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when profitability is greater than average profitability than companies in industry |
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firm-specific strengths that allow a company to differentiate its products from those offered by rivals and/or achieve substantially lower costs
arise from: resources and capabilities |
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roots of competitive advantage |
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competencies, resources, capabilities |
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assets of company
tangible: physical entities; land, building, inventory, money intangible: brand name, reputation, knowledge of employees
valuable when: - they create demand for products - lower its costs |
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a company's skills at coordinating its resources and putting them to productive use
valuable when: - they create strong demand
- lower its costs |
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distinction between resources & capabilities |
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- without capabilities to use resources effectively, firm may not be able to create a distinctive competency - firm may not need firm-specific and valuable resources to create a distinctive competency (as long as it has unique capabilities) |
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three factors of company profitability |
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1) value customers place on products 2) price company charges for products 3) cost of creating products |
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U = utility to customer P = price C = cost of production
U-P = consumer surplus P-C = profit margin U-C = value created |
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refers to idea that a company is a chain of activities for transforming inputs into outputs that customers value |
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value chain - primary activities |
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design, creation, delivery of products
EX. R&D, Production, Marketing & Sales, Customer Service |
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value chain - support activities |
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Provide inputs that allow primary activities to take place
EX. Info systems, Logistics, HR, Company Infrastructure |
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building blocks of competitive advantage |
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allow company to differentiate its product offering and lower its cost structure
1. superior efficiency 2. quality 3. innovation 4. customer responsiveness |
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outputs/inputs
components of efficiency: - employee productivity: output produced per employee - capital productivity: sales produced per dollar of capital invested in a business |
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attributes of quality:
- quality of excellence - quality as realiability
TQM - 1980s |
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product innovation - development of products that are new to the world or have superior attributes than existing products
process innovation - development of a new process for producing products |
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time that it takes for a good to be delivered or a service to be performed |
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ROIC - NOPLAT/IC
ROS (net profit/sales) -> COGS/sales, SG&A/sales, R&D/sales Capital turnover (sales/IC) -> working capital/sales, PPE/sales |
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factors that make it difficult for a competitor to copy distinctive competencies
imitating resources - easy; visible and can often be purchased on market imitating capabilities - more difficult and hard for outsiders to discern; capabilities based on way in which decisions are made |
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ability of an enterprise to identify, value, assimilate, and use new knowledge |
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- inertia: companies find it difficult to change their strategies to adapt to changing conditions - prior strategic commitments - the Icarus paradox - companies can become so specialized and inner-directed that they lose sight of market realities |
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- focus on building blocks of competitive advantage (efficiency, quality, innovation, customer responsiveness) - institute continuous improvement and learning - track best industrial practice and use benchmarking - overcome inertia |
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