100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Other

Strategic Management-Competitive Advantage Lecture Notes, Reading List Book Summaries and Essay Plans

Rating
-
Sold
1
Pages
18
Uploaded on
07-09-2021
Written in
2021/2022

Detailed notes, including lecture notes, reading list book summaries and essay plans for the Oxford University FHS Strategic Management course's section on the Competitive Advantage (Week 2 of the course).











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Document information

Uploaded on
September 7, 2021
Number of pages
18
Written in
2021/2022
Type
Other
Person
Unknown

Content preview

Competitive Advantage




Industry Analysis
 Porter (1985)- A firm achieves a competitive advantage in a given market whenever it
outperforms its competitors- strategy gets to this competitive advantage
 Porter (1979)- A strategist should “position his company to best cope with the
environment”, building a defense against competitive forces/finding positions within an
industry where the forces are weakest
 Porter (1979) FIVE FORCES MODEL – buyer power, supplier power, Threat of
Substitution, threat of new entrants and competitive rivalry
o Industry level analysis – evaluates industry attractiveness
 Managerial Action implied by industry model:
o Profits created at the industry/subsector level rather than the firm level
 Focus on industries where the five forces are favorable
o OR change the five forces by investing in barriers to entry, differentiating
product, consolidating competition
o Focus on protecting industry profitability can avoid mutually destructive
competition
 Porter (1985)- “stalemates can be quite profitable in attractive industries”
 Industry leaders are better off taking actions to improve or protect
industry structure rather than seeking greater competitive advantage for
themselves
 Coca-Cola: global leader in the soft-drinks industry, avoids narrow cost-
cutting and competitive pricing strategies to maintain industry
profitability
 Industry Model Evaluation:
o Assumes that uncertainty is sufficiently low that you can accurately predict
participants’ behaviour and select strategy accordingly
o Ignores complements and the nonmarket environment
o Industry analysis not sufficient to make strategic decisions
 For example, US air travel made zero profits cumulatively (1903-2003)
o Selecting a position may reduce the capacity for adaptation/emergent strategy

, o Model suggests that performance is relative and industry effects affect all firms
symmetrically, therefore cannot explain high/low performance which is visible in
empirical evidence
o Learned, Christensen, Andrews & Guth: Successful firm has to match internal
competences and values with external environment
o JOHNSON, WHITTINGTON & SCHOLES (2011): The relative strengths of the 5
forces change over the life cycle of the industry e.g. Transferwise
Bain/ Mason Industrial organization
 Firm’s performance depends on the industry environment in which it competes



 Theory assumes all firms in industry are identical, differences other than size are just
noise
o Little room for stable differences in performance within industry
o Not considered as policy practiti oners interest in improving private performance
not social (industry) performance- industry is the unit of analysis
o Static perspective- structure of industry is definitionally stable
 Improvements:
o Unit of Analysis: Firms within industries clustered by strategy and their reactions
to disturbances & patterns of rivalry will be determined by group configuration
o Static Tradition- now encompassing dynamic models of industry evolution
Generic Business Strategies Model
 Porter (1980)- Generic Business Strategies- Cost
Leadership OR Differentiation (2 strategies can’t be
mixed)
o Know your competence and don’t get stuck
in the middle
o Evaluation: Adherence to the traditional
paradox between ‘low-cost and high-quality’
may result in key opportunities being missed:
Japanese idea that it is possible to reduce
costs by improving quality (lean production)
unleashed a whole new line of development
 Porter’s Three “Essential Tests” for Companies Considering Diversification
o The attractiveness test: Is the industry attractive?
o The cost-of-entry test: Will you make profits?
o The better-off test: Will either firm gain?

, Beyond Industry Analysis

Why Industry Analysis cannot explain sustainable competitive advantage
 Rumelt (1991): Business-unit effects explain 44-46% of the variation in business-unit
profits- Industry effects only account for 9-16%
 Rumelt (1984): “by taking the industry as unit of analysis, industrial organization has
largely ignored the theory and evidence of intra-industry differences among firms.”
o The dispersion in long-term rates of return of firms within industries is five to
eight times as large as the variance in returns across industries.”
 GALBREITH & GALVIN (2008): Resources are more important in explaining performance
variation in service firms than manufacturing firms
o Resources were 4.17x more important as industry effects for service firms, and
2.23x more important for other firms
 Positioning is not an appropriable asset so unlikely to provide a sustained advantage
o Rapidly-changing technologies, increasing competition and volatility of consumer
preferences make positioning strategies unlikely to provide stability/constancy
 Grant (1998)- Market position in technological change is extremely fragile because
innovation reconfigures the value chain
 Barney (1991): Data needed for industry-level analysis is in the public domain so
everyone can copy
o BUT information about own resources is private info about its own resources
 AMEL & FROEB (1991)- Firm effects are more important than market effects in
determining profitability
 CHANG & SIGNH (2000)- Firm effects explain over twice the variation as industry effects
Strategic Capabilities & Core Competencies- The Resource Based View
 Many scholars claim it is intangible resources that explain performance heterogeneity
among firms and thus are likely sources of competitive advantage.
 Isolating mechanisms exist and are economic forces that limit the extent to which a
competitive advantage can be duplicated or neutralised. This is needed to sustain
resource heterogeneity
o Inimitability may arise breakthrough innovations/real advantages often come
from firms outside an industry which incumbents may not see as competitors e.g.
Starbucks
o Lippman & Rumelt (1982)- causal ambiguity leads to imperfect imitability
 Strategic Capabilities and Core Competences: bundle of skills, technologies, people, &
other resources of fundamental customer benefit
o Competitively unique (non-tradable, non-imitable, and non-substitutable)
o Examples: Tacit, behavioural, imperfectly imitable features like open culture,
employee empowerment, and executive commitment
 Barney (1991): RBV- resources can yield sustained competitive advantage if Valuable,
Rare, Imperfectly Imitable and Non-Substitutable
o Sustained competitive advantage arises from exploiting internal rather than
external factors
o Internal Factors such as Knowledge- the most valuable resource a firm can have,
hard to imitate and only gained through learning

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
edoardocolao Oxford University
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
99
Member since
7 year
Number of followers
76
Documents
4
Last sold
7 months ago

4.2

23 reviews

5
13
4
6
3
1
2
1
1
2

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions