CH8
Long-Term Contracts typically last
1 year or more
When one firm buys or takes over another firm
Acquisition
New Core Competence, New Market
Building new core competencies to create and compete in markets of the future
New Core-Competence, Existing Market
Building new core competencies to protect and extend current market position
Term is used to describe cooperation by competitors
Co-Opetition
Unrelated Diversification
Conglomerate fits which type of corporate diversification model
In most cases, mergers and acquisitions
Do not create competitive advantage
Alliance Management Capability
Firm's ability to effectively manage three alliance-related tasks concurrently, often across a portfolio of many different alliances
Tata Group, owns Land Rover and Jaguar, is pursuing
Focused Differentiation Strategy
One way to overcome the principal-agent problem is to
Give stock options to managers, thus making them owners
Some foreign countries require companies to be structured as
Joint Ventures
Addition to having the lowest cost, a low-cost leader is likely to have
Large Market Share
In order to build alliance management capabilities in small companies, it is recommended that firms take the
Learning-by-Doing
In Taper Integration Systems, a firm has
Partial reliance on outside markets
Because the size of organizations is typically correlated with prestige, power, and pay
Principal-agent problems might be a reason to pursue Managers as agents
Purpose of the Core Competence-Market Matrix
Provides guidance regarding how to diversify in order to grow the company
Principal-Agent Problem
Situation in which an agent performing activities on behalf of a principal pursues his or her own interests
The Lemons problem suggests that information asymmetries can cause
Superior goods to be replaced by inferior ones
Disadvantage of a Short-Term Contract as an Alternative on the Make-or-Buy continuum is that
Supplying firms responding to the request for proposal have no incentive to make any transaction-specific investments due to the short duration of the contract
Horizontal Integration can reduce
The threat of entry
IKEA used the value innovation framework of
eliminate-reduce-raise-create to successfully implement a blue ocean strategy
To figure out if a firm's type of diversification is
related or unrelated, one can ask questions about the degree to which the corporation's business units share core competencies
Three of the following are Advantages of Equity Alliances
- Window into new technology - Possible emergence of trust and commitment - Stronger ties
Four underlying strategic management concepts that determine the scope of a firm
Core Competencies - Unique strengths embedded deep within a firm Economies of Scale - When a firm's average cost per unit decreases as its output increases Economies of Scope - Savings that come from producing two (or more) outputs or providing different services at less cost than producing each individually, through using the same resources and technology Transaction Costs - All costs associated with an economic exchange
When an established firm makes an equity investment in an entrepreneurial venture it is known as
Corporate Venture Capital Investment
Boston Consulting Group Growth-Share Matrix
Locates a firm's individual SBU (Strategic Business Unit) in Speed of Market Growth and Relative Market Share
Two alternatives to vertical integration are
Tapper Integration - Way of orchestrating value activities in which a firm is backwardly integrated, but it 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 Strategic Outsourcing - Involves moving one or more internal value chain a firm's boundaries to other firms in the industry value chain
True about Alliance Management Capability
- Involves partner selection and alliance formation - A firm may need to employ it with several different alliances
Partnership in which at least one partner takes partial ownership in the other is an
Equity Alliance
Best option if a company wants to show commitment to a partner firm without acquiring that firm
Equity alliance
Existing Core Competence, Existing Market
Leveraging core competencies to improve current market position
Existing Core Competencies, New Market
Redeploying and recombining core competencies to compete in markets of the future
Benefits of a horizontal Integration
Reduction in competitive intensity Lower Costs Increased Differentiation
Strategic Outsourcing
Refers to moving one or more internal value chain activities outside the firm's boundaries to other firms in the industry value chain
When a multi-business firm pools and shares resources and leverages competencies across different business lines, it is following a
Related diversification strategy
Which of the following are alternatives on the make-or-buy continuum?
