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Chapter 5

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Chapter 5:

Competitive advantage, firm performance, and business models


5.1 Competitive advantage and firm performance

Competitive advantage is relative-measured in relation to other companies

Multidimensional perspective in assessing competitive advantage:

What are the 3 standard performance dimensions?

 What is accounting profitability?

- How much shareholder value does the firm creates?

 How much economic value does the firm generates?

These three performance dimensions tend to be correlated, particularly when


considered over longer time periods. That is, accounting profitability and economic value
creation tend to be reflected in the firm’s stock price.

Accounting profitability:

When assessing competitive advantage by measuring accounting profitability, we use


financial data and ratios derived from publicly available accounting data. Such income
statement and balance sheets.

To measure competitive advantage, we must be able to:

 Accurately assess firm performance

 Compare and benchmark the focal firm’s performance to other


competitors in the same industry or against industry average.→ Standardized
financial metrics derived from publicly available accounting data fulfill both of
these conditions.

Accounting data enable us to conduct direct performance comparisons between


different companies. Some of the profitability ratios most commonly used in
strategic management are:

ROIC → Return On Investment Capital

ROE → Return On Equity --- ROA → Return On Assets --- ROR → Return On
Revenue

ROIC is broken down into its 2 components to understand better the underlying drivers
of the marked difference in firm profitability:
1st component of ROIC → ROR: (Return on revenue) → indicates how much of the
firm’s sales is converted into profits.

ROR is broken down into 3 additional financial ratios:

1. COGS/Revenue → which indicates how efficiently a company can produce a good.


(High profit margin)

2. R&D/Revenue → which indicates how much of each $ that the firm earns in sales is
invested to conduct research and development A higher percentage is generally an
indicator of a stronger focus on innovation to improve current products and
services, and to come up with new ones.

3. SG&A/Revenue → which indicates how much of each $ that the firm earns in sales is
invested in sales, general, and administrative (SG&A)  Generally its an
indicator of the firms focus on marketing to promote its products.

Apple is more successful than Blackberry because it is able to differentiate its product
through user-friendly and complementary products/services.

2nd component of ROIC → Working capital turnover → it is a measure of how


effectively capital is being used to generate revenue. It is broken down into 4 additional
financial ratios:

1. Fixed asset turnover (Revenue/Fixed Assets) → it measures how well a company


leverages its fixed assets. This ratio indicated how much of a firm’s assets is tied
up in fixed assets. Particularly property, plant and equipment (PPE), each dollar
of Apple’s fixed assets generate $10.10. This ratio indicates how much of a firm’s
capital is tied up in its fixed assets

2. Inventory turnover (COGS/Inventory) → COGS captures the firm’s production cost


of merchandise it has sold. → Inventory is the cost of the firm’s merchandise to
be sold. This ratio indicates how much of a firm’s capital is tied up in its
inventory.

3. Receivables turnover (Revenue/Accounts receivable) → it indicated the company’s


effectiveness in extending credit and collecting debts. Higher ratios imply more
efficient management in collecting accounts receivable and shorter durations of
interest-free loans to customers (i.e., time until payments are due)

4. Payables turnover (Revenue/Accounts payable) → How fast it pays its creditors and
how much a firm benefits from interestfree loans extended by its suppliers (the
lower the more efficient).
Limitations of accounting ratios:

All accounting data are historical data and thus backward looking: accounting
profitability ratios show us only the outcomes from past decisions, and the past is no
guarantee of future performance.

Accounting data do not consider offbalance sheet items such as pension obligations or
operating leases in the retail industry. Offbalance sheet items can be significant factors.

Accounting data focus mainly on tangible assets, which are no longer the most
important. Although accounting data captures some intangible assets, many key
intangible assets are not captured. Today, the most competitively important assets tend to
be intangibles such as innovation, quality, and customer experiences, which are not
included in a firm’s balance sheet.

Overall importance of ratios in assessing competitive advantage:

Key financial ratios based on accounting data give us an important tool with which to
assess competitive advantage: they help us measure relative profitability, which is useful
when comparing firms of different sizes over time. While not perfect, these ratios are an
important starting point when analyzing the competitive performance of firms.

Shareholder value creation:

Shareholders are individuals or organizations that own one or more shares of stock in a
public company: they are the legal owners of public companies.

From a shareholder’s perspective, the measure of competitive advantage that matters


most is the return on their risk capital. The risk capital is the money shareholders
provide in return for equity share. It is money that shareholders cannot recover if the firm
goes bankrupt.

Investors are primarily interested in a company’s total return to shareholders. The total
return to shareholders is the return on risk capital, including stock price appreciation plus
dividends received over a specific period.

