Title: Lecture Outline
1Lecture Outline
Strategic Management and Competitive
Advantage Jay B. BarneyWilliam S. Hesterly
2Chapter 7
Corporate Diversification
3Chapter Objectives (1 of 3)
- Define corporate diversification and describe
five types of corporate diversification. - Specify the two conditions that a corporate
diversification strategy must meet in order to
create economic value. - Define the concept of economies of scope and
identify eight potential economies of scope a
diversified firm might try to exploit.
4Chapter Objectives (2 of 3)
- Identify which of these economies of scope a
firms outside equity investors are able to
realize on their own at low cost. - Specify the circumstances under which a firms
diversification strategy will be rare. - Indicate which of the economies of scope
identified in this chapter are more likely to be
subject to low-cost imitation and which are less
likely to be subject to low-cost imitation.
5Chapter Objectives (3 of 3)
- Identify two potential substitutes for corporate
diversification. - Identify economies of scope that can be realized
through international operations.
6The Strategic Management Process
External Analysis
Strategic Choice
Strategy Implementation
Competitive Advantage
Mission
Objectives
Which Businesses to Enter?
Internal Analysis
Vertical Integration
Corporate Level Strategy
Diversification
7Logic of Corporate Level Strategies(1 of 3)
- Corporate Level Strategy Should Create Value
- Such that businesses forming the corporate whole
are worth more than they would be under
independent ownership. - That equity holders cannot create through
portfolio investing. - Therefore
- A corporate level strategy must crate synergies
- Economies of scopediversification
- Economies of scope exist in a firm when the value
of the products or services it sells increases as
a function of the number of businesses that firm
operates in.
8Logic of Corporate Level Strategies(2 of 3)
Examples of Economics of Scope
McDonalds
P G
9Logic of Corporate Level Strategies(3 of 3)
Additional Example of Economics of Scope
General Motors
General Motors Vehicles
General Motors Credit
10Integration and Diversification
Integration
Raw Materials
Distribution
Focal Firm
Customer
Supplier
Forward
Backward
Diversification
Other Businesses
Other Businesses
Current Businesses
No Links
Many Links
Unrelated
Related
11Example of Unrelated Diversification
General Electric
12Levels of Diversification(1 of 3)
Limited Diversification
Single business 95 or more of firm revenues
comes from a business Example WD-40 Dominant-bus
iness between 70 and 95 of firm revenues comes
from a single business Example Donatos Pizza
A
E
F
13Levels of Diversification(2 of 3)
Related Diversification
Related-constrained less than 70 of firm
revenues comes from a single business, and
different businesses share numerous links and
common attributes Example Pepsi Related-linked
less than 70 of firm revenues comes from a
single business, and different businesses share
only a few links and common attributes or
different links and common attributes Example
Disney
K
M
L
N
Q
S
R
T
14Levels of Diversification(3 of 3)
Unrelated Diversification
Unrelated Diversification Less than 70 of firm
revenues comes from a single business, and there
are few, if any, links or common attributes among
businesses Example General Electric
W
Y
X
Z
15Types of Corporate Diversification(1 of 3)
- At a general level
- Product Differentiation
- Operating in multiple industries
- Geographic Market Diversification
- Operating in multiple geographic markets
- Product-Market Diversification
- Operating in multiple industries in multiple
geographic markets
16Types of Corporate Diversification(2 of 3)
Product Differentiation
Geographic Market Differentiation
Product Market Differentiation
- Pepsi
- Soft drinks
- Frito-Lay Snacks
- Tropicana
- Gatorade
The Home Depot 1,950 stores in all 50 states
- Boeing
- Commercial aircraft
- Military aircraft
- Satellites
- Defense applications
17Types of Corporate Diversification(3 of 3)
- At a more specific level
- Limited Diversification
- Single business gt 95 of sales in single
business - Dominant business 70 to 95 in single business
- Related Diversification
- Related constrained all businesses related on
most dimensions - Unrelated Diversification
- Businesses are not related
18Product and Geographic Diversification
- Possibilities
- Single-business in one geographic area
- Single-business in multiple geographic areas
- Related-constrained in one or multiple geographic
areas - Related-linked in one or multiple geographic
areas - Unrelated in one or multiple geographic areas
- Note
- Relatedness usually refers to products
- Seemingly unrelated products may be related on
other dimensions
19Competitive Advantage
- If a diversification strategy meets the VRIO
criteria - Is it valuable?
- Is it rare?
- Is it costly to imitate?
- Is the firm organized to exploit it?
