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Chapter 13The Origins of Competitive Advantage:
Innovation, Evolution, and Environment
Prepared by
Charles Crompton
Sam Etchegaray
Gino Fumia
AGB 450: Agribusiness Strategy Formulation
Dr. Sean Hurley
Cal Poly College of Agriculture
December 5, 2003
Developing a Competitive Advantage
Looking deep into the future to anticipate unmet or even unarticulated consumer needs.
Betting on alternative technologies.
Investing in the development of new products and new capabilities to produce and deliver those products to market.
Being the first to introduce those products to the marketplace to benefit from early-mover advantages.
Origins of Competitive Advantage
Part 1- Role of innovation and entrepreneurship in a market economy.
Part 2- Firms’ incentives to innovate.
Part 3- Competition among innovators.
Part 4- Innovation from the perspective of evolutionary economics.
Part 5- Relationship between the firm’s local environment and its ability to gain competitive advantage.
Part 6- The process of managing innovation inside the firm.
Creative Destruction
Creative Destruction, evolutionary process described by economist Joseph Schumpeter.
Def- When quiet periods in markets are punctuated by fundamental “shocks” or “discontinuities” that destroy old sources of advantage and replace them with new ones.
The entrepreneurs who exploit the opportunities these shocks create will achieve positive profits in the next period of comparative quiet.
Comparative Quiet- Time in market where firms that have developed superior products, technologies, or organizational capabilities earn positive economic profits.
Creative Destruction Cont…
Shumpeter says that Static Efficiency is less important than Dynamic Efficiency.
Static Efficiency- The optimal allocation of society’s resources at a given point in time.
Dynamic efficiency- The achievement of long-term growth and technological improvement.
Competition between new products, new technologies, and new sources of organization are more important than price competition.
Defends monopoly, concentration of wealth and power leads to greater investments in innovation and higher-rates of long term growth.
Dynamic of Competitive Advantage
Economic Profitability
TimeDevelopment of Advantage
Sustenance of Advantage
Erosion of Advantage
Disruptive Technologies
Def- Class of technologies that has higher B-C than their predecessors, but does so through a combination of lower B and much lower C.
Examples-
Personal Computers (replacing more powerful mainframes) Ink Jet Printers (replacing higher resolution laser printers)
E-Mail (replacing “snail mail” and telephones) MP3’s (replacing higher audio resolution compact disks) These products are inferior to the ones that they replaced,
but the consumers did not put a high value on the extra features and quality of the older technology.
Established firms forestall success of disruptive technologies by doing a better job of marketing their benefits.
Sustainability and Creative Destruction
Prahalad and Hamel’s Ideas
Strategic Intent- Idea that the fundamental focus of a firm’s strategy that commits it well beyond its current resource profile.
Strategic Stretch- Idea which combines commitment to the firm’s ambitions with the flexibility to change with circumstances.
Sony succeeded by sustaining their obsession with global dominance in their industry.
Sony had to expand and adapt their current stock of resources and create new ones.
D’Aveni’s View
Argues that the sources of competitive advantage are being created and and eroded at an increasingly rapid rate.
Hypercompetition- Phenomenon that the length of sustainable advantage is decreasing.
A firm can sustain positive economic profits only by continually developing new sources of advantage.
Firms goal should be to disrupt existing sources of advantage in its industry (including its own) and create new ones.
D’Aveni, Prahalad, & Hamel
A firm that does not create new sources of advantage will be displaced by more innovative rivals.
Common in environments of rapid technological development and fickle tastes.
Firms may be able to create their own shocks, rather than waiting for the environment to change or for other firms to disrupt existing sources of advantage in the industry.
The Incentive to Innovate
Larger, more powerful companies can be overtaken by companies with a much smaller resource base Small firms are more nimble and less bureaucratic More willing to innovate and break with
established practices
Why don’t larger firms innovate in order to maintain market share? The sunk cost effect The replacement effect
The Sunk Cost Effect
Occurs when a firm has already made a commitment to a particular technology or product concept Has invested resources in this idea and that are
likely very specific Less valuable if the firm switches to a different
technologyA firm that has not yet committed to a technology can compare costs of all options and choose the best one More freedom
The Replacement Effect
Do monopolies have a stronger or weaker incentive to innovate than a new entrant? Kenneth Arrow (Nobel Prize in economics) Considered the incentive to adopt a process which
would lower the variable cost of production Whoever adopted the new technology would have
monopoly power over the industry Who would innovate first?
A firm who already had Monopoly power? New entrant in the market?
