Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Brief Contents
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION: STRATEGY AND ECONOMICS
- Why Study Strategy?
- Why Economics?
- The Need for Principles
- So What’s the Problem?
- A Framework for Strategy
- Boundaries of the Firm
- Market and Competitive Analysis
- Positioning and Dynamics
- Internal Organization
- The Book
- Endnotes
- ECONOMICS PRIMER: BASIC PRINCIPLES
- Costs
- Cost Functions
- Total Cost Functions
- Fixed and Variable Costs
- Average and Marginal Cost Functions
- The Importance of the Time Period: Long-Run versus Short-Run Cost Functions
- Sunk versus Avoidable Costs
- Economic Costs and Profitability
- Economic versus Accounting Costs
- Economic Profit versus Accounting Profit
- Demand and Revenues
- Demand Curve
- The Price Elasticity of Demand
- Brand-Level versus Industry-Level Elasticities
- Total Revenue and Marginal Revenue Functions
- Theory of the Firm: Pricing and Output Decisions
- Perfect Competition
- Game Theory
- Games in Matrix Form and the Concept of Nash Equilibrium
- Game Trees and Subgame Perfection
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- PART ONE FIRM BOUNDARIES
- 1 THE POWER OF PRINCIPLES: AN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
- Doing Business in 1840
- Business Conditions in 1840: Life without a Modern Infrastructure
- Transportation
- Example 1.1 The Emergence of Chicago
- Communications
- Finance
- Production Technology
- Government
- Example 1.2 Building National Infrastructure: The Transcontinental Railroad
- Doing Business in 1910
- Business Conditions in 1910: A “Modern” Infrastructure
- Production Technology
- Transportation
- Communications
- Finance
- Government
- Example 1.3 Evolution of the Steel Industry
- Doing Business Today
- Modern Infrastructure
- Transportation
- Communications
- Finance
- Production Technology
- Government
- Infrastructure in Emerging Markets
- Example 1.4 The Gaizhi Privatization Process in China
- Three Different Worlds: Consistent Principles, Changing Conditions, and Adaptive Strategies
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- 2 THE HORIZONTAL BOUNDARIES OF THE FIRM
- Definitions
- Definition of Economies of Scale
- Definition of Economies of Scope
- Scale Economies, Indivisibilities, and the Spreading of Fixed Costs
- Economies of Scale Due to Spreading of Product-Specific Fixed Costs
- Economies of Scale Due to Trade-offs among Alternative Technologies
- Indivisibilities Are More Likely When Production Is Capital Intensive
- Example 2.1 Hub-and-Spoke Networks and Economies of Scope in the Airline Industry
- “The Division of Labor Is Limited by the Extent of the Market”
- Example 2.2 The Division of Labor in Medical Markets
- Special Sources of Economies of Scale and Scope
- Density
- Purchasing
- Advertising
- Costs of Sending Messages per Potential Consumer
- Advertising Reach and Umbrella Branding
- Research and Development
- Physical Properties of Production
- Inventories
- Complementarities and Strategic Fit
- Sources of Diseconomies of Scale
- Labor Costs and Firm Size
- Spreading Specialized Resources Too Thin
- Bureaucracy
- Economies of Scale: A Summary
- The Learning Curve
- The Concept of the Learning Curve
- Expanding Output to Obtain a Cost Advantage
- Example 2.3 Learning by Doing in Medicine
- Learning and Organization
- The Learning Curve versus Economies of Scale
- Example 2.4 The Pharmaceutical Merger Wave
- Diversification
- Why Do Firms Diversify?
- Efficiency-Based Reasons for Diversification
- Scope Economies
- Internal Capital Markets
- Problematic Justifications for Diversification
- Diversifying Shareholders’ Portfolios
- Identifying Undervalued Firms
- Reasons Not to Diversify
- Managerial Reasons for Diversification
- Benefits to Managers from Acquisitions
- Problems of Corporate Governance
- The Market for Corporate Control and Recent Changes in Corporate Governance
- Example 2.5 Activist Investors in Silicon Valley
- Performance of Diversified Firms
- Example 2.6 Haier: The World’s Largest Consumer Appliance and Electronics Firm
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- 3 THE VERTICAL BOUNDARIES OF THE FIRM
- Make versus Buy
- Example 3.1 What Apple “Makes” and What It “Buys” for the iPhone
- Upstream, Downstream
- Example 3.2 Licensing Biotechnology Products
- Defining Boundaries
- Some Make-or-Buy Fallacies
- Avoiding Peak Prices
- Tying Up Channels: Vertical Foreclosure
- Reasons to “Buy”
- Exploiting Scale and Learning Economies
- Example 3.3 Employee Skills: Make or Buy?
