ST Management
If TechnoGeek and VarsityBlue compete in the same market for the same customer and TechnoGeek generates $900 of economic value each time it sells a product or service while VarsityBlue generates $400 of economic value each time it sells a product or service, TechnoGeek has a competitive advantage of
$500
Thermacorp's cost of equity is 13.6. If the after tax cost of debt is 4.6, what is the weighted average cost of capital?
11.35
Thermacorp is in the heating and cooling industry and has total assets of $20 million, with stockholders' equity of $15 million, an ROE of 17.3%, and a firm Beta of 1.6. If the risk free rate of return is 4 and the market rate of return is 10, what is the cost of equity?
13.6
If the risk free rate of return is 4%, the market rate of return is 9%, and a firm's beta is 2.0, what is the firm's cost of equity?
14
If a firm has total assets of $10 million, stockholder's equity of $6 million, a cost of equity of 10, and an after tax cost of debt of 5%, what is the firm's weighted average cost of capital?
8
Which of the following is a reason why it is important for students to study strategy and the strategic management process?
A) Studying strategy and the strategic management process can give students tools to evaluate the strategies of firms that may employ them. B) It can be very important to a new hire's career success to understand the strategies of the firm that hired them and their place in implementing these strategies. C) While strategic choices are generally limited to very experienced senior managers in large organizations, in smaller and entrepreneurial firms many employees end up being involved in the strategic management process. D) All of the above.
Define the term "mission" and discuss how a firm's mission can both positively and negatively impact a firm's performance.
Answer: A firm's mission is its long-term purpose and it defines both what a firm aspires to be in the long run and what it wants to avoid in the meantime. If a mission statement does not influence firm behavior, it is unlikely to have an impact on a firm's actions. However, visionary firms, or firms whose mission is central to all they do, tend to earn substantially higher returns than average over the long run even though their mission statements suggest that profit maximization is not their primary reason for existence. However, missions that are inwardly focused and defined only with reference to the personal values and priorities of their founders or top managers, independent of whether or not those values and priorities are consistent with the economic realities facing a firm, are not likely to be a source of competitive advantage.
Define the term "strategy," discuss the set of assumptions and hypotheses that a strategy is based on and discuss what makes a good strategy.
Answer: A firm's strategy is defined as its theory about how to gain competitive advantages. This theory is based on a set of assumptions and hypotheses about how competition in this industry is likely to evolve and how that evolution can be exploited to earn a profit. To the extent that these assumptions and hypotheses accurately describe how competition in this industry actually evolves, the more likely it is that a firm will gain a competitive advantage from implementing its strategies. Thus, a "good strategy" is a strategy that actually generates such advantages.
99) Why is it important to understand a firm's strategy, even if you are not a senior manager in a firm?
Answer: First, studying strategy and the strategic management process can give individuals the tools they need to evaluate the strategies of the firms that may hire them. Second, once an individual is working for a firm, understanding that firm's strategy, and their place in it, can be very important to their personal success since the expectations of how they perform their function will be impacted by the firm's strategy. Finally, while strategic choices are generally limited to very experienced managers in large organizations, in smaller and entrepreneurial firms, many employees end up being involved in the strategic management process.
Discuss the nature of a sustainable competitive advantage. In your answer, identify when a firm has a competitive advantage, define the term "economic value" and distinguish between a temporary competitive advantage and a sustainable competitive advantage.
Answer: In general, a firm has a competitive advantage when it is able to generate more economic value than rival firms. Economic value is simply the difference between the perceived benefits gained by a customer who purchases a firm's products or services and the full economic cost of these products and services. A temporary competitive advantage is a competitive advantage that lasts a very short period of time while a sustained competitive advantage lasts much longer.
Describe the difference between emergent and intended strategies. Why might firms employ an emergent strategy?
Answer: Intended strategies can best be described as a firm's theories of how to gain a competitive advantage that are developed as a result of the strategic management process. Intended strategies are developed when firms choose and implement their strategies exactly as described by the strategic management process. Alternately, emergent strategies are theories of how to gain a competitive advantage in an industry that emerge over time or that have been radically reshaped once they are implemented. Firms employ emergent strategies since some of the information needed to complete the strategic management process may not be available when firms are developing their intended strategies.
What are objectives, what role do they play in the strategic management process and what differentiates high quality objectives from low quality objectives?
Answer: Objectives are specific measurable targets a firm can use to evaluate the extent to which it is realizing its mission. High quality objectives are tightly connected to elements of a firm's mission and are relatively easy to measure and track over time. Low quality objectives either do not exist or are not connected to elements of a firm's mission, are not quantitative, are difficult to measure or are difficult to track over time.
Define strategy implementation and discuss three specific organizational policies and practices that are particularly important in implementing a strategy.
Answer: Strategy implementation occurs when a firm adopts organizational policies and practices that are consistent with its strategy. Three specific organizational policies and practices are particularly important in implementing a strategy: a firm's formal organizational structure, its formal and informal management control systems, and employee compensation policies.
100) What is the residual claimants view of equity holders?
Answer: The residual claimants view is that equity holders only receive payment on their investment in a firm after all legitimate claims by a firm's other stakeholders are satisfied. This view posits that by maximizing returns to its equity holders, a firm is ensuring that its other stakeholders are fully compensated for investing in a firm.
Differentiate between business level and corporate level strategies and give examples of each.
Business level strategies are actions firms take to gain competitive advantages in a single market or industry. The two most common business level strategies are cost leadership, such as Wal-Mart, and product differentiation, such as Macy's. Corporate level strategies are actions firms take to gain competitive advantages in multiple markets or industries simultaneously. Common corporate level strategies include vertical integration strategies, diversification strategies, strategic alliances strategies and merger and acquisition strategies.
Green Frog is an environmentally friendly firm in the cosmetics industry. If Green Frog were considering expanding beyond the cosmetics industry into pharmaceuticals in order to gain competitive advantages by operating in multiple markets and industries, this would be an example of which type of strategy?
Corporate level strategy
One of the first scholars to examine the longevity of competitive advantage was
Dennis Mueller.
________ measures of competitive advantage compare a firm's level of return to its cost of capital instead of to the average level of return in the industry.
Economic
________ strategies are theories of how to gain competitive advantage in an industry that emerge over time or that have been radically reshaped once they are initially implemented.
Emergent
A "good strategy" does not necessarily have to create a competitive advantage.
FALSE
A sustained competitive advantage is virtually permanent.
FALSE
Activity ratios are ratios with some measure of profit in the numerator and some measure of firm size or assets in the denominator.
FALSE
All firms have almost entirely emergent strategies.
FALSE
Applying accounting measures of competitive advantage for firms that are headquartered in different countries is not complicated by issues such as differences in accounting practices and exchange rates.
FALSE
Business level strategies are actions firms take to gain competitive advantages by operating in multiple markets or industries simultaneously.
FALSE
Corporate level strategies are actions firms take to gain competitive advantages in a single market or industry.
FALSE
Emergent strategies are only important when a firm fails to implement the strategic management process effectively.
FALSE
Firms whose mission statement is central to all they do are known as missionary firms.
FALSE
High quality objectives are tightly connected to the elements of a firm's mission but tend to be relatively difficulty to measure and track over time.
FALSE
It is usually possible to know for sure that a firm is choosing the right strategy.
FALSE
Johnson & Johnson's introduction of "Johnson's Toilet and Baby Powder" as a result of customers asking to purchase the talcum powder is an example of a planned strategy.
FALSE
Mission statements often contain so many common elements that even if a firm's mission statement does not influence behavior throughout an organization, it is likely to have a significant impact on a firm's actions.
FALSE
The correlation between economic and accounting measures of competitive advantage is generally low.
FALSE
The cost of equity is equal to the interest a firm must pay its debt holders in order to induce those debt holders to lend money to the firm.
FALSE
The greatest disadvantage of accounting measures of competitive performance is that they are relatively difficult to compute.
FALSE
The residual claimants' view of equity holders argues that the interests of equity holders and a firm's other stakeholders often collide.
FALSE
The second step in the strategic management process is the definition of a firm's mission.
FALSE
The size of a firm's competitive advantage is the sum of the economic value a firm is able to create and the economic value rivals are able to create.
FALSE
Visionary firms earn substantially higher returns than average firms because they acknowledge that profit maximizing is their primary reason for existence.
