Ch06 SM
Ch06 SM
Ch06 SM
Corporate-Level Strategy
62
Knowledge Objectives
Studying this chapter should provide you with the
strategic management knowledge needed to:
The Strategic
Management
Process
Figure 1.1
65
Figure 6.1
SOURCE: Adapted from R. P. Rumelt, 1974, Strategy, Structure and Economic Performance, Boston: Harvard Business School.
69
Unrelated Diversification
Financial economies
Efficient internal capital allocation
Business restructuring
610
Synergy & Risk reduction for firm synergy exist when value created
by buss units working together exceeds the value those same units
create working independently. As firm increases its relatedness
between buss units, it also increase risk of corporate failure, because
synergy produces joint interdependence between units & increase risk
of corporate failure. Firms flexibility to respond is constrained.
Table 6.1b
615
Value-creating
Strategies of
Diversification:
Operational and
Corporate
Relatedness
Figure 6.2
617
Related Diversification
Firm creates value by building upon or extending its:
Resources
Capabilities
Core competencies
Economies of scope
Cost savings that occur when a firm transfers capabilities and
competencies developed in one of its businesses to another of its
businesses
618
Sharing Activities
Operational Relatedness
Created by sharing either a primary activity
such as inventory delivery systems, or a
support activity such as purchasing
Activity sharing requires sharing strategic
control over business units
Activity sharing may create risk because
business-unit ties create links between
outcomes
620
Corporate Relatedness
Creates value in two ways:
Vertical Integration
Backward integrationa firm produces its own
inputs
Forward integrationa firm operates its own
distribution system for delivering its outputs
624
Unrelated Diversification
Financial Economies
Are cost savings realized through improved
allocations of financial resources
Based on investments inside or outside the
firm
Create value through two types of financial
economies:
Efficient internal capital allocations
Purchasing other corporations and
restructuring their assets
626
Figure 6.3
632
Figure 6.4
SOURCE: R. E. Hoskisson & M. A. Hitt, 1990,
Antecedents and performance outcomes of
diversification: A review and critique of theoretical
perspectives, Journal of Management, 16: 498.