Lecture 6 Flashcards
Non-market strategy
Using institutional differences to create competitive advantage.
“a concerted pattern of actions taken in the non-market environment to create value by improving overall performance”
Involved in the non-market
- Government
- Citizens
- Regulators
- Media
- Activists
Non market environment is characterised by 4 I’s
- Issues, what non-market strategies address
- Institutions, bodies that the firm must interact with in course of its non-market behaviour
- Interests, individuals and groups with preferences about or stake in the non-market discussion
- Information, pertains to what the interested parties know or need to know about the matter on hand
Which firms should have a non-market strategy
- big powerful firms
- Firms in industries where government control is high
Integrated strategy
The market is always characterised by voluntary interactions non-market maybe voluntary, but often involuntary, this strategy integrates both the non-market and market
non-market influences business
- Fiscal factors (race to the bottom)
- Legal factors
- Political factors (governmental politics and activitsts)
3 regulations in legal factors
- Environmental regulations
- Financial regulations (levels of protection)
- Business regulations (pro-business or pro-union)
Corporate political strategy
Involves the activities taken by organisations to acquire, develop and use power to obtain an advantage
3 strategies how businesses can influence the non-market
- Financial incentives strategy - businesses provide incentives to influence government policy-makers to act
- Constituency building strategy - businesses gain from other affected organisations to better influence government policy makers
- Information strategy - businesses provide government policymakers with information to influence their actions
3 ways of constituency building
- Stakeholder coalitions - Firms influence politics by mobilising various stakeholders to support its political agenda
- Advocacy advertising - Ads that focus on the firm’s view on controversial political issues
- Legal challenges - Businesses seek to overturn a law
Lobbying
Lobbyists communicate with, and try to persuade others to support an organisation’s interests or stake, as they consider a particular law, policy or regulation