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Quiz Week 3 Advanced Models

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Title: Quiz Week 3 Advanced Models


1
Quiz Week 3Advanced Models
  • Vault

2
Week 3 Quiz
  • List all the advance models.

3
Week 3 Quiz
  • List all the advanced models.
  • Net Present Value
  • Capital Asset Pricing Model
  • Five Forces
  • PIE
  • SWOT
  • Seven Ss
  • Product Life Cycle Curve
  • Strategy Framework Chart
  • Four Ps
  • Four Cs
  • Five Cs
  • Value Chain Analysis
  • Core Competencies
  • Best Practices
  • 2X2 Matrix
  • BCG Matrix
  • Value Drivers Framework
  • Target and Market Assessment
  • Data Gathering and Analysis

4
Strategic and Natural Competition
  • Bruce D. Henderson, 1980

5
Bruce Henderson
  • BCG founder
  • Provocative
  • Relevant and Significant
  • Argumentative
  • Self-critical
  • Strategy 1963

6
Strategy
  • All competitors who persist over time must
    maintain a unique advantage by differentiation
    over all others. Managing that differentiation
    is the essence of long-term business strategy.
  • Bruce Henderson

7
Strategy
  • The essence of strategy is managing a firms
    differentiation.

8
Elements of Competition
  • The ability to understand competitive
    interactions as a complete dynamic system that
    includes the interaction of competitors,
    customers, money, people, and resources.
  • The ability to use this understanding to predict
    the consequences of a given intervention in that
    system and how that intervention will result in a
    new pattern of stable dynamic equilibrium.

9
Elements of Competition
  • The availability of uncommitted resources that
    can be dedicated to different uses and purposes
    in the present even though the dedication is
    permanent and the benefits will be deferred.
  • The ability to predict the risk and return with
    sufficient accuracy and confidence to justify
    commitment of such resources.
  • The willingness to deliberately act to make the
    commitment.

10
Strategic and Natural Competition
  • Strategic
  • Deliberate
  • Radical
  • compressed time
  • Natural
  • Wildly expedient
  • Inherently extremely conservative
  • Learning by trial-and-error
  • Goes on even if by pure chance
  • Can yield complexity

11
Hypotheses
  • Effective competition will result in a range of
    sizes of competitors from very small to very
    large. The spectrum will be stable over time.

12
Hypotheses
  • Competitors who survive and prosper will have a
    unique advantage over any and all other
    competitors in specific combinations of time,
    place, products, and customers.

13
Hypotheses
  • For any given competitor, there will be different
    competitors who will provide the constraints for
    almost every combinations of relevant factors.
    Therefore the frontiers or boundaries of
    competitive parity will be constantly changing as
    any one of the competitors changes, adapts,
    grows, or redeploys.

14
Hypotheses
  • Perpetual conflict will exist along those
    frontiers where competitive ability is at parity.

15
Hypotheses
  • Very little conflict will exist where clear
    superiority is visible. The military analogy of
    the battlefront is useful in visualizing this.

16
Hypotheses
  • Business competition inherently has multiple
    fronts with a different competitor on each front.

17
Hypotheses
  • Any redeployment of resources will change the
    balance of competitive parity on at least two
    fronts. If one is strengthened, others will be
    weakened.

18
Hypotheses
  • Whenever a front or zone of competitive parity
    becomes stable or static, then bourgeois
    competition will develop. Such bourgeois
    competition exists even when the defense always
    acts as hawk and the offense always acts as a
    dove. This is a mutual recognition of mutually
    predictable behavior.

19
Hypotheses
  • The fewer the number of competitive variables
    that are critical, the fewer will be the number
    of competitors. If only one factor is critical,
    then no more than two or three competitors are
    likely to coexist. Only one will survive if the
    available market shrinks. This is the Rule of
    Three and Four.

20
Hypotheses
  • The greater the number of potentially important
    variables, the larger will be the number of
    coexisting competitors but the smaller will be
    their absolute size.

21
Hypotheses
  • The more variable the environment, the fewer the
    number of surviving competitors. In this case,
    the ability to cope with the greater change in
    environment becomes the overriding and
    controlling factor.

22
Hypotheses
  • The entry of a new competitor depends on the
    ability of that competitor to develop and
    identify a clear superiority compared to all
    existing competitors in some subsection of the
    total market. Sequence of entry is important.

23
Summation of SC
  • Elements of SC
  • Understanding of competitive interactions as a
    complete dynamic system of firms-people-money-res
    ources
  • Ability to predict the results of an intervention
  • Availability of uncommitted resources
  • Ability to predict risks and returns
  • Willingness
  • SC Hypotheses
  • Size
  • Unique combination
  • Boundaries
  • Parity
  • Clear superiority
  • Multiple fronts
  • Redeployment
  • Bourgeois
  • Small number of variablesRule of Three and
    Four
  • Large number of variables
  • Variable environment
  • New entrant

24
Case Interview 1
  • Use PIE to analyze the supermarket industry in
    Sacramento

25
Case Interview 2
  • Use the Product Life Cycle Curve to decide
    whether Apple should develop a new version of the
    iPhone.

26
Case Interview 3
  • Use the Four Cs to determine whether it would be
    a good idea to launch a fast-food chain based on
    a Greek / Mediterranean menu.

27
Case Interview 4
  • Use the Rule of Three and Four to analyze the
    supermarket industry in Sacramento.

28
Next Weeks Assignment
  • Write
  • What was your favorite thing about todays
    discussions?
  • Why?
  • What are your plans for mastering this material?
  • Read (This assignment is due in 2 weeks)
  • Chapter 4, Cosentino
  • Foundations Section, BCG
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