Week 3: Strategy Content Flashcards
Hodgetts
1999
Interview with Porter.
“Strategy is the pursuit of a unique way of competing”
Porter says the role of a manager is STRATEGY.
Porter
1979 Five forces 1. Threat of Entry 2. B.P. of customers 3. B.P of suppliers 4. Threat of substitutes 5. Competitive rivalry
Brandenburger
2002
Five forces is good due to it’s simplicity
Ghoshal
2005
Five forces has firm competing with both suppliers and customers.
Contrast to Japan (Week 14. Womack, Jones, Roos)
Ghoshal et al
1999
Five forces is about capturing value as opposed to creating it
Foss
1996
Five forces ignores the firm itself
Rumelt
1991
Firm specific factors highly relevant to profitability. Can’t just look at the industry as 5F does.
McGahan and Porter
1991
Empirical study. 19% profit variation due to industry. 32% due to firm.
Porter
1980
Three “generic strategies”
Dess and Davies,
Miller and Friesen
Both empirical studies. D&D 1984: Consumer durables, M&F 1986: U.S. paint industry. Some firms stuck in the middle but those who didn’t performed better.
Hendry
1990
Many firms are both price leaders and diffrentiated. One can lead to the other. In manufacturing for example, low cost and high quality must come together.
Caves and Ghemawat
1992 Different generic strategy for different objective.
Diffrentiation = Profit margins. Low cost = market share
Collis and Montgomery
1995 Resources must pass five market tests 1. Imitability 2. Durability 3. Appropriability 4. Substitutability 5. Competitive superiority
Barney
1986
Strategic factor markets. Firms compete on acquiring resources. Strategy arises from imperfect pricing, the rest is luck.
Conner
1991
RBV being a new theory of the firm.
Same resource inputs lead to differnt firm outputs. Reason for the firm existing is value creation as opposed to avoiding opportunism