Title: Diversification Strategy
1Diversification 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
2The 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?
3Diversification 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
4Diversification among Large UK Corporations,
1950-93
5Diversification 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
6Motives 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.
7Diversification 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
8Competitive 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
9Relatedness 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.
10Branson 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?