Description
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- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Brief Contents
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Part 1: THE TOOLS OF STRATEGIC ANALYSIS
- CHAPTER 1 What Is Strategy and the Strategic Management Process?
- Go, PokÉmon Go
- Strategy and the Strategic Management Process
- Defining Strategy
- The Strategic Management Process
- What is Competitive Advantage?
- Research Made Relevant: How Sustainable Are Competitive Advantages?
- The Strategic Management Process, Revisited
- Measuring Competitive Advantage
- Accounting Measures of Competitive Advantage
- Strategy in Depth: The Business Model Canvas
- Economic Measures of Competitive Advantage
- Ethics and Strategy: Stockholders Versus Stakeholders
- The Relationship Between Economic and Accounting Performance Measures
- Emergent Versus Intended Strategies
- Why you Need to Know About Strategy
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- CHAPTER 2 Evaluating a Firm’s External Environment
- How Attractive is the Music Streaming Industry?
- Understanding a Firm’s General Environment
- The Structure‐Conduct‐Performance Model of Firm Performance
- Ethics and Strategy: Is a Firm Gaining a Competitive Advantage Good for Society?
- A Model of Environmental Threats
- Threat from New Competition
- Strategy in Depth: Environmental Threats and the S‐C‐P Model
- Another Environmental Force: Complements
- Industry Structure and Environmental Opportunities
- Research Made Relevant: The Impact of Industry and Firm Characteristics on Firm Performance
- Strategy in Depth: Network and Empty Core Industries
- Opportunities in Fragmented Industries: Consolidation
- Opportunities in Emerging Industries: First‐Mover Advantages
- Opportunities in Mature Industries: Product Refinement, Service, and Process Innovation
- Opportunities in Declining Industries: Leadership, Niche, Harvest, and Divestment
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- CHAPTER 3 Evaluating a Firm’s Internal Capabilities
- When a Noun Becomes a Verb
- The Resource‐Based View of the Firm
- What Are Resources and Capabilities?
- Critical Assumptions of the Resource‐Based View
- Strategy in Depth: Ricardian Economics and the Resource‐Based View
- The VRIO Framework
- The Question of Value
- Ethics and Strategy: Externalities and the Broader Consequences of Profit Maximization
- The Question of Rarity
- The Question of Imitability
- The Question of Organization
- Research Made Relevant: Strategic Human Resource Management Research
- Applying the VRIO Framework
- Applying the VRIO Framework to Southwest Airlines
- Southwest’s People‐Management and Competitive Advantage
- Imitation and Competitive Dynamics in an Industry
- Not Responding to Another Firm’s Competitive Advantage
- Changing Tactics in Response to Another Firm’s Competitive Advantage
- Changing Strategies in Response to Another Firm’s Competitive Advantage
- Implications of the Resource‐Based View
- Where Does the Responsibility for Competitive Advantage in a Firm Reside?
- Competitive Parity and Competitive Advantage
- Difficult‐to‐Implement Strategies
- Socially Complex Resources
- The Role of Organization
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- End‐of‐Part 1 Cases
- Case 1–1: Can SodaStream Disrupt the Carbonated Soft Drink Market?
- Case 1–2: True Religion Jeans: Flash in the Pants or Enduring Brand?
- Case 1–3: Walmart Stores, Inc.
- Case 1–4: Harlequin Enterprises: The Mira Decision
- Part 2: BUSINESS‐LEVEL STRATEGIES
- CHAPTER 4 Cost Leadership
- Brathwait: A Transparent Watchmaker
- What is Business‐Level Strategy?
- What is Cost Leadership?
- Sources of Cost Advantages
- Strategy in Depth: Determining the Optimal Level of Production in an Industry
- Research Made Relevant: How Valuable Is Market Share—Really?
- Ethics and Strategy: The Race to the Bottom
- The Value of Cost Leadership
- Cost Leadership and Environmental Threats
- Strategy in Depth: The Economics of Cost Leadership
- Cost Leadership and Sustained Competitive Advantage
- The Rarity of Sources of Cost Advantage
- The Imitability of Sources of Cost Advantage
- Organizing to Implement Cost Leadership
- Organizational Structure in Implementing Cost Leadership
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- CHAPTER 5 Product Differentiation
- Who Is Victoria, and What Is Her Secret?
