chapter 2: strategy and technology: concepts and frameworks for achieving success

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AmazonFresh

FreshDirect's current most dangerous competitor

true

T/F: Dell started out as the largest PC firm on the planet, utilizing vertically integrated manufacturing and direct to consumer sales to earn the firm significantly more profit than rival firms

true

T/F: as google's innovations in technology, interface, and advertising remained unmatched over time, this allowed the firm to build its brand, scale, and advertising network (distribution channel) that grew from network effects because content providers and advertisers attract one another

true

T/F: being dependent on distribution channels provided by other firms can present challenges if distribution partners suddenly decide to cut you off

true

T/F: consumers buying commodities are highly price focused since they have so many similar choices

true

T/F: contract manufacturers serving Dell's rivals observed Dell and improved manufacturing efficiency, causing the price of computing to fall and the price advantage Dell enjoyed to shrink this meant that savings from buying a Dell weren't as big as they once were

true

T/F: even if an innovation is patentable, that doesn't mean that a firm has bulletproof protection

true

T/F: firms that seem dominant but don't have high switching costs can be rapidly trumped by strong rivals

false

T/F: goods and information have to flow in a line from one function to another in a value chain in order to be successful

true

T/F: if a firm adopts software that changes a unique process into a generic one, it may have coopted a key source of competitive advantage, particularly if other firms can buy the same stuff third party SCM, CRM, and ERP software typically requires adopting a very specific way of doing things, using software and methods that can be purchased and adopted by others

true

T/F: in order for a challenger to win customers away from a rival, a new entrant must not only demonstrate to consumers that an offering provides more value than the incumbent, but they have to ensure that their value added exceeds the incumbent's value plus any perceived customer switching costs if it's going to cost you and be inconvenient, there's no way you're going to leave unless the benefits are overwhelming

true

T/F: in the US, technology and business methods can be patented

true

T/F: late moving pure play rivals will struggle, as FreshDirect's lead time allows the firm to develop brand, scale, data, and other advanages that newcomers lack

true

T/F: market entry is not the same as building a sustainable business, and just showing up doesn't guarantee survival

true

T/F: operational effectiveness is critical, as firms must invest in techniques to improve quality, lower cost, and design efficient customer experiences

true

T/F: operational effectiveness is not sufficient to yield sustainable dominance over the competition

true

T/F: over time, FreshDirect has built up a set of strategic assets that not only address specific needs of a market but are now extremely difficult for any upstart to compete against entry costs for competitors would be high as well

true

T/F: resource based thinking can help firms avoid the trap of carelessly entering markets simply because growth is spotted telecommunications industry learned this lesson in a hard way after the explosion of the internet

differences

T/F: technology can play a critical role in creating and strengthening strategic ____________ or advantages that rivals will struggle to match

true

T/F: technology is very easy to replicate, and those assuming advantage lies in technology alone may find themselves in a profit eroding arms race with rivals able to match their moves step by step

true

T/F: technology opens up opportunities to leverage products provided by others to create new distribution channels to reach customers

true

T/F: the ability to distribute products by bundling them with existing offerings can be a key advantage

true

T/F: the patent system is often considered to be unfairly stacked against startups

true

T/F: today's internet giants are winners because in most cases, they were the first to move with a profitable model and they were able to quickly establish resources for competitive advantage

true

T/F: with growing internet demands, many telecom firms began digging up the ground and laying down cables to meet demand, but all rivals were doing the same thing, resulting in new assets that weren't rare and less valuable

valuable, rare, imperfectly imitable, non substitutable

4 characteristics of a resource that a firm should control to maintain sustainable competitive advantage

tech

______ firms often benefit from strong switching costs that cement customers to their firms users invest their time learning a product, entering data into a system, creating files, and buying supporting programs or manuals, making them reluctant to switch to a rival's efforts

commodity

a basic good that can be interchanged with nearly identical offerings by others (think milk, coal, orange juice, or to a lesser extent, Windows PCs and Android phones)

information asymmetry

a decision situation where one party has more or better information than its counterpart

