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Diversification Strategy

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Shareholder Value: Porter's Essential Tests. Competitive Advantage from Diversification ... Diversification and Shareholder Value: Porter's Three Essential Tests ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Diversification Strategy


1
Diversification Strategy
OUTLINE
  • Introduction The Basic Issues
  • The Trend over Time
  • Motives for Diversification
  • - Growth and Risk Reduction
  • - Shareholder Value Porters Essential
    Tests
  • Competitive Advantage from Diversification
  • Diversification and Performance Empirical
    Evidence
  • Relatedness in Diversification

2
The Basic Issues in Diversification Decisions
Superior profit derives from two sources
INDUSTRY ATTRACTIVENESS
RATE OF PROFIT gt COST OF CAPITAL
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
  • Diversification decisions involve these same two
    issues
  • How attractive is the sector to be entered?
  • Can the firm achieve a competitive advantage?

3
Diversification among the US Fortune 500, 1949-74
70.2 63.5 53.7
53.9 39.9 37.0
  • Percentage of Specialized Companies
    (single-business,
  • vertically-integrated and dominant-business)
  • Percentage of Diversified Companies
    (related-business
  • and unrelated business)
  • Note During the 1980s and 1990s the trend
    reversed as large
  • companies refocused upon their core businesses

29.8 36.5 46.3
46.1 60.1 63.0
1949 1954 1959 1964
1969 1974
4
Diversification among Large UK Corporations,
1950-93
5
Diversification The Evolution of Strategy and
Management Thinking
MANAGEMENT PRIORITIES
Quest for Growth
Addressing under-performance of
widely-diversified firms
Creating shareholder value
  • Competitive advantage through speed flexibility
  • Creating opportunities for future growth
  • Emergence of conglomerates
  • Diversification by established companies into
    related sectors

Emphasis on related concentric
diversification
  • Refocusing on core businesses
  • Divesting diversified businesses
  • Joint ventures and alliances
  • Creating growth options
  • through focused
  • diversification

DEVELOPMENTS IN CORPORATE STRATEGY
STRATEGY TOOLS CONCEPTS
  • Financial analysis
  • Diffusion of M form structures
  • Creation of corporate planning depts.
  • Economies of scope synergy
  • Portfolio planning models
  • Capital asset pricing model
  • Maximization of shareholder wealth
  • Core competences
  • Dominant logic
  • Dynamic capabilities
  • Transaction cost analysis
  • Real options

1960 1970 1980 1990 2000
2006
6
Motives for Diversification
  • GROWTH --The desire to escape stagnant or
    declining industries a powerful motives for
    diversification (e.g. tobacco,
  • oil, newspapers).
  • --But, growth satisfies managers not
    shareholders.
  • --Growth strategies (esp. by acquisition),
    tend to
  • destroy shareholder value

RISK --Diversification reduces variance
of profit flows SPREADING --But, doesnt
create value for shareholdersthey can hold
diversified portfolios of securities. --Capital
Asset Pricing Model shows that
diversification lowers unsystematic risk not
systematic risk.
PROFIT --For diversification to create
shareholder value, then bringing together of
different businesses under common ownership
must somehow increase their profitability.
7
Diversification and Shareholder Value Porters
Three Essential Tests
  • If diversification is to create shareholder
    value, it must meet three tests
  • 1. The Attractiveness Test diversification must
    be directed towards attractive industries (or
    have the potential to become attractive).
  • 2. The Cost of Entry Test the cost of entry
    must not capitalize all future profits.
  • 3. The Better-Off Test either the new unit must
    gain competitive advantage from its link with the
    company, or vice-versa. (i.e. some form of
    synergy must be present)

Additional source of value from diversification
Option value
8
Competitive Advantage from Diversification
  • Predatory pricing/tie-in sales Evidence
  • Reciprocal buying of these
  • Mutual forbearance is sparse

MARKET POWER
  • Sharing tangible resources (research labs,
    distribution systems) across multiple businesses
  • Sharing intangible resources (brands,
    technology) across multiple businesses
  • Transferring functional capabilities (marketing,
    product development) across businesses
  • Applying general management capabilities to
    multiple businesses

ECONOMIES OF SCOPE
  • Economies of scope not a sufficient basis for
    diversification ----must be supported by
    transaction costs
  • Diversification firm can avoid transaction
    costs by operating internal capital and labor
    markets
  • Key advantage of diversified firm over external
    markets--- superior access to information

ECONOMIES FROM INTERNALIZING TRANSACTIONS
9
Relatedness in Diversification
  • Economies of scope in diversification derive
    from two types of relatedness
  • Operational Relatedness-- synergies from sharing
    resources across businesses (common distribution
    facilities, brands, joint RD)
  • Strategic Relatedness-- synergies at the
    corporate level deriving from the ability to
    apply common management capabilities to different
    businesses.
  • Problem of operational relatedness- the
    benefits in terms of economies of scope may be
    dwarfed by the administrative costs involved in
    their exploitation.

10
Branson the Virgin Companies Making strategic
sense of apparent entrepreneurial chaos
  • KEY RESOURCES
  • Virgin brand
  • Branson
  • -charisma/image
  • --PR skills
  • -networking skills
  • -entrepreneurial flair
  • DOMINANT LOGIC
  • Seek competitive advantage by start-up cos.
  • pursuing innovative differentiation in
  • underserved market with sleepy incumbents
  • CHARACTERISTICS OF
  • MARKETSTHAT CONFORM
  • TO THIS LOGIC
  • Consumer businesses
  • dominant incumbent
  • scope for new approaches
  • to customer service
  • high entry barriers to other
  • start-ups
  • Branson/Virgin image
  • appeals to customers
  • DESIGNING A CORPORATE STRATEGY
  • STRUCTURE
  • Whats the business model?
  • (Does Virgin create value by
  • being an entrepreneurial incubator,
  • a venture capital fund, a
  • diversified corporation, or what?)
  • Which businesses to divest?
  • Criteria for future diversification
  • What type of structure?Is there
  • a need for greater formalization?
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