Competition and Business Strategy in Historical Perspective: Pankaj Ghemawat
Competition and Business Strategy in Historical Perspective: Pankaj Ghemawat
Competition and Business Strategy in Historical Perspective: Pankaj Ghemawat
trategy is a term that can be traced back to the ancient Greeks, for whom it meant a chief magistrate or a military commander in chief. The use of the term in business, however, dates only to the twentieth century, and its use in a self-consciously competitive context is even more recent. After providing some historical background, this essay focuses on how the evolution of ideas about business strategy was influenced by competitive thinking in the second half of the twentieth century. The review aims not to be comprehensive but, instead, to focus on some key topical issues in applying competitive thinking to business strategy. Particular attention is paid to the role of three institutions Harvard Business School and two consulting firms, the Boston Consulting Group and McKinsey & Company in looking at the historical development and diffusion of theories of business competition and strategy. The essay concludes with some discussion of how the emergence of a market for ideas in this broad domain is likely to affect future developments in this area.
PANKAJ GHEMAWAT is the Jaime and Josefina Chua Tiampo Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School. The author has drawn upon an earlier draft prepared by Dr. Peter Botticelli under his supervision and has also benefited from helpful comments by Walter A. Friedman, Thomas K. McCraw, and three referees.
Business History Review 76 (Spring 2002): 3774. 2002 by The President and Fellows of Harvard College.
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Historical Background
Until the nineteenth century, the scope for applying (imperfectly) competitive thinking to business situations appeared to be limited: intense competition had emerged in many lines of business, but individual firms apparently often lacked the potential to have much of an influence on competitive outcomes. Instead, in most lines of business with the exception of a few commodities in which international trade had developedfirms had an incentive to remain small and to employ as little fixed capital as possible. It was in this era that Adam Smith penned his famous description of market forces as an invisible hand that was largely beyond the control of individual firms. The scope for strategy as a way to control market forces and shape the competitive environment started to become clearer in the second half of the nineteenth century. In the United States, the building of the railroads after 1850 led to the development of mass markets for the first time. Along with improved access to capital and credit, mass markets encouraged large-scale investment to exploit economies of scale in production and economies of scope in distribution. In some industries, Adam Smiths invisible hand was gradually tamed by what the historian Alfred D. Chandler Jr. has termed the visible hand of professional managers. By the late nineteenth century, a new type of firm began to emerge, first in the United States and then in Europe: the vertically integrated, multidivisional (or M-form) corporation that made large investments in manufacturing and marketing and in management hierarchies to coordinate those functions. Over time, the largest M-form companies managed to alter the competitive environment within their industries and even across industry lines.1 The need for a formal approach to corporate strategy was first articulated by top executives of M-form corporations. Alfred Sloan (chief executive of General Motors from 1923 to 1946) devised a strategy that was explicitly based on the perceived strengths and weaknesses of its competitor, Ford. 2 In the 1930s, Chester Barnard, a top executive with AT&T, argued that managers should pay especially close attention to strategic factors, which depend on personal or organizational action.3
1 Alfred D. Chandler Jr., Strategy and Structure (Cambridge, Mass., 1963) and Scale and Scope (Cambridge, Mass., 1990). 2 See Alfred P. Sloan Jr., My Years with General Motors (New York, 1963). 3 Chester I. Barnard, The Functions of the Executive (Cambridge, Mass., 1968; first published 1938), 2045.
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U.S. military after World War II. In this period, American military leaders found themselves debating the arrangements that would best protect legitimate competition between military services while maintaining the needed integration of strategic and tactical planning. Many argued that the Army, Navy, Marines, and Air Force would be more efficient if they were unified into a single organization. As the debate raged, Philip Selznick, a sociologist, noted that the Navy Department emerged as the defender of subtle institutional values and tried many times to formulate the distinctive characteristics of the various services. In essence, the Navy spokesmen attempted to distinguish between the Army as a manpower organization and the Navy as a finely adjusted system of technical, engineering skills a machine-centered organization. Faced with what it perceived as a mortal threat, the Navy became highly self-conscious about its distinctive competence. 5 The concept of distinctive competence had great resonance for strategic management, as we will see next.
Academic Underpinnings
The Second Industrial Revolution witnessed the founding of many elite business schools in the United States, beginning with the Wharton School in 1881. Harvard Business School, founded in 1908, was one of the first to promote the idea that managers should be trained to think strategically and not just to act as functional administrators. Beginning in 1912, Harvard offered a required second-year course in business policy, which was designed to integrate the knowledge gained in functional areas like accounting, operations, and finance, thereby giving students a broader perspective on the strategic problems faced by corporate executives. A course description from 1917 claimed that an analysis of any business problem shows not only its relation to other problems in the same group, but also the intimate connection of groups. Few problems in business are purely intra-departmental. It was also stipulated that the policies of each department must maintain a balance in accord with the underlying policies of the business as a whole.6 In the early 1950s, two professors of business policy at Harvard, George Albert Smith Jr. and C. Roland Christensen, taught students to question whether a firms strategy matched its competitive environment. In reading cases, students were instructed to ask: do a companys
5 6
Philip Selznick, Leadership in Administration (Evanston, Ill., 1957), 4950. Official Register of Harvard University, 29 Mar. 1917, 423.