Difference between accounting data and total return to shareholders:

Unlike accounting data, total return to shareholders is an external performance metric. It


essentially indicates how the stock market views all available public information about a
firm’s past, current state, and expected future performance (with most of the weight on
future growth expectations). The idea that all available information about a firm’s past,
current state, and expected future performance is embedded in the market price of the
firm’s stock is called the efficient-market hypothesis. In this perspective, a firm’s share
price provides an objective performance indicator. When assessing and evaluating
competitive advantage, a comparison of rival firms’ share price development or market
capitalization provides a helpful yardstick when used over the long term.
Total return to shareholders indicates how the stock market views all available public
information about a firm’s past, current state, and expected future performance.

Other than the total return to shareholders, market capitalization can be used to assess
competitive advantage. Market capitalization (or market cap) captures the total dollar
market value of a company’s outstanding shares at any given point in time. (Market cap =
Number of outstanding shares x Share price)

The efficient market hypothesis is the idea that all available information about a firm’s
past, current state, and expected future performance is embedded in the market price of
the firm’s stock.

A firm’s stock price increases only if the firm’s rate of growth exceeds investors’
expectations. A firm’s stock price decreases when investors’ expectations exceed the
firm’s rate of growth.

Do investors adjust their expectations over time?

Yes, investors adjust their expectations over time.

Limitations of total return to shareholders and firm market capitalization in assessing


competitive advantage:

Stock prices can be highly volatile, making it difficult to assess firm performance,
particularly in the shortterm. This volatility implies that total return to shareholders is a
better measure over the long term due to the “noise” introduced by market volatility,
external factors, and investor sentiment.

Overall macroeconomic factors such as the unemployment rate, economic growth or


contraction, and interest and exchange rates all have a direct bearing on stock prices.

Stock prices frequently reflect the psychological mood of investors, which can at time be
irrational.

Economic value creation:

Economic value created (V-C) is the difference between a buyer’s willingness to pay for
a product or service and the firm’s total cost to produce it.

In terms of economic value creation, a firm has competitive advantage when that firm’s
offering has greater total perceived consumer benefits than the offering of other firms,
while all firms have equal total costs. The amount of total perceived benefit equals to the
maximum willingness to pay.

Assuming all competing firms create the same total perceived consumer benefits, what
could the competitive advantage be a result of?

Given an equal total perceived consumer benefits, competitive advantage can also be the
result from a relative cost advantage over rivals, assuming all firms can create the same
total perceived consumer benefits. In this case, the firm with the competitive advantage
has a lower total unit cost than its rivals do.

Components of total perceived consumer benefits and economic value created:

1. Value:

Value denotes the dollar amount a consumer would attach to a good or service, Values
captures a consumer’s willingness to pay and is determined by the perceived benefits a
good or service provides to the buyer. The cost to produce the good or service matters
little to the consumer, but it matters a great deal to the producer of the good or service
since it has a direct bearing on the profit margin.

→ difference between the price charged (P) and the cost to produce (C) is the profit, or
producer surplus

→ The difference between the price charged and the consumer’s willingness to pay is
called consumer surplus

Competitive advantage in terms of value: Competitive advantage does to the firm that
achieves the largest economic value created, which is the difference between the
consumer’s willingness to pay and the cost to produce the good or service.

2. Price: A firm can:

Charge higher prices to reflect the higher value and thus increase its profitability or

Charge the same price as competitors and thus gain market share

3.Total costs include both fixed and variable costs.

Fixed costs → they are independent of consumer demand.

Variable costs → they change with the level of consumer demand.


Opportunity costs must be considered as well. Opportunity costs → they capture the
value of the best forgone alternative use of the resources employed.

Limitations of economic value creation in assessing competitive advantage:

Determining the value of a good in they eyes of consumers is not a simple task.

The value of a good in the eyes of consumers changes based on income, preferences,
time, and other factors.

Cost: To measure firm level competitive advantage, we must estimate the economic
value created for all products and services offered by the firm.

What are the 2 conceptual frameworks that provide a more holistic (general) perspective
on firm performance?

The 2 frameworks that provide a more holistic perspective on firm performance are the
balanced scorecard and the triple bottom line frameworks.

The balance scorecard:

The balance scorecard is an approach that harnesses multiple internal and external
performance metrics in order to balance both financial and strategic goals.

By answering these 4 questions managers using the balance scorecard develop


strategic objectives and appropriate metrics:

1. How do customers view us? The customer’s perspective concerning the company’s
products and services. The perceived value of a product or service determines
how much the customer is willing to pay for it. To learn how customers view a
company’s products or services, managers collect data to identify areas to
improve, with a focus on speed, quality, service, and cost.

2. How do we create value? Answering this question challenges managers to come up


with strategic objectives that ensure future competitiveness, innovation, and
organizational learning.

3. What core competencies do we need? This question focuses managers internally, to


identify the core competencies needed to achieve their objectives, and the
accompanying business processes that support and leverage those competencies.

