manage 5

This assignment covers chapter seven, Strategy and Technology, and chapter eight, Strategy in the Global Environment.

Chapter 7 Questions

  1. Describe standardization, format wars, and how standardization can lead to a format war. Who can benefit from a format war and why? 
  2. Once standardization occurs, how does an industry benefit?
  3. During a format war, describe how competition occurs and how a price war can take shape.
  4. Define first and second movers. what are the advantages of being the first mover? What are the advantages of being the second mover.  

Chapter 8 Questions

  1. Why do companies go global? Once a company has decided to go global, what entry modes could the company leverage to break into the global market? What is that entry mode is based on? 
  2. What additional benefits from economies of scale does a company receive from going global? How economies of scale can be related to the decision of a company going global? 
  3. Describe the main strategies available to an organization going global. Describe why different strategies may be chosen.
  4. What are the advantages and disadvantages of the different entry modes a company can use to break into the global market? What resources and distinctive competencies a company should have to choose specific entry mode?  

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Chapter 9

Corporate-Level Strategy: Horizontal Integration, Vertical Integration, and Strategic Outsourcing

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Learning objectives

Discuss how corporate-level strategy can be used to strengthen a company’s business model and business-level strategies.

Define horizontal integration and discuss the primary advantages and disadvantages associated with this corporate-level strategy.

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Learning objectives

Explain the difference between a company’s internal value chain and the industry value chain.

Describe why, and under what conditions, cooperative relationships such as strategic alliances and outsourcing may become a substitute for vertical integration.

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Corporate-Level Strategy and the Multibusiness Model

Corporate-level strategies should be chosen to promote the success of its business-level strategies.

This allows a firm to achieve a sustainable competitive advantage, leading to higher profitability.

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Corporate-Level Strategy and the Multibusiness Model

Levels of business model:

Business model and strategies for each business unit or division in every industry in which it competes

Higher-level multibusiness model that justifies its entry into different businesses and industries

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Horizontal Integration

Acquiring or merging with industry competitors to achieve the competitive advantages that arise from a large size and scope of operations

Acquisition: Company uses its capital resources to purchase another company.

Merger: Agreement between two companies to pool their resources and operations and join together to better compete in a business or industry.

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Benefits of Horizontal Integration

Lowers the cost structure

Increases product differentiation

Leverages a competitive advantage

Reduces rivalry within the industry

Increases bargaining power over suppliers and buyers

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Problems with Horizontal Integration

Difficult to implement

Conflict with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

Increase in prices

Abuse of market power

Crushing potential competitors

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Vertical Integration

When a company expands its operations either backward or forward into an industry

Backward vertical integration – Produces inputs for the company’s products

Forward vertical integration – Uses, distributes, or sells the company’s products

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Stages in the Value-Added Chain

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PC Industry Value-Added Chain

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Increasing Profitability Through Vertical Integration

Vertical integration increases product differentiation, lowers costs, and reduces industry competition when it:

facilitates investments in efficiency-enhancing specialized assets.

protects product quality.

results in improved scheduling.

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Problems with Vertical Integration

Increasing cost structure

Disadvantages that arise when technology is changing fast

Disadvantages that arise when demand is unpredictable

Vertical disintegration: When a company decides to exit industries either forward or backward in the industry value chain to its core industry to increase profitability

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Cooperative Relationships

Quasi integration: Use of long-term relationships, or investment into some of the activities normally performed by suppliers or buyers

In place of full ownership of operations that are backward or forward in the supply chain

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Competitive Bidding and Short-Term Contracts

Competitive bidding strategy – Independent component suppliers compete to be chosen to supply a particular component.

Short-term contracts – Last for a year or less

Does not result in specialized investments

Signals a company’s lack of long-term commitment to its suppliers

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Strategic Alliances and Long-Term Contracting

Strategic alliances: Long-term agreements between two or more companies to jointly develop new products or processes

Substitute for vertical integration

Avoids bureaucratic costs

Component suppliers benefit because their business and profitability grow as the companies they supply grow.

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Strategies to Build Long-Term Cooperative Relationships

Hostage taking: Means of exchanging valuable resources to guarantee that each partner to an agreement will keep its side of the bargain

Credible commitment: Believable promise or pledge to support the development of a long-term relationship between companies

Each company should possess a kind of power to discipline its partner, if the need arises.

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Strategic Outsourcing

Decision to allow one or more of a company’s value-chain activities to be performed by independent, specialist companies

Virtual corporation: Companies that pursue extensive strategic outsourcing to the extent that they only perform the central value creation functions that leads to competitive advantage

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Benefits of Outsourcing

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Lower cost structure

Enhanced differentiation

Focus on the core business

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Risks of Outsourcing

Holdup

Risk that a company will become too dependent upon the specialist provider of an outsourced activity

Increased competition

Building of an industry-wide resource that lowers the barriers to entry in that industry

Loss of information and forfeited learning opportunities

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