• Study Resource
  • Explore
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
Assessing Opportunities and Threats: Doing an External Analysis
Assessing Opportunities and Threats: Doing an External Analysis

... gather information, but great managers need to scan the environment, and also do an external analysis For organizations to grow they must identify and understand the opportunities and threats they face With the knowledge of the company’s opportunities and threats the company can focus and make decis ...
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Seventeen

... – Toys or prizes with kid’s meals at fast-food restaurants. ...
Chapter 11 - jb
Chapter 11 - jb

... 1. If firms are making an economic profit, new firms will enter the industry. This entry decreases the demand curve facing an individual firm, because buyers will shift some demand to the new firms. The demand curve will shift leftward until the firm just breaks even. If the demand shifts below the ...
IOSR Journal of Business and Management (IOSR-JBM)
IOSR Journal of Business and Management (IOSR-JBM)

... Marketing is the social process by which individuals and groups obtain what they need and want through creating and exchanging products and value with others (Kotler, 2010). Marketing Mix The scope of marketing activities is determined by the marketing concept called the marketing mix, whereby all e ...
Chapter 7 Acquisitions and Mergers versus Other Growth Strategies
Chapter 7 Acquisitions and Mergers versus Other Growth Strategies

... 3.2.1 This is one of the main reasons for firms becoming targets for acquisition. If a predator recognises that a firm has been undervalued by the market it can take advantage of this discrepancy by purchasing the firm at a ‘bargain’ price. The difference between the real value of the target firm an ...
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 12

... ____ 2. Attempting to sell more existing products to existing markets of the firm. ____ 3. Attempting to sell new products to new markets of the firm. ____ 4. Developed the Product-Portfolio analysis procedure for resource allocation. ____ 5. The “fit” between the organization and its environment. _ ...
Preview Sample 1
Preview Sample 1

... o Each of the four cells in the growth-share matrix represents a different type of business with different strategy and resource requirements. The implications of each are discussed below:  Question marks: Businesses in high-growth industries with low relative market shares are called question mark ...
chapter11 - WordPress.com
chapter11 - WordPress.com

... substitutes from the same industry and regard them as “product groups”. ...
Monopolistic competition
Monopolistic competition

... issues surrounding monopolistic competition. In Figures 1–3 the price is above marginal cost, which means that the market is allocatively inefficient. When price is greater than marginal cost, the value that consumers place on the last unit bought is greater than the cost of producing that unit, so ...
Tools for Staying Ahead
Tools for Staying Ahead

... organization sharp. It forces the rapid development of technology. Competition incentivizes the search for advantage. It puts technology to work in a way that keeps an organization pushing the edge of the envelope. Many of Honda's most significant innovations in engine design were developed and test ...
Perfect Competition
Perfect Competition

... examples may include start-up costs such as office space and word processing equipment. 4. Perfectly competitive markets require identical products, and commodities are defined as identical products. 5. b, f, g 6. Examples of expenses are store rental, inventory costs, employee salaries, and adverti ...
ECON 3210 • Be able define basic marketing terms like: o Brand
ECON 3210 • Be able define basic marketing terms like: o Brand

... ECON 3210 Principles of Marketing Study Guide for the Comprehensive Final Exam ...
T2-2 ESE Faces - Florida International University
T2-2 ESE Faces - Florida International University

... – A firm is conceptualized as bundles of resources and capabilities, with which the firm competes – They cannot be bought or sold in markets and must be developed rather than being taken as given. – Thus the source of sustainable superior performance lies internally in the capacity to exploit and de ...
Strategic Marketing 2e
Strategic Marketing 2e

... industry by competing on price and assortment. It achieved the most dominant position in the toy market in the late 1980s and early 1990s, having driven competitors like Child World and Kiddie City into bankruptcies and liquidation. The announcement resulted from Toys ‘R’ Us loss of market share in ...
Topic 3 File
Topic 3 File

... • Contraction Defence – When firm find its resources are spread too thinly and competitors are nibbling away on several fronts, so it opts to withdraw from those segments in which it is most vulnerable or in which it feels there is the least potential. It then concentrates its resources in other seg ...
Download Full Article
Download Full Article

... An appropriate combination of internal resources and external environment should become an important input in dealing with preparation of the company's strategy. RBV rationale is differed from other concepts because each company has a certain amount of resources that are unique. Based on the RBV per ...
Competitive Strategy
Competitive Strategy

... “Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.” Napoleon Strategic marketing is the decision-making process of risking and allocating scarce company resources in the search for a competitive advantage in the marketplace. The steps are well known: analyze where your customers, competitors a ...
Chapter 11 - PPT 11 Market Segmentation, Targeting and Positioning
Chapter 11 - PPT 11 Market Segmentation, Targeting and Positioning

... • When you have completed this lesson you will be able to; – Summarise the relationship between market segmentation, ...
Trust, Personal Moral Codes, and the Resource
Trust, Personal Moral Codes, and the Resource

... (e.g., there might be significant positive consequences to one’s self as a result of choosing the less ethical alternative). The theory suggests that when behavior and intentions are inconsistent with ethical judgments, there will be feelings of guilt. Therefore, two individuals, A and B, may engage ...
CHAP 12 HM : BUSINESS SEGMENTATION
CHAP 12 HM : BUSINESS SEGMENTATION

