Title: MIS Colloquium
1MIS Colloquium
- IT and Strategic Industry Transformations
- Dr. Joseph McGill
- December 1, 2004
2- Questions
- How does IT generate change within firms and
industries? - How do/can firms use IT for strategic advantage?
3Information
- Represents Objects
- Separated in space and time
- But so do catalogs, purchase requisitions, and
salespeople! - Why is information technology different?
- Marginal returns are often positive
- e.g., improved reach and richness
4Information
- Symbol vs. physical object
- Codify, separate, integrate, manipulate
- Information may also be the product (insurance,
music, etc.)
5Information knowledge?
More valuable to the firm
KNOWLEDGE
Tacit Social
INFORMATION
DATA
More human interpretation, awareness, etc.
6Technology
- Not science - technology concerned with solving
problems, not searching for principles. - Path-dependent, has momentum
- Institutionally embedded (where's the last mile,
and why can't I buy a new liver on the web any
more?) - Economics does not explain , e.g.,
- why would suppliers join the web to encourage
price comparisons? - Linus/OSSs?
7Peter Brimelow, The Silent Boom, Forbes, July
7, 1997
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9IT Genl Purpose Technology
- Applied progressively in a wide variety of
arenas, and based on connectivity - Historical examples of GPTs
- Steamships, railroads, cable telegraph drove
networks scale and scope economies (Chandler,
1990). - Corliss steam engine - production independent of
water power location independent - Electrical motor - controllability, flexible
location in production layout, etc..
10- Connection density increases the reach and flow
of physical (and informational) goods!
111 Minute Strategy Review
- Firms want capabilities that are rare, valuable,
difficult to imitate, and for which there are no
substitutes. (Microsoft? eBay?) - Firms seek/manage environmental fit e.g.,
competitive, legal, institutional.
12 Its about fit
Adapted from J. Pennings, Wharton
THE INDUSTRY ENVIRONMENT Competitors Customers S
uppliers
THE FIRM Resources and Capabilities Struc
ture and Systems
STRATEGY
STRATEGY
The Firm-Strategy interface
The Strategy-Environment Interface
13Strategic Change
- IT "re-values" the capabilities needed by firms
to achieve competitive advantage - IT transforms structural relationships among
customers, suppliers, and competitors
14Modularity
- Technologies and organizations are (usually)
modular systems - Modular (components) with fully-specified
interfaces - Don't need to know the total architecture
- individual components can change while the total
system remains functional
Henderson Clark, 1990, Sanchez Mahoney, 1996
15Modularity and innovation
Redesign
Radical
Modular
Components
Incremental
Architectural
Refine
Stable
Changed
Component links
Adapted from Henderson Clark, 1990
16Organization structures
- More integrated org structures for
- exploitation
- efficiency
- faster (systemwide) learning
- But slower response to external change
17Organization structures
- More modular (loosely coupled) structures permit
- more exploration
- more experimentation
- slower diffusion of learning (e.g., Saturn at GM)
- faster response to change (component can respond
without affecting system)
18Firms use Modular Strategy when
- Multiple customer sets, multiple product sets
- Availability of standards
- High rate of technological change
- High level of competitive intensity
- (study of 330 industries 1992-97, Schilling
Steensma, 2001)
19Being an incumbent can be an asset or a liability
- Modular competencies can become core rigidities -
information is filtered - Amazon, Dell required web entry
- When to leverage, when to disintermediate? Webvan
vs. Tesco
20News Story by Todd R. Weiss JULY 16, 2001
(COMPUTERWORLD) - After trying unsuccessfully for
the past two years to make a business out of
selling groceries online, Webvan Group Inc. last
week closed its doors for good. The Foster City,
Calif.-based company announced that it's ending
all operations, laying off about 2,000 workers
and preparing to file for Chapter 11
- Webvan Tesco
- Both information enabled
- Differing views of the environment
21Adoption Leader strategy when
- the innovation's value is appropriable and
protectable against imitation. - owning/ controlling the standard is critical to
competitive advantage. - there are early mover advantages from learning,
efficiency and stability
22Adoption Follower strategy when
- A firm can leverage existing infrastructure
- A firm can access complementary resources
- rate of adoption is uncertain
- Followers have more flexibility, but lose
early-mover advantages
23Information changes markets
- Exchange f (transaction costs - search,
selection costs) - Entry costs are lowered (in virtual markets)
..many new entrants - As info ?costs ?
- buyer power increases
- rivalry increases
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25Trust
- E-commerce (and technology in general) adoption
requires Institutional mechanisms for trust - examples - eBay feedback insurance, Verisign,
legal (hunting the spammers and phishers)
26Sources of Value -1
- Efficiency
- buyer-seller (and seller-buyer!) information
flows reduce search costs (e.g., Autobytel) - Complementarities - bundling information (goods)
- vertically (e.g., aftermarket service)
- horizontally (e.g., cookbooks and food)
- Adapted from Amit Zott, 2001
27Sources of Value - 2
- Novelty -
- new combinations of information
- customer-ization improves reach and richness
simultaneously - Configurators, click streams, profiles, reverse
markets Priceline, sticky web sites - Examples- Amazon.com - increasing marginal
returns
Adapted from Amit Zott, 2001
28Sources of Value - 3
- Lock-in
- Sunk investment in reputation
- Communities
- Network size (e.g., eBay)
- First mover advantage
Adapted from Amit Zott, 2001
29Supply Chains Restructured
- Virtual Integration Dell, Nortel, Cisco
- We are not experts in technology we buy, we are
experts in virtual integration - Dick Hunter, Dell VP, quoted in The Economist,
Nov. 11, 2000 - Assets are liabilities!
- Outsource to the consumer Dell, GE, GM,
everyone... -
30Supply chains
- minimize system wide costs while satisfying
service level requirements.
31Modular supply?
- Global contract manufacturing
- Solectron, Celestica, SCI, Flextronics
- Product design, inputs, final assembly managed by
lead firms (e.g., Dell) - Bilateral arrangements between partners, ERP
rather than industry standard /public interface - Future implication vertical re-aggregation of
CMs through acquisitions? - Market-based B2B has not fared well
- Auctions problematic why would suppliers join?
- Example Covisint.com (auto mfg)
- e2open.com (ICT)
- Private exchange consortia
Bahlia Rivardb (2004) Validating measures of
information technology outsourcing risk factors
32IT RD
- Example biotech
- Combine apps from chemistry, functional genomics,
and bioinformatics to target and test new
molecules - Knowledge transfer via bridging devices for
data, genomics, 3D molecular structures
33Communities of practice
- Small biotech research teams operating on shared
information - knowledge (know-how vs. know-what)
- Information intensity driving specialist firms
that provide new tools
(GIFs Courtesy of proteinexplorer.org)
Salazar, Hackney, Howells (2003)
34The Questions were .
- How does IT generate change within firms and
industries? - How do firms use IT for strategic advantage?
35IT- enabled StrategicTransformation
- IT Organizational Modularity Architectural
Potential - Industries are transformed when IT
organizations co-evolve new architectures - Transformation is gated by transactional,
institutional, and technological uncertainties. - IT enabled strategy focuses on assessing and
aligning environments and firm capabilities. - Involves learning, timing, acquiring, divesting,
influencing, restructuring, outsourcing,
contracting, collaborating, and adapting.
36Final note
- Firms (not all) need IT competency
- IT adoption as epidemic, bandwagon? No
sustainable competitive advantage - Adoption should be co-specialized with
organizational learning to be a capability
(i.e., aid info acquisition, dissemination,
shared interpretation, memory) (Tippins Soh,
2003)
37Thank you for your attention