- Bureaucracy Effects: Avoiding Agency and Influence Costs
- Agency Costs
- Influence Costs
- Example 3.4 Disconnection at Sony
- Organizational Design
- Reasons to “Make”
- The Economic Foundations of Contracts
- Complete versus Incomplete Contracting
- Bounded Rationality
- Difficulties Specifying or Measuring Performance
- Asymmetric Information
- The Role of Contract Law
- Coordination of Production Flows through the Vertical Chain
- Example 3.5 Nightmares at Boeing: The 787 Dreamliner
- Leakage of Private Information
- Transaction Costs
- Relationship-Specific Assets
- Forms of Asset Specificity
- The Fundamental Transformation
- Rents and Quasi-Rents
- The Holdup Problem
- Example 3.6 Power Barges
- Holdup and Ex Post Cooperation
- The Holdup Problem and Transaction Costs
- Contract Negotiation and Renegotiation
- Example 3.7 A Game of Chicken? Specificity and Underinvestment in the Broiler Industry
- Investments to Improve Ex Post Bargaining Positions
- Distrust
- Reduced Investment
- Recap: From Relationship-Specific Assets to Transaction Costs
- Summarizing Make-or-Buy Decisions: The Make-or-Buy Decision Tree
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- 4 INTEGRATION AND ITS ALTERNATIVES
- What Does It Mean to Be “Integrated”?
- The Property Rights Theory of the Firm
- Alternative Forms of Organizing Transactions
- Example 4.1 Vertical Integration in a Mountain Paradise
- Governance
- Delegation
- Recapping PRT
- Path Dependence
- Making the Integration Decision
- Technical Efficiency versus Agency Efficiency
- The Technical Efficiency/Agency Efficiency Trade-off
- Example 4.2 Accountable Care Organizations
- Real-World Evidence
- Double Marginalization: A Final Integration Consideration
- Example 4.3 Vertical Integration of the Sales Force in the Insurance Industry
- Alternatives to Vertical Integration
- Tapered Integration: Make and Buy
- Franchising
- Example 4.4 Franchise Heat in China
- Strategic Alliances and Joint Ventures
- Example 4.5 Joint Ventures in Sub-Saharan Africa
- Implicit Contracts and Long-Term Relationships
- Example 4.6 Interfirm Business Networks in the United States: The Women’s Dress Industry in New Yo
- Business Groups
- Keiretsu
- Chaebol
- Business Groups in Emerging Markets
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- PART TWO MARKET AND COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS
- 5 COMPETITORS AND COMPETITION
- Competitor Identification and Market Definition
- The Basics of Market Definition and Competitor Identification
- Putting Competitor Identification into Practice
- Example 5.1 The SSNIP in Action: Defining Hospital Markets
- Empirical Approaches to Competitor Identification
- Geographic Competitor Identification
- Example 5.2 Whole Foods Attempts to Acquire Wild Oats
- Measuring Market Structure
- Market Structure and Competition
- Perfect Competition
- Many Sellers
- Homogeneous Products
- Excess Capacity
- Example 5.3 The Bottom Drops Out on Cubs Tickets
- Monopoly
- Monopolistic Competition
- Demand for Differentiated Goods
- Entry into Monopolistically Competitive Markets
- Oligopoly
- Example 5.4 Capacity Competition in the U.S. Beef Processing Industry13
- Cournot Quantity Competition
- The Revenue Destruction Effect
- Cournot’s Model in Practice
- Bertrand Price Competition
- Example 5.5 Cournot Equilibrium in the Corn Wet Milling Industry
- Why Are Cournot and Bertrand Different?
