Chapter6_SupportingBusiness-LevelStrategy.pdf

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    Chapter 6

    Supporting the Business-Level Strategy: Competitive and Cooperative Moves

    L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S

    After reading this chapter, you should be able to understand and articulate answers to the following

    questions:

    1. What different competitive moves are commonly used by firms?

    2. When and how do firms respond to the competitive actions taken by their rivals?

    3. What moves can firms make to cooperate with other firms and create mutual benefits?

    Can Merck Stay Healthy?

    On June 7, 2011, pharmaceutical giant Merck & Company Inc. announced the formation of a strategic

    alliance with Roche Holding AG, a smaller pharmaceutical firm that is known for excellence in medical

    testing. The firms planned to work together to create tests that could identify cancer patients who might

    benefit from cancer drugs that Merck had under development. [1]

    This was the second alliance formed between the companies in less than a month. On May 16, 2011, the

    US Food and Drug Administration approved a drug called Victrelis that Merck had developed to treat

    hepatitis C. Merck and Roche agreed to promote Victrelis together. This surprised industry experts

    because Merck and Roche had offered competing treatments for hepatitis C in the past. The Merck/Roche

    alliance was expected to help Victrelis compete for market share with a new treatment called Incivek that

    was developed by a team of two other pharmaceutical firms: Vertex and Johnson & Johnson.

    Experts predicted that Victrelis’s wholesale price of $1,100 for a week’s supply could create $1 billion of

    annual revenue. This could be an important financial boost to Merck, although the company was already

    enormous. Merck’s total of $46 billion in sales in 2010 included approximately $5.0 billion in revenues

    from asthma treatment Singulair, $3.3 billion for two closely related diabetes drugs, $2.1 billion for two

    closely related blood pressure drugs, and $1.1 billion for an HIV/AIDS treatment.

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    Despite these impressive numbers, concerns about Merck had reduced the price of the firm’s stock from

    nearly $60 per share at the start of 2008 to about $36 per share by June 2011. A big challenge for Merck

    is that once the patent on a drug expires, its profits related to that drug plummet because generic

    drugmakers can start selling the drug. The patent on Singulair is set to expire in the summer of 2012, for

    example, and a sharp decline in the massive revenues that Singulair brings into Merck seemed

    inevitable. [2]

    A major step in the growth of Merck was the 2009 acquisition of drugmaker Schering-Plough. By 2011,

    Merck ranked fifty-third on the Fortune 500 list of America’s largest companies. Rivals Pfizer (thirty-first)

    and Johnson & Johnson (fortieth) still remained much bigger than Merck, however. Important questions

    also loomed large. Would the competitive and cooperative moves made by Merck’s executives keep the

    firm healthy? Or would expiring patents, fearsome rivals, and other challenges undermine Merck’s

    vitality?

    Friedrich Jacob Merck had no idea that he was setting the stage for such immense stakes when he took

    the first steps toward the creation of Merck. He purchased a humble pharmacy in Darmstadt, Germany, in

    1688. In 1827, the venture moved into the creation of drugs when Heinrich Emanuel Merck, a descendant

    of Friedrich, created a factory in Darmstadt in 1827. The modern version of Merck was incorporated in

    1891. More than three hundred years after its beginnings, Merck now has approximately ninety-four

    thousand employees.

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    Merck’s origins can be traced back more than three centuries to Friedrich Jacob Merck’s purchase

    of this pharmacy in 1688.

    Image courtesy of

    Wikimedia,http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/eb/ENGEL_APHOTHEKE.png.

    For executives leading firms such as Merck, selecting a generic strategy is a key aspect of business-level

    strategy, but other choices are very important too. In their ongoing battle to make their firms more

    successful, executives must make decisions about what competitive moves to make, how to respond to

    rivals’ competitive moves, and what cooperative moves to make. This chapter discusses some of the more

    powerful and interesting options. As our opening vignette on Merck illustrates, often another company,

    such as Roche, will be a potential ally in some instances and a potential rival in others.

    [1] Stynes, T. 2011, June 7. Merck, Roche focus on tests for cancer treatments. Wall Street Journal. Retrieved from

    online.wsj.com/article/SB100014240527023044323045 76371491785709756.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

    [2] Statistics drawn from Standard & Poor’s stock report on Merck.

