Deck 4: Further Topics in Industry and Competitive Analysis

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Question
When products A and B are complements,the division of profit between the supplier of A and the supplier of B will depend upon which builds the stronger market position and is better able to reduce the value contributed by the other.
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Question
Where different firms supply different products that link together to form a system,power typically resides with the form that supplies the platform-the interface between the different component products.
Question
The profitability of making inkjet cartridges depends critically upon their complementary relationship with between inkjet printers.
Question
In the world of business,competition and cooperation seldom coexist.
Question
Within a business ecosystem,the migrates of value between groups f firms is the result of external forces such as technology,regulation,and changing customer preferences.Individual firms have little power to influence value migration.
Question
In hypercompetitive markets,the quest for sustainable competitive advantage is the overwhelmingly important priority for firm strategy.
Question
Business models can assist strategy formulation for firms that are located within complex business ecosystems.
Question
The value of a product to its consumers tends to be reduced by availability of close substitutes.Similarly,the value if a product to its consumers is reduced by the availability of complements.
Question
After arriving in Mexico in 1519,the destruction by Hernan Cortes of his own ships was a signal,in game theory terminology,of "commitment" for his troops to the conquest of the Aztec empire
Question
Industry membership is the single most important source of profitability differences between firms.
Question
Empirical studies on hypercompetition show unanimously that industries are becoming increasingly turbulent and competitive advantage increasingly short-lived
Question
The propensity for similar businesses to cluster in the same locality (e.g.IT companies in Silicon Valley,fashion houses in Milan)is evidence of the intensity of the competitive instincts that drive the owners of these businesses.
Question
Deterrence is effective when it imposes costs upon other players,but s costless for the initiating firm.
Question
In common with the Porter five forces framework,the Schumpeterian approach views competitive behavior as the outcome of industry structure.
Question
The Schumpeterian view of competition emphasizes the role of innovation and entrepreneurship
Question
The suppliers of video game consoles (Sony,Microsoft and Nintendo)are less able to appropriate the profits generated by the sales of video game systems because of d the growing size and power of the video game developers and publishers.
Question
A "winner-take-all industry" is one in which the market leader earns the great majority of the industry's total profits.
Question
Game theory seeks to predict the outcome of competitive situations by modeling the interactive decisions by firms,
Question
Unlike most strategic management concepts,there is little ambiguity over what a business model is.
Question
Porter's five forces model offers a rigorous,empirically-validated approach to explaining the variation in profitability across industries
Question
A key limitation of Porter's five forces framework is that:

A)I looks only at single industries not at relationships between industries
B)Competitive strategies may shape industry structure,rather than structure shaping competition
C)Industries are more complex than can be reduced to five competitive forces
D)It offers qualitative,not quantitative predictions
Question
When applied to real business situations,the usefulness of game theory is enhanced by its ability to predict very different outcomes on the basis of small changes in initial conditions.
Question
A company whose primary goal is profitability is likely to be a much more aggressive competitor than one whose primary goal is market share.
Question
The more similar are key success factors across the different segments of an industry,the more likely it is that the firms within that industry will specialize by segment.
Question
To analyze the profit potential of different industry segments,we can use the same Porter five forces of competition framework that we use to analyze the profit potential of different industries.
Question
In the automobile industry barriers to firms' mobility between different segments tend to be low,hence profitability differences between segments are not sustained over long periods of time.
Question
A strategic group is a group of firms in an industry that serving the same market segment.
Question
The tendency for both Coca-Cola and Pepsi to compete through large advertising budgets which have little impact on their relative market shares cannot be a true example of a "prisoners' dilemma" because both firms remain highly profitable.
Question
The more variables that are deployed to segment a market,the more useful is the resulting segmentation likely to be.
Question
The aim of competitive intelligence is to predict competitor behavior on the basis of verifiable facts.Attempts to "get inside the heads of your rivals" are inherently unreliable and should be avoided.
Question
The "prisoners' dilemma" can be resolved by changing the payoffs in a way that induces cooperative behavior.
Question
The ability to predict a competitor's behavior is facilitated by the tendency for the managers within an industry to share common beliefs about their industry and about the key success factors within it.
Question
Industries are the central arenas in which competition takes place.Disaggregating industries into segments and groups of firms add little to our understanding of competition.
Question
To divide an industry into segments it is always preferable to focus on the characteristics of different customers rather than the characteristics of different products.
Question
The main usefulness of strategic group analysis is in analyzing interfirm profitability
differences within an industry;it is less useful as a tool for describing the strategic positioning of firms within an industry.
Question
Industry segmentation is always horizontal-it is based upon the products an industry supplies and the customers to which they are supplied.The notion of vertical segmentation-segmenting an industry along its value chain is attractive in principle but impossible in practice.
Question
Deterrence is a competitive action that is more attractive to firms that compete in multiple markets than in a single market because the resulting reputation can be transferred from one market to another.
Question
A "prisoners' dilemma" situation in which a failure to cooperate leaves both parties worse off is just as likely in a multi-period game as in a single-period game.
Question
Empirical research shows that proportion of inter-firm differences in profitability that industry factors explain is:

A)More than 75%
B)About half
C)Less than 25%
D)The question is unanswerable because "industry" is a meaningless concept.
Question
Competitive intelligence involves the systematic collection and analysis of public information about suppliers and customers to aid decision making.
Question
In a market where Firm A and Firm B are leading suppliers,if Firm A initiates a price cut,the likelihood that Firm B responds with an identical price cut will be greater:

A)If Firm B's goal is to maximize profit
B)If Firm B's goal is to maximize market share
C)If Firm B is a private rather than a public (listed)company
D)If the market is growing.
Question
Business model mapping is a useful technique for developing strategy for firms:

A)In mature industries
B)In technology-based industries
C)Which inhabit complex business ecosystems
D)Which are seeking venture capital funding
Question
The producer of a complementary product can maximize its relative bargaining power by means of:

A)Adopting a differentiation strategy that allows it to sell at a premium price
B)Adopting a cost cutting strategy to provide its product at the lowest possible cost and so exploit economies of scale
C)Restricting complementors' access to the market
D)Commoditizing the market for the complementary good.
Question
Winner-take-all industries,where the leading firm accounts for the great majority of the industry's total profit,are usually the result of:

A)Economies of scale
B)Economies of scope
C)Network externalities
D)Product differentiation
Question
The key implication of "hypercompetition" in business is that:

A)Competitive advantage is temporary
B)Technological change will continue to accelerate
C)"If it ain't broke,don't fix it" is an obsolete piece of advice
D)The concept of Schumpeterian competition needs to be updated to realities of the 21st century.
Question
The main purpose of competitive intelligence is to:

A)Forecast competitors' behavior
B)Assess competitors' resources and capabilities
C)Signal to competitors in order to influence their behavior
D)Gain access to competitors' trade secrets
Question
The difference between substitute and complementary products may be summarized as follows:

A)Substitutes reduce the value of a product,whereas complements increase value
B)Complements reduce the value of a product,whereas substitutes increase value
C)Substitutes cannot be used together,whereas complements must be used in combination
D)Complementary relationships increase the profitability of all firms engaged in supplying them;substitute relationships reduce the profitability of all firms supplying them.
Question
Joseph Schumpeter perceived competition among companies as:

A)Corresponding closely to economists' model of perfect competition where profits are competed away
B)A process of oligopolistic rivalry
C)A process of creative destruction
D)A process of punctuated equilibrium in which periods of stability were interspersed by bouts of intense competition
Question
Signaling refers to:

A)Communications that announce your strategic intentions or plans to rivals
B)Any deliberate action that is intended to influence other players' perceptions or behavior
C)Deception through misinformation
D)Internal communications that divert strategic orientations and obtain the buy-in of the organization's key stakeholders
Question
The prediction that hypercompetition makes competitive advantage temporary:

A)Is confirmed by empirical research shows that the answer is Yes
B)Is refuted by empirical research shows that the answer is No
C)Has not been answered by empirical research
D)Cannot be answered by empirical research because competitive advantage cannot be measured.
Question
The key problem facing Nespresso in implementing a "razors and blades" strategy for its Nespresso system is that:

