Exam II Review: Transaction Costs, Vertical Integration, Diversification
Forward Integration
Owning activities closer to the end customer
Backward Integration
Owning activities in industries further from the end customer
Fully Vertically Integrated
Participating in every stage of the industry value chain
Acquisition Integration
Post-deal work involving asset rationalization, activity integration, and acculturation to ensure successful mergers and acquisitions
Managing Alliances
Principles including value creation, governance, value sharing, incentives, defining roles, trust-building, and resource investment
How to do M&A right?
Recommendations include critical self-assessment, willingness to walk away, rigorous post-acquisition reviews, and caution with investment bankers' advice
Restructuring
Reorganizing and divesting to refocus a company's core competencies
M&A and Competitive Advantage
Research shows most M&As do not create competitive advantage, realize expected synergies, or add shareholder value
Desired Closeness to Resource Provider
Achieved through equity alliances or joint ventures, impacting the level of partnership and integration
Core Competence-Market Matrix
Assessing core competencies for new market leverage
Why so many M&As?
Driven by miscalculations, irrational exuberance, enthusiasm, commitment escalation, principal-agent problems, and desire to 'win'
Tradability
Ease of obtaining resources from another firm, influencing decisions on long-term contracts or acquisitions
Diversification
Entering new businesses not in the existing industry value chain
Acquisition Price
Factors like intrinsic value, market value, purchase price, and synergy value influence how much to pay for an acquisition
Vertical Integration
Firm's ownership of production inputs or distribution channels
Vertically Disintegrated
Focusing on the core stage, outsourcing other functions
Relevance
Internal resources are relevant if similar to needed resources and superior to competitors', guiding internal development or external acquisition decisions
Types of Alliances
Long-term contracts, equity alliances, joint ventures, each involving different levels of partnership and ownership
Financial Engineering
Manipulating financial structures for benefits, not a sufficient reason for mergers and acquisitions
Product-Resource Matrix
Matching resources with potential new markets using VRIO framework
Mergers and Acquisitions
Merger joins two companies forming a new entity, acquisition involves one company purchasing another, both with benefits and costs
Diversification Mode
Methods firms use to diversify, including internal development, alliances, non-equity, equity, joint venture, and M&A
Build-Borrow-or-Buy Framework
Model considering internal resources relevance, tradability, desired closeness to resource partner, and integration for growth strategies
External Transaction Costs
Costs between a firm and other entities, e.g., negotiating with suppliers
Internal Transaction Costs
Costs within a firm, e.g., monitoring employee performance
Synergy
Value creation from cost savings (C) and revenue enhancements (R) in acquisitions, challenging to estimate and often underestimated
Taper Integration
Vertical integration with reliance on outside firms for supplies
Strategic Alliances
Voluntary arrangements between firms for sharing knowledge, resources, and capabilities to develop processes, products, services
Miscalculations in M&As
Common overestimations of synergy and integration abilities, underestimations of post-merger challenges and resources needed
Make, Borrow, or Buy Continuum
Concept of how firms achieve growth through building (organic growth), buying (acquisitions), or borrowing (partnerships)
Integration
Conditions for integrating a resource provider based on relevancy, tradability, need for closeness, and integration ability
Alliance vs. Acquisition: The Four I's Framework
Considerations like infeasibility, information asymmetry, indigestibility, and inflexibility when choosing between alliances and acquisitions
Transaction Costs
Costs associated with economic exchanges, like buying lunch or recruiting
BCG Growth-Share Matrix
Tool to guide restructuring decisions by Boston Consulting Group