Chapter 7: Corporate Diversification
Types of Corporate Diversification
Includes: Product Diversification Strategy, Geographic Market Diversification Strategy, Product-Market Diversification Strategy
Related Diversification
Includes: Related-Constrained and Related-linked
Limited Corporation Diversification
Includes: Single-business and Dominant-business
Types of Diversification
Includes: Unrelated Diversification, Related Diversification, Limited Corporation Diversification
Imitability of Diversification
Includes: direct duplication and substitutes
Operational Economies of Scope
Includes: shared activities and core competencies
predatory pricing
setting prices so that they are less than the subsidized business's costs
Product Diversification Strategy
operations in different industries simultaneously
Corporate Diversification Strategy
operations in multiple markets or industries at the same time
Geographic Market Diversification Strategy
operations in multiple markets simultaneously
shared activities
potential sources of operational economies of scope for diversified firms
Types of Economies of Scope
Includes: Operational Economies of Scope, Financial Economies of Scope, Anticompetitive Economies of Scope, and Employee and Stakeholder Incentives for Diversification
Rarity of Diversification
If only a few competing firms have exploited a particular economy of scope, that economy of scope can be rare
Anticompetitive Economies of Scope
Includes Multipoint competition / Collusion and Exploiting market power
Financial Economies of Scope
Includes: Internal capital allocation, Risk reduction and Tax advantages
2 Values of Corporate Diversification
Valuable Economies of Scope and it must be less costly for managers in a firm to realize these economies of scope than for outside equity holders on their own
Single-business
more than 95% of revenues comes from one business alone
Dominant-business
about 70 to 95% of revenues comes from one business
deep-pockets model
diversification enables a firm to apply its monopoly power in several different businesses
Economies of Scope
exist in a firm when the value of the products or services it sells increases as a function of the number of businesses in which that firm operates
Unrelated Diversification
less than 70% of revenues come from one business most of the business share very few links or commonalities or nothing in common at all
Related-linked
less than 70% of revenues come from one business and different business share few links or commonalities or different links and attributes
Related-Constrained
less than 70% of revenues come from one business and different business share many links or commonalities
Employee and Stakeholder Incentives for Diversification
maximizing management compensation
core competencies
the collective learning in the organization, especially how to coordinate diverse production skills and integrate multiple streams of technologies
Product-Market Diversification Strategy
using both product and geographic market diversifications strategies at the same time