7 George Albert Smith Jr. and C. Roland Christensen, Suggestions to Instructors on Policy Formulation (Chicago, 1951), 34. 8 George Albert Smith Jr., Policy Formulation and Administration (Chicago, 1951), 14. 9 Kenneth R. Andrews, The Concept of Corporate Strategy (Homewood, Ill., 1971), 23. 10 See Part I of Edmund P. Learned, C. Roland Christensen, and Kenneth Andrews, Problems of General Management (Homewood, Ill., 1961). 11 Interview with Kenneth Andrews, 2 Apr. 1997.
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Figure 1. Andrewss Strategy Framework. (Source: Kenneth Andrews, The Concept of Corporate Strategy, rev. ed. [Homewood, Ill., 1980], 69.)
ence was held at Harvard that helped diffuse the SWOT concept in academia and in management practice. Attendance was heavy, and yet the popularity of SWOT which was still used by many firms, including Wal-Mart, in the 1990s did not bring closure to the problem of actually defining a firms distinctive competence. To solve this problem, strategists had to decide which aspects of the firm were enduring and unchanging over relatively long periods of time and which were necessarily more responsive to changes in the marketplace and the pressures of other environmental forces. This distinction was crucial because the strategic decision is concerned with the long-term devel-
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Figure 2. Ansoffs Product/Mission Matrix as adapted by Henry Mintzberg. (Source: Henry Mintzberg, Generic Strategies, in Advances in Strategic Management, vol. 5 [Greenwich, Conn., 1988], 2. For the original, see Igor Ansoff, Corporate Strategy [New York, 1965], 128.)
be used to evaluate and compare many different types of businesses. Since business policy groups at Harvard and elsewhere remained strongly wedded to the idea that strategies could only be analyzed on a case-by-case basis in order to account for the unique characteristics of every business, corporations turned elsewhere to satisfy their craving for standardized approaches to strategy making. 18 A study by the Stanford Research Institute indicated that a majority of large U.S. companies had set up formal planning departments by 1963. 19 Some of these internal efforts were quite elaborate. General Electric (GE) is a bellwether example: it used Harvard faculty extensively in its executive education programs, but it also independently developed an elaborate, computer-based Profitability Optimization Model (PROM) in the first half of the 1960s that appeared to explain a significant fraction of the variation in the return on investment afforded by its various businesses.20 Over time, like many other companies, GE also sought the help of private consulting firms. While consultants made important contributions in many areas, such as planning, forecasting, logistics, and long-range research and development (R&D), the following section traces their early impact on mainstream strategic thinking.
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Decker.26 As BCG consultants studied these industries, they naturally asked why one competitor outperforms another (assuming comparable management skills and resources)? Are there basic rules for success? There, indeed, appear to be rules for success, and they relate to the impact of accumulated experience on competitors costs, industry prices and the interrelation between the two. 27 The firms standard claim for the experience curve was that for each cumulative doubling of experience, total costs would decline by roughly 20 to 30 percent due to economies of scale, organizational learning, and technological innovation. The strategic implication of the experience curve, according to BCG, was that for a given product segment, the producer . . . who has made the most units should have the lowest costs and the highest profits. 28 Bruce Henderson claimed that with the experience curve the stability of competitive relationships should be predictable, the value of market share change should be calculable, [and] the effects of growth rate should [also] be calculable. 29 From the Experience Curve to Portfolio Analysis. By the early 1970s, the experience curve had led to another powerful oversimplification by BCG: the Growth-Share Matrix, which was the first use of what came to be known as portfolio analysis. (See Figure 3.) The idea was that after experience curves were drawn for each of a diversified companys business units, their relative potential as areas for investment could be compared by plotting them on the grid. BCGs basic strategy recommendation was to maintain a balance between cash cows (i.e., mature businesses) and stars, while allocating some resources to feed question marks, which were potential stars. Dogs were to be sold off. In more sophisticated language, a BCG vice president explained that since the producer with the largest stable market share eventually has the lowest costs and greatest profits, it becomes vital to have a dominant market share in as many products as possible. However, market share in slowly growing products can be gained only by reducing the share of competitors who are likely to fight back. If a product market is growing rapidly, a company can gain share by securing most of the growth. Thus, while competitors grow,
26 Bruce Henderson explained that, unlike earlier versions of the learning curve, BCGs experience curve encompasses all costs (including capital, administrative, research and marketing) and traces them through technological displacement and product evolution. It is also based on cash flow rates, not accounting allocation. Bruce D. Henderson, preface to Boston Consulting Group, Perspectives on Experience (Boston, 1972; first published 1968). 27 Boston Consulting Group, Perspectives on Experience, 7. 28 Patrick Conley, Experience Curves as a Planning Tool, in Boston Consulting Group pamphlet (1970): 15. 29 Bruce Henderson, preface, Boston Consulting Group, Perspectives on Experience.