.it may create a competitive advantage
20Value of Diversification(1 of 2)
- Two Criteria
- There must be some economy of scope
- The focal firm must have a cost advantage over
outside equity holders in exploiting any
economies of scope
21Value of Diversification(2 of 2)
Value
Independent equity holder could buy shares of
each firm
Focal Firm
Value
Economies Of Scope
Combined equity holder buys shares in one firm
22Economies of Scope(1 of 7)
- Four Types
- Operational
- Financial
- Anticompetitive
- Managerialism
23Economies of Scope(2 of 7)
- Operational Economies of Scope
- Sharing Activities
- Exploiting efficiencies of sharing business
activities - Example Frito-Lays Trucking
- Spreading Core Competencies
- Exploiting core competencies in other businesses
- Competencies must be strategically relevant
- Example Orbitz
24Economies of Scope(3 of 7)
- Financial Economies of Scope
- Internal Capital Market
- Premise Insiders can allocate capital across
divisions more efficiently than the external
capital market - Works only if managers have better information
- May protect proprietary information
- May suffer from escalating commitment
- Example Hanson Trust, PLC
25Economies of Scope(4 of 7)
- Financial Economies of Scope
- Risk reduction
- Counter cyclical businesses may provide decreased
overall risk - However,
- Individual investors can usually do this more
efficiently than a firm - Example Snow Skis and Water Skis
26Economies of Scope(5 of 7)
- Financial Economies of Scope
- Tax Advantage
- Transfer pricing policy allows profits in one
division to be offset by losses in another
division - This is especially true internationally
- Can be used to smooth income
27Economies of Scope(6 of 7)
- Anticompetitive Economies of Scope
- Multipoint Competition
- Mutual Forbearance
- A firm chooses not to compete aggressively in one
market to avoid competition in another market - Example American Airlines Delta Dallas
Atlanta - Market Power
- Using profits from one business to compete in
another business - Using buying power in one business to obtain
advantage in another business
28Economies of Scope(7 of 7)
- Managerialism
- An economy of scope that accrues to managers at
the expense of equity holders - Managers of larger firms receive more
compensation (larger scope more compensation) - Therefore, managers have an incentive to acquire
other firms and become even larger - Even though the incentive is there, it is
difficult to know if managerialism is the reason
for an acquisition
29Equity Holders and Economies of Scope
- Equity Holders and Economies of Scope
- Most economies of scope cannot be captured by
equity holders - Risk reduction can be captured by equity holders
- Managers should consider whether corporate
diversification will generate economies of scope
that equity holders can capture - If a corporate diversification move is unlikely
to generate valuable economies of scope, managers
should avoid it
30Rareness of Diversification
- Diversification per se is not rare
- Underlying economies of scope may be rare
- Relationships that allow an economy of scope to
be exploited may be rare - An economy of scope may be rare because it is
naturally or economically limited - A soft drink bottler buys the only source of
spring water available - A hotel in a resort town creates a large water
park, there are only enough customers to support
one park
31Imitability of Diversification(1 of 2)
Duplication of Economies of Scope
Less Costly-to-Duplicate
Costly-to-Duplicate
Core Competencies
Employee Compensation
Tax Advantages
Internal Capital Allocation
Multipoint Competition
Risk Reduction
Shared Activities
Exploiting Market Power
(tacit/intangible)
(codified/tangible)
may be costly depending on relationships
32Imitability of Diversification(2 of 2)
Substitution of Economies of Scope
Internal Development
Strategic Alliances
find a partner with the desired
complementary assets
start a new business under the corporate whole
avoids potential cross- firm integration issues
less costly than acquiring a firm
Competitors may use these strategies to arrive at
a position of diversification without buying
another firm
33International Diversification(1 of 2)
Three Types of International Risk
Financial
Cultural/Popular
Political
nationalization
currency exchange
product may not be accepted simply because of
your country of origin
quotas
general economic conditions
tariffs
regulations
Example Resistance to McDonalds by Frances
older generation
Example Bolivia nationalized its petroleum indus
try in the 70s
Example Asian economic crisis of the 1990s
34International Diversification(2 of 2)
- Managing International Risks
- Political
- Find a local partner
- Political neutrality
- Negotiate with government
- Foreign governments often have an interest in
direct investment - Example Case International in Brazil
35Summary(1 of 2)
- Corporate Strategy In what businesses should the
firm operate? - An understanding of diversification helps
managers answer that question - Two Criteria
- Economies of scope must exist
- Must create value that outside equity holders
cannon create on their own
36Summary(2 of 2)
- Economies of Scope
- A case of synergycombined activities generate
greater value than independent activities - May generate competitive advantage if they meet
the VRIO criteria - Firms should pursue diversification only if
careful analysis shows that competitive advantage
is likely