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    6.1 Making Competitive Moves

    Figure 6.1 Making Competitive Moves

    Image courtesy of 663highland, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Enchoen27n3200.jpg

    Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books Saylor.org 184

    L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S

    1. Understand the advantages and disadvantages of being a first mover.

    2. Know how disruptive innovations can change industries.

    3. Describe two ways that using foothold can benefit firms.

    4. Explain how firms can win without fighting using a blue ocean strategy.

    5. Describe the creative process of bricolage.

    Being a First Mover: Advantages and Disadvantages

    A famous cliché contends that “the early bird gets the worm.” Applied to the business world, the cliché

    suggests that certain benefits are available to a first mover into a market that will not be available to later

    entrants (Figure 6.1 "Making Competitive Moves"). A first-mover advantage exists when making the

    initial move into a market allows a firm to establish a dominant position that other firms struggle to

    overcome. For example, Apple’s creation of a user-friendly, small computer in the early 1980s helped

    fuel a reputation for creativity and innovation that persists today. Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC)

    was able to develop a strong bond with Chinese officials by being the first Western restaurant chain

    to enter China. Today, KFC is the leading Western fast-food chain in this rapidly growing market.

    Genentech’s early development of biotechnology allowed it to overcome many of the

    pharmaceutical industry’s traditional entry barriers (such as financial capital and distribution networks)

    and become a profitable firm. Decisions to be first movers helped all three firms to be successful in their

    respective industries. [1]

    On the other hand, a first mover cannot be sure that customers will embrace its offering, making a first

    move inherently risky. Apple’s attempt to pioneer the personal digital assistant market, through its

    Newton, was a financial disaster. The first mover also bears the costs of developing the product and

    educating customers. Others may learn from the first mover’s successes and failures, allowing them to

    cheaply copy or improve the product. In creating the Palm Pilot, for example, 3Com was able to build on

    Apple’s earlier mistakes. Matsushita often refines consumer electronic products, such as compact disc

    players and projection televisions, after Sony or another first mover establishes demand. In many

    industries, knowledge diffusion and public-information requirements make such imitation increasingly

    easy.

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    One caution is that first movers must be willing to commit sufficient resources to follow through on their

    pioneering efforts. RCA and Westinghouse were the first firms to develop active-matrix LCD display

    technology, but their executives did not provide the resources needed to sustain the products spawned by

    this technology. Today, these firms are not even players in this important business segment that supplies

    screens for notebook computers, camcorders, medical instruments, and many other products.

    To date, the evidence is mixed regarding whether being a first mover leads to success. One research study

    of 1,226 businesses over a fifty-five-year period found that first movers typically enjoy an advantage over

    rivals for about a decade, but other studies have suggested that first moving offers little or no advantages.

    Perhaps the best question that executives can ask themselves when deciding whether to be a first mover

    is, how likely is this move to provide my firm with a sustainable competitive advantage? First moves that

    build on strategic resources such as patented technology are difficult for rivals to imitate and thus are

    likely to succeed. For example, Pfizer enjoyed a monopoly in the erectile dysfunction market for five years

    with its patented drug Viagra before two rival products (Cialis and Levitra) were developed by other

    pharmaceutical firms. Despite facing stiff competition, Viagra continues to raise about $1.9 billion in sales

    for Pfizer annually. [2]

    In contrast, E-Trade Group’s creation in 2003 of the portable mortgage seemed doomed to fail because it

    did not leverage strategic resources. This innovation allowed customers to keep an existing mortgage

    when they move to a new home. Bigger banks could easily copy the portable mortgage if it gained

    customer acceptance, undermining E-Trade’s ability to profit from its first move.

    Disruptive Innovation

    Some firms have the opportunity to shake up their industry by introducing a disruptive innovation—an

    innovation that conflicts with, and threatens to replace, traditional approaches to competing within an

    industry. The iPad has proved to be a disruptive innovation since its introduction by Apple in 2010.

    Many individuals quickly abandoned clunky laptop computers in favor of the sleek tablet format offered

    by the iPad. And as a first mover, Apple was able to claim a large share of the market.

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    The iPad story is unusual, however. Most disruptive innovations are not overnight sensations. Typically, a

    small group of customers embrace a disruptive innovation as early adopters and then a critical mass of

    customers builds over time. An example is digital cameras. Few photographers embraced digital cameras

    initially because they took pictures slowly and offered poor picture quality relative to traditional film

    cameras. As digital cameras have improved, however, they have gradually won over almost everyone that

    takes pictures. Executives who are deciding whether to pursue a disruptive innovation must first make

    sure that their firm can sustain itself during an initial period of slow growth.

    Footholds

    In warfare, many armies establish small positions in geographic territories that they have not occupied

    previously. These footholds provide value in at least two ways. First, owning a

    foothold can dissuade other armies from attacking in the region. Second, owning a foothold gives an army

    a quick strike capability in a territory if the army needs to expand its reach.

    Similarly, some organizations find it valuable to establish footholds in certain markets. Within the context

    of business, a foothold is a small position that a firm intentionally establishes within a market in which it

    does not yet compete.[3] Swedish furniture seller IKEA is a firm that relies on footholds. When IKEA enters

    a new country, it opens just one store. This store is then used as a showcase to establish IKEA’s brand.