Figure 3. BCGs Growth-Share Matrix. (Source: Adapted from George Stalk Jr. and Thomas M. Hout, Competing Against Time [New York, 1990], 12.)
the company can grow even faster and emerge with a dominant share when growth eventually slows.30 Strategic Business Units and Portfolio Analysis. Numerous other consulting firms came up with their own matrices for portfolio analysis at roughly the same time as BCG. McKinsey & Companys effort, for instance, began in 1968 when Fred Borch, the CEO of GE, asked McKinsey to examine his companys corporate structure, which consisted of two hundred profit centers and one hundred and forty-five departments arranged around ten groups. The boundaries for these units had been defined according to theories of financial control, which the McKinsey consultants judged to be inadequate. They argued that the firm should be organized on more strategic lines, with greater concern for external conditions than internal controls and a more future-oriented approach than was possible using measures of past financial performance. The study recommended a formal strategic planning system that would divide the company into natural business units, which Borch later renamed strategic business units, or SBUs. GEs executives followed this advice, which took two years to put into effect. However, in 1971, a GE corporate executive asked McKinsey for help in evaluating the strategic plans that were being written by the companys many SBUs. GE had already examined the possibility of using the BCG growth-share matrix to decide the fate of its SBUs, but its top management had decided then that they could not set priorities on the basis of just two performance measures. And so, after studying the problem for three months, a McKinsey team produced what came to be known as the GE/McKinsey nine-block matrix. The nine-block matrix used about a dozen measures to screen for industry attractive-
30
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Figure 4. Industry AttractivenessBusiness Strength Matrix. (Source: Arnoldo C. Hax and Nicolas S. Majluf, Strategic Management: An Integrative Perspective [Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1984], 156.)
ness, or profitability, and another dozen to screen for competitive position, although the weights to be attached to them were not specified. 31 (See Figure 4.) Another, more quantitative, approach to portfolio planning was developed at roughly the same time under the aegis of the Profit Impact of Market Strategies (PIMS) program, which was the multicompany successor to the PROM program that GE had started a decade earlier. By the mid-1970s, PIMS contained data on six hundred and twenty SBUs drawn from fifty-seven diversified corporations. 32 These data were used, in the first instance, to explore the determinants of returns on investment by regressing historical returns on variables such as market share, product quality, investment intensity, marketing and R&D expenditures, and several dozen others. The regressions established what were supposed to be benchmarks for the potential performance of SBUs with particular characteristics against which their actual performance might be compared.
Interview with Mike Allen, 4 Apr. 1997. Sidney E. Schoeffler, Robert D. Buzzell, and Donald F. Heany, Impact of Strategic Planning on Profit Performance, Harvard Business Review (Mar./Apr. 1974): 13940, 1445.
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31
See Walter Kiechel III, Corporate Strategists under Fire, Fortune (27 Dec. 1982). Frederick W. Gluck and Stephen P. Kaufman, Using the Strategic Planning Framework, in McKinsey internal document, Readings in Strategy (1979), 34. 35 J. Quincy Hunsicker, Strategic Planning: A Chinese Dinner? McKinsey staff paper (Dec. 1978), 3. 36 Philippe Haspeslagh, Portfolio Planning: Uses and Limits, Harvard Business Review (Jan. /Feb. 1982): 59.
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spond to those introduced by competitors. 37 Abernathy and Wayne pointed to the case of Henry Ford, whose obsession with lowering costs had left him vulnerable to Alfred Sloans strategy of product innovation in the car business. The concept of the experience curve was also criticized for treating cost reductions as automatic rather than something to be managed, for assuming that most experience could be kept proprietary instead of spilling over to competitors, for mixing up different sources of cost reduction with very different strategic implications (e.g., learning versus scale versus exogenous technical progress), and for leading to stalemates as more than one competitor pursued the same generic success factor.38 In the late 1970s, portfolio analysis came under attack as well. One problem was that, in many cases, the strategic recommendations for an SBU were very sensitive to the specific portfolio-analytic technique employed. For instance, an academic study applied four different portfolio techniques to a group of fifteen SBUs owned by the same Fortune 500 corporation; it found that only one of the fifteen SBUs fell into the same portion of each of the four matrices, and only five of the fifteen were classified similarly in terms of three of the four matrices. 39 This was only a slightly higher level of concordance than would have been expected if the fifteen SBUs had been randomly classified four separate times! An even more serious problem with portfolio analysis was that even if one could figure out the right technique to employ, the mechanical determination of resource allocation patterns on the basis of historical performance data was inherently problematic. Some consultants acknowledged as much. In 1979, Fred Gluck, the head of McKinseys strategic management practice, ventured the opinion that the heavy dependence on packaged techniques [has] frequently resulted in nothing more than a tightening up, or fine tuning, of current initiatives within the traditionally configured businesses. Even worse, technique-based strategies rarely beat existing competition and often leave businesses vulnerable to unexpected thrusts from companies not previously considered competitors.40 Gluck and his colleagues sought to loosen some of the constraints imposed by mechanistic approaches,
37 William J. Abernathy and Kenneth Wayne, Limits of the Learning Curve, Harvard Business Review (Sept./Oct. 1974): 111. 38 Pankaj Ghemawat, Building Strategy on the Experience Curve, Harvard Business Review (Mar. /Apr.): 1985. 39 Yoram Wind, Vijay Mahajan, and Donald J. Swire, An Empirical Comparison of Standardized Portfolio Models, Journal of Marketing 47 (Spring 1983): 8999. The statistical analysis of their results is based on an unpublished draft by Pankaj Ghemawat. 40 Gluck and Kaufman, Using the Strategic Planning Framework, 56.