4. How do shareholders view us? The final perspective in the balanced scorecard is the
shareholders’ view of financial performance. Some of the measures in this area
rely on accounting data such as cash flow, operating income, ROIC, ROE, and, of
course, total returns to shareholders. Understanding the shareholders’ view of
value creation leads managers to a more future-oriented evaluation

Once managers answer these 4 questions, they get a set of measures that give them a
quick but also comprehensive view of the firm’s current state.

Advantages of the balanced scorecard:

Communicate and link the strategic vision to responsible parties within the
organization. Translate the vision into measurable operational goals. Design and plan
business processes. Implement feedback and organizational learning in order to modify
and adapt strategic goals when indicated.

The balanced scorecard can accommodate both short and long term performance metrics.

The balanced scorecard provides a concise report that tracks chosen metrics and
measures and compares them to target values. The balanced scorecard allows managers
to assess past performance, identify areas for improvements, and position the company
for future growth.

The balanced scorecard allows managers and executives a more balanced view of
organizational performance.

Disadvantages of the balanced scorecard:

A tool for strategy implementation, not for strategy formulation. It provides only limited
guidance about which metrics to choose. It provides limited guidance about which
metrics to choose. A failure to achieve competitive advantage is not so much a reflection
of a poor framework but of a strategic failure.

The balanced scorecard is only as good as the skills of the managers who use it. The
balanced scorecard does not provide much insight into how metrics that deviate from the
set goals can be put back on track.

What can be helpful to measuring competitive advantage when using the balanced
scorecard?

All of the 3 approaches to measuring competitive advantage (accounting profitability,


shareholder value creation, and economic value creation) in addition to other quantitative
and qualitative measures, can be helpful when using a balancedscorecard approach.

The triple bottom line:

Today managers are asked to maintain and improve the firm’s economical performance
as well as its social and ecological performance. The triple bottom line is a combination
of economic, social, and ecological concerns that can lead to a sustainable strategy (a
strategy that can endure over time). A sustainable strategy produces not only positive
financial results, but also positive results along the social and ecological dimensions.

How does the triple bottom line work?

Using a triplebottomline approach, managers audit their company’s fulfillment of its


social and ecological obligations to stakeholders such as employees, customers, suppliers,
and communities as conscientiously as they track its financial performance. The TBL is
related to stakeholders theory an approach of understanding a firm as embedded in a
network of internal and external constituencies that each make contributions and expect
consideration in return
What is the discussion that captures the requirement of companies to address social and
ecological concerns?

Corporate social responsibility (CSR). CSR helps firms recognize and address society’s
expectations of the business enterprise at a given point in time.

Among the many research studies looking at the relationship between CSR and firm
performance, some find CSR improves financial performance, while others conclude
superior financial performance makes CSR possible

5.2 Business models: putting strategy into action

Strategy is a set of goal-directed actions a firm takes to gain and sustain superior
performance relative to competitors or the industry average
The translation of strategy into action takes place in the firm’s business model.
A business model details the firm’s competitive tactics and initiatives. Simply put, the
firm’s business model explains how the firm makes money how it conducts its business
with its buyers, suppliers, and partners.

Importance of business model innovation:

How companies do business can sometimes be as important to gaining and sustaining


competitive advantage as what they do. This also implies that the business model
innovation might be as important achieving superior performance as product or process
innovation. iTunes stores for apple  Business model innovation

The steps of coming up with an effective business model:

The firm’s managers first transform their strategy of how to compete into a blueprint of
actions and initiatives that support the overarching goals.

In a second step, managers implement this blueprint through structure, process, culture,
and procedures.→ If the firm fails to translate a strategy into a profitable business model,
the firm will run into trouble.

Different business models:

RazorRazorBlade: The initial product is often sold at loss or given away for free in order
to drive demand for complementary goods.

Subscriptionbased: The subscriptionbased model has been traditionally used for


magazines and newspapers. Users pay for access to a product or service whether they use
the product of service during the payment term or not. Industries that use this model
presently are cable television, cellular service providers, satellite radio, Internet service
providers, and health clubs.

PayasYouGo: In the PayasYouGo business model, the user pays for only the services
he/she consumes. The payasyougo model is most widely used by utilities providing
power and water, but it’s gaining momentum in other areas such as rental cars.

Freemium: The freemium business model is a model in which the basic features of a
product or service a provided free of charge, but the user must pay for premium services
such as advanced features or addons.

5.3 Implications for the strategist

Several implications emerge from competitive advantage and firm performance concepts:

No best strategy exists only better ones: we must interpret any performance metric
relative to those of competitors and the industry average. Competitive advantage is best
measured by criteria that reflect overall business unit performance rather than the
performance of specific departments.

Both quantitative and qualitative performance dimensions matter in judging how


effective a firm’s strategy is. A firm’s business model is critical to achieving a
competitive advantage. The goal of strategic management is to integrate and align each
business function and activity to obtain superior performance at the business unit and
corporate levels. Therefore, competitive advantage is best measured by criteria that
reflect overall business unit performance rather than the performance of specific
departments.

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