A)It has been unable to prevent the emergence of other suppliers of Nespresso-compatible coffee capsules
B)Its Nespresso coffee machines are manufactured under license by other companies
C)Keurig Green Mountain is the market leader for capsule coffee systems in the US
D)The high cost of Nespresso capsules compared to traditionally-packaged coffee
Question
Competitive intelligence,the systematic collection and analysis of information about rival firms,is:

A)A practice which,though legal in most countries,is unethical
B)Likely to distract firms from their efforts to establish positions of competitive advantage based upon their distinctive strengths
C)An important component of a firm's environmental scanning and strategic analysis
D)A useful activity because it can help firms imitate the strategies of their more successful competitors.
Question
The relationship between competition and cooperation can be described as follows:

A)Industries either compete or cooperate;if they cooperate,they are likely to be in breach of competition law
B)Cooperation and competition may exist in an industry,but not at the same time
C)Both can co-exist simultaneously
D)Both can co-exist at the same time,but not in the same industry segment or strategic group
Question
If administering deterrence is costly or unpleasant for the threatening party,then:

A)It may lack credibility
B)It will always lack effectiveness
C)It will need to be supported by appropriate signaling
D)It reinforces the power of the threatening party
Question
The distinction between legitimate competitive intelligence and industrial espionage:

A)Is clearly defined by legislation and case law relating to trade secrets
B)Is not always clear
C)Is non-existent - they overlap
D)Is easily resolved by hiring a good lawyer
Question
The relationship between commitment and strategic options may be best described as:

A)Commitments increase the value of real options
B)By committing to a set of options,a firm can reconcile two sources of value: value from deterring competitors and value from real options
C)Making commitments inevitably involve giving up options
D)The two reside in different realms of analysis: commitments can be analyzed using game theory;real options can be analyzed using financial theory
Question
The contribution of game theory to the field of strategic management is in:

A)Generating more accurate predictions about competitive behavior
B)Extending the theory of competition to embrace cooperation
C)Extending the analysis of competitive behavior to the realms of politics,diplomacy,and social behavior
D)Permitting a more rigorous framing of competitive situations and strategic decisions
Question
Schumpeter's process of "creative destruction" challenges Porter's five forces of competition framework by:

A)Introducing concepts of renewal and rebirth into the analysis of industrial change
B)Recognizing the cooperation is as important in business as competition
C)Proposing that competitive behavior determines industry structure rather than the other way round
D)Viewing competition is essential for the renewal of mature and declining industries
Question
Video game consoles and video games are complementary products: the availability of one increases the value of the other.In the past the suppliers of consoles were able to appropriate most of the profits generated by video game systems because:

A)Video game consoles cost more to develop than video games
B)The consoles were more powerful determinant of the consumer experience than the games
C)The console suppliers controlled technology and distribution giving them more bargaining power than the suppliers of video games
D)The console makers-Nintendo,Sony and Microsoft-were bigger companies than the suppliers of video games.
Question
The key insight from the "prisoners' dilemma" game is:

A)Competitive behavior can create an outcome that is inferior for all involved in a situation
B)The principle of "honor among thieves" is inapplicable either to thieves or to business executives
C)In every social interaction,the inability to communicate effectively always results in an inferior outcome
D)Trust can play a critical role in creating favorable outcomes form both crime and business
Question
"Profit pool mapping" describes a technique for:

A)Analyzing the distribution of profit across different stages of an industry's value chain
B)Analyzing the distribution of value added across different stages of an industry's value chain
C)Analyzing competitive advantage in the different stages of an industry's value chain
D)Analyzing the distribution of an industry's profit among the member firms of that industry
Question
The main use of industry segmentation analysis is to:

A)Identify the most attractive segments for a firm to locate within
B)Understand better the needs of different customer groups
C)Formulate better marketing strategies
D)Predict the likely evolution of market structure
Question
A firm will choose to compete across multiple segments rather than specialize in a single segment if:

A)It is a publicly-listed company that than a family owned company
B)The same resources and capabilities can be deployed in different segments
C)Segments are defined by distinct socio-economic groups of customers
D)Barriers to mobility are high.
Question
Segmentation is a process through which:

A)Market demand is analyzed through identifying different customer groups
B)Industries are disaggregated into more narrowly-drawn markets
C)Industries are divided into groups of similar products
D)Industries are divided into separate geographical markets
Question
Barriers to mobility are:

A)Barriers that protect a segment from firms established in other segments of the same industry
B)Barriers that protect incumbents from established firms in other industries rather than from new start-up companies
C)Obstacles that a firm faces in changing its strategy
D)Barriers that prevent globalization and developing a firm's business abroad
Question
A strategic groups consists of:

A)Firms that follow the same generic strategies (e.g.cost leadership or differentiation)
B)Firms within an industry that have similar strategies
C)Firms that occupy the same industry segment
D)Firms that target the same customer groups
Question
The difference between barriers to entry and barriers to mobility is:

A)The sources of barriers to mobility are different than the sources of barriers to mobility
B)There is no real difference
C)Barriers to mobility are less effective than barriers to entry
D)Barriers to entry protect the industry as a whole whereas barriers to mobility protect segments within the industry
Question
To attempt to predict competitive behaviors,Porter suggests a four-step framework,where analysts must identify:

A)The competitor's current strategy,its objectives,its assumptions about the industry and itself,and its available resources and capabilities
B)The competitor's current strategy,its future strategy,its assumptions,and its vulnerabilities
C)The competitor's assumptions about the industry,its available resources and competencies,its objectives,and its competitive advantage
D)The competitor's available resources and competencies,its objectives,then its competitive advantage,and finally its performance
Question
In the European airline industry,EasyJet,Baltic Air,WizzAir,and Ryanair:

A)Have different route networks,therefore belong to different strategic groups
B)Have similar strategies,hence belong to the same strategic group
C)Belong to the same strategic group and can therefore be expected to have similar financial performance
D)Have little in common
Question
Strategic group analysis is primarily useful for:

A)Identifying "blue ocean" opportunities
B)Describing and understanding the strategic positioning of firms within an industry
C)Identifying the strategies that are most conducive to profitability within an industry
D)Identifying which strategic niches in an industry are least saturated and therefore have the greatest profit potential
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Deck 4: Further Topics in Industry and Competitive Analysis
1
When products A and B are complements,the division of profit between the supplier of A and the supplier of B will depend upon which builds the stronger market position and is better able to reduce the value contributed by the other.
True
2
Where different firms supply different products that link together to form a system,power typically resides with the form that supplies the platform-the interface between the different component products.
True
3
The profitability of making inkjet cartridges depends critically upon their complementary relationship with between inkjet printers.
True
4
In the world of business,competition and cooperation seldom coexist.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Within a business ecosystem,the migrates of value between groups f firms is the result of external forces such as technology,regulation,and changing customer preferences.Individual firms have little power to influence value migration.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
In hypercompetitive markets,the quest for sustainable competitive advantage is the overwhelmingly important priority for firm strategy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Business models can assist strategy formulation for firms that are located within complex business ecosystems.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
8
The value of a product to its consumers tends to be reduced by availability of close substitutes.Similarly,the value if a product to its consumers is reduced by the availability of complements.
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
9
After arriving in Mexico in 1519,the destruction by Hernan Cortes of his own ships was a signal,in game theory terminology,of "commitment" for his troops to the conquest of the Aztec empire
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Industry membership is the single most important source of profitability differences between firms.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
11
Empirical studies on hypercompetition show unanimously that industries are becoming increasingly turbulent and competitive advantage increasingly short-lived
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k this deck
12
The propensity for similar businesses to cluster in the same locality (e.g.IT companies in Silicon Valley,fashion houses in Milan)is evidence of the intensity of the competitive instincts that drive the owners of these businesses.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Deterrence is effective when it imposes costs upon other players,but s costless for the initiating firm.
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In common with the Porter five forces framework,the Schumpeterian approach views competitive behavior as the outcome of industry structure.
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k this deck
15
The Schumpeterian view of competition emphasizes the role of innovation and entrepreneurship
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k this deck
16
The suppliers of video game consoles (Sony,Microsoft and Nintendo)are less able to appropriate the profits generated by the sales of video game systems because of d the growing size and power of the video game developers and publishers.
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k this deck
17
A "winner-take-all industry" is one in which the market leader earns the great majority of the industry's total profits.
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k this deck
18
Game theory seeks to predict the outcome of competitive situations by modeling the interactive decisions by firms,
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k this deck
19
Unlike most strategic management concepts,there is little ambiguity over what a business model is.
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k this deck
20
Porter's five forces model offers a rigorous,empirically-validated approach to explaining the variation in profitability across industries
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
A key limitation of Porter's five forces framework is that:

A)I looks only at single industries not at relationships between industries
B)Competitive strategies may shape industry structure,rather than structure shaping competition
C)Industries are more complex than can be reduced to five competitive forces
D)It offers qualitative,not quantitative predictions
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
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22
When applied to real business situations,the usefulness of game theory is enhanced by its ability to predict very different outcomes on the basis of small changes in initial conditions.
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k this deck
23
A company whose primary goal is profitability is likely to be a much more aggressive competitor than one whose primary goal is market share.
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k this deck
24
The more similar are key success factors across the different segments of an industry,the more likely it is that the firms within that industry will specialize by segment.
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25
To analyze the profit potential of different industry segments,we can use the same Porter five forces of competition framework that we use to analyze the profit potential of different industries.
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26
In the automobile industry barriers to firms' mobility between different segments tend to be low,hence profitability differences between segments are not sustained over long periods of time.
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k this deck
27
A strategic group is a group of firms in an industry that serving the same market segment.
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28
The tendency for both Coca-Cola and Pepsi to compete through large advertising budgets which have little impact on their relative market shares cannot be a true example of a "prisoners' dilemma" because both firms remain highly profitable.
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29
The more variables that are deployed to segment a market,the more useful is the resulting segmentation likely to be.
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k this deck
30
The aim of competitive intelligence is to predict competitor behavior on the basis of verifiable facts.Attempts to "get inside the heads of your rivals" are inherently unreliable and should be avoided.
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k this deck
31
The "prisoners' dilemma" can be resolved by changing the payoffs in a way that induces cooperative behavior.
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k this deck
32
The ability to predict a competitor's behavior is facilitated by the tendency for the managers within an industry to share common beliefs about their industry and about the key success factors within it.
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k this deck
33
Industries are the central arenas in which competition takes place.Disaggregating industries into segments and groups of firms add little to our understanding of competition.
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k this deck
34
To divide an industry into segments it is always preferable to focus on the characteristics of different customers rather than the characteristics of different products.
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k this deck
35
The main usefulness of strategic group analysis is in analyzing interfirm profitability
differences within an industry;it is less useful as a tool for describing the strategic positioning of firms within an industry.
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k this deck
36
Industry segmentation is always horizontal-it is based upon the products an industry supplies and the customers to which they are supplied.The notion of vertical segmentation-segmenting an industry along its value chain is attractive in principle but impossible in practice.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
37
Deterrence is a competitive action that is more attractive to firms that compete in multiple markets than in a single market because the resulting reputation can be transferred from one market to another.
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k this deck
38
A "prisoners' dilemma" situation in which a failure to cooperate leaves both parties worse off is just as likely in a multi-period game as in a single-period game.
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k this deck
39
Empirical research shows that proportion of inter-firm differences in profitability that industry factors explain is:

A)More than 75%
B)About half
C)Less than 25%
D)The question is unanswerable because "industry" is a meaningless concept.
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k this deck
40
Competitive intelligence involves the systematic collection and analysis of public information about suppliers and customers to aid decision making.
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k this deck
41
In a market where Firm A and Firm B are leading suppliers,if Firm A initiates a price cut,the likelihood that Firm B responds with an identical price cut will be greater:

A)If Firm B's goal is to maximize profit
B)If Firm B's goal is to maximize market share
C)If Firm B is a private rather than a public (listed)company
D)If the market is growing.
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
42
Business model mapping is a useful technique for developing strategy for firms:

A)In mature industries
B)In technology-based industries
C)Which inhabit complex business ecosystems
D)Which are seeking venture capital funding
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
The producer of a complementary product can maximize its relative bargaining power by means of:

A)Adopting a differentiation strategy that allows it to sell at a premium price
B)Adopting a cost cutting strategy to provide its product at the lowest possible cost and so exploit economies of scale
C)Restricting complementors' access to the market
D)Commoditizing the market for the complementary good.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Winner-take-all industries,where the leading firm accounts for the great majority of the industry's total profit,are usually the result of:

A)Economies of scale
B)Economies of scope
C)Network externalities
D)Product differentiation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
The key implication of "hypercompetition" in business is that:

A)Competitive advantage is temporary
B)Technological change will continue to accelerate
C)"If it ain't broke,don't fix it" is an obsolete piece of advice
D)The concept of Schumpeterian competition needs to be updated to realities of the 21st century.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
The main purpose of competitive intelligence is to:

A)Forecast competitors' behavior
B)Assess competitors' resources and capabilities
C)Signal to competitors in order to influence their behavior
D)Gain access to competitors' trade secrets
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
The difference between substitute and complementary products may be summarized as follows:

A)Substitutes reduce the value of a product,whereas complements increase value
B)Complements reduce the value of a product,whereas substitutes increase value
C)Substitutes cannot be used together,whereas complements must be used in combination
D)Complementary relationships increase the profitability of all firms engaged in supplying them;substitute relationships reduce the profitability of all firms supplying them.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Joseph Schumpeter perceived competition among companies as:

A)Corresponding closely to economists' model of perfect competition where profits are competed away
B)A process of oligopolistic rivalry
C)A process of creative destruction
D)A process of punctuated equilibrium in which periods of stability were interspersed by bouts of intense competition
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Signaling refers to:

A)Communications that announce your strategic intentions or plans to rivals
B)Any deliberate action that is intended to influence other players' perceptions or behavior
C)Deception through misinformation
D)Internal communications that divert strategic orientations and obtain the buy-in of the organization's key stakeholders
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
The prediction that hypercompetition makes competitive advantage temporary:

A)Is confirmed by empirical research shows that the answer is Yes
B)Is refuted by empirical research shows that the answer is No
C)Has not been answered by empirical research
D)Cannot be answered by empirical research because competitive advantage cannot be measured.
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
The key problem facing Nespresso in implementing a "razors and blades" strategy for its Nespresso system is that:

A)It has been unable to prevent the emergence of other suppliers of Nespresso-compatible coffee capsules
B)Its Nespresso coffee machines are manufactured under license by other companies
C)Keurig Green Mountain is the market leader for capsule coffee systems in the US
D)The high cost of Nespresso capsules compared to traditionally-packaged coffee
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Competitive intelligence,the systematic collection and analysis of information about rival firms,is:

A)A practice which,though legal in most countries,is unethical
B)Likely to distract firms from their efforts to establish positions of competitive advantage based upon their distinctive strengths
C)An important component of a firm's environmental scanning and strategic analysis
D)A useful activity because it can help firms imitate the strategies of their more successful competitors.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
The relationship between competition and cooperation can be described as follows:

A)Industries either compete or cooperate;if they cooperate,they are likely to be in breach of competition law
B)Cooperation and competition may exist in an industry,but not at the same time
C)Both can co-exist simultaneously
D)Both can co-exist at the same time,but not in the same industry segment or strategic group
Unlock Deck
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54
If administering deterrence is costly or unpleasant for the threatening party,then:

A)It may lack credibility
B)It will always lack effectiveness
C)It will need to be supported by appropriate signaling
D)It reinforces the power of the threatening party
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55
The distinction between legitimate competitive intelligence and industrial espionage:

A)Is clearly defined by legislation and case law relating to trade secrets
B)Is not always clear
C)Is non-existent - they overlap
D)Is easily resolved by hiring a good lawyer
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56
The relationship between commitment and strategic options may be best described as:

A)Commitments increase the value of real options
B)By committing to a set of options,a firm can reconcile two sources of value: value from deterring competitors and value from real options
C)Making commitments inevitably involve giving up options
D)The two reside in different realms of analysis: commitments can be analyzed using game theory;real options can be analyzed using financial theory
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57
The contribution of game theory to the field of strategic management is in:

A)Generating more accurate predictions about competitive behavior
B)Extending the theory of competition to embrace cooperation
C)Extending the analysis of competitive behavior to the realms of politics,diplomacy,and social behavior
D)Permitting a more rigorous framing of competitive situations and strategic decisions
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58
Schumpeter's process of "creative destruction" challenges Porter's five forces of competition framework by:

A)Introducing concepts of renewal and rebirth into the analysis of industrial change
B)Recognizing the cooperation is as important in business as competition
C)Proposing that competitive behavior determines industry structure rather than the other way round
D)Viewing competition is essential for the renewal of mature and declining industries
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59
Video game consoles and video games are complementary products: the availability of one increases the value of the other.In the past the suppliers of consoles were able to appropriate most of the profits generated by video game systems because:

A)Video game consoles cost more to develop than video games
B)The consoles were more powerful determinant of the consumer experience than the games
C)The console suppliers controlled technology and distribution giving them more bargaining power than the suppliers of video games
D)The console makers-Nintendo,Sony and Microsoft-were bigger companies than the suppliers of video games.
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60
The key insight from the "prisoners' dilemma" game is:

A)Competitive behavior can create an outcome that is inferior for all involved in a situation
B)The principle of "honor among thieves" is inapplicable either to thieves or to business executives
C)In every social interaction,the inability to communicate effectively always results in an inferior outcome
D)Trust can play a critical role in creating favorable outcomes form both crime and business
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61
"Profit pool mapping" describes a technique for:

A)Analyzing the distribution of profit across different stages of an industry's value chain
B)Analyzing the distribution of value added across different stages of an industry's value chain
C)Analyzing competitive advantage in the different stages of an industry's value chain
D)Analyzing the distribution of an industry's profit among the member firms of that industry
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62
The main use of industry segmentation analysis is to:

A)Identify the most attractive segments for a firm to locate within
B)Understand better the needs of different customer groups
C)Formulate better marketing strategies
D)Predict the likely evolution of market structure
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63
A firm will choose to compete across multiple segments rather than specialize in a single segment if:

A)It is a publicly-listed company that than a family owned company
B)The same resources and capabilities can be deployed in different segments
C)Segments are defined by distinct socio-economic groups of customers
D)Barriers to mobility are high.
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64
Segmentation is a process through which:

A)Market demand is analyzed through identifying different customer groups
B)Industries are disaggregated into more narrowly-drawn markets
C)Industries are divided into groups of similar products
D)Industries are divided into separate geographical markets
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65
Barriers to mobility are:

A)Barriers that protect a segment from firms established in other segments of the same industry
B)Barriers that protect incumbents from established firms in other industries rather than from new start-up companies
C)Obstacles that a firm faces in changing its strategy
D)Barriers that prevent globalization and developing a firm's business abroad
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66
A strategic groups consists of:

A)Firms that follow the same generic strategies (e.g.cost leadership or differentiation)
B)Firms within an industry that have similar strategies
C)Firms that occupy the same industry segment
D)Firms that target the same customer groups
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67
The difference between barriers to entry and barriers to mobility is:

A)The sources of barriers to mobility are different than the sources of barriers to mobility
B)There is no real difference
C)Barriers to mobility are less effective than barriers to entry
D)Barriers to entry protect the industry as a whole whereas barriers to mobility protect segments within the industry
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68
To attempt to predict competitive behaviors,Porter suggests a four-step framework,where analysts must identify:

A)The competitor's current strategy,its objectives,its assumptions about the industry and itself,and its available resources and capabilities
B)The competitor's current strategy,its future strategy,its assumptions,and its vulnerabilities
C)The competitor's assumptions about the industry,its available resources and competencies,its objectives,and its competitive advantage
D)The competitor's available resources and competencies,its objectives,then its competitive advantage,and finally its performance
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69
In the European airline industry,EasyJet,Baltic Air,WizzAir,and Ryanair:

A)Have different route networks,therefore belong to different strategic groups
B)Have similar strategies,hence belong to the same strategic group
C)Belong to the same strategic group and can therefore be expected to have similar financial performance
D)Have little in common
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70
Strategic group analysis is primarily useful for:

A)Identifying "blue ocean" opportunities
B)Describing and understanding the strategic positioning of firms within an industry
C)Identifying the strategies that are most conducive to profitability within an industry
D)Identifying which strategic niches in an industry are least saturated and therefore have the greatest profit potential
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.