Vertical integration is a strategy where a company gains control over suppliers upstream (backward integration) and/or distributors downstream (forward integration). It allows a company to secure supplies/distribution and increase power in the marketplace. A company must consider costs, competencies, and whether partial or full vertical integration is best to determine the appropriate level of integration for its value chain.
Vertical integration is a strategy where a company gains control over suppliers upstream (backward integration) and/or distributors downstream (forward integration). It allows a company to secure supplies/distribution and increase power in the marketplace. A company must consider costs, competencies, and whether partial or full vertical integration is best to determine the appropriate level of integration for its value chain.
Vertical integration is a strategy where a company gains control over suppliers upstream (backward integration) and/or distributors downstream (forward integration). It allows a company to secure supplies/distribution and increase power in the marketplace. A company must consider costs, competencies, and whether partial or full vertical integration is best to determine the appropriate level of integration for its value chain.
Vertical integration is a strategy where a company gains control over suppliers upstream (backward integration) and/or distributors downstream (forward integration). It allows a company to secure supplies/distribution and increase power in the marketplace. A company must consider costs, competencies, and whether partial or full vertical integration is best to determine the appropriate level of integration for its value chain.
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The key takeaways are that vertical integration is a strategy for companies to gain control over their suppliers or distributors to increase power in the marketplace and reduce costs. The main types of vertical integration are forward, backward, and balanced integration.
The different types of vertical integration strategies are forward integration, backward integration, and balanced integration. Forward integration involves gaining control over distributors or retailers. Backward integration involves gaining control over suppliers. Balanced integration combines both forward and backward integration.
Forward integration strategy is most beneficial when there are few quality distributors, distributors have high profit margins, distributors are unreliable or unable to meet needs, the industry is growing, and there are benefits to stable production and distribution. It is also beneficial when the company has resources to manage the new business.
Vertical Integration
• Vertical integration (VI) is a strategy that many
companies use to gain control over their industry’s value chain. • It is a strategy used by a company to gain control over its suppliers or distributors in order to increase the firm’s power in the marketplace, reduce transaction costs and secure supplies or distribution channels. • This strategy is one of the major considerations when developing corporate level strategy. Vertical Integration • The important question in corporate strategy is, whether the company should participate in one activity (one industry) or many activities (many industries) along the industry value chain. • For example, the company has to decide if it only manufactures its products or would engage in retailing and after-sales services as well. Vertical Integration Two issues have to be considered before integration:
• Costs. An organization should vertically integrate when costs
of making the product inside the company are lower than the costs of buying that product in the market.
• Scope of the firm. A firm should consider whether moving
into new industries would not dilute its current competencies. New activities in a company are also harder to manage and control. The answers to previous questions determine if a company will pursue none, partial or full VI. Vertical Integration Level of Integration Industry Value Chain None Partial Full Difference between Vertical and Horizontal Integration
• VI is different from HI, where a corporation usually
acquires or merges with a competitor in a same industry. • An example of horizontal integration would be a company competing in raw materials industry and buying another company in the same industry rather than trying to expand to intermediate goods industry. • Horizontal integration examples: Kraft Foods taking over Cadbury, HP acquiring Compaq or Lenovo buying personal computer division from IBM. Difference between Vertical and Horizontal Integration Types of Vertical Integration
• If the manufacturing company engages in sales or after-
sales industries it pursues forward integration strategy. • Forward integration is a strategy where a firm gains ownership or increased control over its previous customers (distributors or retailers) • This strategy is implemented when the company wants to achieve higher economies of scale and larger market share. • Forward integration strategy became very popular with increasing internet appearance. • Many manufacturing companies have built their online stores and started selling their products directly to consumers, bypassing retailers. Forward Integration Forward integration strategy is effective when: • Few quality distributors are available in the industry. • Distributors or retailers have high profit margins. • Distributors are very expensive, unreliable or unable to meet firm’s distribution needs. • The industry is expected to grow significantly. • There are benefits of stable production and distribution. • The company has enough resources and capabilities to manage the new business. Backward Integration • When the same manufacturing company starts making intermediate goods for itself or takes over its previous suppliers, it pursues backward integration strategy. • Firms implement backward integration strategy in order to secure stable input of resources and become more efficient. Backward Integration Backward integration strategy is most beneficial when: • Firm’s current suppliers are unreliable, expensive or cannot supply the required inputs. • There are only few small suppliers but many competitors in the industry. • The industry is expanding rapidly. • The prices of inputs are unstable. • Suppliers earn high profit margins. • A company has necessary resources and capabilities to manage the new business Balanced Integration Strategy
Started On Tuesday, 28 September 2021, 10:45 AM State Finished Completed On Tuesday, 28 September 2021, 10:49 AM Time Taken 3 Mins 48 Secs Grade 15.00 Out of 15.00 (100%)