Figure 5. Four Phases of Strategy. (Source: Adapted from Frederick W. Gluck, Stephen P. Kaufman, and A. Steven Walleck, The Evolution of Strategic Management, McKinsey staff paper [Oct. 1978], 4. Reproduced in modified form in Gluck, Kaufman, and Walleck, Strategic Management for Competitive Advantage, Harvard Business Review [July/Aug. 1980], 157.)
proposing that successful companies devise progressive strategies to take them through four basic stages. Each stage requires these companies to grapple with increasing levels of dynamism, multidimensionality, and uncertainty, and they therefore become less amenable to routine quantitative analysis. (See Figure 5.) The most stinging attack on the analytical techniques popularized by strategy consultants was offered by two Harvard professors of production, Robert Hayes and William Abernathy, in 1980. They argued that these new principles [of management], despite their sophistication and widespread usefulness, encourage a preference for (1) analytic detachment rather than the insight that comes from hands on experience and (2) short-term cost reduction rather than long-term development of technological competitiveness. 41 Hayes and Abernathy in particular criticized portfolio analysis as a tool that led managers to focus on minimizing financial risks rather than on investing in new opportunities that require a long-term commitment of resources. 42 They went on to compare U.S. firms unfavorably with Japanese and, especially, European ones. These and other criticisms gradually diminished the popularity of portfolio analysis. However, its rise and fall did have a lasting influence on subsequent work on competition and business strategy because it highlighted the need for more careful analysis of the two basic dimensions of portfolio-analytic grids: industry attractiveness and competi41 Robert H. Hayes and William J. Abernathy, Managing Our Way to Economic Decline, Harvard Business Review (July/Aug. 1980): 68. 42 Ibid., 71.
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tive position. Although these two dimensions had been identified earlierin the General Survey Outline developed by McKinsey & Company for internal use in 1952, for example portfolio analysis underscored this particular method of analyzing the effects of competition on business performance. U.S. managers, in particular, proved avid consumers of insights about competition because the exposure of much of U.S. industry to competitive forces increased dramatically during the 1960s and 1970s. One economist roughly calculated that heightened import competition, antitrust actions, and deregulation increased the share of the U.S. economy that was subject to effective competition from 56 percent in 1958 to 77 percent by 1980. 43 The next two sections describe attempts to unbundle these two basic dimensions of strategy. (See Figure 6.)
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Figure 7. Differences in the Profitability of Selected Industries, 19711990. (Source: Anita M. McGahan, Selected Profitability Data on U.S. Industries and Companies, Harvard Business School Publishing, No. 792-066 [1992].)
been carried out. While the relation between structural variables and performance turned out to be more complicated than had been suggested earlier,49 these studies reinforced the idea that some industries are inherently much more profitable or attractive than others, as indicated below. (See Figure 7.) Harvard Business Schools Business Policy Group was aware of these insights from across the Charles River: excerpts from Bains book on barriers to entry were even assigned as required readings for the business policy course in the early 1960s. But the immediate impact of IO on business strategy was limited. Although many problems can be discerned in retrospect, two seem to have been particularly important. First, IO economists focused on issues of public policy rather than business policy: they concerned themselves with the minimization rather than the maximization of excess profits. Second, the emphasis of Bain and his successors on using a limited list of structural variables to explain industry profitability shortchanged the richness of modern industrial competition (conduct within the IO paradigm). Both of these problems with applying classical IO to businessstrategic concerns about industry attractiveness were addressed by Michael Porter, a graduate of the Ph.D. program offered jointly by Harvards Business School and its Economics Department. In 1974, Porter prepared a Note on the Structural Analysis of Industries, which presented his first attempt to turn IO on its head by focusing on the business policy objective of profit maximization, rather than on the public policy objective of minimizing excess profits. 50 In 1980, he released his landmark book, Competitive Strategy, which owed much of its suc49 See, for instance, Harvey J. Goldschmid, H. Michael Mann, and J. Fred Weston, eds., Industrial Concentration: The New Learning (Boston, 1974). 50 Michael E. Porter, Note on the Structural Analysis of Industries, Harvard Business School Teaching Note, no. 376-054 (1983).
51 Michael E. Porter, Toward a Dynamic Theory of Strategy, in Richard P. Rumelt, Dan E. Schendel, and David J. Teece, eds., Fundamental Issues in Strategy (Boston, 1994), 4279. 52 Richard Schmalensee, Inter-Industry Studies of Structure and Performance, in Richard Schmalensee and R. D. Willig, eds., Handbook of Industrial Organization, vol. 2 (Amsterdam, 1989). 53 Adam M. Brandenburger and Barry J. Nalebuff, Co-opetition (New York, 1996).
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complementary products and services, or to which suppliers sell complementary resources. As Brandenburger and Nalebuff pointed out, the practical importance of this group of players was evident in the amount of attention being paid in business to the subject of strategic alliances and partnerships. Their Value Net graphic depicted this more complete description of the business landscape emphasizing, in particular, the equal roles played by competition and complementarity. (See Figure 9.)
