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Evaluating a Firm’s Internal Capabilities

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1 Evaluating a Firm’s Internal Capabilities
Chapter #3 Evaluating a Firm’s Internal Capabilities

2 Learning Objectives Describe the Critical assumptions of the resource-based view Describe four types of resources and capabilities Apply the value chain analysis to identify a firm’s critical resources and capabilities Apply the VRIO frame work to identify the competitive Implications of a firm’s resources and capabilities including…

3 The conditions under which resources are likely to be valuable
The conditions under which resources are likely to be rare Four reasons why a firm’s resources may be costly to imitate How a firm uses its structure, control processes and compensation policy to exploit its resources

4 Opening Case EA SEGA Nintendo Sony Online games Wizards of the Coast
Warhammer war

5 Resource-based View of the Firm
Resources Are defined as the tangible and intangible assets that a firm controls Factories, Products (tangible) Reputation, Teamwork (intangible) Capabilities Subset of a firms resources that allows the firm to identify and implement strategies

6 Types of resources Financial Resources Physical Resources
$ Retained Earnings Physical Resources Plant, Access to raw materials, Geographic location Human Resources Leadership Organizational Resources Collections of individuals

7 Assumptions of the resource-based view
Resource Heterogeneity Firms, even in the same industry can develop different resources and capabilities Resource Immobility May be long lasting

8 David Ricardo Fertile Land Example Gratuitous Economics cartoon

9 The VRIO Framework Value Rarity Imitability Organization
Does a resource enable a firm to exploit an environmental opportunity and or neutralize an environmental threat? Rarity Is a resource currently controlled by only a small number of competing firms? Imitability Do firms without a resource face a cost disadvantage in obtaining or developing it? Organization Are a firm’s other policies and procedures organized to support the exploitation of its valuable, rare, and costly-to-imitate resource

10 Value for Yahoo Yahoo Sell Advertising Charge Customers Sell Data Base
First mover Superior Technology (237 million) Sell Advertising Charge Customers Sell Data Base

11 Value Chain Oil Industry
Exploring for crude oil Drilling for crude oil Pumping crude oil Shipping crude oil Buying crude oil Refining crude oil Selling refined products to distributors Shipping refined products Selling refined products to final customers

12 Ethics and the nature of externalities
Pollution Education

13 Value Chain McKinsey and Company

14 Value Chain Porter

15 Rarity ESPN X-games

16 Imitability Sustained competitive Advantage Forms of imitation
Direct duplication Substitution

17 Why might it be costly Unique historical conditions Casual Ambiguity
Space and time dependent resources ESPN X-Games Path Dependence Later advantages may be dependent on resources that were developed earlier Casual Ambiguity Take for granted Multiple hypothesis Not just a few

18 More on costly to imitate
Casual Ambiguity Take for granted Multiple hypothesis Not just a few Whenever sources of competitive advantage are widely diffused across people, locations and processes, those sources of competitive advantage will be difficult to imitate

19 Costly continued Social Complexity Patents
Socially complex phenomena, beyond the ability of firms to systematically manage and influence Patents Not as difficult to imitate (depending on industry) (Sony and reverse engineering)

20 Research Box MIT 70 plants 6 had both low costs and high quality
Modern technology necessary but not sufficient Human resource practices Participative decision-making, quality circles, team production Loyalty, belief that managers would treat employees fairly

21 Organization Formal structure Management control systems
Compensation policies Complementary resources & Capabilities

22 Xerox PARC (Palo Alto Research Center) Through the 1960s and early 70s
The personal Computer The “mouse” Widows-type software Laser printer Paperless office Ethernet

23 The VRIO Framework Valuable Rare Costly to imitate Exploited
Completive Implications Economic Performance No Competitive Disadvantage Below Normal Yes Parity Normal Temporary competitive advantage Above Sustained Competitive Advantage

24 The VRIO Framework and Strengths and Weaknesses
Valuable Rare Costly to imitate Exploited Strength or Weakness No Weakness Yes Strength Distinctive competency Strength, Sustainable Distinctive Competency

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27 The responsiblity Janitor

28 Competitive Parity and Competitive Advantage
Bench marking not sufficient Must develop proprietary valuable, rare and costly-to imitate resources and capabilities

29 Difficult-to-Implement
Is the strategy easier for us to implement than it is for our competitors to implement? Two errors Overestimate the uniqueness of resources Underestimate the uniqueness of resources

30 Socially Complex Resources
Employee empowerment Organizational culture Teamwork

31 The role of organization
Structure Control Systems Compensation Policies


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