235x Filetype PPTX File size 1.15 MB Source: pages.law.illinois.edu
The individual firm (strategic actions) Overview of Chapter 3 a) Strategic traits – Strategic competences – Strategic rigidities – Reform (modifying strategic traits) – From strategic traits to strategic actions b) Differentiation c) Coordination d) Confrontation e) Review (integrating the course’s components) 2 © Amitai Aviram. All rights reserved. Strategic traits Moving beyond environment… • Fighting over a slice of the Value Pool pie – Environment determines the portion of the VP that is allocated to market participants (firm + rivals) – Strategic actions increase firm’s portion of VP by improving the environment for the firm • If rivals could employ the same strategic actions, firms would offset each other • Therefore, strategic actions rely on firm’s strategic traits, which rivals don’t have 3 © Amitai Aviram. All rights reserved. Strategic traits What are strategic traits? • A strategic trait has two aspects: – Positive aspect: strategic competence • Often called “core competence” or “firm-specific resource” • This is the “strengths” part of the SWOT analysis – Negative aspect: strategic rigidity • Possessing a strategic competence is always a trade-off: limits firm’s ability or incentive to take certain strategic actions or to develop certain new strategic competences • This is the “weaknesses” part of the SWOT analysis 4 © Amitai Aviram. All rights reserved. Strategic competences Elements of a strategic competence (VRIO) • Value [facilitates a strategic act that exploits an opportunity/neutralizes a threat] – A benefit that facilitates a strategic act • For differentiation: value to customers (one of the bases of competition) • For confrontation: ability to impose costs on rivals • For coordination: low coordination costs • Value through benefitting others – Competence that benefits another firm can facilitate coordination w/that firm – Competence that benefits politicians or their constituents can facilitate regulation (for the purposes of confrontation, coordination or differentiation) – Benefit must be competitively superior (difficult for rivals to substitute) • Rarity [unavailable to rivals] – Competence is scarce (currently available only to one/few competing firms) – Competence is difficult to imitate (rivals face cost/disadvantage to acquire/develop it) • Organization [firm is able to capture the value of the competence] – Value must be appropriable (i.e., firm can capture the value) – Firm’s policies & procedures must support exploitation of the competence 5 © Amitai Aviram. All rights reserved. Strategic competences Strategic competence: organization • Organization element involves support on the following dimensions – Skills/knowledge of individual employees – Technical systems (proprietary processes & information) – Managerial systems (firm policies on employee incentives) – Values/norms • Example: supporting a competence in handling US-China M&A – Skills/knowledge: e.g., attorneys who can speak both English & Chinese and who know both US & Chinese corporate law – Technical systems: e.g., timetables, procedures and templates for antitrust review in both US & China – Managerial systems: policies that encourage temporary assignments in China; policies that facilitate hiring foreign-trained lawyers – Values: e.g., foreign attorneys not disadvantaged in making partner 6 © Amitai Aviram. All rights reserved.
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