Figure 9. The Value Net. (Source: Adam M. Brandenburger and Barry J. Nalebuff, Co-opetition [New York, 1996], 17.)
Other strategists, however, argued that some very limiting assumptions were built into such frameworks. Thus, Kevin Coyne and Somu Subramanyam of McKinsey argued that the Porter framework made three tacit but crucial assumptions: First, that an industry consists of a set of unrelated buyers, sellers, substitutes, and competitors that interact at arms length. Second, that wealth will accrue to players that are able to erect barriers against competitors and potential entrants, or, in other words, that the source of value is structural advantage. Third, that uncertainty is sufficiently low that you can accurately predict participants behavior and choose a strategy accordingly. 54
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Figure 10. Profitability within the Steel Industry, 19731992. (Source: David Collis and Pankaj Ghemawat, Industry Analysis: Understanding Industry Structure and Dynamics, in Liam Fahey and Robert M. Randall, The Portable MBA in Strategy [New York, 1994], 174.)
Traditional academic research has made a number of contributions to our understanding of positioning within industries, starting in the 1970s. The IO-based literature on strategic groups, initiated at Harvard by Michael Hunts work on broad-line versus narrow-line strategies in the major home appliance industry, suggested that competitors within particular industries could be grouped in terms of their competitive strategies in ways that helped explain their interactions and relative profitability.56 A stream of work at Purdue explored the heterogeneity of competitive positions, strategies, and performance in brewing and other industries with a combination of statistical analysis and qualitative case studies. More recently, several academic points of view about the sources of performance differences within industries have emerged views that are explored more fully in the next section. However, it does seem accurate to say that the work that had the most impact on the strategic thinking of business about competitive positions in the late 1970s and the 1980s was more pragmatic than academic in its intent, with consultants once again playing a leading role.
56 See Michael S. Hunt, Competition in the Major Home Appliance Industry, DBA diss., Harvard University, 1972. A theoretical foundation for strategic groups was provided by Richard E. Caves and Michael E. Porter, From Entry Barriers to Mobility Barriers, Quarterly Journal of Economics (Nov. 1977): 66775.
This is based on my experience working at BCG in the late 1970s. Walter Kiechel III, The Decline of the Experience Curve, Fortune (5 Oct. 1981).
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Figure 11. McKinseys Business System. (Source: Adapted from Carter F. Bales, P. C. Chatterjee, Donald J. Gogel, and Anupam P. Puri, Competitive Cost Analysis, McKinsey staff paper [Jan. 1980], 6.)
bution costs were driven by local or regional scale. Field maps underscored the potential importance of economies (or diseconomies) of scope across businesses rather than scale within a business. The effects of capacity utilization on costs were dramatized by macroeconomic downturns in the wake of the two oil shocks. The globalization of competition in many industries highlighted the location of activities as a main driver of competitors cost positions, and so on. Thus, an influential mid-1980s discussion of cost analysis enumerated ten distinct cost drivers. 59 Customer Analysis. Increased sophistication in analyzing relative costs was accompanied by increased attention to customers in the process of analyzing competitive position. Customers had never been entirely invisible: even in the heyday of experience curve analysis, market segmentation had been an essential strategic tool although it was sometimes used to gerrymander markets to demonstrate a positive link between share and cost advantage rather than for any analytic purpose. But, according to Walker Lewis, the founder of Strategic Planning Associates, To those who defended in classic experience-curve strategy, about 80% of the businesses in the world were commodities. 60 This started to change in the 1970s. Increased attention to customer analysis involved reconsideration of the idea that attaining low costs and offering customers low prices was always the best way to compete. More attention came to be paid to differentiated ways of competing that might let a business command a price premium by improving customers performance or reducing their (other) costs. While (product) differentiation had always occupied center stage in marketing, the idea of looking at it in a cross-functional, competitive context that also accounted for relative costs apparently started to emerge in business strategy in the 1970s. Thus, a member of Harvards Business Policy group recalls using the distinction between
59 60
Michael E. Porter, Competitive Advantage (New York, 1985), ch. 3. Quoted in Kiechel, The Decline of the Experience Curve.
Many other strategists agreed that, except in such special cases, the analysis of competitive position had to cover both relative cost and differentiation. There was continuing debate, however, about the proposition, explicitly put forth by Porter, that businesses stuck in the middle should be expected to perform less well than businesses that had targeted lower cost or more differentiated positions. Others saw optimal positioning as a choice from a continuum of trade-offs between cost and differentiation, rather than as a choice between two mutually exclusive (and extreme) generic strategies. Porters book, published in 1985, suggested analyzing cost and differentiation via the value chain, a template that is reproduced in Figure 12. While Porters value chain bore an obvious resemblance to McKinseys business system, his discussion of it emphasized the importance of regrouping functions into the activities actually performed to produce, market, deliver, and support products, thinking about links between activities, and connecting the value chain to the determinants of competitive position in a specific way:
Competitive advantage cannot be understood by looking at a firm as a whole. It stems from the many discrete activities a firm performs in designing, producing, marketing, delivering, and supporting its
Interview with Hugo Uyterhoeven, 25 Apr. 1997. Interview with Fred Gluck, 18 Feb. 1997. Michael E. Porter, Competitive Strategy (New York, 1980), ch. 2; and William K. Hall, Survival Strategies in a Hostile Environment, Harvard Business Review (Sept./Oct. 1980): 7881. 64 Porter, Competitive Strategy, 414.