    Once IKEA gains brand recognition in a country, more stores are established. [4]

    Pharmaceutical giants such as Merck often obtain footholds in emerging areas of medicine. In December

    2010, for example, Merck purchased SmartCells Inc., a company that was developing a possible new

    treatment for diabetes. In May 2011, Merck acquired an equity stake in BeiGene Ltd., a Chinese firm that

    was developing novel cancer treatments and detection methods. Competitive moves such as these offer

    Merck relatively low-cost platforms from which it can expand if clinical studies reveal that the treatments

    are effective.

    Blue Ocean Strategy

    It is best to win without fighting.

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    Sun-Tzu, The Art of War

    A blue ocean strategy involves creating a new, untapped market rather than competing with rivals in an

    existing market. [5] This strategy follows the approach recommended by the ancient master of strategy

    Sun-Tzu in the quote above. Instead of trying to outmaneuver its competition, a firm using a blue ocean

    strategy tries to make the competition irrelevant. Baseball legend Wee Willie Keeler offered a similar idea

    when asked how to become a better hitter: “Hit ’em where they ain’t.” In other words, hit the baseball where

    there are no fielders rather than trying to overwhelm the fielders with a ball hit directly at them.

    Nintendo openly acknowledges following a blue ocean strategy in its efforts to invent new markets. In

    2006, Perrin Kaplan, Nintendo’s vice president of marketing and corporate affairs for Nintendo of

    America noted in an interview, “We’re making games that are expanding our base of consumers in Japan

    and America. Yes, those who’ve always played games are still playing, but we’ve got people who’ve never

    played to start loving it with titles like Nintendogs, Animal Crossing and Brain Games. These games are

    blue ocean in action.” [6] Other examples of companies creating new markets include FedEx’s invention of

    the fast-shipping business and eBay’s invention of online auctions.

    Bricolage

    Bricolage is a concept that is borrowed from the arts and that, like blue ocean strategy, stresses moves that

    create new markets. Bricolage means using whatever materials and resources happen to be available as

    the inputs into a creative process. A good example is offered by one of the greatest inventions in the

    history of civilization: the printing press. As noted in the Wall Street Journal, “The printing press is a

    classic combinatorial innovation. Each of its key elements—the movable type, the ink, the paper and the

    press itself—had been developed separately well before Johannes Gutenberg printed his first Bible in the

    15th century. Movable type, for instance, had been independently conceived by a Chinese blacksmith

    named Pi Sheng four centuries earlier. The press itself was adapted from a screw press that was being

    used in Germany for the mass production of wine.” [7] Gutenberg took materials that others had created

    and used them in a unique and productive way.

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    Executives apply the concept of bricolage when they combine ideas from existing businesses to create a

    new business. Think miniature golf is boring? Not when you play at one of Monster Mini Golf’s more than

    twenty-five locations. This company couples a miniature golf course with the thrills of a haunted house. In

    April 2011, Monster Mini Golf announced plans to partner with the rock band KISS to create a “custom-

    designed, frightfully fun course [that] will feature animated KISS and monster props lurking in all 18

    fairways” in Las Vegas. [8]

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    Braveheart meets heavy metal when TURISAS takes the stage.

    Image courtesy of Cecil, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Turisas_-_Jalometalli_2008_-

    _02.JPG.

    Many an expectant mother has lamented the unflattering nature of maternity clothes and the boring

    stores that sell them. Coming to the rescue is Belly Couture, a boutique in Lubbock, Texas, that combines

    stylish fashion and maternity clothes. The store’s clever slogan—“Motherhood is haute”—reflects the

    unique niche it fills through bricolage. A wilder example is TURISAS, a Finnish rock band that has created

    a niche for itself by combining heavy metal music with the imagery and costumes of Vikings. The band’s

    website describes their effort at bricolage as “inspirational cinematic battle metal brilliance.” [9]No one

    ever claimed that rock musicians are humble.

    Strategy at the Movies

    Love and Other Drugs

    Competitive moves are chosen within executive suites, but they are implemented by frontline employees.

    Organizational success thus depends just as much on workers such as salespeople excelling in their roles

    as it does on executives’ ability to master strategy. A good illustration is provided in the 2010 film Love

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    and Other Drugs, which was based on the nonfiction book Hard Sell: The Evolution of a Viagra

    Salesman.

    As a new sales representative for drug giant Pfizer, Jamie Randall believed that the best way to increase

    sales of Pfizer’s antidepressant Zoloft in his territory was to convince highly respected physician Dr.

    Knight to prescribe Zoloft rather than the good doctor’s existing preference, Ely Lilly’s drug Prozac. Once

    Dr. Knight began prescribing Zoloft, thought Randall, many other physicians in the area would follow

    suit.