- What is Product Differentiation?
- Bases of Product Differentiation
- Research Made Relevant: Discovering the Bases of Product Differentiation
- Product Differentiation and Creativity
- The Value of Product Differentiation
- Product Differentiation and Environmental Threats
- Strategy in Depth: The Economics of Product Differentiation
- Product Differentiation and Environmental Opportunities
- Ethics and Strategy: Product Claims and the Ethical Dilemmas in Health Care
- Product Differentiation and Sustained Competitive Advantage
- Rare Bases for Product Differentiation
- The Imitability of Product Differentiation
- Organizing to Implement Product Differentiation
- Organizational Structure and Implementing Product Differentiation
- Management Controls and Implementing Product Differentiation
- Strategy in Depth: Going in Search of Blue Oceans
- Compensation Policies and Implementing Product Differentiation Strategies
- Can Firms Implement Product Differentiation and Cost Leadership Simultaneously?
- No: These Strategies Cannot Be Implemented Simultaneously
- Yes: These Strategies Can Be Implemented Simultaneously
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- CHAPTER 6 Flexibility and Real Options
- Why Is Netflix called Netflix?
- What is Strategic Flexibility?
- Types of Flexibility
- The Value of Strategic Flexibility
- Incorporating Risk in Strategic Decision Making
- Limitations of Risk Based Decision Making Under Uncertainty
- Valuing Flexibility
- Strategy in Depth: The Black‐Scholes Model for Valuing Financial Options
- Research Made Relevant: The Value of Real Options Thinking
- Strategic Flexibility and Sustained Competitive Advantage
- Rare and Costly‐to‐Imitate Flexibility
- Organizing to Implement Strategic Flexibility
- Ethics and Strategy Feature: Treating Employees as Flexible Assets
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- CHAPTER 7 Collusion
- A Gas Station Conundrum
- What is Collusion?
- Ethics and Strategy Feature: The Ethics of Collusion
- The Value of Collusion
- Colluding to Reduce the Threat of New Competitors
- Colluding to Reduce the Threat of Current Competitors
- Strategy in Depth: How Colluding Firms Generate Economic Profits
- Colluding to Reduce Other Competitive Threats
- Collusion and Sustained Competitive Advantage
- Ways Firms Can Cheat on Collusive Agreements
- Explicit and Tacit Collusion
- Industry Attributes and the Threat of Cheating
- Research Made Relevant: Sending Signals to Maintain Collusion
- Rarity and Costly to Imitate Collusion Strategies
- Organizing to Implement Tacit Collusion
- Organizational Efficiency
- Organizational Self‐Discipline
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- End‐of‐Part 2 Cases
- Case 2–1: McDonald’s: Comeback in the U.S. Burger Market?
- Case 2–2: The Levi’s Personal Pair Proposal
- Case 2–3: Papa John’s International, Inc.: Growth Challenges
- Case 2–4: Ryanair—The Low Fares Airline
- Case 2–5: Torrey Nano, Inc.
- Case 2–6: Collusion in Major League Baseball
- Part 3: CORPORATE STRATEGIES
- CHAPTER 8 Vertical Integration
- Outsourcing Services
- What Is Corporate Strategy?
- What Is Vertical Integration?
- The Value of Vertical Integration
- Strategy in Depth: Measuring Vertical Integration
- Vertical Integration and the Threat of Opportunism
- Vertical Integration and Firm Capabilities
- Vertical Integration and Flexibility
- Applying the Theories to the Management of Call Centers
- Research Made Relevant: Empirical Tests of Theories of Vertical Integration
- Integrating Different Theories of Vertical Integration
- Vertical Integration and Sustained Competitive Advantage
- The Rarity of Vertical Integration
- Ethics and Strategy: The Ethics of Outsourcing
- The Imitability of Vertical Integration
- Organizing to Implement Vertical Integration
- Organizational Structure and Implementing Vertical Integration
- Management Controls and Implementing Vertical Integration
- Compensation in Implementing Vertical Integration Strategies
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- CHAPTER 9 Corporate Diversification
- Diversifying with a Core Mission
- What is Corporate Diversification?
