9 Corporate Strategy and Vertical Integration

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SEU_MGT510_Module09_PPT_Ch10.ppt

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CONTEMPORARY STRATEGY ANALYSIS

tenth edition

Robert M. Grant

John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2019

Chapter 10

Vertical Integration and the Scope of the Firm

  • Transaction Costs and the Scope of the Firm
  • The Benefits and Costs of Vertical Integration
  • Designing Vertical Relationships

Vertical Integration and

the Scope of the Firm

Copyright © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

OUTLINE

33

  • Business Strategy is concerned with how a firm computes within a particular market
  • Corporate Strategy is concerned with where a firm competes, i.e. the scope of its activities
  • The dimensions of scope are:
  • vertical scope
  • geographical scope
  • product scope

From Business Strategy to Corporate Strategy: The Scope of the Firm

Copyright © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

TRANSACTION COSTS AND THE SCOPE OF THE FIRM

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Multiple specialist firms vs. integration within a single firm

Specialized firms

Single integrated firm

Vertical scope:

Electric cars

Product scope:

Entertainment

Geographical

scope:

Banking

LG (Battery)

Ford (Final assembly)

Magna (Drivetrain)

S Video games

O Consumer

N electronics

Y Movies

Wells Fargo (US)

Banco Bradesco (Brazil)

Lloyds Banking Group (UK)

T Battery

E

S Drivetrain

L

A Assembly

Nintendo (Video games)

MGM (Movies)

Panasonic (Consumer electronics)

Ford Focus Electric

H US

S UK

B Brazil

C + other countries

TRANSACTION COSTS AND THE SCOPE OF THE FIRM

Expanding Scale and Scope

  • scale economies from new technologies
  • new management tools
  • multidivisional structure
  • computers
  • international expansion

Restructuring, Refocusing and Downsizing:

  • Quest for shareholder value: focus on core competences and core businesses
  • Turbulent business environment: inflexibility of large, complex hierarchies
  • Digital revolution

Top 100 companies’ share of total employment (%)

The changing scale and scope of large US companies

Consolidation through mergers and acquisitions

Quest for scale and market dominance in both mature and hi-tech sectors

Second Industrial Revolution: Growth of industrial giants assisted by electricity, the telephone, innovations in

management and organization

Railways, canals, and telegraph expand firms geographical reach

TRANSACTION COSTS AND THE SCOPE OF THE FIRM

Copyright © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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Chart1

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1860 1860 1860
1870 1870 1870
1880 1880 1880
1890 1890 1890
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2020 2020 2020
First Industrial Revolution: Mechanization and the factory system
Series 1
Column1
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Sheet1

Series 1 Column1 Column2
1800 0.7
1810 0.5
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1840 1
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1860 1.9
1870 2.3
1880 2.9
1890 3.1
1900 4.2
1910 4.9
1920 6
1930 6.7
1940 6.8
1950 9.6
1960 13
1970 14.4
1980 13.8
1990 11.6
2000 11.3
2010 11.5
2020 11.7

  • Technical economies from integrating processes e.g. iron and steel production

—but doesn’t necessarily require common ownership

  • Avoids transactions costs of market contracts in situations where there are:

-- small numbers of firms

-- transaction-specific investments

-- opportunism and strategic misrepresentation

-- taxes and regulations on market transactions

  • Superior coordination

The Benefits of Vertical Integration

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Copyright © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

THE COSTS AND BENEFITS OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION

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  • Differences in optimal scale of operation between different stages of production prevent balanced vertical integration
  • Inhibits development of distinctive capabilities
  • Difficulties of managing strategically different businesses
  • Incentive problems: lack of “high-powered” incentives
  • Limits flexibility -- in responding to demand fluctuations

-- in responding to changes in technology,

customer preferences, etc.

(But, may be conducive to system-wide flexibility)

  • Compounding of risk

The Costs of Vertical Integration

Copyright © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

THE COSTS AND BENEFITS OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION

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How many firms in the adjacent stage?

Do transaction-specific investments necessary?

The greater the need for transaction-specific investments, the greater the advantages of VI

Is information evenly distributed across the stages?

The greater are information asymmetries, the greater the advantages of VI

Is there uncertainty over the period of the relationship?

The greater the uncertainty, the more incomplete is the contract and the greater the advantages of VI

How similar is optimal scale between the two stages?

The greater the dissimilarity, the less advantageous is VI

How strategically similar are the two stages?

Do capabilities in the adjacent stage need to be continually upgraded?

The fewer the number, the less advantageous is VI

Are profit incentives critical to performance?

The greater the need for high-powered incentives the greater the disadvantages of VI

Unpredictable demand reduces advantages of VI

Is market demand uncertain?

The greater the need for capability development the greater the disadvantages of VI

Is the adjacent stage highly risky?

VI tends to compound risk

Characteristics of the vertical relationship

Implications for VI

Vertical Integration v. Outsourcing: Key Considerations

Do transaction-specific investments necessary?

THE COSTS AND BENEFITS OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION

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Iron ore

mining

Steel

production

Steel strip

production

Can

making

MARKET

CONTRACTS

VERTICAL

INTEGRATION

MARKET

CONTRACTS

Canning of

food, drink, oil, etc.

VERTICAL

INTEGRATION,

AND MARKET

CONTRACTS

What factors explain why some stages are vertically integrated,

while others are linked by market transactions?

The Value Chain for Steel Cans

Copyright © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

THE COSTS AND BENEFITS OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION

  • Choices not limited to vertical integration or arms-length market contracts:

-- Several intermediate types of vertical relationship: these may combine benefits of both market transactions and internalization

  • Key issues in designing vertical relationships:

-- No generic solution: depends upon the resources,

capabilities and strategy of the individual firm

-- How is risk to be allocated between the parties?

-- Are the incentives appropriate?

Long-Term Contracts and

Quasi-Vertical Integration

Copyright © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

DESIGNING VERTICAL RELATIONSHIPS

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Spot sales/ purchases

Long-term contracts

Agency agreements

Franchises

Vertical integration

Joint ventures

Informal supplier/ customer relationships

Supplier/ customer partnerships

Degree of Commitment

Formalization

Different Types of Vertical Relationship

Low

High

Low

High

Copyright © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

DESIGNING VERTICAL RELATIONSHIPS

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  • From competitive contracting to supplier partnerships, e.g. in autos
  • From vertical integration to outsourcing (not just components, also IT, distribution, and administrative services).
  • Diffusion of franchising
  • Technology partnerships (e.g. IBM- Apple; Canon- HP)
  • Inter-firm networks

General conclusion:- boundaries between firms and markets are becoming increasingly blurred.

Recent Trends in Vertical Relationships

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DESIGNING VERTICAL RELATIONSHIPS

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