    This straightforward plan proved more difficult to execute than Randall suspected. Sales reps from Ely

    Lilly and other pharmaceutical firms aggressively pushed their firm’s products, such as by providing all-

    expenses-paid trips to Hawaii for nurses in Dr. Knight’s office. Prozac salesman Trey Hannigan went so

    far as to beat up Randall after finding out that Randall had stolen and destroyed Prozac samples. While

    assault is an extreme measure to defend a sales territory, the actions of Hannigan and the other

    salespeople depicted in Love and Other Drugs reflect the challenges that frontline employees face when

    implementing executives’ strategic decisions about competitive moves.

    Image courtesy of Marco, http://www.flickr.com/photos/zi1217/5528068221.

    K E Y T A K E A W A Y

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    Firms can take advantage of a number of competitive moves to shake up or otherwise get ahead in an

    ever-changing business environment. E X E R C I S E S

    1. Find a key trend from the general environment and develop a blue ocean strategy that might capitalize on

    that trend.

    2. Provide an example of a product that, if invented, would work as a disruptive innovation. How

    widespread would be the appeal of this product?

    3. How would you propose to develop a new foothold if your goal was to compete in the fashion industry?

    4. Develop a new good or service applying the concept of bricolage. In other words, select two existing

    businesses and describe the experience that would be created by combining those two businesses.

    [1] This section draws from Ketchen, D. J., Snow, C., & Street, V. 2004. Improving firm performance by matching

    strategic decision making processes to competitive dynamics.Academy of Management Executive, 19(4), 29–43.

    [2] Figures from Standard & Poor’s stock report on Pfizer.

    [3] Upson, J., Ketchen, D. J., Connelly, B., & Ranft, A. Forthcoming. Competitor analysis and foothold

    moves. Academy of Management Journal.

    [4] Hambrick, D. C., & Fredrickson, J. W. 2005. Are you sure you have a strategy? Academy of Management

    Executive, 19, 51–62.

    [5] Kim, W. C., & Mauborgne, R. 2004, October. Blue ocean strategy. Harvard Business Review, 76–85.

    [6] Rosmarin, R. 2006, February 7. Nintendo’s new look. Forbes.com. Retrieved

    fromhttp://www.forbes.com/2006/02/07/xbox-ps3-revolution-cx_rr_0207nintendo.html

    [7] Johnson, S. The genius of the tinkerer. Wall Street Journal. Retrieved from

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703989304575503730101860838.html

    [8] KISS Mini Golf to rock Las Vegas this fall [Press release]. 2011, April 28. Monster Mini Golf website. Retrieved

    from http://www.monsterminigolf.com/mmgkiss.html

    [9] http://www.turisas.com/site/biography/

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    6.2 Responding to Competitors’ Moves

    L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S

    1. Know the three factors that determine the likelihood of a competitor response.

    2. Understand the importance of speed in competitive response.

    3. Describe how mutual forbearance can be beneficial for firms engaged in multipoint competition.

    4. Explain two ways firms can respond to disruptive innovations.

    5. Understand the importance of fighting brands as a competitive response.

    In addition to choosing what moves their firm will make, executives also have to decide whether to

    respond to moves made by rivals. Figuring out how to react, if at all, to a competitor’s move

    ranks among the most challenging decisions that executives must make. Research indicates

    that three factors determine the likelihood that a firm will respond to a competitive move:

    awareness, motivation, and capability. These three factors together determine

    the level of competition tension that exists between rivals.

    An analysis of the “razor wars” illustrates the roles that these factors play. [1]Consider Schick’s

    attempt to grow in the razor-system market with its introduction of the Quattro. This move was

    widely publicized and supported by a $120 million advertising budget. Therefore, its main

    competitor, Gillette, was well aware of the move. Gillette’s motivation to respond was also high.

    Shaving products are a vital market for Gillette, and Schick has become an increasingly formidable

    competitor since its acquisition by Energizer. Finally, Gillette was very capable of responding, given

    its vast resources and its dominant role in the industry. Because all three factors were high, a strong

    response was likely. Indeed, Gillette made a preemptive strike with the introduction of the Sensor 3

    and Venus Devine a month before the Schick Quattro’s projected introduction.

    Although examining a firm’s awareness, motivation, and capability is important, the results of a

    series of moves and countermoves are often difficult to predict and miscalculations can be costly. The

    poor response by Kmart and other retailers to Walmart’s growth in the late 1970s illustrates this

    point. In discussing Kmart’s parent corporation (Kresge), a stock analyst at that time wrote, “While

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    we don’t expect Kresge to stage any massive invasion of Walmart’s existing territory, Kresge could

    logically act to contain Walmart’s geographical expansion.…Assuming some containment policy on

    Kresge’s part, Walmart could run into serious problems in the next few years.” Kmart executives also

    received but ignored early internal warnings about Walmart. A former member of Kmart’s board of

    directors lamented, “I tried to advise the company’s management of just what a serious threat I

    thought [Sam Walton, founder of Walmart] was. But it wasn’t until fairly recently that they took him

    seriously.” While the threat of Walmart growth was apparent to some observers, Kmart executives

    failed to respond. Competition with Walmart later drove Kmart into bankruptcy.

