ECON 5315 Homework 3 Chapters 8 & 9
Value Creation Equation
(B-P)+(P-C)
Value Net
A concept developed by Brandenburger and Nalebuff as a counterpart to Porter's five forces consisting of suppliers, customers, competitors, and complementors
Generic Strategy
A concept developed by Michael Porter that describes, in broad terms, how it positions itself to compete in the market it serves.
Indifference Curve
A curve that can be used to describe the set of price-quality combinations that yields the same consumer surplus to an individual
Search Good
A good whose quality is relatively easy to evaluate before purchase
Competitive Advantage
A situation in which a firm earns a higher rate of economic profit than the average rate of economic profit of other firms competing within the same market.
Share Strategy
A strategy in which a firm exploits its benefit or cost advantage through a higher market share rather than through higher price-cost margins
Broad-Coverage Strategy
A targeting strategy that is aimed at serving all customer groups in the market by offering a full line of related products
Stuck in the Middle
A term coined by Michael Porter that describes a firm that pursues elements of cost leadership and benefit leadership at the same time and in the process fails to achieve either a cost advantage or a benefit advantage
Consumer Surplus Equation
B-P
How can entry erode incumbents' profits?
Entrants decrease market concentration
The five parts of the Five-Forces Framework
Internal rivalry; entry; substitutes and complements; supplier power; buyer power
Producer Surplus Equation
P-C
Seller Power
The ability of firms to negotiate prices that extract higher profits from buyers
Consumer Surplus
The perceived benefit of a product per unit consumed minus the product's monetary price
Maximum Willingness-to-Pay
The price at which a customer is indifferent between buying a product and going without it
Value-Added Analysis
The process of using market prices of unfinished and semi-finished goods to estimate the incremental value created by distinctive parts of the value chain
Consumer Surplus Parity
The situation in which multiple firm's price-quality positions line up along the same indifference curve offering a consumer the same amount of consumer surplus
What does the steepness (slope) of an indifference curve indicate?
The tradeoff a consumer is willing to make between price and quality
Focus Strategy
When a firm either offers a narrow set of varieties, serves a narrow set of customers, or does both