Porter's Five Forces (Industry and Competitive Analysis)

a framework considering the interplay between (1) the interplay between the intensity of rivalry among existing competitors, (2) the threat of new entrants, (3) the threat of substitute goods or services, (4) the bargaining power of buyers, and (5) the bargaining power of suppliers analyzing them will illuminate an industry's fundamental attractiveness, expose the underlying drivers of average industry profitability, and provide insight into how profitability will evolve in the future

data

a particularly strong switching cost for firms leveraging technology (like Netflix recommendations/feeds)

collaborative filtering

a process that automatically groups people with similar buying intentions, preferences, and behaviors and predicts future purchases

dense wave division multiplexing (DWDM)

a technology that increases the transmission capacity (and hence speed) of fiber-optic cable transmissions using fiber are accomplished by transmitting light inside "glass" cables in ___________, the light inside fiber is split into different wavelengths in a way similar to how a prism splits light into different colors

augmented reality

a technology that superimposes content, such as images and animation, on top of real world images

imitation resistant value chain

a way of doing business that competitors struggle to replicate and that frequently involves technology in a key enabling role having one is a critical competitive asset

outbound logistics

delivering products or services to consumers, distribution centers, retailers, or other partners

fast follower problem

exists when savvy rivals watch a pioneer's efforts, learn from their successes and missteps, then enter the market quickly with a comparable or superior product at a lower cost before the first mover can dominate Groupon, Instagram vs Snapchat, Flip video camera

sustainable competitive advantage

financial performance that consistently outperforms industry averages

scalable

firms that benefit from scale economies as they grow are _________ many internet and tech leveraging businesses are highly _______ since, as firms grow to serve more customers with their existing infrastructure investment, profit margins improve dramatically

firm infrastructure

functions that support the whole firm, including general management, planning, IS, and finance

inbound logistics

getting needed materials and other inputs into the firm from suppliers

tradeoffs

if a firm's value chain can't be copied by competitors without engaging in painful _________, or if the firm's value chain helps to create and strengthen other strategic assets over time, it can be a key source for competitive advantage

differentiate

in order to break the commodity trap, many firms leverage technology to _________ their goods and services

straddled

incumbents trying to copy FreshDirect's value chain will be _______ across two business models, unable to reap full advantages of either

new entrants

investments online are expensive and uncertain, prompting some firms to partner with ________ like Amazon

increases, decreases

it is often suggested that the internet _______ (increases/decreases) the bargaining power of buyers and _______ (increases/decreases) the bargaining power of suppliers

viral marketing

leveraging consumers to promote a product or service

supply chain management (SCM)

linking inbound and outbound logistics with operations

long-haul fiber-optic cables

most of what travels over the internet is transferred over __________

technology/research and development

new product and process design

inventory turns (inventory turnover, stock turns, stock turnover)

number of times inventory is sold or used during a given period (a higher figure means that a firm is selling products quickly)

FreshDirect

online grocery firm addressing the quality gap between store bought produce and restaurant grade goods broader selection and cheaper prices compared to in person stores, supply chain savings that traditional grocery stores and delivery firms can't match, appealing user interface and mobile app encourages people to buy more and more often, next day delivery appeals to time strapped New Yorkers

strategic positioning

performing different tasks than rivals, or the same tasks in a different way

operational effectiveness

performing the same tasks better than rivals perform them

switching costs

play a role in determining the strength of network effects, as users spend time learning a product, buy add ons, create files, and enter preferences

data

plays a critical role in differentiation each time a user returns to Amazon, the firm uses browsing records, purchase patterns, and product ratings to present a custom home page that the firm hopes the user would like Apple operating systems only running on Apple hardware

substitute good

products or services that can be used in place of each other, like online digital tracks and their CD counterparts

application programming interfaces (APIs)

programming hooks, or guidelines, published by firms that tell other programs how to get a service to perform a task such as send or receive data ex: Amazon provides ____ to let developers write their own applications and websites that can send the firm orders

human resource management (HRM)

recruiting, hiring, training, and development

switching costs

the cost a consumer incurs when moving from one product to another can involve actual money spent (buying a new product) as well as investments in time, any data loss, and so forth

sameness

the danger in operational effectivness

price transparency

the degree to which complete information is available

commoditized

the direct to consumer model suffered when sales of notebook PCs outpaced the more _________ desktop market