    Speed Kills

    Executives in many markets must cope with a rapid-fire barrage of attacks from rivals, such as head-to-

    head advertising campaigns, price cuts, and attempts to grab key customers. If a firm is going to respond

    to a competitor’s move, doing so quickly is important. If there is a long delay between an attack and a

    response, this generally provides the attacker with an edge. For example, PepsiCo made the mistake of

    waiting fifteen months to copy Coca-Cola’s May 2002 introduction of Vanilla Coke. In the interim, Vanilla

    Coke carved out a significant market niche; 29 percent of US households had purchased the beverage by

    August 2003, and 90 million cases had been sold.

    In contrast, fast responses tend to prevent such an edge. Pepsi’s spring 2004 announcement of a

    midcalorie cola introduction was quickly followed by a similar announcement by Coke, signaling that

    Coke would not allow this niche to be dominated by its longtime rival. Thus, as former General Electric

    CEO Jack Welch noted in his autobiography, success in most competitive rivalries “is less a function of

    grandiose predictions than it is a result of being able to respond rapidly to real changes as they occur.

    That’s why strategy has to be dynamic and anticipatory.”

    So…We Meet Again

    Multipoint competition adds complexity to decisions about whether to respond to a rival’s moves.

    With multipoint competition, a firm faces the same rival in more than one market. Cigarette makers R. J.

    Reynolds (RJR) and Philip Morris, for example, square off not only in the United States but also in many

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    countries around the world. When a firm has one or more multipoint competitors, executives must realize

    that a competitive move in a market can have effects not only within that market but also within others. In

    the early 1990s, RJR started using lower-priced cigarette brands in the United States to gain customers.

    Philip Morris responded in two ways. The first response was cutting prices in the United States to protect

    its market share. This started a price war that ultimately hurt both companies. Second, Philip Morris

    started building market share in Eastern Europe where RJR had been establishing a strong position. This

    combination of moves forced RJR to protect its market share in the United States and neglect Eastern

    Europe.

    If rivals are able to establish mutual forbearance, then multipoint competition can help them be

    successful. Mutual forbearance occurs when rivals do not act aggressively because each recognizes that

    the other can retaliate in multiple markets. In the late 1990s, Southwest Airlines and United Airlines

    competed in some but not all markets. United announced plans to form a new division that would move

    into some of Southwest’s other routes. Southwest CEO Herb Kelleher publicly threatened to retaliate in

    several shared markets. United then backed down, and Southwest had no reason to attack. The result was

    better performance for both firms. Similarly, in hindsight, both RJR and Philip Morris probably would

    have been more profitable had RJR not tried to steal market share in the first place. Thus recognizing and

    acting on potential forbearance can lead to better performance through firms not competing away their

    profits, while failure to do so can be costly.

    Responding to a Disruptive Innovation

    When a rival introduces a disruptive innovation that conflicts with the industry’s current competitive

    practices, such as the emergence of online stock trading in the late 1990s, executives choose from among

    three main responses. First, executives may believe that the innovation will not replace established

    offerings entirely and thus may choose to focus on their traditional modes of business while ignoring the

    disruption. For example, many traditional bookstores such as Barnes & Noble did not consider book sales

    on Amazon to be a competitive threat until Amazon began to take market share from them. Second, a firm

    can counter the challenge by attacking along a different dimension. For example, Apple responded to the

    direct sales of cheap computers by Dell and Gateway by adding power and versatility to its products. The

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    third possible response is to simply match the competitor’s move. Merrill Lynch, for example, confronted

    online trading by forming its own Internet-based unit. Here the firm risks cannibalizing its traditional

    business, but executives may find that their response attracts an entirely new segment of customers.

    Fighting Brands: Get Ready to Rumble

    A firm’s success can be undermined when a competitor tries to lure away its customers by charging lower

    prices for its goods or services. Such a scenario is especially scary if the quality of the competitor’s

    offerings is reasonably comparable to the firm’s. One possible response would be for the firm to lower its

    prices to prevent customers from abandoning it. This can be effective in the short term, but it creates a

    long-term problem. Specifically, the firm will have trouble increasing its prices back to their original level

    in the future because charging lower prices for a time will devalue the firm’s brand and make customers

    question why they should accept price increases.

    The creation of a fighting brand is a move that can prevent this problem. Afighting brand is a lower-end

    brand that a firm introduces to try to protect the firm’s market share without damaging the firm’s existing

    brands. In the late 1980s, General Motors (GM) was troubled by the extent to which the sales of small,

    inexpensive Japanese cars were growing in the United States. GM wanted to recapture lost sales, but it did

    not want to harm its existing brands, such as Chevrolet, Buick, and Cadillac, by putting their names on

    low-end cars. GM’s solution was to sell small, inexpensive cars under a new brand: Geo.