- Types of Corporate Diversification
- Limited Corporate Diversification
- Related Corporate Diversification
- Unrelated Corporate Diversification
- The Value of Corporate Diversification
- What Are Valuable Economies of Scope?
- Research Made Relevant: How Valuable Are Economies of Scope?
- Can Equity Holders Realize These Economies of Scope on Their Own?
- Ethics and Strategy: Globalization and the Threat of the Multinational Firm
- Corporate Diversification and Sustained Competitive Advantage
- The Rarity of Diversification
- Strategy in Depth: Risk‐Reducing Diversification and a Firm’s Other Stakeholders
- The Imitability of Diversification
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- CHAPTER 10 Organizing to Implement Corporate Diversification
- Is It Soup Yet?
- Organizational Structure and Implementing Corporate Diversification
- The Board of Directors
- Strategy in Depth: Agency Conflicts Between Managers and Equity Holders
- Research Made Relevant: The Effectiveness of Boards of Directors
- Institutional Owners
- The Senior Executive
- Corporate Staff
- Division General Manager
- Shared Activity Managers
- Management Controls and Implementing Corporate Diversification
- Evaluating Divisional Performance
- Allocating Corporate Capital
- Transferring Intermediate Products
- Compensation Policies and Implementing Corporate Diversification
- Ethics and Strategy: Do CEOs Get Paid Too Much?
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- CHAPTER 11 Strategic Alliances
- Alliances Between Chinese and U.S. Firms
- What is a Strategic Alliance?
- How do Strategic Alliances Create Value?
- Strategic Alliance Opportunities
- Strategy in Depth: Winning Learning Races
- Research Made Relevant: Do Strategic Alliances Facilitate Tacit Collusion?
- Alliance Threats: Incentives to Cheat on Strategic Alliances
- Adverse Selection
- Moral Hazard
- Holdup
- Ethics and Strategy: When It Comes to Alliances, Do “Cheaters Never Prosper”?
- Strategic Alliances and Sustained Competitive Advantage
- The Rarity of Strategic Alliances
- The Imitability of Strategic Alliances
- Organizing to Implement Strategic Alliances
- Explicit Contracts and Legal Sanctions
- Equity Investments
- Firm Reputations
- Joint Ventures
- Trust
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- CHAPTER 12 Mergers and Acquisitions
- The Travails of Technology Acquisitions
- Ethics and Strategy: Is Greed Good?
- What Are Mergers and Acquisitions?
- The Value of Mergers and Acquisitions
- Mergers and Acquisitions: No Economies of Scope
- Mergers and Acquisitions: When Economies of Scope Exist
- Returns to Mergers and Acquisitions: Research Results
- Strategy in Depth: Evaluating the Performance Effects of Acquisitions
- Why Are There So Many Mergers and Acquisitions?
- Mergers and Acquisitions and Sustained Competitive Advantage
- Valuable, Rare, and Private Economies of Scope
- Valuable, Rare, and Costly‐to‐Imitate Economies of Scope
- Unexpected Valuable Economies of Scope Between Bidding and Target Firms
- Implications for Bidding Firm Managers
- Implications for Target Firm Managers
- Research Made Relevant: The Wealth Effects of Management Responses to Takeover Attempts
- Organizing to Implement a Merger or Acquisition
- Post‐Merger Integration and Implementing a Diversification Strategy
- Special Challenges in Post‐Merger Integration
- Summary
- Challenge Questions
- Problem Set
- End Notes
- End‐of‐Part 3 Cases
- Case 3–1: National Hockey League Enterprises Canada: A Retail Proposal
- Case 3–2: Starbucks: An Alex Poole Strategy Case
- Case 3–3: Rayovac Corporation: International Growth and Diversification Through Acquisitions
- Case 3–4: Aegis Analytical Corporation’s Strategic Alliances
- Case 3–5: Activision’s Crush on Mobile Gaming
- Appendix: Analyzing Cases and Preparing for Class Discussions
- Glossary
- Company Index
- Name Index
- Subject Index
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