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There are 5 modules in this course
Strategy is about sustainable competitive advantage. Create massive value for customers and protect your profits. Strategy is about winning. Play your own game and use your unfair advantage.
Strategy is about sustainable competitive advantage; it's about winning. It's about playing the long-game, knowing what you do well, creating massive value for customers, and finding your unfair advantage. It applies to everyone.
Optional: What is your unfair advantage?•5 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 10 minutes
Optional: What company do you think is strategic?•10 minutes
Porter's 5 Forces and industry analysis
Module 2•1 hour to complete
Module details
Industries don’t change overnight. They have structural dynamics and players that push/pull for profits. If we were Coca Cola, it's natural to think of rivals (e.g., Pepsi, Dr. Pepper), but also consider other players: a) suppliers (aluminum, glass providers) who want to raise prices; b) distributors (grocery, retail, gas stations) who want discounts; c) new entrants (energy drinks) who want to get into your industry, your business; d) substitutes (water, tea) that offer different kind of value. Business is a wrestling match for profits, so we should always remember who we are wrestling with.
What's included
3 videos1 assignment2 discussion prompts
Show info about module content
3 videos•Total 30 minutes
Industry Analysis using Porter's 5 Forces•8 minutes
Industry Analysis: Airlines, diamonds, bottled water•10 minutes
Industries has lifecycles, just like people•12 minutes
1 assignment•Total 15 minutes
Quiz: sustainable competitive advantage, industry analysis•15 minutes
2 discussion prompts•Total 20 minutes
Optional: How would you describe your industry?•10 minutes
Optional: India's electronics industry•10 minutes
Strategy is Set of Activities
Module 3•1 hour to complete
Module details
Strategy is how we deal with competition. Customers have high expectations and competition (rivals, suppliers, distributors, new entrants, and substitutes) are always knocking on the door. So our strategy needs to be a "flywheel" that gets stronger over time. . . sustainable, enduring, and hard to copy.
What's included
2 videos1 reading1 discussion prompt
Show info about module content
2 videos•Total 18 minutes
Strategy is Flywheel: Southwest Example•9 minutes
What is your Strategy? What is your flywheel?•9 minutes
1 reading•Total 10 minutes
Simple summary: "What is strategy" by Michael Porter, HBR, 1996 •10 minutes
Positioning is a marketing concept that also applies to strategy. When your customers think of their top 3 choices, how would they describe you, and how would they describe their other choices. Question: How are Dell and Apple different? Don't they both make electronics? Answer: They use their core competencies - what makes them truly unique to "be the best versions of themselves" and "play their own game."
Optional: Do you use Apple or a PC for a computer?•10 minutes
Optional: What does this Apple earnings call tell you?•10 minutes
Strategy is scary and involves risk
Module 5•2 hours to complete
Module details
Strategy is not a straight line. Your customers have opinions and choices; they don't have to like your products. They don't have to pay for your service. Competitors are always eager to out-best you, work harder, copy your success. Steal your market share. Free markets are great for customers and terrible for lazy companies. Strategy involves trade-offs. You cannot be all things to all people. Strategy involves innovation, risk, and potential failure. As Roger Martin, ex-Dean of Rotman Business School (Toronto) said, "If you're not scared, it probably means your strategy is no good."
What's included
3 readings1 peer review1 discussion prompt
Show info about module content
3 readings•Total 30 minutes
HBR video: A plan is not a strategy (9 min video)•10 minutes
Using strategy to think about our careers•10 minutes
Please take 2 min to review this course•10 minutes
1 peer review•Total 60 minutes
Required peer assignment: My personal career strategy•60 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 10 minutes
Optional: 100 smart things my strategy students said•10 minutes
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Instructor
Instructor ratings
Instructor ratings
We asked all learners to give feedback on our instructors based on the quality of their teaching style.
Emory University, located in Atlanta, Georgia, is one of the world's leading research universities. Its mission is to create, preserve, teach and apply knowledge in the service of humanity.
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5.0
21 reviews
5 stars
95.23%
4 stars
4.76%
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Showing 3 of 21
M
MR
5·
Reviewed on Dec 2, 2025
Spent multiple years in high school doing business classes and nobody explained strategy nearly as precisely and clearly!
D
DM
5·
Reviewed on Feb 18, 2026
Easy to follow basic business concept. Highly recommended.
K
KL
5·
Reviewed on Dec 22, 2025
I thought strategy is very sophisticated and profound. But the teacher has made into very easy concepts one by one and offers many examples. I really like this course.
Strategy is about having a sustainable competitive advantage, which is incredibly important to companies and your personal career. What are you uniquely good at? What are customers willing to pay you for? How can you create an "economic moat" around yourself? What lessons can we learn from Reliance Jio, Apple, Dell Computer, Trader Joe's, and Southwest airlines.
In the age of GenAI (ChatGPT, CoPilot, LLM) where machines learn by themselves, how can you stay relevant and earn $$$. Strategy is about making difficult choices = investing your time with customers, skills, experiences that gain in value.
Tactics are always important, but strategy helps you win long-term. I teach strategy every year to Emory students, here is a sample of the questions we tackle together in the classroom, in discussions, and online here.
Who is the instructor, John Kim?
John Kim, is an associate professor in the practice, at Emory University. He is a management consultant by experience and passion. He's been teaching strategy, healthcare, and consulting since 2017.
He has a Management Consulting specialization here with 1,300+ reviews with a weighted average 4.9 star rating here.
His teaching style is interactive - yes, even with online videos - and wants you to succeed. See his teaching philosophy here.
When will I have access to the lectures and assignments?
To access the course materials, assignments and to earn a Certificate, you will need to purchase the Certificate experience when you enroll in a course. You can try a Free Trial instead, or apply for Financial Aid. The course may offer 'Full Course, No Certificate' instead. This option lets you see all course materials, submit required assessments, and get a final grade. This also means that you will not be able to purchase a Certificate experience.
What will I get if I subscribe to this Specialization?
When you enroll in the course, you get access to all of the courses in the Specialization, and you earn a certificate when you complete the work. Your electronic Certificate will be added to your Accomplishments page - from there, you can print your Certificate or add it to your LinkedIn profile.
Is financial aid available?
Yes. In select learning programs, you can apply for financial aid or a scholarship if you can’t afford the enrollment fee. If fin aid or scholarship is available for your learning program selection, you’ll find a link to apply on the description page.