    Interestingly, several of Geo’s models were produced in joint ventures between GM and the same

    Japanese automakers that the Geo brand was created to fight. A sedan called the Prizm was built side by

    side with the Toyota Corolla by the New United Motor Manufacturing Incorporated (NUMMI), a factory

    co-owned by GM and Toyota. The two cars were virtually identical except for minor cosmetic differences.

    A smaller car (the Metro) and a compact sport utility vehicle (the Tracker) were produced by a joint

    venture between GM and Suzuki. By 1998, the US car market revolved around higher-quality vehicles, and

    the low-end Geo brand was discontinued.

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    The Geo brand was known for its low price and good gas mileage, not for its styling.

    Image courtesy of Bull-

    Doser,http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6a/Geo_Metro_Convertible.JPG.

    Some fighting brands are rather short lived. Merck’s failed attempt to protect market share in Germany by

    creating a fighting brand is an example. Zocor, a treatment for high cholesterol, was set to lose its German

    patent in 2003. Merck tried to keep its high profit margin for Zocor intact until the patent expired as well

    as preparing for the inevitable competition with generic drugmakers by creating a lower-priced brand,

    Zocor MSD. Once the patent expired, however, the new brand was not priced low enough to keep

    customers from switching to generics. Merck soon abandoned the Zocor MSD brand. [2]

    Two major airlines experienced similar futility. In response to the growing success of discount airlines

    such as Southwest, AirTran, Jet Blue, and Frontier, both United Airlines and Delta Airlines created

    fighting brands. United launched Ted in 2004 and discontinued it in 2009. Delta’s Song had an even

    shorter existence. It was started in 2003 and was ended in 2006. Southwest’s acquisition of AirTran in

    2011 created a large airline that may make United and Delta lament that they were not able to make their

    own discount brands successful.

    Despite these missteps, the use of fighting brands is a time-tested competitive move. For example, very

    successful fighting brands were launched forty years apart by Anheuser-Busch and Intel. After Anheuser-

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    Busch increased the prices charged by its existing brands in the mid-1950s (Budweiser and Michelob),

    smaller brewers started gaining market share. In response, Anheuser-Busch created a lower-priced brand:

    Busch. The new brand won back the market share that had been lost and remains an important part of

    Anheuser-Busch’s brand portfolio today. In the late 1990s, silicon chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices

    started undercutting the prices charged by industry leader Intel. Intel responded by creating the Celeron

    brand of silicon chips, a brand that has preserved Intel’s market share without undermining profits. Wise

    strategic moves such as the creation of the Celeron brand help explain why Intel ranks thirty-second

    on Fortune magazine’s list of the “World’s Most Admired Corporations.” Meanwhile, Anheuser-Busch is

    the second most admired beverage firm, ranking behind Coca-Cola.

    K E Y T A K E A W A Y

    When threatened by the competitive actions of rivals, firms possess numerous ways to respond,

    depending on the severity of the threat.

    E X E R C I S E S

    1. Why might local restaurants not be in the position to respond to large franchises or chains? What can

    local restaurants do to avoid being ruined by chain restaurants?

    2. If a new alternative fuel was found in the auto industry, what are two ways existing car manufacturers

    might respond to this disruptive innovation?

    3. How might a firm such as Apple computers use a fighting brand?

    [1] Portions of this section are adapted from Ketchen, D. J., Snow, C., & Street, V. 2004. Improving firm

    performance by matching strategic decision making processes to competitive dynamics. Academy of Management

    Executive, 19(4) 29-43. Ibid.

    [2] Ritson, M. 2009, October. Should you launch a fighter brand? Harvard Business Review, 65–81.

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    6.3 Making Cooperative Moves

    L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S

    1. Know the four types of cooperative moves.

    2. Understand the benefits of taking quick and decisive action.

    In addition to competitive moves, firms can benefit from cooperating with one another. Cooperative

    moves such as forming joint ventures and strategic alliances may allow firms to enjoy successes that

    might not otherwise be reached. This is because cooperation enables firms to share (rather than duplicate)

    resources and to learn from one another’s strengths. Firms that enter cooperative relationships

    take on risks, however, including the loss of ontrol over operations, possible transfer of valuable secrets

    to other firms, and possibly being taken advantage of by partners.[1]

    Joint Ventures

    A joint venture is a cooperative arrangement that involves two or more organizations each contributing to

    the creation of a new entity. The partners in a joint venture share decision-making authority, control of

    the operation, and any profits that the joint venture earns.

    Sometimes two firms create a joint venture to deal with a shared opportunity. In April 2011, a joint

    venture was created between Merck and Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., an Indian pharmaceutical

    company. The purpose of the joint venture is to create and sell generic drugs in developing countries. In a

    press release, a top executive at Sun stressed that each side has important strengths to contribute: “This

    joint venture reinforces [Sun’s] strategy of partnering to launch products using our highly innovative

    delivery technologies around the world. Merck has an unrivalled reputation as a world leading,

    innovative, research-driven pharmaceutical company.” [2] Both firms contributed executives to the new

    organization, reflecting the shared decision making and control involved in joint ventures.