- Example 5.6 Electric Markets, Bertrand Competition, and Capacity Constraints
- Bertrand Price Competition When Products Are Horizontally Differentiated
- Evidence on Market Structure and Performance
- Price and Concentration
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- 6 ENTRY AND EXIT
- Some Facts about Entry and Exit
- Entry and Exit Decisions: Basic Concepts
- Barriers to Entry
- Bain’s Typology of Entry Conditions
- Analyzing Entry Conditions: The Asymmetry Requirement
- Example 6.1 How the Japanese Broke into the U.S. Car Market
- Structural Entry Barriers
- Control of Essential Resources
- Economies of Scale and Scope
- Example 6.2 Emirates Air
- Marketing Advantages of Incumbency
- Barriers to Exit
- Entry-Deterring Strategies
- Limit Pricing
- Example 6.3 Limit Pricing by Brazilian Cement Manufacturers
- Is Strategic Limit Pricing Rational?
- Example 6.4 Entry Barriers and Profitability in the Japanese Brewing Industry
- Predatory Pricing
- The Chain-Store Paradox
- Example 6.5 Predatory Pricing in the Laboratory
- Rescuing Limit Pricing and Predation: The Importance of Uncertainty and Reputation
- Wars of Attrition
- Example 6.6 Walmart Enters Germany . . . and Exits
- Predation and Capacity Expansion
- Strategic Bundling
- “Judo Economics”
- Evidence on Entry-Deterring Behavior
- Contestable Markets
- An Entry Deterrence Checklist
- Entering a New Market
- Preemptive Entry and Rent-Seeking Behavior
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- 7 DYNAMICS: COMPETING ACROSS TIME
- Microdynamics
- The Strategic Benefits of Commitment
- Strategic Substitutes and Strategic Complements
- The Strategic Effect of Commitments
- Example 7.1 Committed to a Settlement
- Tough and Soft Commitments
- A Taxonomy of Commitment Strategies
- The Informational Benefits of Flexibility
- Example 7.2 Commitment at Nucor and USX: The Case of Thin-Slab Casting
- Real Options
- A Framework for Analyzing Commitments
- Competitive Discipline
- Dynamic Pricing Rivalry and Tit-for-Tat Pricing
- Example 7.3 What Happens When a Firm Retaliates Quickly to a Price Cut: Philip Morris versus B.A.T.
- Why Is Tit-for-Tat So Compelling?
- Coordinating on the Right Price
- Impediments to Coordination
- The Misread Problem
- Example 7.4 Forgiveness and Provocability: Dow Chemicals and the Market for Reverse Osmosis Membrane
- Lumpiness of Orders
- Information about the Sales Transaction
- Volatility of Demand Conditions
- Asymmetries among Firms and the Sustainability of Cooperative Prices
- Price Sensitivity of Buyers and the Sustainability of Cooperative Pricing
- Market Structure and the Sustainability of Cooperative Pricing: Summary
- Facilitating Practices
- Price Leadership
- Advance Announcement of Price Changes
- Most Favored Customer Clauses
- Example 7.5 Are Most Favored Nation Agreements Anticompetitive?
- Uniform Delivered Prices
- Where Does Market Structure Come From?
