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Competitive Intelligence. Vertical Boundaries of the Firm: Make or Buy and Outsourcing Diversification. Horizontal and Vertical Boundary Strategies. Reduce costs Profitability Aggressive pricing Growth Market share Shareholders …. Let’s Talk Strategy. Strategic Thrusts
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Competitive Intelligence Vertical Boundaries of the Firm: Make or Buy and Outsourcing Diversification
Horizontal and Vertical Boundary Strategies • Reduce costs • Profitability • Aggressive pricing • Growth • Market share • Shareholders • …
Let’s Talk Strategy • Strategic Thrusts • Generic Strategies
Business Strategic Thrust =f (Attractiveness + Position) Protect Build Selective Earnings Harvest Divest
Value Added:What are you offering? VALUE Price, Service, Quality, Reliability, Safety, Prestige, No problems Convenience, And More
Using the market • Benefits • Economies of scales • Market efficiency and innovations • Costs • Coordination of flows • Information leaks • Transaction costs
Fallacies about make or buy • Make asset as a source of competitive advantage • Is it cheaper? Agency cost? • Buy to avoid the costs of making • Does not eliminate costs • Make to avoid paying profit margins to vendors • ROI? Can you do it cheaper? • Make (downstream) to tie up distribution channel • Pepsi example. Refusal to sell. Anti-trust regulations • Make to avoid high prices • See Rustic Homes Example. What about hedging?
Vertical Functions • Backward or Upstream integration
Backward Integration (Plus) • Generates cost savings only if volume needed is big enough to capture efficiencies of suppliers • Potential to reduce costs exists when • Suppliers have sizable profit margins • Item supplied is a major cost component • Resource requirements are easily met • Can produce a differentiation-based competitive advantage when it results in a better quality part or customer value • Reduces risk of depending on suppliers of crucial raw materials / parts / components
Backward Integration (Minus) • Flexibility and Capital structure • ROI • Bureaucracy: Agency Costs • Slacking • Cost center Vs Profit center • Internal Customers Vs Competition • Silos and Internal transaction charges
Vertical Functions • Forward or Downstream integration
M A D W R C M W R C M C Distribution Channels and Channel Captains M W R C C M R
Increased Sales Value (?) • Manufacturing price $0.48 • Wholesale Price (MU 20%) $0.60 • Retail Price (MU 40%) $1.00
Forward Integration (Plus) • Undependable distribution channels undermine steady production operations • May be cheaper (?) than going through independent distributors • May help achieve stronger product differentiation, allowing escape from price competition • May provide better access to users (Cultivation/Loyalty, Cross-sell, Up-sell) • Logistics Technology
Vertical Integration (Minus) • Boosts resource requirements • Locks firm deeper into same industry • Fixed sources of supply and less flexibility in accommodating buyer demands for product variety • Poses problems of balancing capacity at each stage of value chain • May require radically different skills / capabilities • Reduces manufacturing flexibility, lengthening design time and ability to introduce new products • Internal inefficacity (agency costs) > Transaction costs
Examples: Dow ChemicalUnion CarbideKyocera Examples:IntelSeagateMicron Examples:AppleCompaqDell Best Buy(?) Examples:Apple Dell Computer WorldOffice Max Best Buy Staples Distribution Assembly Intermediatemanufacturer Raw materials End user Value Chain in the Personal Computer Industry
Outsourcing or Unbundling • Outside specialists can perform the activity better or cheaper • Activity is not crucial to achieving competitive advantage • Reduces risk exposure to changing technology and/or changing buyer preferences • Streamlines operations to • Cut cycle time • Speed decision-making • Reduce coordination costs • Allows firm to concentrate on its core business
Strategic Alliances(Relational Vs Transactional) • To collaborate on technology development or new product development • To improve supply chain efficiency • To gain economies of scale in production and/or marketing • To fill gaps in technical or manufacturing expertise • To speed new products to market • To acquire or improve market access
Japanese KeiretsuKorean Chaebol Mitsubishi Sumitomo Mitsui Samsung Hyundai LG
Sumitomo Sumitomo Bank (until 2001)Sumitomo Mitsui Bank (2001– ), Sumitomo Trust and Banking Food: Asahi BreweriesRail: Hanshin Railway, Keihan Railway, Nankai RailwayCars: MazdaElectronics: NECIron and Steel: Sumitomo MetalsFinancial: Sumitomo Real EstateInfrastructure: Nippon Koei
Dai-Ichi Kangyo Group • Asahi Mutual Life Insurance (DKB) • The Dai-ichi Mutual Life Insurance Company (DKB) • Daiichi Sankyo • Dentsu (DKB) • Fujitsu (Furukawa) • Hitachi (Hitachi) • Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries (IHI) • Isuzu (IHI) • ITOCHU (DKB) • JFE Holdings (Kawasaki) • Kawasaki Heavy Industries (Kawasaki) • Kao (DKB) • K Line (Kawasaki) • Kobe Steel (Suzuki) • Meiji Seika (DKB) • Mizuho (Mizuho Financial Group) • Seibu Department Stores (DKB) • Sojitz (Suzuki) • Sompo Japan Insurance (DKB) • Taiheiyo Cement (Asano) • Tokyo Dome (DKB) • The Tokyo Electric Power Company (DKB) • Tokyo FM (DKB) • Yokohama Rubber Company(Furukawa)
Fuyo Group • Canon (Fuji Bank) • Hitachi (Shunkou), also part of Nissan Group. • JFE Holdings (Asano) • Keihin Kyuko Electric Railway (Fuji Bank) • Marubeni (Odate) • Matsuya (Nedsu) • Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance (Yasuda) • Mizuho Corporate Bank (Yasuda) • Mizuho Trust Bank (Yasuda) • Nissan (Shunkou) - no longer considered part of the keiretsu, part of Nissan Group. • Oki Electric Industry (Yasuda) • Ricoh (Riken) • Sapporo Beer (Nedsu) • Sompo Japan Insurance (Yasuda), also part of Nissan Group. • Tobu Railway (Netsu) • Yamaha (Fuji Bank)
Sumotomo • Sumitomo, Ltd., Chemicals • Sumitomo Heavy Industries, Ltd., Machinery, weaponry, and shipbuilding • Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, Finance • Sumitomo Metal Industries, Ltd., Steel • Sumitomo, Non-ferrous metals • Sumitomo Corporation, • The Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co., Ltd., Finance • Sumitomo Life Insurance Co., Insurance • Sumitomo, Mining • Sumitomo, Warehousing • Sumitomo, Electronics and electric products • Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Co., Ltd., Insurance • Nippon Sheet Glass Co., Ltd., Glass • NEC, Electronics and electric products • Sumitomo, Real estate • Sumitomo, Cement • Sumitomo, Nonferrous metals • Sumitomo, Construction • , Chemicals • , Lumber and housing • Sumitomo Rubber Industries, Ltd., Tires and rubber under Dunlop brand • Mazda Motor Corporation
Concluding on Vertical Integration Market N N N Y Y Available suppliers: -Economies of Scale -Capabilities Relationship-specificasset? Coord. Problems? Info. Leakage? Complete contractsunfeasible and costly? Y Conflict resolutionproblems N N Vertical integration Arrangements? Alliances? Y Joint alliances
Wrap up • This week • Vertical integration • Forward • Backward • Alternatives • Next week • Part 2: Competitors and Competition • Market Structure (Chapter 5)