FALSE
When a firm earns above average accounting performance, it is said to enjoy competitive parity.
FALSE
There is complete consensus among strategic managers and academic researchers about what a "strategy" is.
False
Green Frog is an environmentally friendly firm in the cosmetics industry. Even though Green Frog is environmentally friendly, the strategic planning team had decided that financial performance is one of the company's top priorities. Which of the following is the best example of an objective the company might use to help it achieve its goal of superior financial performance?
Growth in earnings per share averaging 15% or better annually for the next five years
Identify two approaches to estimating a firm's competitive advantages and discuss the strengths and weaknesses of each.
Identify two approaches to estimating a firm's competitive advantages and discuss the strengths and weaknesses of each. Answer: The two general approaches to estimating a firm's competitive advantage are measuring accounting performance and measuring economic performance. A firm's accounting performance is a measure of its competitive advantage calculated using information from a firm's published profit and loss and balance sheets, and a firm's accounting performance is determined by comparing a firm's accounting ratios with other firms in the industry. The greatest measure of accounting measures of competitive advantage is that they are relatively easy to compute. The most significant drawback to accounting measures is that they do not consider a firm's cost of capital. Additionally, accounting measures can be difficult to compare across countries. Economic measures of competitive advantage compare a firm's level of return to its cost of capital instead of to the average level of return in the industry. The primary benefit of economic measures is that if a firm earns at least its cost of capital, it is satisfying two of its important stakeholdersdebt holders and equity holders. Disadvantages of economic measures include that it can be difficult to calculate a firm's cost of capital, especially for privately held firms, and economic measures may overstate the importance of debt and equity holders.
________ helps a firm understand which of its resources and capabilities are likely to be sources of competitive advantage.
Internal analysis
Which type of ratios focus on the ability of a firm to meet its short-term financial obligations?
Liquidity ratios
________ are specific measurable targets a firm can use to evaluate the extent to which it is realizing its mission.
Objectives
________ are ratios with some measure of profit in the numerator and some measure of firms' size or assets in the denominator.
Profitability ratios
________ occurs when a firm adopts organizational policies and practices that are consistent with its strategy.
Strategy implementation
A firm that earns below average accounting performance, performance that is less than the industry average, generally experiences a competitive disadvantage.
TRUE
A firm's accounting performance is a measure of its competitive advantage calculated using information from a firm's published profit and loss and balance sheet statements.
TRUE
A firm's mission defines both what it wants to be in the long run and what it wants to avoid in the meantime.
TRUE
By conducting an external analysis, a firm identifies the critical threats and opportunities in the industry's competitive environment.
TRUE
Economic measures of competitive advantage compare a firm's level of return to its costs of capital instead of to the average level of return to the industry.
TRUE
Emergent strategies are theories of how to gain competitive advantage in an industry that emerge over time or that have been radically reshaped once they are initially implemented.
TRUE
Firms that create the same economic value as their rivals experience competitive parity.
TRUE
Firms with strategies that are unlikely to be a source of competitive advantage will rarely provide the same career opportunities as firms with strategies that do generate such advantages.
TRUE
For the purposes of this book, a firm's strategy is defined as its theory about how to gain competitive advantages.
TRUE
In general, a firm has a competitive advantage when it is able to create more economic value than rival firms.
TRUE
Liquidity ratios are ratios that focus on the firm's ability to meet its short-term financial obligations.
TRUE
Mission statements that are very inwardly focused and are defined only with reference to the personal values and priorities of its founders and top managers can hurt a firm's performance.
TRUE
Objectives are the specific measurable targets a firm can use to evaluate the extent to which it is realizing its mission.
TRUE
Strategic choices are generally limited to very experienced senior managers in large corporations; in smaller and entrepreneurial firms, many employees end up being involved in the strategic management process.
TRUE
Strategy implementation occurs when a firm adopts organizational policies and practices that are consistent with its strategy.
TRUE
The greater the extent to which a firm's assumptions and hypotheses accurately describe how the competition in the industry is likely to evolve, and how that evolution can be exploited to earn a profit, the more likely it is that a firm will gain a competitive advantage from implementing its strategies.
