Title: MBA299: Strategy
1MBA299 Strategy
- Leadership Online Barnes Noble vs Amazon
- Take-aways
- April 13, 2006
2Discussion plan for Leadership Online
- Review positioning analysis
- On-line book reselling vs. off-line book
reselling - Digital music (iTunes) vs. CD retailing
- Understand Barnes Nobles response to advent of
on-line book reselling - Response to a substitution threat
- Can online retailers make money?
3What is positioning analysis?
- Examines relative costs and relative willingness
to pay between competitors - a.k.a. relative competitive position (RCP)
analysis - A good starting point for assessing the strengths
and weaknesses of a given strategy, threat of
retaliation from direct rivals, and potential
impact of substitute technologies - despite weaknesses, provides quantitative
benchmark for assessing position, sensitivities,
etc.
Know the enemy and know your yourself, and you
can fight a hundred battles with no danger of
defeat Sun Tzu
4Operating Performance Comparison, Coors vs.
Anheuser Busch
Prices and Costs Per Barrel
Dollars (1977)
5Dell vs. a Compaq/Reseller Team in 1996
WTP for Compaq / Reseller Product
WTP for Dell Product (?)
Compaq / Reseller Price
500
Dell Price
Compaq / Reseller Cost
300
Dell Cost
6Ryanair vs. Aer Lingus British Airways
Estimated Relative Cost Per Passenger Dublin -
London
7Four threats to sustainability of competitive
advantage
Imitation
Substitution
Slack
Holdup
8Positioning analysis can be performed on
substitutes
- Preceding examples all are positioning
comparisons with rivals pursuing similar
activities - Same process can be performed with substitutes
- Traditional stock brokerage vs. online brokerage
- Online vs. offline bookselling
- Other examples
- iTunes vs. record stores
- Netflix vs. video store rentals
- How great is the threat? Will the current
business model disappear? How can the existing
firm modify its current way of doing business to
respond to the threat?
9Example of a Substitution Threat Economics of
Brokerage Business Models, 1996
Source Rajiv Lal, E-Trade Securities, Inc.
Stanford University Graduate School of Business
Case No. M-286, 1996
10Cost Comparison of Online vs. Offline Business
Models, Based on 1996 Figures Projections
11Responses to Substitution Threats
- Not responding.
- Fighting. Investing to improve the value
generated by the existing products / business
model - Switching. Complete conversion to rivals
business model - Recombining. Incorporating elements of rivals
business model - Straddling. Short run measure to delay the
penetration of rivals business model - Harvesting. Manage business for cash,
anticipating exit / reduction in scale
12The Barnes and Noble Response Some lessons
- BN did some good things (relative to analogs in
other industries) - Identified and responded to the threat fairly
early - Broadened and shifted the scope of the strategic
scanning effort (looked at players beyond the
immediate threat for solutions) - How would you solve if starting afresh (e-books,
B-O-D, etc.)? - Attempt to lock-out competitors from up and
downstream - Failed attempt to purchase Ingram
- Commitment to deter investment
- Increase superstore footprint
- Price cuts
13The Barnes and Noble Response Some lessons
- But some problems?
- Straddle strategy was probably only choice
- Straddle however was primarily imitation
- Me-too was not very effective (particularly in
hindsight) - Some conflicts with existing business model make
radical shifts difficult - Offline not want to make it easy for .com?
- Worried about cannibalization that happened
eventually? - Leapfrogging to kill Amazon would have to damage
its own business (B-O-D, e-books) - Commitment is good but in this case, could price
cuts could have been be ill-founded (sin of
commission) - Exploded online demand
- Failed to deter Amazon, may have inspired get
big faster given increase in breakeven - Removed headroom for BN to pay 5-7 sales tax
- Did not build on non-imitable pieces of business
perhaps doomed therefore? (sin of omission) - Very late to extract advantages and synergies
from physical network - Slow to build out vertical/horizontal scope
- Often times in face of radical/disruptive
technologies recombination may be best avenue - In sum, BN did well to recognize substitution
threat early, but did not respond in ways that
were likely to force Amazon to back down
particularly because they did not build on areas
of unique advantage
14Generic Barriers to Effective Responses to
Substitution
- Substitutes tend to start out in small, less
profitable niches, and are at their most
dangerous when they initially underserve the
needs of existing customers (but get better
fast!) - Substitutes tend to inspire mixed motives in
incumbents, who may believe that their incentives
to respond are dissipated by cannibalization
threat - There may be ambiguity about which business model
will win out - Responding to substitutes may require
capabilities that incumbents lack and that are
hard to acquire
15Barnes Noble Corporation vs. Amazon.com
16Can Amazon Be Successful? Some initial thoughts
on competing on the internet (more to come)
- Internet retailing is tough
- Limited entry barriers frictionless markets ?
marginal cost pricing ? consumer surplus
increased, tough to make profits - Scale economies, distribution, brand equity
replicable - Substitution threats substantial e-books
- Holdups portals, IP walking out the door (key
person risk) - Slack risk creativity requires slack but also
harms operational effectiveness - Where will barriers come from?
- If distribution is complicated, it is possible to
have barriers to imitation - Non-digitizability (e-books could kill the
business) - Increase WTP (enhanced differentiation)
- Community (EBay edge?)
- Networks (Instant messaging)
- Information leverage
- Collaborative filtering
- Demand pricing
- Brand/reputation in absence of physical assurance
- Non-market activity may be critical
- Tax breaks