to the end consumers directly. The saleable
products can happen at various phases of the ‘extract & process’ stage where these may be
sold to downstream firms or may be moved internally within the same group of firms(the
downstream processing locations being geographically in another country). Some of the
products could be traded in the metal exchanges and reference price obtained from these
11. trades while many others are negotiated and sales cycle may involve lengthy testing and
validation. Many of the mining products especially metals are vulnerable to business cycles
and prices tend to fall to such a level that it at times renders mining unviable.
Haulage, transportation and storage are very key aspect in this industry. The movement of
materials can be internal within the same site or external. The transportation cost could be
large part of the final cost in many instances. The modes can be road, rail and water (sea,
rivers & channels). On both fronts – movement and storage – a lot depends upon the mineral
characteristics–e.g. precious metals, hazardous minerals, dry bulk, etc.
The end user industries are of a wide range–construction, glass, ceramics, electrical,
electronics, automobile, white goods, jewelry, aircrafts and so on. The channels and
intermediate industries through which these products reach them is complex.
The above is just sample of what nature of insights we can gain when studying the industry
value chain which can have pronounced impact on the firms operating in this industry. These
insights can be used by the firms/consultants/contractors in the industry to shape their
strategy & approach – to their suppliers, to their customers, in adapting to collaborative or
information sharing processes, in helping improve performance on various key parameters
etc. For investors, financial institutions, analysts and such others the insight helps them to ask
12. the right questions to the management, place their replies in perspective as well as judge its
quality, understand the external dynamics at play in determining the firm’s performance or
likely projected performance and other similar related matters for them to take
lending/investing decisions.
About Ganesh Rajagopalan
Ganesh Rajagopalan is an advisor and trainer with expertise in the areas of Strategic
Planning, Business Planning, Business Modeling, Financial Planning, Tactical Planning,
Industry Analysis, Investment Analysis, Credit Analysis, Financial Systems Planning,
Team Building, and Organizational Structuring. Prior to consulting, Ganesh worked
with Standard Chartered Bank, Oracle Finance and a niche investment banking firm. He has several
business frameworks available on Flevy here.
13. Flevy (www.flevy.com) is the
marketplace for premium
documents. These documents can
range from Business Frameworks to
Financial Models to PowerPoint
Templates.
Flevy was founded under the principle
that companies waste a lot of time and
money recreating the same
foundational businessdocuments. Our
vision is for Flevy to become a
comprehensive knowledge base of
business documents. All
rganizations, from startups to large
enterprises, can use Flevy— whether
it's to jumpstart projects, to find
reference or comparison materials, or
just to learn.
Contact Us
Please contact us with any questions you
may haveabout our company.
• General Inquiries
support@flevy.com
• Media/PR
press@flevy.com
• Billing
billing@flevy.com