62 63 61
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Figure 12. Porters Value Chain. (Source: Michael E. Porter, Competitive Advantage [New York, 1985], 37.)
product. Each of these activities can contribute to a firms relative cost position and create a basis for differentiation. . . . The value chain disaggregates a firm into its strategically relevant activities in order to understand the behavior of costs and the existing and potential sources of differentiation.65
Putting customer analysis and cost analysis together was promoted not only by disaggregating businesses into activities (or processes) but also by splitting customers into segments based on cost-to-serve as well as customer needs. Such de-averaging of customers was often said to expose situations in which 20 percent of a businesss customers accounted for more than 80 percent, or even 100 percent, of its profits. 66 It also suggested new customer segmentation criteria. Thus, Bain & Company built a thriving customer retention practice, starting in the late 1980s, on the basis of the higher costs of capturing new customers as opposed to retaining existing ones.
Porter, Competitive Advantage, 33, 37. Talk by Arnoldo Hax at MIT on 29 April 1997.
67 F. M. Scherer and David Ross, Industrial Market Structure and Economic Performance (Boston, 1990), ch. 5. 68 Benjamin C. Esty, Note on Value Drivers, Harvard Business School Teaching Note, no. 297-082 (1997). 69 Pankaj Ghemawat, Sustainable Advantage, Harvard Business Review (Sept./Oct. 1986): 538, and Commitment (New York, 1991), ch. 5. 70 The first economic citation of the Red Queen effect is generally attributed to L. Van Valen. See L. Van Valen, A New Evolutionary Law, Evolutionary Theory 1 (1973): 130. The literary reference is to Lewis Carrolls Alices Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass (New York, 1981; first published 186571), in which the Red Queen tells Alice: here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast . . . (p. 127).
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late 1980s and early 1990s, both academics and consultants started to wrestle with the dynamic question of how businesses might create and sustain competitive advantage in the presence of competitors who could not all be counted on to remain inert all the time. From an academic perspective, many of the consultants recommendations regarding dynamics amounted to no more, and no less, than the injunction to try to be smarter than the competition (for example, by focusing on customers future needs while competitors remained focused on their current needs). The most thoughtful exception that had a truly dynamic orientation was work by George Stalk and others at BCG on time-based competition. In an article published in the Harvard Business Review in 1988, Stalk argued: Today the leading edge of competition is the combination of fast response and increasing variety. Companies without these advantages are slipping into commoditylike competition, where customers buy mainly on price. 71 Stalk expanded on this argument in a book coauthored with Thomas Hout in 1990, according to which time-based competitors [c]reate more information and share it more spontaneously. For the information technolo71 George Stalk Jr., TimeThe Next Source of Competitive Advantage, Harvard Business Review (July/Aug. 1988).
Stalk and Hout, Competing Against Time, 179. George Stalk Jr. and Alan M. Webber, Japans Dark Side of Time, Harvard Business Review (July/Aug. 1993): 94. 74 Ibid., 989. 75 Ibid., 1012. 76 This test of stability is in the spirit of the game theorists, John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern. See their Theory of Games and Economic Behavior (Princeton, 1944). 77 Ibid.
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tion, but research in this area does supply a language and a set of logical tools for analyzing the outcome that is likely the equilibrium pointgiven specific rules, payoff structures, and beliefs if players all behave rationally.78 Economists trained in IO started to turn to game theory in the late 1970s as a way of studying competitor dynamics. Since the early 1980s, well over half of all the IO articles published in the leading economics journals have been concerned with some aspect of non-zero-sum game theory.79 By the end of the 1980s alone, competition to invest in tangible and intangible assets, strategic control of information, horizontal mergers, network competition and product standardization, contracting, and numerous other settings in which interactive effects were apt to be important had all been modeled using game theory. 80 The effort continues. Game-theory IO models tend, despite their diversity, to share an emphasis on the dynamics of strategic actions and in particular on the role of commitment.81 The emphasis on commitment or irreversibility grows out of game theorys focus on interactive effects. From this perspective, a strategic move is one that purposefully limits your freedom of action. . . . It changes other players expectations about your future responses, and you can turn this to your advantage. Others know that when you have the freedom to act, you also have the freedom to capitulate.82 The formalism of game theory is accompanied by several significant limitations: the sensitivity of the predictions of game-theory models to details, the limited number of variables considered in any one model, and assumptions of rationality that are often heroic, to name just a few.83 Game theorys empirical base is also limited. The existing evidence suggests, nonetheless, that it merits attention in analyses of interactions between small numbers of firms. While game theory often formalizes preexisting intuitions, it can sometimes yield unanticipated, and even counterintuitive, predictions. Thus, game-theory modeling of
78 There is also a branch of game theory that provides upper bounds on players payoffs if freewheeling interactions between them are allowed. See Brandenburger and Nalebuffs Coopetition for applications of this idea to business. 79 Pankaj Ghemawat, Games Businesses Play (Cambridge, Mass., 1997), 3. 80 For a late 1980s survey of game-theory IO, consult Carl Shapiro, The Theory of Business Strategy, RAND Journal of Economics (Spring 1989): 12537. 81 Ibid., 127. 82 Avinash K. Dixit and Barry J. Nalebuff, Thinking Strategically (New York, 1991), 120. Their logic is based on Thomas C. Schellings pioneering book, The Strategy of Conflict (Cambridge, Mass., 1979; first published in 1960). 83 For a detailed critique, see Richard P. Rumelt, Dan Schendel, and David J. Teece, Strategic Management and Economics, Strategic Management Journal (Winter 1991): 529. For further discussion, see Ghemawat, Games Businesses Play, chap. 1.
