Title: School of Management MBA 6262 High Tech Entrepreneurship
1 School of Management MBA 6262High Tech
Entrepreneurship
-
- Winter 2006
- Margaret Dalziel
2Session 5 Alliances and Acquisitions
- Large-small firm relations
- Where are the opportunities for new firms?
- Why dont large firms occupy these spaces?
- What types of large-small firm alliances are
there? - Do small firms always define themselves with
respect to one or a group of large firms? - How are large-small firm alliances expected to
evolve? - Acquisitions?
- Types of acquisitions (Bower)
- Which high technology firms are likely to get
acquired?
3Porters 5 Forces
4Interfirm Relations(Brandenburger Nalebuff,
1996)
5Dimensions of Interfirm Relations
Proximity to Customer
Horizontal
Knowledge Novelty
6(No Transcript)
71. Where are the opportunities for new firms?
- In spaces not occupied by large firms
- These spaces are becoming more numerous because
large firms must focus - To compete for customers (need to understand
them) - To compete for investors (need to offer high
returns) - Most successful large firms are focused (see
Waitman slide)
82. Why dont large firms occupy these spaces?
- Waldinger Aldrich, 2000
- Abandoned because they are insufficiently
profitable - Low economies of scale
- Fluctuating demand (seasonal, uncertain)
- Customers are seeking specialized, customized
solution - Christensen, 1997
- Disruptive technologies (cheaper and initially
lower performing) - Bhide, 2000
- Ambiguous opportunities
9Disruptive Technologies (Christensen)
103. What types of large-small firm alliances are
there?
11Automotive Industry
12Bio-Pharmaceutical Industry
13Communications Equipment Industry
144. Do small firms always define themselves with
respect to one or a group of large firms?
- Complementors do
- Competitors may not
- Some may depend on specific geographic or product
markets - What are their chances of becoming global
leaders? - What happens when a large firm enters their
market? - Some may create new markets
- Extraordinary growth models, e.g. Ebay, Linux,
Google
15The Trajectory ofInnovative Central Firms
- Towards increased value for customers
- Offering a more complete solution
- Moving up the systems hierarchy
- Shifting the firms center of gravity through
outsourcing - Helping customers generate revenues rather than
save costs - Serving markets of one with fully customized or
fully customizable products
16The Trajectory ofInnovative Central Firms (cont)
- Towards new knowledge
- New scientific or technical knowledge
- New ways of organizing
- New product design
- New understandings, fashions
- Emerging markets
175. How are large-small firm alliances expected
to evolve?
18Propositions on Relationship Evolution
- Direction of knowledge flows
- From firms addressing high levels of knowledge
novelty to those addressing low levels - From firms closer to customer to those further
from customer - Relationship evolution
- Leaders most likely to get acquired
- Complementors must move in tandem with central
firm to continue to add value to relationship - Follows may enjoy strong growth opportunities
196. What about acquisitions
- What is an acquisition?
- What types of acquisitions are there?
- Which small firms are likely to get acquired?
- When are acquisitions likely to take place?
20Mergers and Acquisitions(Bower, 2001)
- Five types of mergers and acquisitions
- The overcapacity MA
- The geographic roll-up MA
- The product or market extension MA
- The MA as research and development
- The industry convergence MA
21Types of Acquisitions Revisited
22The overcapacity MA
- Air Canada and Canadian Airlines
23The geographic roll-up MA
MDSs roll up of private labs
24Industry Convergence
25Acquisitions and Market CapCisco Lucent
26Nortel 3Com
27Cisco Acquisitions
- 93 acquisitions between 1993 and April 2005
- Classified into three categories
- 0 Optical, wireless, voice, content delivery
networks (areas with stiff competition, less than
30 market share) - 1 Routing/switching (areas of strength, 60-70
market share) - 2 Software components
28Number of Cisco acquisitions per year
29Cost of acquisitions per year
306. Which high technology firms are likely to get
acquired?
- Firms will acquire competitors and
entrepreneurial competitors - Growth acquisitions will likely be associated
with growth of both industry and acquirer - Consolidation acquisitions likely associated with
industry consolidation - Horizontal diversity in acquisitions likely to be
associated with growth - Aggressive forward momentum on the knowledge
novelty dimension likely to be associated with
growth.
31In-Class Exercise
- Small firm Your groups firm from Assignment 2
- Large firm Identify a large firm with which
your firm might have a relationship - Relationship type One of the six types of
relations just described - Answer the questions on the next slide and
present your findings to the class
32- Describe the two firms and the industry in which
they operate - Could your firm have been a spin-off of your
large firm partner? - Describe the relations between your firm and your
large firm partner in terms of - Roles (customer, supplier, complementor, etc.)
- Relationship design (Number of participants, the
way it is managed, i.e. through market relations,
contracts, equity, etc.) - Geographic proximity
- Why does your large firm partner care about your
firm? - Describe the knowledge flows between your firm
and your large firm partner - What will your firm learn from your large firm
partner? - What will your large firm partner learn from your
firm? - What type of financing assistance might your
large firm partner provide to your firm? - Why (not) would your large firm partner provide
this type of financing? - What type of firm might acquire your firm?
- What kind of acquisition would it be?
- What is the relationship between your potential
acquirer and your large firm partner?