- Sutton’s Endogenous Sunk Costs
- Example 7.6 The Evolution of the Chinese Down Apparel Industry
- Innovation and Market Evolution
- Learning and Industry Dynamics
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- 8 INDUSTRY ANALYSIS
- Performing a Five-Forces Analysis
- Internal Rivalry
- Entry
- Substitutes and Complements
- Supplier Power and Buyer Power
- Strategies for Coping with the Five Forces
- Coopetition and the Value Net
- Applying the Five Forces: Some Industry Analyses
- Chicago Hospital Markets Then and Now
- Market Definition
- Internal Rivalry
- Entry
- Substitutes and Complements
- Supplier Power
- Buyer Power
- Commercial Airframe Manufacturing
- Market Definition
- Internal Rivalry
- Barriers to Entry
- Substitutes and Complements
- Supplier Power
- Buyer Power
- Professional Sports
- Market Definition
- Internal Rivalry
- Entry
- Substitutes and Complements
- Supplier Power
- Buyer Power
- Conclusion
- Professional Search Firms
- Market Definition
- Internal Rivalry
- Entry
- Substitutes and Complements
- Supplier Power
- Buyer Power
- Conclusion
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- PART THREE STRATEGIC POSITION AND DYNAMICS
- 9 STRATEGIC POSITIONING FOR COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
- Competitive Advantage and Value Creation: Conceptual Foundations
- Competitive Advantage Defined
- Maximum Willingness-to-Pay and Consumer Surplus
- From Maximum Willingness-to-Pay to Consumer Surplus
- Value-Created
- Example 9.1 The Division of Value Creation for Gilead Sciences’ Sovaldi on the Back of an Envelope
- Value Creation and “Win–Win” Business Opportunities
- Value Creation and Competitive Advantage
- Analyzing Value Creation
- Example 9.2 Kmart versus Walmart
- Example 9.3 The Emergence of Uber . . . and the Demise of the Taxi?
- Value Creation and the Value Chain
- Value Creation, Resources, and Capabilities
- Example 9.4 Creating Value at Enterprise Rent-a-Car
- Example 9.5 Measuring Capabilities in the Pharmaceutical Industry
- Strategic Positioning: Cost Advantage and Benefit Advantage
- Generic Strategies
- The Strategic Logic of Cost Leadership
- The Strategic Logic of Benefit Leadership
- Example 9.6 “Haute Pot” Cuisine in China
- Extracting Profits from Cost and Benefit Advantage
- Comparing Cost and Benefit Advantages
- “Stuck in the Middle”
- Example 9.7 Strategic Positioning in the Airline Industry: Four Decades of Change
- Diagnosing Cost and Benefit Drivers
- Cost Drivers
- Cost Drivers Related to Firm Size, Scope, and Cumulative Experience
- Cost Drivers Independent of Firm Size, Scope, or Cumulative Experience
- Cost Drivers Related to Organization of the Transactions
- Benefit Drivers
- Methods for Estimating and Characterizing Costs and Perceived Benefits
- Estimating Costs
- Estimating Benefits
- Strategic Positioning: Broad Coverage versus Focus Strategies
- Segmenting an Industry
- Broad Coverage Strategies
- Focus Strategies
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- 10 INFORMATION AND VALUE CREATION
- The “Shopping Problem”
- Unraveling
- Alternatives to Disclosure
- Example 10.1 A Warranty for Surgery
- Example 10.2 The Evolution of Branding in Appliance Retailing
- Nonprofit Firms
- Report Cards
- Multitasking: Teaching to the Test
- Example 10.3 Teachers Teaching to the Test
- What to Measure
- Example 10.4 Calorie Posting in New York City Restaurants
- Risk Adjustment
- Presenting Report Card Results
- Gaming Report Cards
- Example 10.5 Hospital Report Cards
- The Certifier Market
- Certification Bias
- Matchmaking
- When Sellers Search for Buyers
- Example 10.6 The Netflix Challenge
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- 11 SUSTAINING COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
- Market Structure and Threats to Sustainability
- Threats to Sustainability in Competitive and Monopolistically Competitive Markets
- Threats to Sustainability under All Market Structures
- Evidence: The Persistence of Profitability
- The Resource-Based Theory of the Firm
- Imperfect Mobility and Cospecialization
- Example 11.1 Coffee, Tea, or Starbucks?