84 For a discussion of the original models (by Ghemawat and Nalebuff) and the supporting empirical evidence, consult Ghemawat, Games Businesses Play, ch. 5. 85 In the same year, Richard Rumelt also noted that the strategic firm is characterized by a bundle of linked and idiosyncratic resources and resource conversion activities. See his chapter, Towards a Strategic Theory of the Firm, in R. B. Lamb, ed., Competitive Strategic Management (Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1984), 561. 86 Birger Wernerfelt, A Resource-based View of the Firm, Strategic Management Journal 5 (1984): 171. In addition to citing Andrewss 1971 book, The Concept of Corporate Strategy, Wernerfelt referred to the pioneering work of Edith Penrose, The Theory of the Growth of the Firm (Oxford, 1959). 87 Jay B. Barney, Firm Resources and Sustained Competitive Advantage, Journal of Management (March 1991): 10711.
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which attacked the SBU system of management for focusing on products rather than on underlying core competencies in a way that arguably bounded innovation, imprisoned resources, and led to a decline in investment: In the short run, a companys competitiveness derives from the price/performance attributes of current products. . . . In the long run, competitiveness derives from the . . . core competencies that spawn unanticipated new products.88 To many resource-based theorists, the core competencies that Prahalad and Hamel celebrate are simply a neologism for the resources that the RBV has emphasized all along. Whether the same can be said about another, more distinct, line of research on dynamic capabilities that emerged in the 1990s is an open question. Dynamic Capabilities. In the 1990s, a number of strategists have tried to extend the resource-based view by explaining how firm-specific capabilities to perform activities better than competitors can be built and redeployed over long periods of time. The dynamic-capabilities view of the firm differs from the RBV because capabilities are to be developed rather than taken as given, as described more fully in a pioneering article by David Teece, Gary Pisano, and Amy Shuen:
If control over scarce resources is the source of economic profits, then it follows that issues such as skill acquisition and learning become fundamental strategic issues. It is this second dimension, encompassing skill acquisition, learning, and capability accumulation that . . . [we] refer to as the dynamic capabilities approach. . . . Rents are viewed as not only resulting from uncertainty . . . but also from directed activities by firms which create differentiated capabilities, and from managerial efforts to strategically deploy these assets in coordinated ways.89
Taking dynamic capabilities also implies that one of the most strategic aspects of the firm is the way things are done in the firm, or what might be referred to as its routines, or patterns of current practice and learning.90 As a result, research in such areas as management of R&D, product and process development, manufacturing, and human resources tend to be quite relevant [to strategy].91 Research in these areas supplies some specific content to the idea that strategy execution is important.
88 C. K. Prahalad and Gary Hamel, The Core Competence of the Corporation, Harvard Business Review (May/June 1990): 81. 89 David J. Teece, Gary Pisano, and Amy Shuen, Dynamic Capabilities and Strategic Management, mimeo (June 1992): 1213. 90 David Teece and Gary Pisano, The Dynamic Capabilities of Firms: An Introduction, Industrial and Corporate Change 3 (1994): 5401. The idea of routines as a unit of analysis was pioneered by Richard R. Nelson and Sidney G. Winter, An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change (Cambridge, Mass., 1982). 91 Teece, Pisano, and Shuen, Dynamic Capabilities and Strategic Management, 2.
Commitments to durable, firm-specific resources and capabilities that cannot easily be bought or sold account for the persistence observed in most strategies over time. Modern IO theory also flags such commitments as being responsible for the sustained profit differences among product market competitors: thought experiments as well as formal models indicate that, in the absence of the frictions implied by commitment, hit-and-run entry would lead to perfectly competitive (zero-profit) outcomes even without large numbers of competitors. 95 A final attraction of commitment as a way of organizing thinking about competitor dynamics is that it can be integrated with other modes of strategic analysis described earlier in this note, as indicated in Figure
92 Dorothy Leonard-Barton, Core Capabilities and Core Rigidities: A Paradox in Managing New Product Development, Strategic Management Journal (1992): 11125. 93 For a book-length discussion of commitments, see Pankaj Ghemawat, Commitment (New York, 1991). For connections to the other modes of dynamic analysis discussed in this section, see chs. 4 and 5 of Pankaj Ghemawat, Strategy and the Business Landscape (Reading, Mass., 1999). 94 Robert Townsend, Up the Organization (New York, 1970). 95 See, for instance, William J. Baumol, John C. Panzar, and Robert D. Willig, Contestable Markets and the Theory of Industry Structure (New York, 1982) for an analysis of the economic implications of zero commitment; and Richard E. Caves, Economic Analysis and the Quest for Competitive Advantage, American Economic Review (May 1984): 12732, for comments on the implications for business strategy.
