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Lessons
from
CompetitveExperiencesW.A.
FischerCEIBS,
ShanghaiFebruary
1,
1999William
A.
Fischer第一頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/20231Understanding
Rivalry:The
Heart
of
the
CompetitiveEquationWilliamA.Fischer第二頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/20232The
Nature
of
Economic
Inquiry?thefocusofeconomics[fromaWestern,market-orientedperspective]haslargelybeenonhowwellaneconomyallocatesresources,givenpreferencesandtechnologies.RichardR.NelsonespeciallywherefirmsaretheprincipalallocatingagentsWilliamA.Fischer 3第三頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/2023The
Nature
of
the
Players?economists
tend
to
see
firms
asplayers
in
a
multi-actor
economic
game...RichardR.NelsonWilliamA.Fischer第四頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/20234The
Nature
of
RivalryThe
essence
of
rivalry
is
a
strivingfor
potentially
incompatible
positions?FredericM.Scherer?the
jockeying
for
share
byfirms
within
a
market.Besanko,
Dranove
&
ShanleyWilliamA.Fischer第五頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/20235Who
are
these揻irms?and
whatare
their
roles?Some
fundamental
assumptions搮an
entity
run
by
agents
of
thecapital-owning
principals
with
thesole
objective
of
maximizing
theprofits
of
the
latter厰Ronald
Dorethus,in搈odern?market
economy,we
can
separatemanagement
from
ownership...WilliamA.Fischer第六頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/20236Other
Underlying
Assumptions
profits
[surpluses]
being
s
en
as
a
signal
of
performancein
a
market
a
faith
in
market
a
location
of
resources
in
complexsituations
over
government
a
location
-
because
thecustomer
is
voting
with
their
purchases
the
maximization
of
the
overa
l
social
welfare
functionby
the
a
cumulation
of
numerous
personal
decisions
-the
customer
being
s
en
as
being
in
the
best
position
todetermine
what
they
wantWilliamA.Fischer第七頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/20237Establishing
the
Arena[A
market
is]
that
set
of
suppliers
andemanders
whose
trading
establishesthe
price
of
a
good.George
Stigler
&
Robert
SherwinCustomersSuppliersRivalryWilliamA.Fischer第八頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/20238In
such
a
classical
market
settinit
is
important
to
considereconomies
of
scale
The
history
of
the
industrial
revolution
waone
of
economies
of
scale.WilliamA.Fischer第九頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/20239The
Centrality
of
ScaleEconomiesStatic
EconomiesDynamic
EconomiesCost
perUnitRated
Capacity
of
FacilityCost
perUnitCumulative
Production
ofA
Standardized
ItemThe
Economics
of
the
Industrial
RevolutionTheoretical12/17/202310第十頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。In
such
a
classical
market
settingit
is
important
to
considereconomies
of
scaleThe
history
of
the
industrial
revolution
was
one
ofeconomies
of
scale.
In
markets
where
consumers
are
price
sensitive,
larger
firmscan
use
their
cost
advantage
to
gain
an
appreciable
advantageover
smaller
firms.
In
the
US,
it
has
been
shown
that
firm
size
is
positivelycorrelated
with
profitability.However,
cause
and
effect
are
not
well-established.Also,
larger
shares
for
some,
mean
lower
shares
for
others.WilliamA.Fischer第十一頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202311In
such
a
classical
market
settingit
is
important
to
considereconomies
of
scaleThe
history
of
the
industrial
revolution
waone
of
economies
of
scale.But
even
in
such
a
non-complex
setting,bigger
was
not
always
better.–
In
fact,
in
studies
in
the
US,
mid-century,
minimum
optimalplant/firm
size
appeared
to
be
small
relative
to
market
size[single-digit].WilliamA.Fischer第十二頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202312The
Centrality
of
ScaleEconomiesCost
perUnitRated
Capacity
of
FacilityCost
perUnitCumulative
Production
ofA
Standardized
ItemThe
Economics
of
the
Industrial
RevolutionTheoretical
&
EmpiricalStatic
Economies
Dynamic
Economies12/17/202313第十三頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。In
such
a
classical
market
settingit
is
important
to
considereconomies
of
scaleBut
even
in
such
a
non-complex
setting,bigger
was
not
always
better.