... should not be treated independently and run autonomously. The tasks are horizontal and vertical integration. This mean that immediately after having defined the business, we will ask the degree of interelationship they should have, as well as how much value added will be provided to these businesses ...
CHAPTER 2 – STRATEGY PLANNING
CHAPTER 2 – STRATEGY PLANNING

...  Not just “some” strategy, but one that will offer target customers superior value ...
market foreclosure
market foreclosure

... no double marginalization problem, and since there are no other cost savings, the merger is clearly anticompetitive; the merger raises the cost of the non-integrated rivals on the supply side, and leaves them at a disadvantage relative to the integrated firm. • This story has been of particular inte ...
Market failure, Externalities, the Enviroment, and Public
Market failure, Externalities, the Enviroment, and Public

... there first, claims it is not his fault.This is a negative externality Solutions for this negative externality: 1) Farmer can move; Rancher can move 2) Build a fence (either around rancher or farmer) 3) Rancher can keep cows to less than 800 (voluntarily or through government regulation and/or taxes ...
General Guidelines
General Guidelines

... • Synergies or increases in costs • Treat as an acquisition • Capacity to take on the workload • Continuity to retain clients or pass on deal ...
Non-renewable Resources
Non-renewable Resources

... The USGS definition of “Resource” is a concentration of naturally occurring solid, liquid, or gaseous material in or on the earth’s crust in such form and amount that economic extraction of a commodity from the concentration is currently or potentially feasible. To start with, mineral resources are ...
< 1 ... 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 ... 27 >

Resource-based view

The resource-based view (RBV) as a basis for the competitive advantage of a firm lies primarily in the application of a bundle of valuable tangible or intangible resources at the firm's disposal (Mwailu & Mercer, 1983 p142, Wernerfelt, 1984, p172; Rumelt, 1984, p557-558; Penrose, 1959). To transform a short-run competitive advantage into a sustained competitive advantage requires that these resources are heterogeneous in nature and not perfectly mobile (: p105-106; Peteraf, 1993, p180). Effectively, this translates into valuable resources that are neither perfectly imitable nor substitutable without great effort (Barney, 1991;: p117). If these conditions hold, the bundle of resources can sustain the firm's above average returns. The VRIO and VRIN (see below) model also constitutes a part of RBV. There is strong evidence that supports the RBV (Crook, Ketchen, Combs, and Todd, 2008). RBV has been extensively applied in management and marketing (Kozlenkova, Samaha, and Palmatier). Identify the firm’s potential key resources. Evaluate whether these resources fulfill the following criteria (referred to as VRIN): Valuable – A resource must enable a firm to employ a value-creating strategy, by either outperforming its competitors or reduce its own weaknesses (: p99;: p36). Relevant in this perspective is that the transaction costs associated with the investment in the resource cannot be higher than the discounted future rents that flow out of the value-creating strategy (Mahoney and Pandian, 1992, p370; Conner, 1992, p131). Rare – To be of value, a resource must be rare by definition. In a perfectly competitive strategic factor market for a resource, the price of the resource will be a reflection of the expected discounted future above-average returns (Barney, 1986a, p1232-1233; Dierickx and Cool, 1989, p1504;: p100). In-imitable – If a valuable resource is controlled by only one firm it could be a source of a competitive advantage (: p107). This advantage could be sustainable if competitors are not able to duplicate this strategic asset perfectly (Peteraf, 1993, p183; Barney, 1986b, p658). The term isolating mechanism was introduced by Rumelt (1984, p567) to explain why firms might not be able to imitate a resource to the degree that they are able to compete with the firm having the valuable resource (Peteraf, 1993, p182-183; Mahoney and Pandian, 1992, p371). An important underlying factor of inimitability is causal ambiguity, which occurs if the source from which a firm’s competitive advantage stems is unknown (Peteraf, 1993, p182; Lippman and Rumelt, 1982, p420). If the resource in question is knowledge-based or socially complex, causal ambiguity is more likely to occur as these types of resources are more likely to be idiosyncratic to the firm in which it resides (Peteraf, 1993, p183; Mahoney and Pandian, 1992, p365;: p110). Conner and Prahalad go so far as to say knowledge-based resources are “…the essence of the resource-based perspective” (1996, p477). Non-substitutable – Even if a resource is rare, potentially value-creating and imperfectly imitable, an equally important aspect is lack of substitutability (Dierickx and Cool, 1989, p1509;: p111). If competitors are able to counter the firm’s value-creating strategy with a substitute, prices are driven down to the point that the price equals the discounted future rents (Barney, 1986a, p1233; Sheikh, 1991, p137), resulting in zero economic profits. Care for and protect resources that possess these evaluations, because doing so can improve organizational performance (Crook et al., 2008).The VRIN characteristics mentioned are individually necessary, but not sufficient conditions for a sustained competitive advantage (Dierickx and Cool, 1989, p1506; Priem and Butler, 2001a, p25). Within the framework of the resource-based view, the chain is as strong as its weakest link and therefore requires the resource to display each of the four characteristics to be a possible source of a sustainable competitive advantage (: 105-107).
  • studyres.com © 2025
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report