Title: understand the competitive forces you currently face ..
1Economic Strategy IssuesBig Picture Framework
- BUSI 7130/6 Strategic Analysis of the
Competitive Environment
2Economic Strategy
- Goal of economic strategy to thrive in a
competitive marketplace - understand the competitive forces you currently
face - understand the forces which shape your future
- understand your own competitive advantage
3Porters Five Forces Model
- Initial task Define the Industry (not trivial!)
- product space
- geographic space (any Internet effects?)
- Evaluate the power of each of the forces
- can each force reduce our profits?
- can each force increase our profits?
- What are the net effects?
4Porters Five Forces Model
- Porters model is a classic on which many have
built - the core is microeconomic analysis
applied to business management issues
5Porters five forces, continued
- Internal rivalry - competition from other firms
already in the industry how intense is this? - Buyer power - can our buyers threaten our
profitability? Are there large customers who can
negotiate a better deal with us? - Supplier power - can the suppliers of any of our
inputs threaten our profitability? - Complements or substitutes - are there related
goods or services that can threaten our
profitability if their prices or availability
changes? - New entrants - are there new firms possibly ready
to enter our markets who pose a competitive
threat?
6Our additions to the five forces model
- Other strategic elements
- Evaluate the national and international economic
scene - any macroeconomic issues that matter? - Any political, legal or regulatory threats or
opportunities?
7Economic Strategy IssuesHorizontal and Vertical
Boundaries of the Firm
- BUSI 7130/6 Strategic Analysis of the
Competitive Environment - BDSS Chapters 2 3
8The Boundaries of the Firm
- Why do firms exist at all? (See Coase.) why
not market exchange for everything? - Critical role of transactions costs and
contracting issues - within-firm production vs. market (outsourcing)
- Horizontal boundaries - role of production
technology and economies of scale and scope in
determining firm size and shape
9Horizontal Boundaries of the Firm
- Role of economies of scale and scope and firm
size and shape - Economies of scale - declining LRATC
- implies MC lt AC, in range where Economies of
scale exist - cost advantages which favor larger firms
10Some Sources of Economies of Scale
- Production technology
- Capital requirements
- Inventories
- advertising
- purchasing
- R D
11Sources of diseconomies of scale
- Monitoring and transaction costs - coordination
difficulties - Managerial incentives and agency costs
- conflicts of interest, networks, and conflicting
out
12Economies of Scope
- Average cost reductions due to adding new or
different product lines - Sources
- specialized inputs, ex beef leather, banks
information, exotic birds and hubcaps - sharing fixed costs
- technology
- Conglomerate firms (will they last?)
13Applications and estimation examples
- Financial Services Industry
- further reading for estimation examples
- Gropper, D. M. changes in scale economies for
commercial banking firms 1979-1986, Journal of
Money, Credit and Banking, 1991 - Gropper, D. M. Product-line deregulation and
cost structure of U.S. savings and loan
associations Applied Economics, 1995
14 Some examples to consider
- Dell Computer / Intel / Seagate
- Home Depot / Lowes / YellaWood
- Birds Eye Foods
- (See HBSP case)
15Some questions to ponder for the Birds Eye case
- Why did Birds Eye develop as a vertically
integrated producer? - Should Birds Eye have bought their own fleet of
fishing boats, and backward integrated into
fishing? Why or why not? - How about building cold storage facilities or
farming? Are the answers similar to those for
fishing? Why? - What sort of advantage did Birds Eye build over
other producers? - Were there scale economies?
- If so, where were the scale economies, and what
was their source? - Why did the frozen food industry de-integrate?
- What do you see as a triggering event?
- What happened to asset-specificity?
- What could Birds Eye have done to stop the
de-integration process? - What are Birds Eyes problems at the end of the
case? What are their main assets?
16Economic Strategy Issues
- The Vertical Boundaries of the Firm
- BUSI 7130/7136
17Basic questions to consider
- Should our firm be more (or less) vertically
integrated than it is currently? - Should we buy our inputs from another firm
through a market transaction, or make it within
our firm (perhaps buy a supplier)? - Should we sell our outputs to another firm
through a market transaction, or integrate more
toward the final consumer?
18 Make-or-Buy Fallacies
- Buy, to Avoid the cost of production
- Make, to Avoid paying for another firms profit
margin on an item - Make, to Avoid price increases on an input.
(ex electricity producers and natural gas in
Summer 2000) - Common theme above all fail to recognize
opportunity cost concepts
19Transactions Costsand Market Exchange
- Role of Contracts
- complete and incomplete contracts
- very difficult (e.g. costly) to write complete
contingent contracts - Bounded rationality issues
- Performance specification problems
- Asymmetric information
20Relation-specific assets
- Specialized assets for a particular situation
- location
- design properties
- dedicated assets
- Human capital
- Asset specificity can lead to opportunistic
behavior - difference in best use and opportunity cost
21Never contend with a man who has nothing to
lose.
- Baltasar Gracian, 1602-1658
22The Holdup Problem
- Arise because of the wedge between first-best use
and opportunity cost with relationship-specific
assets - Incomplete contracts make holdup more likely
- Renegotiation after decision points passed is
likely - How to deal with holdup problems?
23Vertical Boundaries of the Firm
- Vertical integration - up and/or downstream
- Vertical integration avoids
- holdup problem
- underinvestment problem
- contracting problems
- Vertical integration considerations
- examine costs and benefits
- scale scope economies - technical efficiency
- agency costs - organizational efficiency
24 Examples to consider
- Telephone lines and end-use equipment production
- Frozen food processing and farming
- Food processing and grocery retailing
- Electric utilities and gas companies
- Electricity generation and transmission
- Paper companies and tree farms
- chips and computer firms
25Alternatives to Vertical Integration
- Partial or tapered integration
- make some, buy some
- Strategic alliances and joint ventures
- soft contracts - based more on mutual trust and
understanding - Japanese Keiretsu
- Informal networks
26Diversification
- Economies of Scope and Conglomerates
- Merger waves in U.S. history
- late 1800s, 1920s, 1960s, 1980s, 1990s
- Diversification vs. Integration
- Central notion of transaction costs and agency
theory - General skepticism about performance
- General concern about power and politics