One
of
the
lessons
of
the
Japanesemanufacuring
triumphs
of
the
last
threedecades
has
been
the
importance
oflearning,
through
repetitive
manufacturingwhich
is
different
than
just
being
bigger
orsmarter.WilliamA.Fischer 14第十四頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/2023The
Centrality
of
ScaleEconomiesCost
perUnitRated
Capacity
of
FacilityCost
perUnitCumulative
Production
ofA
Standardized
ItemThe
Economics
of
the
Industrial
RevolutionTheoretical
&
EmpiricalStatic
Economies
Dynamic
Economies12/17/202315第十五頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。In
such
a
classical
market
settingit
important
to
considereconomies
of
scaleOne
of
the
lessons
of
the
Japanesemanufacuring
triumphs
of
the
last
threedecades
has
been
the
importance
oflearning,
through
repetitive
manufacturing
Yet,
learning,
especially
when
based
onrepetition,
comes
with
the
risk
of
rigiditythe
focus
is
too-much
on
consistent
cost-reduction.WilliamA.Fischer 16第十六頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/2023The
Importance
of
MarketMaturityempiricalresearchon113USmanufacturingfirmsbyCEIBSfaculty?nearlyonehalfoftherevenuesgeneratedbythe11mostsuccessfulfirms?camefrommaturemarkets.However,77percentofrevenuesfor15oftheleastsuccessfulfirmscamefrommaturemarkets.Capon,
Farley
&
HoenigWilliamA.Fischer第十七頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202317but,
markets
are
changing;they
are
no
longer
classical
norsimpleWilliamA.Fischer第十八頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202318The
History
of
Competition
was
marked
bysuccessiveIndustrialRevolutionsWilliamA.Fischer第十九頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202319Tomorrow抯Marketswill
be
characterized
by:*
Increasingly
demanding
customers*
An
emergingglobal
arena
*
An
amalgamation
of
markets
and
resource
pools[EU,
NAFTA,
etc.]*
The
appearance
of
adversarial
trade*
Neo-Kondratieffian
technology
changes*
The
quickening
of
the
product
life-cycle
*
The
emergence
of
the
knowledge-based
informationeconomy
*
An
acceptance
of
new
organizational
formats[Alliances,
jvs,
wofes,
etc.]WilliamA.Fischer第二十頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202320The
Death
of
FirmsTomVollmann:Adyingcompanydoesnotlead;itfollows.Itislosingmarketshare,itislosingcapabilities,ithasthewrongsetofcompetencies,itisdemoralized,itsactivitieshavelittleimpact.Infact,allarounduswecanobservecompaniesthatareinastateworsethandeath-theyhavejoinedthelivingdead,aware(ornot)thatwhatevertheydomakeslittledifferencetotheirsituation,andyettheyfeelcompelledtokeeponacting,producing,carryingon.Deathismostoftenalongdrawnoutaffair.Evenwithineptmanagement,itstilltakesalongtimetodestryalargecompanywithoncestrong,ifcurrentlyobsoletecapabilities.Deathisnostrangertotheranksofoncepowerfulmanufacturingcompanies.Everyindustryhasitsshareofthedead,aswellastheterminallyillandthewalkingwounded.WilliamA.Fischer第二十一頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202321Death
Signals
of
the
non-competitivestaying
level
of
falling
behind
the
competitionrisk
aversionbureaucracylosing
capabilitieserosion
of
what
were
once
distinctive
competenciesinternal
focusing
of
corporate
attentionlimited
knowledge
of
the
customerpanic
decisions
to
reduce
short-run
costsnot
developing
people?Tom
VollmannWilliamA.Fischer第二十二頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202322In
Hyper-competitive
MarketsSuchasthosecharacterizingglobalmarketsinthelate20thcentury,thatarefiledwith搒urprises?theabilitytonavigatefromoneproductgenerationtoanotheristhebasisforsustainedcompetitiveadvantage.ThinkaboutWang!greatorganizationsarenecessarytoproducegreatproducts(morethanonce),whilegreatproductsdonotguaranteegreatorganizations.揌ighreturnsarenotsustainableinaparticularmarket,buttheprocessofgeneratinghighreturnscanbesustainabllastquoteisfrom:Capon,Farley&HoenigWilliamA.Fischer第二十三頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202323Early
Lessons
from
In
Search
ofExcellenceExcellent
firms
are
characterized
by
(among
otherthings:Bias
for
ActionClose
to
the
CustomerAutonomy
&
EntrepreneurshipFocusSimple
form,
Lean
staffPeters
&
WatermanWilliamA.Fischer第二十四頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202324More
recent
findings
from
EuropeExcellent
European
firms
are
characterized
by
(among
otherthings):Devolving
leadership
(without
losing
control
or
direction)Driving
radical
change
(in
the
entire
corporate
system,
notjust
in
its
parts)Reshaping
cultureDividing
to
rule
(winning
the
rewards
of
smallness
whilestaying
or
growing
large)Keeping
the
competitive
edge
(in
a
world
where
the
old
waysof
winning
no
longer
work)Achieving
constant
renewalRobert
HellerWilliamA.Fischer第二十五頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202325Determinants
of
FinancialPerformanceempirical
research
on
113
US
manufacturing
firms
