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Chapter 8: Economics of Strategy Creating and capturing value. Brickley, Smith, and Zimmerman, Managerial Economics and Organizational Architecture , 4th ed. Creating and capturing value learning objectives. Students should be able to
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Chapter 8: Economics of StrategyCreating and capturing value Brickley, Smith, and Zimmerman, Managerial Economics and Organizational Architecture, 4th ed.
Creating and capturing valuelearning objectives Students should be able to • Distinguish between value creation and value capture and provide examples of each • Define transactions costs and apply to strategic decision making • Identify and provide meaningful examples of Porter’s “five factors” • Differentiate between industry and firm effects on organizational success
Strategy • General policies intended to generate profits • Choice of industry • Combination of products and services • Competitive and cooperative behaviors • Strategies evolve as circumstances change • Strategies must create and capture value
Transaction costs • Consumer transaction costs • product search • learning product characteristics and quality • negotiating terms of sale • enforcing agreements • Producer transaction costs • negotiating terms • legal expenses
Value creation • Reduce production costs or producer transaction costs • shift supply curve to the right • Reduce consumer transaction costs • shift demand curve to the right • Shift demand to the right by other means • Devise new products and services
Pricing complementsexample • CompuInc produces personal computers • PrintCo produces complementary printer • Demand for each product is Q=12-(Pc+Pp) when (Pc+Pp)12, 0 otherwise • Profit-maximization yields reaction curves • Each will view its demand curve as
Advantage of coordination • Failure to coordinate yields combined profits of 32 • Jointly setting MC = MR yields combined profits of 36 • customers better off as product prices fall, quantity purchased rises
Capturing value • Firms in competitive markets are price takers • Market power and superior resources can lead to economic profit
Market powerPorter’s five forces • Potential rivals • Existing rivalry • Substitute products • Buyer power • Supplier power
Porter’s Five Forces Potential Rivals Upstream Downstream Current Rivals Buyers Sellers Substitute Products Value/supply Chain Competitive Environment
Superior factors of production • People • special talents or skills • Physical assets • prime real estate • unique equipment • But bidding for specialized assets may erode profits
Superior factors of productionagain • Team production • interdependencies among workers increase value beyond the “sum of the parts” • luck or foresight may endow firms with unique team production capabilities • Rivals may be unable to pinpoint source of advantage and unable to capture equivalent value
Increasing demand • Increase expected product quality • “value added” > cost increase • Reduce price of complements • Raise price of substitutes • limit entry of competitors
Other value-enhancing strategies • Introduce new products and services • Cooperation with other firms
Diversification • Benefits • Economies of scope • Promoting complements • Costs • Bureaucracy • Incompatible cultures
Diversification and management • Diversification for earnings volatility • may not increase value • Related diversification • can increase value • Capturing the gains • does the firm bring some special resource to bear?
Strategy formulation • Understanding resources and capabilities • physical, human, and organizational capital • Understanding the environment • markets, technology, regulation, economic conditions • Combining environmental and internal analyses • Strategy and organizational architecture
To think about... Can a firm capture value on a sustained basis? Discuss.