Short-term Contracts Long-term Contracts Equity Alliances Joint Ventures Parent-Subsidiary Relationships
Types of diversification that tend to have the lowest performance
Single Business and Unrelated Diversification
Why did Coca-Cola enter into a strategic alliance with Monster?
So it could gain private information
Joint Venture
Two or more partners create and jointly own a new organization
A company known for its Alliance Management, Manages its alliances using three-person team consisting of
- Alliance Champion - Alliance Leader - Alliance Manager
Advantages of Strategic Alliances
- Help Firms achieve goals faster than they would alone - Might give companies a competitive advantage
Why firms need to grow
- Increase Profits - Motivate Management - Lower Costs - Increase Market Power - Reduce Risk
Types of Strategic Alliances
- Joint Venture - Equity Alliances - Long-Term Contracts
Three Mechanisms that Alliances can be Governed by
- Non-Equity Alliances - Equity Alliances - Joint Ventures
Three Options used by Executives to drive firm growth
- Organic Growth Through Alliances - External Growth Through Alliances - External Growth through Acquisitions
Two Necessary Conditions for Successful Alliance Formation
- Partner Compatibility - Partner Commitment
Primary reasons a firm might pursue a merger
- Principal-agent problems - Desire to overcome competitive disadvantage - Superior acquisition and integration capability
Three Choices in the Build-Burrow-or-Buy Framework
- Pursue Internal Development - Enter a Strategic Alliance - Acquire New Resources, Capabilities, and Competencies
Three of the Following are the Primary Benefits of Horizontal Integration
- Reduction in Competitive Intensity - Lower Costs - Increased Differentiation
Main Types of Diversification
- Single Business - Dominant Business - Related Diversification - Unrelated Diversification: The Conglomerate
One reason why a firm might enter into a strategic alliance is to
- Strengthen Competitive Position - Enter New Markets - Hedge against uncertainty - Access critical complementary assets - Learn new capabilities
Horizontal Integration Affect on Porter's Five Focus for the surviving firms
- Strengthening bargaining power vis-a-vis suppliers and buyers - Reducing the threat of entry - Reducing rivalry among existing firms
Forms of Agreement do Non-Equity Alliances Typically Take
- Supply Agreements - Distribution Agreements - Licensing Agreements
Questions that managers must answer when pursuing value innovation
- Which product factors to eliminate - Which product factors to reduce below the industry standards - Which product factors to raise above the industry standard - Which new product factors to create
Gaining new capabilities or competencies is on of three main reasons companies
Make acquisitions
When two firms agree to join and create a combined entity
Merger
Forward Vertical Integration
Moving ownership of activities closer to the end customer
Backward Vertical Integration
Moving ownership of activities upstream to the originating inputs of the value chain
Most integrated Alternative to Vertical Integration is
Parent-Subsidiary Relationship
Beneficial Effect of a Differentiation Strategy on the Power of Suppliers in an Industry is
Protection against increase in input prices, which can be passed on to customers
Approach to Strategic Decision making takes a larger investment decision and divides it into multiple decisions that happen over time
Real-Options Perspective
Forms of specialized assets include
Site Specificity - Assets required to be co-located, such as the equipment necessary for mining bauxite and aluminum smelting Physical-Asset Specificity - Assets whose physical and engineering properties are designed to satisfy a particular customer Human-Asset Specificity - Investments made in human capital to acquire unique knowledge and skills
Diversification Discount
Situation in which the stock price of a highly diversified firm is valued as less than the sum of their individual business units
Which has significantly more value in their intended use than in their next-best use
Specialized Assets
Relational View of Competitive Advantage
States that important resources are commonly embedded in strategic alliances that cross firm boundaries
Licensing is
Form of long-term contracting in the manufacturing sector that enables firms to commercialize intellectual property such as a patent
Horizontal Integration can
Help a firm improve its strategic position in an industry
Occurs when a Targeted Firm is Unwillingly Acquired
Hostile Takeover