by
CEIBS
faculty
competing
in
relatively
concentrated
markets
withhigher
market
sharecompeting
in
growing
markets
high
investment
in
developing
new
products
&serviceshigh
involvements
in
markets
outside
of
USlow
debt
levelsan
entreprenurial
atmosphereCapon,
Farley
&
Hoenig26WilliamA.Fischer第二十六頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/2023Comparing
High
&
LowPerformersempirical
research
on
113
US
manufacturing
firms
by
CEIBS
facultyHigh-Performing
High-Share
Focused
Innovatorsconcentrate
capital
investment
in
growing
international
marketsgenerate
new
products
from
high
R&D
budgetsare
highly
vertically
integrated
have
little
diversificationhighly
specialized
in
their
organizationhave
low
debtHigh-Performing
Focused
World
Consumeristsfocus
less
internationally
spend
heavily
on
advertisinghave
low
debt
diversification
almost
nonexistentCapon,
Farley
&
HoenigWilliamA.Fischer第二十七頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202327Comparing
High
&
LowPerformersempirical
research
on
113
US
manufacturing
firms
by
CEIBS
facultyLow-Performing
Diversified
Indentured
Industrialistsspend
little
on
R&Dwere
frequently
involved
in
mergers
conducted
under
duressare
highly
diversifiedhave
high
debtonly
average
on
international
investmentCapon,
Farley
&
HoenigWilliamA.Fischer第二十八頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202328Navigating
Resources
&InformationInformationComplexityHighLowResource
ScarcityLowHighLawrence
&
DyerDevelopment
Paths
fora
Typical
IndustryWilliamA.Fischer第二十九頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202329this
will
mean
changing
the
waysin
which
we
do
businessWilliamA.Fischer第三十頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202330Dimensions
of
TransformationSpeedFastSlowScopeBroadNarrowDoingDifferentThingsDoing
theSameThingsBetterTurnaroundTransformationReengineeringContinuousImprovementSource:
Tom
VollmannWilliamA.Fischer第三十一頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202331and,
changing
the
businesses
wedoWilliamA.Fischer第三十二頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202332Industry
Restructuring
as
ValueMigrationMarketValueisameasureofthepowerofabusinessdesigntocreateandcapturevalue.AdrianJ.SlywotzkyCustomersmakechoicesbasedontheirpriorities.Thosechoicesdeveloppotentialvalueforthebusinessesfromwhichtheybuy.Atanygiventime,thepatternofthosechoicesallocatesvaluetovariousbusinessdesigns.Ascustomers?prioritieschangeandnewdesignspresentcustomerswithnewoptions,theymakenewchoices.Theyreallocatevalue.Thesechangingpriorities,andthewayinwhichtheyinteractwithnewcompetitors?offerings,arewhattrigger,enable,orfacilitatetheValueMigrationprocess. AdrianJ.SlywotzkyWilliamA.Fischer第三十三頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202333Value
Migration
today
inChina?.. ThefirmsthatarewinningintheChinamarketarethosethatcontroltheirvalue-chains,especiallydown-streamfrommanufacturing! Buildingbrandsmakesthedifferenceincompetingonfactorsotherthanprice:brand&customerservicerequirevalue-chaindiscipline.Nationalbrandsarebeingbuilttoday,asinthepast,byvalue-chaincontrol.WilliamA.Fischer第三十四頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202334in
China,
value
migration
resultsin
...
Focusing
solely
on
transport
costs
mayignore
75%
of
the
distribution
costs.
In
China,
nearly
2/3
of
distribution
costscomes
in
product
loss
&
damage,
and
theassociated
inventory
costs.
Customer
service
&
accounts
receivableboth
benefit
from
value-chain
control.BusinessChina12/07/98WilliamA.Fischer第三十五頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202335Industry
Restructuring
&
ValueMigrationValueMigrationisnotnew.ValuemigratedawayFord抯verticallyintegrated,single-car-focusedbusinessdesigntowardGM抯price-ladderedbusinessdesigninthe1920s.Itmovedfromgrocerystorechainstosupermarketsinthe1930s,fromfragmentedmerchandiserstonationalcataloguesalesinthe1890s(Sears),andtonationalmerchandisechainsinthe1920s(Searsagain).AdrianJ.SlywotzkyTherearealwayswinnersandlosersintheValueMigrationprocess.WilliamA.Fischer第三十六頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/202336We
Must
Re-etablish
the
Arena[there
is
a
big
difference
between]definingcompetitors
as搕hose
companies
that
do
the
same
thingthat
we
do厯[and]defining
them
[instead]as
those
businesdesigns
that
customers
can
choose
from
in
satisfying
their
prioritAdrianJ.Slywotzky[Where]abusinessdesignisthetotalityofhowacompanyselectsitscustomers,defines&differentiatesitsofferings,definesthetasksitwillperform?configuresitsresources,goestomarket,createsutilityforitscustomersandearningaprofitfromthatactivity.WilliamA.Fischer 37第三十七頁(yè),共四十二頁(yè)。12/17/2023The
Broader
Version
of
RivalryCustomersSuppliersRivalryThreat
of
New
Entrantsmore
of搕hose
companies
that
dothe
same
thing
that
we
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