Chapter 6 Module
Chapter 6 Module
CORPORATE-LEVEL STRATEGY
■ Corporate-level strategy’s value is ultimately
determined by the degree to which “the businesses
in the portfolio are worth more under the
management of the company than they would be
under any other ownership”
1. Low Levels
1. Expense incurred in first business and ■ MARKET POWER: while Google appears to be
knowledge transfer reduces resource increasing its vertical integration, many
allocation for second business manufacturing firms have been reducing vertical
2. Intangible resources difficult for integration to gain market power
competitors to understand and imitate,
■ DEINTEGRATION: developing independent supplier
so immediate competitive advantage
networks - the focus of many manufacturing firms,
over competition
such as Intel and Dell, and Ford and General Motors
SIMULTANEOUS OPERATIONAL RELATEDNESS AND ● EQUITY - investors take equity positions
CORPORATE RELATEDNESS (ownership) with high expected future cash-flow
values.
■ The ability to simultaneously create economies of
scope by sharing activities (operational relatedness) ● DEBT - debt holders try to improve the value of
and transferring core competencies (corporate their investments by taking \ stakes in businesses
relatedness) is difficult for competitors to understand with high growth and profitability prospects
and learn how to imitate
INTERNAL CAPITAL MARKET - In large diversified firms,
■ Involves managing two sources of knowledge capital distributions may generate gains from
simultaneously: internal capital market allocations that
INCENTIVES TO DIVERSIFY
External incentives
1. Antitrust Regulation
Incentives to diversify