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Figure 14. Commitment and Strategy (Source: Adapted from Pankaj Ghemawat, Resources and Strategy: An IO Perspective, Harvard Business School working paper [1991], 20, Fig. 3).
14. The ideas behind the figure are very simple. Traditional positioning concepts focus on optimizing the fit between product market activities on the right-hand side of the figure. The bold arrows running from left to right indicate that choices about which activities to perform, and how to perform them, are constrained by capabilities and resources that can be varied only in the long run and that are responsible for sustained profit differences between competitors. The two fainter arrows that feed back from right to left capture the ways in which the activities the organization performs and the resource commitments it makes affect its future opportunity set or capabilities. Finally, the bold arrow that runs from capabilities to resource commitments serves as a reminder that the terms on which an organization can commit resources depend, in part, on the capabilities it has built up.
97 For additional discussion of the methodology employed, consult Richard T. Pascale, Managing on the Edge (New York, 1990), 1820. 98 For some evidence that management ideas have become shorter-lived, see Paula P. Carson, Patricia A. Lanier, Kerry D. Carson, and Brandi N. Guidry, Clearing a Path through the Management Fashion Jungle: Some Preliminary Trailblazing, Academy of Management Journal (December 2000). 99 Richard DAveni, among many others, asserts unprecedented levels of environmental change in Hypercompetition: Managing the Dynamics of Strategic Maneuvering (New York, 1994). William Lee and Gary Skarke discuss apparently transient ideas that are permanently valuable in Value-Added Fads: From Passing Fancy to Eternal Truths, Journal of Management Consulting (1996): 1015. Robert G. Eccles and Nitin Nohria emphasize the rhetorical uses of changing the wrappers on a limited number of timeless truths about management in Beyond the Hype: Rediscovering the Essence of Management (Boston, 1992). 100 See Michael Hammer and James Champy, Reengineering the Corporation (New York, 1993). See also John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge, The Witch Doctors (New York, 1996). Micklethwait and Wooldridge devote a chapter to CSC Index.
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Figure 15. Ebbs, Flows, and Residual Impact of Business Fads, 19501995. (Source: Adapted from Richard T. Pascale, Managing on the Edge [New York, 1990], 1820.)
101 Michael Hammer, Reengineering Work: Dont Automate, Obliterate, Harvard Business Review (July/Aug. 1990): 104. 102 Micklethwait and Wooldridge, The Witch Doctors, 29. 103 See James OShea and Charles Madigan, Dangerous Company: The Consulting Powerhouses and the Businesses They Save and Ruin (New York, 1997). 104 For a general discussion, see Robert H. Frank and Philip J. Cook, The Winner-TakeAll Society (New York, 1995); for formal modeling and a discussion specific to the management idea business, see Ghemawat, Competition among Management Paradigms.
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formation asymmetry.105 Performance contracting is sometimes proposed as an antidote to otherwise ineradicable informational problems of this sort, but its efficacy and use in the context of management ideas seem to be limited by noisy performance measurement. Instead, the market-based transfer of ideas to companies appears to be sustained by mechanisms such as reputation and observational learning. Based on microtheoretical analysis, these mechanisms may lead to cascades of ideas, in which companies that choose late optimally decide to ignore their own information and emulate the choices made earlier by other companies.106 Such fadlike dynamics can also enhance the sales of products with broad, as opposed to niche, appeal. 107 And then there are contracting problems within, rather than between, firms that point in the same direction. In particular, models of principal-agent problems show that managers, in order to preserve or gain reputation when markets are imperfectly informed, may prefer either to hide in the herd so as not to be accountable or to ride the herd in order to prove quality.108 The possible link to situations in which managers must decide which, if any, new ideas to adopt should be obvious. More broadly, demand-side considerations suggest some reasons to worry about patterns in the diffusion of new ideas as well as the incentives to develop them in the first place. Whether such worries about the performance of markets for ideas actually make their effects felt in the real world of management is, ultimately, an empirical matter. Unfortunately, the informational imperfections noted aboveand others, such as the difficulty of counting ideascomplicate systematic empirical analysis of product variety and turnover in management ideas. A shared basis for understanding the historical evolution of ideas, which I have attempted to provide in the specific context of competitive thinking about business strategy, is but a first step in unraveling such complications.
105 See, for example, James J. Anton and Dennis A. Yao, The Sale of Ideas: Strategic Disclosure, Property Rights, and Incomplete Contracts, unpublished working paper, Fuqua School of Business, Duke University (1998). 106 See Sushil Bikhchandani, David Hirshleifer, and Ivo Welch, Learning from the Behavior of Others: Conformity, Fads and Informational Cascades, Journal of Economic Perspectives (1998): 1570. 107 See Daniel L. McFadden and Kenneth E. Train, Consumers Evaluation of New Products: Learning from Self and Others, Journal of Political Economy (Aug. 1996): 683703. 108 These models derive some of their real-world appeal from the use of relative performance measures to evaluate managers. See Robert Gibbons and Kevin J. Murphy, Relative Performance Evaluation of Chief Executive Officers, Industrial and Labor Relations Review (Feb. 1990): 30S51S.