The Replacement Effect (cont)
Concluded that an entrant would be willing to spend more than the monopolist to develop the innovationWhy? Successful innovation by either firm results in a
monopoly But since the established firm already had a
monopoly its gain from innovation is less than the potential entrant
“Through innovation an entrant can replace the monopolist, but the monopolist can only replace itself”
The Efficiency Effect
Helps negate sunk cost and replacement effects (stops innovation)Strengthens an established firm’s incentive
to innovateEfficiency effect occurs if the firm can
anticipate innovation by new entrantsA monopolist usually has more to lose from a
new firm’s entry than the new firm has from entering
Takes business away and drives prices down
Innovation Competition
Response to the level of investment in R&D made by one firmSeveral firms competing, the one to
innovate first gains a big advantage PatentsFirst-mover advantageConsumer perception
Patent Races
The race between firms to innovate firstFirms in a patent race must anticipate the
R&D investments of competitorsWhen a firm is deciding to increase its
R&D spending it must answer:Does the increase in R&D increase its chances
of winning the patent race? Will other firms increase R&D in response?How many competitors are there?
Choosing the Technology
Firms may choose from a variety of methods when spending on R&DWhen choosing a research method, firms
must consider what the competition is doing
2 dimensions when choosing the method:Riskiness of research methodDegree to which success of one method is
correlated to success of another
Riskiness of R & D
Research methods often have completely different completion datesOne method might be safe and be
successful in 2-3 yearsAnother method could be riskier and take
anywhere from 1-4 years
Monopoly would be indifferent between the two because both have identical expected times to development
Correlated Research Strategies
Research methods may be correlated so that if one is successful, the other is more likely to be successful More beneficial to pursue uncorrelated strategies
They increase the probability that at least one approach will be successful
Will a firm use a research strategy that has a low probability of success? If many firms are competing then, YES If all firms use same strategy then all have the same
probability of success The firm that uses the uncorrelated strategy stands to win
the race if the popular approach fails (less competition)
Evolutionary Economics
A firms decisions determined by routines: well practiced patterns of activity inside the firm
Include methods of production, hiring procedures, and policies for determining advertising expenditure
Routines
Routines determine its distinctive capabilities, or what they do better than competing firms
Will firms frequently change their routine? Firms will seldom change there routine because getting
their staff to change what has worked well in the past is an “unnatural act”
However, Firms must find ways to continually change their act in order to survive, I.e. McDonald’s
Dynamic Capabilities
A Firm’s ability to maintain the bases of it’s competitive advantage Firms with strong dynamic capabilities adapt their resources
and capabilities over time and take advantage of new market opportunities to create new sources of competitive advantage I.e Costco,
Limitations to Dynamic Capabilities
Path Dependency It is typically very hard for a company to ignore what has been done
in the past and conceptualize a new idea
Complementary Assets Assets that are valuable only in connection with a particular
product, technology, or way of doing business, I.e. “Old school” Farmers
Uncertain “Windows of Opportunity” When Firms get “locked out” by committing themselves to new
markets. This is when being a first mover is a disadvantage. I.e a winery decides to make exclusively red wines and all the sudden white wines become popular
The Local Environment- It’s role in sustaining competitive advantage
The argument that competitive advantage originates in the local environment in which the firm is basedThe four attributes in a firm’s home market that promote or impede its ability to achieve competitive advantage in global markets Factor conditions Demand Conditions Related supplier or support industries Strategy, structure, and rivalry
Factor Conditions
Describe a nation’s position with regard to factors of production (human resources, infrastructure) that are necessary to compete in a particular industry In the 1950’s Japan had one of the highest
numbers of engineering graduates per capita. This lead to success in industries such as automobiles and electronics
I.E. USA has wide range of natural resources that help them compete in many industries
Demand Conditions
Include size, growth, and character of home demand for the firm’s product. Sophisticated Customers or unique local conditions stimulate firms to enhance the quality of their products and to innovate. In Japan, summers are hot and humid and the houses are
small and densely populated. Therefore, companies like Panasonic (Japanese Firm) developed small, quiet, energy efficient AC units rather than large and noisy AC units.
Family Vans became more popular in the USA as families started evolving from the Baby Boom era
Related and Supporting Industries
These firms usually have a strong base of internationally competitive supplier or support industries and will be positioned favorably to achieve competitive advantage in global markets Italian shoemakers have close relationships with leather
producers this allows the shoemakers to learn textures and colors while
the leather producers learn emerging trends. This will help shape innovation
Strategy, Structure, and Rivalry
Includes local management practices, organizational structure, corporate governance, and the nature of local capital markets Germany and Switzerland=publicly traded firms owned by
institutional investors who do not trade very often. They may spend more money on R&D than US and British firms.
Local rivalry will affects the rate of innovation in markets Coke and Pepsi with new styles of cola
Foreign Rivalries do not affect markets US airline industry is competitive while International industries
are restricted by government, therefore an international flight on United would be different than a flight on an international airline
Managing Innovation
Managing Innovation creates a dilemmaFormal structure and controls are needed
to coordinate innovationBut looseness and flexibility can foster
innovation, creativity, and adaptiveness to changing circumstances
Firms attempts to manage innovation
Creation or corporate venture departments Larger corporations recognize the need to exploit
opportunities for innovation beyond current products, processes, and services
Spinoffs, joint ventures, and strategic alliance sometimes with educational institutions (Stanford and the
Silicon Valley) Will help facilitate entry into new business areas or the
development of new capabilities