Facebook

the dominant social network worldwide

commoditized

the more _____________ an offering, the greater the likelihood that competition will be based on price, pulling down profits for al players that consumers see as basically equivalent in features

customer experience

the most important aspect to building a strong brand (not advertising and promotion, but proxying quality and inspiring trust)

distribution channels

the path through which products or services get to customers Apple Store versus selling Apple gear at Best Buy gives Apple an advantage and reduces the likelihood that consumers price check products with other brands

bargaining power

the pressure that a supplier or buyer can exert on a company Apple's dominance of smartphone and tablet markets has allowed the firm to lock up a significant portion of the world's supply of advanced touch screen displays and to do so with better pricing than would be available to smaller rivals

operational effectiveness, strategic positioning

the reason so many firms suffer aggressive, margin eroding competition is because they've defined themselves according to _______________ rather than ____________

barrier to entry

the scale of technology investment required to run a business can act as a __________, discouraging new, smaller competitors

value chain

the set of activities through which a product or service is created and delivered to customers

reduced based view of competitive advantage

the strategic thinking approach suggesting that if a firm is to maintain sustainable competitive advantage, it must control an exploitable resource, or set of resources, that have four critical characteristics (valuable, rare, imperfectly imitable, non substitutable)

brand

the symbolic embodiment of all the information connected with a product or service

intensity of rivalry

the threat that customers will switch their business to competitors within the industry the rise of the internet led to an increase of _______ for music retailers

non practicing entities (NPEs, patent trolls)

these firms make money by acquiring and asserting patents, rather than bringing products and services to market ex: BlackBerry was forced to pay a settlement to a little known holding company called NTP

affiliates

third parties that promote a product or service, typically in exchange for a cut of any sales

enablers

timing and technology are _______ for competitive advantage, but they alone will not yield sustainable competitive advantage (it is what a firm does with its time lead and technology)

operations

turning inputs into products or services

inbound logistics, operations, outbound logistics, marketing and sales, service

value chain primary components (value chain does not necessarily flow in a line from one function to another)

firm infrastructure, human resource management, technology/research and development, procurement

value chain secondary components

economies of scale

when costs can be spread across increasing units of production or in service multiple customers businesses that have favorable __________ (like many internet firms) are sometimes referred to as being highly scalable

network effects (Metcalfe's Law, network externalities)

when the value of a product or service increases as its number of users expands (like Instagram)

scale advantages

advantages related to size (Google, Netflix, Amazon)

OpenTable

an example of network effects, delivers high value to the restaurant industry by exposing inventory and lowering search costs (thereby reducing frustration)

straddling

attempts to occupy more than one position, while failing to match the benefits of a more efficient, singularly focused rival

private (as in "to go private" or "take a firm private")

buying up a publicly traded firm's shares usually done when a firm has suffered financially and when a turnaround strategy will first yield losses that would further erode share price firms (often called private equity, buyout, LBO/leveraged buyout firms) that take another company _______ hope to improve results so that the company can be sold to another firm or they can reissue shares on public markets

lower

consumers use brands to _______ (raise/lower) search costs, so having a strong brand is particularly vital for firms hoping to the first online stop for consumers

marketing and sales

customer engagement, pricing, promotion, and transaction

procurement

sourcing and purchasing function

accounting processes

standardized and not a source of competitive advantage, so firms buy rather than build their own

customer relationship management (CRM)

supporting sales, marketing, and in some cases, research and development

strategic position

Dell's struggles as computers, customers, and product mix changes all underscore the importance of continually assessing a firm's __________ among changing market conditions

defensible strategic assets

Google and Apple arrived late in their respective tech games, but nothing before them had created _______, which left an opening

two sided market

OpenTable participates in a _______, where customers are attracted to the service with the most restaurants, and restaurants are attracted to the service with the most customers

distribution channel

OpenTable's captive audience of restaurants and diners effectively creates a new __________ for introducing all sorts of additional value added services, including loyalty programs

support

service, maintenance, and customer support

enterprise resource planning software (ERP)

software implemented in modules to automate the entire value chain

learning costs, information and data, financial commitment, contractual commitments, search costs, loyalty programs

sources of switching costs 1. switching tech might require an investment in learning a new interface and commands 2. users may have to reenter data, convert files or databases, or even lose earlier contributions on incompatible systems 3. can include investments in new equipment, the cost to acquire any new software, consulting, or expertise, and the devaluation of any investment in prior technologies no longer used 4. breaking contracts can lead to compensatory damages and harm an organization's reputation as a reliable partner 5. finding and evaluating a new alternative costs time and money 6. switching can cause customers to lose out on program benefits (think frequent purchaser programs that offer "miles" or "points" all enabled and driven by software)


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