    In other cases, a joint venture is designed to counter a shared threat. In 2007, brewers SABMiller and

    Molson Coors Brewing Company created a joint venture called MillerCoors that combines the firms’ beer

    operations in the United States. Miller and Coors found it useful to join their US forces to better compete

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    against their giant rival Anheuser-Busch, but the two parent companies remain separate. The joint

    venture controls a wide array of brands, including Miller Lite, Coors Light, Blue Moon Belgian White,

    Coors Banquet, Foster’s, Henry Weinhard’s, Icehouse, Keystone Premium, Leinenkugel’s, Killian’s Irish

    Red, Miller Genuine Draft, Miller High Life, Milwaukee’s Best, Molson Canadian, Peroni Nastro Azzurro,

    Pilsner Urquell, and Red Dog. This diverse portfolio makes MillerCoors a more potent adversary for

    Anheuser-Busch than either Miller or Coors would be alone.

    Strategic Alliances

    A strategic alliance is a cooperative arrangement between two or more organizations that does not involve

    the creation of a new entity. In June 2011, for example, Twitter announced the formation of a strategic

    alliance with Yahoo! Japan. The alliance involves relevant Tweets appearing within various functions

    offered by Yahoo! Japan. [3] The alliance simply involves the two firms collaborating as opposed to

    creating a new entity together.

    The pharmaceutical industry is the location of many strategic alliances. In January 2011, for example, a

    strategic alliance between Merck and PAREXEL International Corporation was announced. Within this

    alliance, the two companies collaborate on biotechnology efforts known as biosimilars. This alliance could

    be quite important to Merck because the global market for biosimilars has been predicted to rise from

    $235 million in 2010 to $4.8 billion by 2015. [4]

    Colocation

    Colocation occurs when goods and services offered under different brands are located close to one

    another. In many cities, for examples, theaters and art galleries are clustered together in one

    neighborhood. Auto malls that contain several different car dealerships are found in many areas.

    Restaurants and hotels are often located near on another too. By providing customers with a variety of

    choices, a set of colocated firms can attract a bigger set of customers collectively than the sum that could

    be attracted to individual locations. If a desired play is sold out, a restaurant overcrowded, or a hotel

    overbooked, many customers simply patronize another firm in the area.

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    Because of these benefits, savvy executives in some firms colocate their own brands. The industry that

    Brinker International competes within is revealed by its stock ticker symbol: EAT. This firm often sites

    outlets of the multiple restaurant chains it owns on the same street. Marriott’s Courtyard and Fairfield Inn

    often sit side by side. Yum! Brands takes this clustering strategy one step further by locating more than

    one of its brands—A&W, Long John Silver’s, Taco Bell, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and Pizza Hut—within a

    single store.

    Co-opetition

    Although competition and cooperation are usually viewed as separate processes, the concept of co-

    opetition highlights a complex interaction that is becoming increasingly popular in many industries. Ray

    Noorda, the founder of software firm Novell, coined the term to refer to a blending of competition and

    cooperation between two firms. As explained in this chapter’s opening vignette, for example, Merck and

    Roche are rivals in some markets, but the firms are working together to develop tests to detect cancer and

    to promote a hepatitis treatment. NEC (a Japanese electronics company) has three different relationships

    with Hewlett-Packard Co.: customer, supplier, and competitor. Some units of each company work

    cooperatively with the other company, while other units are direct competitors. NEC and Hewlett-Packard

    could be described as “frienemies”—part friends and part enemies.

    Toyota and General Motors provide a well-known example of co-opetition. In terms of cooperation,

    Toyota and GM vehicles were produced side by side for many years at the jointly owned New United

    Motor Manufacturing Incorporated (NUMMI) in Fremont, California. While Honda and Nissan used

    wholly owned plants to begin producing cars in the United States, NUMMI offered Toyota a lower-risk

    means of entering the US market. This entry mode was desirable to Toyota because its top executives were

    not confident that Japanese-style management would work in the United States. Meanwhile, the venture

    offered GM the chance to learn Japanese management and production techniques—skills that were later

    used in GM’s facilities. NUMMI offered both companies economies of scale in manufacturing and the

    chance to collaborate on automobile designs. Meanwhile, Toyota and GM compete for market share

    around the world. In recent years, the firms have been the world’s two largest automakers, and they have

    traded the top spot over time.