- Isolating Mechanisms
- Example 11.2 Sports Dynasties
- Impediments to Imitation
- Legal Restrictions
- Superior Access to Inputs or Customers
- Example 11.3 Cola Wars in Venezuela
- The Winner’s Curse
- Market Size and Scale Economies
- Intangible Barriers to Imitation
- Causal Ambiguity
- Dependence on Historical Circumstances
- Social Complexity
- Early-Mover Advantages
- Learning Curve
- Reputation and Buyer Uncertainty
- Buyer Switching Costs
- Network Effects
- Networks and Standards
- Example 11.4 Building Blocks of Sustainable Advantage
- Competing “For the Market” versus “In the Market”
- Knocking Off a Dominant Standard
- Early-Mover Disadvantages
- Imperfect Imitability and Industry Equilibrium
- Creating Advantage and Creative Destruction
- Disruptive Technologies
- The Productivity Effect
- The Sunk Cost Effect
- The Replacement Effect
- The Efficiency Effect
- Disruption versus the Resource-Based Theory of the Firm
- Innovation and the Market for Ideas
- Example 11.5 Patent Racing and the Invention of the Integrated Circuit
- Evolutionary Economics and Dynamic Capabilities
- The Environment
- Factor Conditions
- Demand Conditions
- Related Supplier or Support Industries
- Example 11.6 The Rise of the Swiss Watch Industry
- Strategy, Structure, and Rivalry
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- PART FOUR INTERNAL ORGANIZATION
- 12 PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENT AND INCENTIVES
- The Principal–Agent Relationship
- Combating Agency Problems
- Example 12.1 Differences in Objectives in Agency Relationships: Yahoo! And English Fruit
- Performance-Based Incentives
- Example 12.2 Hidden Action and Hidden Information in Garment Factory Fire Insurance
- Problems with Performance-Based Incentives
- Preferences over Risky Outcomes
- Risk Sharing
- Risk and Incentives
- Example 12.3 “Target and Terror” in English Hospitals
- Performance Measures That Fail to Reflect All Desired Actions
- Selecting Performance Measures: Managing Trade-offs between Costs
- Example 12.4 Herding, RPE, and the 2007–2008 Credit Crisis
- Do Pay-for-Performance Incentives Work?
- Implicit Incentive Contracts
- Subjective Performance Evaluation
- Promotion Tournaments
- Example 12.5 Quitters Never Win
- Efficiency Wages and the Threat of Termination
- Incentives in Teams
- Example 12.6 Teams and Communication in Steel Mills
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- 13 STRATEGY AND STRUCTURE
- An Introduction to Structure
- Individuals, Teams, and Hierarchies
- Complex Hierarchy
- Departmentalization
- Coordination and Control
- Approaches to Coordination
- Example 13.1 ABB’s Matrix Organization
- Types of Organizational Structures
- Functional Structure (U-form)
- Example 13.2 Organizational Structure at AT&T
- Multidivisional Structure (M-form)
- Matrix Structure
- Network Structure
- Why Are There So Few Structural Types?
- Strategy-Environment Coherence
- Technology and Task Interdependence
- Example 13.3 Steve Jobs and Structure at Apple
- Information Processing
- Structure Follows Strategy
- Example 13.4 Strategy, Structure, and the Attempted Merger Between the University of Chicago Hospita
- Strategy, Structure, and the Multinational Firm
- Example 13.5 Multinational Firms: Strategy and Infrastructure39
- Example 13.6 Reorganization at Rhône-Poulenc S.A.
- Hybrid Organizations
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- 14 ENVIRONMENT, POWER, AND CULTURE
- The Social Context of Firm Behavior
- Internal Context
- Power
- The Sources of Power
- Example 14.1 The Sources of Presidential Power
- Structural Views of Power
- Do Successful Organizations Need Powerful Managers?
- Example 14.2 Power and Poor Performance: The Case of the 1957 Mercury
- The Decision to Allocate Formal Power to Individuals
- Example 14.3 Power in the Boardroom: Why Let CEOs Choose Directors?
- Culture
- Culture Complements Formal Controls
- Example 14.4 Corporate Culture and Inertia at ICI
- Culture Facilitates Cooperation and Reduces Bargaining Costs
- Culture, Inertia, and Performance
- A Word of Caution about Culture
- Example 14.5 Corporate Culture at Aetna: Yoga and the CEO
- External Context, Institutions, and Strategies
- Example 14.6 Corporate Culture at Ford
- Institutions and Regulation
- Interfirm Resource Dependence Relationships
- Example 14.7 Preserving Culture in the Face of Growth: The Google IPO
- Industry Logics: Beliefs, Values, and Behavioral Norms
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Endnotes
- GLOSSARY
- NAME INDEX
- SUBJECT INDEX
- EULA




