MGT 3830 Test #2
The key challenges for firms entering the growth stage of the industry life cycle insures
All of the above; scaling up output to meet demand, obtaining sufficient resources and capabilities to support effective scaling-up operations, and adaptive product designs and manufacturing capabilities to accommodate large-scale production
The extent to which an innovation leads to greater profit for the innovating firm is
All of the above; the creation of value for consumers by the innovation, the appropriation of value created from the innovation by the innovating firm, and how quickly the innovation gets adopted by consumers
A firm's ability to respond quickly to external change depends upon:
Both A and B; accurate information and having a well-established market leadership position
The number of firms in most industries tends to ____________ with the onset of the maturity stage of the industry life cycle
Decrease significantly
The difference between "evolutionary" and "revolutionary" standards strategies is:
Evolutionary strategies maintain compatibility with what went before
A key success factor in the maturity stage of an industry life cycle is a firm's ability to create necessary supporting capabilities to scale up production of its good/service
False
Emphasis often shifts from process innovation to product innovation once a dominant product emerges
False
In the context of innovation, lead-time refers to the period of time during which a firm is the new leader for a product or service
False
Isolating mechanisms are forces that tend to equalize profit rates among firms and erode a firm's competitive advantage
False
Research has shown that higher R&D output has a strong positive relationship with firm performance
False
The industry life cycle consists of 4 stages: 1)introduction,2)Growth,3)Plateau, and 4)Rejuvenation
False
competitive advantage and technology are linked by:
Innovation
Michael Porter's early work suggests that combining cost leadership and differentiation
Is likely to result in a firm becoming "stuck in the middle"
External changes can only give to competitive advantage when those changes differently affect firms
True
If a firm is able to establish clear property rights over its innovation, then the firm is leading
True
In the long run, competition eliminates differences in profitability between firms.
True
Two main factors drive industry evolution: demand growth and the product knowledge
True
___________ refers to the idea that, when a would be imitator cannot clearly understand the extent of a competitor's success, any attempt to imitate that strategy is subject to unknown outcomes
Uncertain imitability
Dynamic capabilities:
are a firm's higher level ability to learn new capabilities
As an industry moves through the stages of the life cycle, overall strategies tend to:
change in most major aspects
An organization that engages in both exploitative and explorative activities in the same organizational units, with the same people employs _________
contextual ambidexterity
A cost leadership strategy means that a firm must:
exploit sources of cost advantage in providing customers with a standardized product
If a strong regime of appropriability exists, the innovating firm:
has the advantage in terms of capturing a significant portion of value created by the innovation
standards emerge in markets that are subject to ___________
network externalities
Differentiation is when a firm
offers customers something valuable and unique for which customers are willing to pay a price premium
Strategic innovation involves:
pioneering along at least one of three dimensions : new industry, new customer segment, or a new advantage
Once established, competitive advantage is:
subject to erosion by competitors or new entrants
The idea that an organization's existing capabilities are path dependent means that:
the capabilities it possesses today are the result of the steps it has taken throughout history
The most successful follower strategies are:
those that initiate a product's transition from niche market to mass market
an innovation diffuses
through the adoption of products by customers and the imitation by competitors