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    In their book titled, not surprisingly, Co-opetition, A. M. Brandenberger and B. J. Nalebuff suggest that

    cooperation is generally best suited for “creating a pie,” while competition is best suited for “dividing it

    up.” [5] In other words, firms tend to cooperate in activities located far in the value chain from customers,

    while competition generally occurs close to customers. The NUMMI example illustrates this tendency—

    GM and Toyota worked together on design and manufacturing but worked separately on distribution,

    sales, and marketing. Similarly, a research study focused on Scandinavian firms found that, in the mining

    equipment industry, firms cooperated in material development, but they competed in product

    development and marketing. In the brewing industry, firms worked together on the return of used bottles

    but not in distribution. [6]

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    Joseph Addison, an eighteenth-century poet, is often credited with coining the phrase “He who hesitates

    is lost.” This proverb is especially meaningful in today’s business world. It is easy for executives to become

    paralyzed by the dizzying array of competitive and cooperative moves available to them. Given the fast-

    paced nature of most industries today, hesitation can lead to disaster. Some observers have suggested that

    competition in many settings has transformed into hypercompetition, which involves very rapid and

    unpredictable moves and countermoves that can undermine competitive advantages. Under such

    conditions, it is often better to make a reasonable move quickly rather than hoping to uncover the perfect

    move through extensive and time-consuming analysis.

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    The importance of learning also contributes to the value of adopting a “get moving” mentality. This is

    illustrated in Miroslav Holub’s poem “Brief Thoughts on Maps.” The discovery that one soldier had a map

    gave the soldiers the confidence to start moving rather than continuing to hesitate and remaining lost.

    Once they started moving, the soldiers could rely on their skill and training to learn what would work and

    what would not. Similarly, success in business often depends on executives learning from a series of

    competitive and cooperative moves, not on selecting ideal moves.

    K E Y T A K E A W A Y

    Cooperating with other firms is sometimes a more lucrative and beneficial approach than directly

    attacking competing firms.

    E X E R C I S E S

    1. How could a family jewelry store use one of the cooperative moves mentioned in this section?? What

    type of organization might be a good cooperative partner for a family jewelry store?

    2. Why is it that “any old map will do” sometimes in relation to strategic actions?

    [1] Portions of this section are adapted from Ketchen, D. J., Snow, C., & Street, V. 2004. Improving firm

    performance by matching strategic decision making processes to competitive dynamics. Academy of Management

    Executive, 19(4), 29-43. Ibid.

    [2] Merck & Co., Inc., and Sun Pharma establish joint venture to develop and commercialize novel formulations

    and combinations of medicines in emerging markets [Press release]. 2011, April 11. Merck website. Retrieved

    fromhttp://www.merck.com/licensing/our-partnership/sun-partnership.html

    [3] Rao, L. 2011, June 14. Twitter announces “strategic alliance” with Yahoo Japan [Blog post]. Techcrunch website.

    Retrieved fromhttp://www.techcrunch.com/2011/06/14/twitter-announces-firehose-partnership-with-yahoo-

    japan

    [4] Global biosimilars market to reach US$4.8 billion by 2015, according to a new report by Global Industry

    Analysts, Inc. [Press release]. 2011, February 15. PRWeb website. Retrieved

    from http://www.prweb.com/releases/biosimilars/human_growth _hormone/prweb8131268.htm

    [5] Brandenberger, A. M., & Nalebuff, B. J. 1996. Co-opetition. New York, NY: Doubleday.

    Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books Saylor.org 204

    [6] Bengtsson, M., & Kock, S. 2000. “Coopetition” in business networks—to cooperate and compete

    simultaneously. Industrial Marketing Management, 29(5), 411–426.

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    6.4 Conclusion

    This chapter explains competitive and cooperative moves that executives may choose from when

    challenged by competitors. Executives may choose to act swiftly by being a first mover in their

    market, and their firms may benefit if they are offering disruptive innovations to an industry.

    Executives may also choose a more conservative route by establishing a foothold within an area that

    can serve as a launching point or by avoiding existing competitors overall by using a blue ocean

    strategy. When firms are on the receiving end of a competitive attack, they are likely to retaliate to

    the extent that they possess awareness, motivation, and capability. While responding quickly is often

    beneficial, mutual forbearance can also be an effective approach. When firms encounter a potentially

    disruptive innovation, they might ignore the threat, confront it head on, or attack along a different

    dimension. Executives may also react to competitive attacks by using fighting brands. Rather than

    engaging in a head-to-head battle with competitors, executives may also choose to engage in a

    cooperative strategy such as a joint venture, strategic alliance, colocation, or co-opetition. Regardless

    of the decision executives make, in many cases any attempt to act on a viable road map will result in

    progress that will get the firm moving in the right direction.

    E X E R C I S E S

    1. Divide your class into four or eight groups, depending on the size of the class. Each group should select a

    different industry. Find examples of competitive and cooperative moves that you would recommend if

    hired as a consultant for a firm in that industry.

    2. What types of cooperative moves could your college or university use to partner with local, national, and

    international businesses? What benefits and risks would be created by making these moves?

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