Ch. 8
changes in an industry value chain that involve moving ownership of activities closer to the end (customer) point of the value chain
Forward Vertical Integration
A situation in which one party is more informed than the other due to the possession of private info is called Info Asymmetry. It can result in the ____ of desirable goods by inferior ones.
crowding out
Moderate levels of diversification are associated with
higher firm performance
Assets required to be co-located such as equipment necessary for mining bauxite
site specificity of specialized asset
A helpful restructuring tool that guides portfolio planning and each category warrants a different strategy
BCG Growth-share matrix
Changes in an industry value chain that involve moving ownership of activities upstream to the originating (inputs) point of the value chain
Backward Vertical Integration
Owning inputs of the value chain is called _____ whereas _____ is owning activities closer to the customer
Backward, forward
Alternatives on the make or buy continuum with the least integration
Buy (Arms length) like short term contracts
A way to guide managerial decision in regard to diversification strategy. The first tasks is to identify existing core competencies & understand current market situation. When applying existing or new dimensions to core competencies and markets, four quadrants emerge each with distinct implications
Core Competence-Market Matrix
Decisions that leaders make; goal-directed actions that they take in quest for competitive advantage
Corporate Strategy
What range of products/services should the company offer describes __.
Diversification
Additional business activity pursued in corporate diversification
Dominant
Name 2 ways that diversification can enhance firm performance
Economies of scale (reduce costs) Economies of scope (increase value)
Increase in a variety of markets and geographic regions
Geographic diversification
costs that occur due to political maneuvering by managers to influence capital and resource allocation and the resulting inefficiencies stemming from suboptimal allocation of scarce resources
Influence costs
Crowding out of desirable goods and services by inferior ones like used cars, e-commerce, mortgage-backed securities, and R&D projects are examples of
Info Asymmetry
A related-diversification strategy that can enhance corporate performance and considers coordination and influence and can add value by shifting capital from business units generating free cash flow to those needing additional capital to expand and realize growth potential
Internal Capital Markets
Can be a source of value creation in diversification strategy; a way to allocate capital at a lower cost if more efficient than external markets
Internal Capital Markets
The most integrated alternative to performing ones own corporate family. The corporate parent owns and can direct it via command and control
Parent-subsidiary relationship
A major disadvantage of organizing economic activity within firm in which agents pursue their own interests (corporate jets, golf outings, and expensive hotels)
Principal Agent Problem
Increase in variety of products and services and active in several product markets
Product Diversification
Product and geographic diversification
Product-market diversification
Constrained: all businesses share competencies and Linked: some businesses share competencies
Related diversification
The two dimensions of BCG growth-share matrix are
Relative market share (horizontal axis) and speed of market growth (vertical axis)
Reorganizing and divesting business units and activities helps refocus a company and leverage competencies more fully.
Restructuring
What are the 4 types of Corporate Diversification?
Single Dominant Related Unrelated
Co-located assets, unique equipment, and human capital; have high opportunity costs because they have significantly more value in their intended use than in their next best use.
Specialized Assets
What is one solution the principal (owner of the firm) can take to ensure agents (employees) are acting on behalf of the firm?
Stock options to make agents owners
Moving internal value chain activities to other firms
Strategic Outsourcing
-Long-term contracts (licensing and franchising) -equity alliance -joint ventures
Strategic alliance (in the middle of integration)
a way of orchestrating value activities in which a firm is backwardly integrated but also relies on outside market firms for some of its supplies, and/or is forwardly integrated but also relies on outside market firms for some of its distribution
Taper Integration
What are 2 alternatives to Vertical Integration
Taper integration and strategic outsourcing
A conglomerate; no businesses share competencies
Unrelated corporate diversification
Lowering costs, improving quality, facilitating scheduling and planning, facilitating investments in specialized assets, securing critical supplies and distribution channels are all advantages of
Vertical Integration
The ownership of inputs or distribution channels. It asks "what percentage of the firms sales is generated within the firms boundaries?"
Vertical Integration
When transactions are too risky or costly
Vertical Market Failure
When does vertical integration make sense?
When there are issues with raw materials and eliminate annoyances to enhance customer experience
If market costs are less than in house costs then the firm should
consider purchasing
costs that are a function of number, size, and type of businesses that are linked
coordination
The Underlying concepts that guide the three dimensions of corporate strategy: (vertical integration, diversification, and geo scope)
core competencies, economies of scale, economies of scope, transaction costs
SBU matrix is plotted in four categories of the matrix
dog, cash cow, star, and question mark
Firms that compete in single markets could potentially benefit from ____ by leveraging core competencies into adjacent markets
economies of scope
employees with specific qualities and knowledge that is not transferable to a different employer
human asset specificity
What are the four risks of vertical integration
increasing costs and potential for legal repercussions reduced quality and flexibility
High and low levels of diversification are generally associated with
lower overall performance
The diversification-performance relationship implies that companies that focus on a single business, as well as companies that pursue unrelated diversification...
often fail to achieve additional value creation
Assets whose physical and engineering properties are designed to satisfy a particular customer
physical asset specificity
The transformation of raw materials into finished goods along distinct stages (supply chain)
vertical integration
Three Boundaries of the firm (3)
vertical integration, diversification, geographic scope
If in House costs are less than Market costs a firm should
vertically integrate (own production of inputs or own output distribution channels)