TRUE
The strategic management process is a sequential set of analyses and choices that can increase the likelihood that a firm will choose a good strategy that generates competitive advantages.
TRUE
One of the central questions that all strategic managers must address, regardless of the industry they work in, is "What is our competition going to do next?"
True
Which of the following statements regarding firm mission is accurate?
While some firms have used their missions to develop strategies that create significant competitive advantages, firm missions can hurt a firm's performance as well.
The realized strategy of most firms tends to be
a combination of both intended and emergent strategies.
Using ratio analysis, a firm earns ________ when its performance is greater than the industry average.
above average accounting performance
If the average ROE in the heating and cooling industry is 10.1%, and Thermacorp's ROE is 17.3%, Thermacorp is said to have
above average accounting performance.
The two types of measures of competitive advantage include
accounting measures and economic measures.
A firm's ________ is a measure of its competitive advantage calculated using information from a firm's published profit and loss and balance sheet statements.
accounting performance
Thermacorp's weighted average cost of capital is 11.35. If the average WACC in the heating and cooling industry is 19, Thermacorp can be said to be earning
below normal economic performance.
Actions firms take to gain competitive advantages in a single market or industry are known as
business level strategies.
When a firm is able to create more economic value than rival firms it is said to have a(n)
competitive advantage.
In many ways, the difference between traditional economics research and strategic management research is that the former attempts to explain why ________, while the latter attempts to explain ________
competitive advantages should not persist; when they can.
Actions firms take to gain competitive advantages by operating in multiple markets or industries simultaneously are known as
corporate level strategies.
The ________ is the rate of return that a firm promises to pay its suppliers of capital to induce them to invest in the firm.
cost of capital
Green Frog is an environmentally friendly firm in the cosmetics industry that has decided to undertake a strategic planning project. It wants to ensure that it performs the process correctly and so intends to start the process with the first step of the strategic planning process, which is
crafting a mission statement.
Firms that generate less economic value than their rivals experience a competitive
disadvantage
The difference between the perceived benefits gained by a customer who purchases a firm's products or services and the full economic costs of these products or services is known as
economic value.
Theories of how to gain competitive advantage in an industry that emerge over time or that have been radically reshaped once they are initially implemented are known as
emergent strategies.
By conducting a(n) ________, a firm identifies the critical threats and opportunities in its competitive environment.
external analysis
Green Frog is an environmentally friendly firm in the cosmetics industry. If during the strategic planning process Green Frog tried to determine the critical threats and opportunities in its competitive environment, it would be performing a(n)
external analysis.
Green Frog is an environmentally friendly firm in the cosmetics industry. If Green Frog undertook an analysis to help it understand which of its resources and capabilities are likely to be sources of competitive advantage and which are less likely to sources of such advantages it would be performing a(n)
internal analysis.
Ratios that focus on the level of a firm's financial flexibility, including its ability to obtain more debt, are known as
leverage ratios.
A firm's ________ is its long-term purpose that defines both what it aspires to be in the long run and what it wants to avoid in the meantime.
mission
Missions are often written in the form of
mission statements.
A firm that earns its cost of capital is said to be earning
normal economic performance.
Firms that create the same economic value as their rivals experience competitive
parity
Thermacorp's 17.3% ROE is an example of a(n) ________ ratio.
profitability
The view that equity holders only receive payment on their investment in a firm after all legitimate claims by a firm's other stakeholders are satisfied is known as the ________ view of equity holders.
residual claimants
The sequential set of analyses and choices that can increase the likelihood that a firm will choose a strategy that generates competitive advantages is the
strategic management process.
A firm's ________ is defined as its theory about how to gain competitive advantages.
strategy
From 1926 to 1995, visionary firms earned ________ returns compared to firms that were not visionary firms.
substantially higher
The mission statements of visionary firms
suggest that profit maximizing, while an important corporate objective, is not their primary reason for existence.
A competitive advantage that lasts a very short period of time is known as a ________ competitive advantage.
temporary
High quality objectives are those that are
tightly connected to elements of a firm's mission.
Firms whose mission is central to all they do are known as ________ firms.
visionary
The percentage of a firm's total capital that is debt times the cost of debt plus the percentage of a firm's total capital that is equity times the cost of equity is the
weighted average cost of capital.