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Strategic Management II
N/A
43
Management
Graduate
03/03/2009

Additional Management Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term

Name 3 external sources of change

Definition

Customer demand

 Prices

Technology

Term

T/F  The impact of external change depends on firms' ability to respond to change.

Definition
True.  Any external change creates opportunity for profit.
Term
What resource and capability is required to respond to opportunities provided by external change?
Definition

Resource - information

 

Capability - flexibility

Term
T/F Internal change is created by marketing.
Definition
False.  It is created by innovation.
Term
What is strategic innovation?
Definition
It involves creating value for customers from novel experiences, products, or product delivery and bundling.
Term
What is new game strategy?
Definition
It involves reconfiguring the industry value chain in order to "change the rules of the game".
Term
What is a blue ocean strategy?
Definition
It emphasizes the attractions of creating new markets.
Term
What is an isolating mechanism?
Definition

A barrier that sustains competitive advantage by preventing other firms from competing through imitation. 

Term

Name 2 types of competitive advantage.

Definition

Cost advantage - Similar product at lower cost

 

Differentiation advantage - Price premium from unique product

Term
What is the experience curve?
Definition
The unit cost of value added to a product declines by a constant percentage (between 20-30%) each time cumulative output doubles.
Term
What is an economy of scale?
Definition
They exist wherever proportionate increases in the amounts of inputs employed in a production process result in lower unit costs.
Term
Name the 3 principal sources of scale economies.
Definition

Technical input-output relationships

 Indivisibilities

Specialization

Term

T/F  The greatest productivity gains from process innovation result from technological innovation.

Definition
False. 
Term
Name 7 cost drivers of advantage.
Definition

Economies of scale

Economies of learning

Production techniques

Product design

Input costs

Capacity utilization

Residual efficiency

Term
What is differentiation?
Definition

It provides something unique that is valuable to the buyer beyond simply offering a low price.

 

It creates value for the customer.

Term

T/F  Low cost offers a less secure basis for competitive advantage than does differentiation.

Definition

True.  International competition has revealed the fragility of well-established positions in cost leadership.

 

High profitability is associated more with differentiation that cost leadership.

Term
Name 2 types of product integrity.
Definition

Internal - Consistency between form and function.

 

External - Fit between product and customers' values, lifestyle, etc.

Term
Which type of goods are most likely to be described through signaling?
Definition
Experience goods, because they can only be recognized after consumption.
Term
List the 4 steps of a value chain analysis.
Definition

Construct a value chain

Identify drivers of uniqueness

Select the most promising diff. variables - consider the firms' R&C

Locate linkages between firm and buyer

Term
What are the 4 stages of the industry life cycle?
Definition

Introduction

Growth

Maturity

Decline

Term
Who is the greatest professor in the history of professordom?
Definition

Roger D. Blair, PhD, MA, BA

 

The Walter G. Matherly Professor in Economics at the Warrington College of Business

 

Term
What growth features dominate the early and late stages of an industry?
Definition

In the early stages, the number of firms rapidly increase.

 

In the mature stages, the the number of firms begins to decrease.  International migration also appears.

Term
What are basic strategies for each stage of the industry life cycle?
Definition

Introductory - product innovation

Growth - increase production

Maturity - cost efficiency

Decline - destructive price competition

Term
What are some barriers to change?
Definition

Organizational capabilities and routines

Social and political structures

Conformity

Complementarities b/t strategy, structure and systems

Limited search

Term
T/F  Evolutionary change over the typical industry life cycle is less threatening than radical technological change.
Definition
True, very true.
Term
What are some features of disruptive technologies?
Definition

They are inferior to existing technology

Existing customers do not want them

Term
What are some general methods to manage organizational change?
Definition

Dual strategies

Separate organizational units

Scenario analysis

 

Term
What is the difference between invention and innovation?
Definition

Invention is the creation of new products and processes.

Innovation is the initial commercialization of an invention through production and marketing.

Term
Draw a schematic for the development of technology.
Definition

 

 

 

 

 Basic knowledge → Invention → Innovation → Diffusion→

IMITATION (Supply side)

ADOPTION (Demand side)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Term
List 4 ways to protect innovation.
Definition

Property rights

Tacitness and Complexity

Lead-time

Complementary resources

Term
T/F  Patents are most effective at protecting innovation and profitability.
Definition
False.  Patenting is primarily a strategic move to block innovation.
Term
T/F  It is best to be a leader in innovation.
Definition
Neither.  It depends on the resouces and capabilities of the firm.
Term
What is a strategic window?
Definition

A period of time in which R&C are aligned with the opportunities available in the market.

 

For smaller firms, it is smaller and earlier in the product/process life cycle.  For larger firms, it is both longer and later.

Term
Jim: Wow, that is really hard.  You really think you can go all day long? 
Definition
Michael: That's what she said!
Term
What are the 2 main sources of risk in an emerging industry?
Definition

Technological

Market

Term
What are 3 ways to manage risk?
Definition

Cooperate with lead users (early adopters)

Limit risk exposure (economize on CAPEX)

Be flexible (respond quickly to market signals)

Term
What are network externalities?
Definition
It exists whenever the value of a product to an individual customer depends on the number of users of that product.  As a result, standards emerge.
Term
What are sources of network externalities?
Definition

User linkages

Complementary products

Economizing on switching costs

Term
What are the steps needed to win a standards war?
Definition

Analyze network externalities

Assemble allies (value chain)

Preempt the market (move first, promote)

Manage expectations (self-fulfilling prophecy)

Term
Which of the previous 4 steps is most important?
Definition

Preempt the market - must build a user base quickly.

 

If you fall behind, bridge the gap by allowing compatibility.

Term
Draw Porter's generic strategies.
Definition

SOURCE OF COMP. ADVANTAGE

                         Low Cost             Differentiation

 

Industry-Wide   Cost Leadership    Differentiation

     

 COMP. SCOPE                                                       

 

Single Segment                          Focus                              

Term
Describe the industry evolution for over the life cycle for competition.
Definition

Few companies

Entry, mergers, and exits

Shakeout; price competition increases

Price wars; exit

Term
Describe the industry evolution for over the life cycle for key success factors.
Definition

Product innovation; establishing credible image

Manufacture, distribution, brand building, process innovation

Cost efficiency; scale efficiency; low input costs

Low overhead; buyer selection; signaling commitment

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