1.
|
The
three generic strategies presented by Michael Porter can be shown on two
dimensions: competitive advantage and product life cycle.
FALSE
Michael Porter presented
three generic strategies that a firm can use to achieve competitive
advantage. They can be illustrated on two dimensions: competitive advantage
and strategic target.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 05-01 The central role of competitive advantage in the study of strategic management; and the three generic strategies: overall cost leadership; differentiation; and focus. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
2.
|
The
three generic strategies that Michael Porter believes a firm can use to
overcome the five forces and achieve competitive advantage include overall
price leadership.
FALSE
Michael Porter presented
three generic strategies that a firm can use to overcome the five forces and
achieve competitive advantage. The strategies are: overall cost leadership,
differentiation, and focus.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 05-01 The central role of competitive advantage in the study of strategic management; and the three generic strategies: overall cost leadership; differentiation; and focus. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
3.
|
Concentrating
solely on one form of competitive advantage generally leads to the highest
possible level of profitability.
FALSE
Observation and research
support the notion that firms that identify with one or more of the forms of
competitive advantage outperform those that do not. One study found that
businesses combining forms of competitive advantage (differentiation and
overall cost leadership) outperformed those using a single form.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-01 The central role of competitive advantage in the study of strategic management; and the three generic strategies: overall cost leadership; differentiation; and focus. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
4.
|
A
firm striving for cost leadership will typically spend relatively more on
product related R&D than on process related R&D.
FALSE
Overall cost leadership
requires a tight set of interrelated tactics that include aggressive
construction of efficient-scale facilities, vigorous pursuit of cost
reductions from experience, tight cost and overhead control, and cost
minimization in all activities in the value chain.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-01 The central role of competitive advantage in the study of strategic management; and the three generic strategies: overall cost leadership; differentiation; and focus. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
5.
|
To
generate above average returns, a firm following an overall cost leadership
position should NOT be concerned with attaining parity or proximity on the
basis of differentiation relative to its peers.
FALSE
To generate above-average
performance, a firm following an overall cost leadership position must attain
competitive parity on the basis of differentiation relative to competitors.
In other words, a firm achieving parity is similar to its competitors, or on
par, with respect to differentiated products.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-01 The central role of competitive advantage in the study of strategic management; and the three generic strategies: overall cost leadership; differentiation; and focus. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
6.
|
The
experience curve concept suggests that production costs tend to decrease as
production increases.
TRUE
The experience curve refers
to how business learns to lower costs as it gains experience with production
processes. With experience, unit costs of production decline as output
increases in most industries.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-01 The central role of competitive advantage in the study of strategic management; and the three generic strategies: overall cost leadership; differentiation; and focus. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
7.
|
A
firm can attain an overall cost leadership position by increasing the
management layers in order to reduce overhead costs.
FALSE
In order for a firm to attain
a cost leadership position using its infrastructure, it should decrease the
number of management layers in order to reduce overhead costs.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-01 The central role of competitive advantage in the study of strategic management; and the three generic strategies: overall cost leadership; differentiation; and focus. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
8.
|
A
firm can attain an overall cost leadership position by using automated
technology to reduce scrappage rates.
TRUE
In order for a firm to attain
a cost leadership position using its technology development support activity,
it should use automated technology effectively to reduce scrappage rates.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-01 The central role of competitive advantage in the study of strategic management; and the three generic strategies: overall cost leadership; differentiation; and focus. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
9.
|
A
firm can attain an overall cost leadership position by purchasing media in
large blocks and maximizing sales force utilization through territory
management.
TRUE
In order for a firm to attain
a cost leadership position using its marketing and sales activities it can
purchase media in large blocks and maximize the utilization of its sales
force through territory management.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-01 The central role of competitive advantage in the study of strategic management; and the three generic strategies: overall cost leadership; differentiation; and focus. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
10.
|
The
French automobile maker, Renault, attains competitive advantage by revamping
cars to be more cost efficient.
TRUE
In these difficult
conditions, Renault has been able to carve out a profitable market for
itself, selling low-cost, no-frills cars. Renault responded to this shift by
creating an entry-level car group that was charged with designing and
producing cars for these more cost conscious consumers. Carlos Ghosn, CEO of
Renault, stated that they are working on a new platform that will be
ultra-low-cost.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-02 How the successful attainment of generic strategies can improve a firm's relative power vis-Ã -vis the five forces that determine an industry's average profitability. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
11.
|
Firms
that compete on overall cost leadership are vulnerable if there is an
increase in the cost of the inputs on which the advantage is based.
TRUE
Firms can be vulnerable to
price increases in the factors of production. For example, consider
manufacturing firms based in China which rely on low labor costs. Due to
demographic factors, the supply of workers 16 to 24 years old has peaked and
will drop by a third in the next 12 years, thanks to stringent
family-planning policies that have sharply reduced population growth in
China. This is leading to upward pressure on labor costs in Chinese
factories, undercutting the cost advantage of firms producing there.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-03 The pitfalls managers must avoid in striving to attain generic strategies. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
12.
|
Too
much focus on one or a few value-chain activities can be a pitfall of the
overall cost leadership strategy.
TRUE
Managers should explore all value-chain
activities, including relationships among them, as candidates for cost
reductions.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-03 The pitfalls managers must avoid in striving to attain generic strategies. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
13.
|
A
cost leadership strategy can be at risk of obsolescence of the basis of the
cost advantage.
TRUE
Other firms may develop new
ways of cutting costs, leaving the old cost leaders at a significant
disadvantage. The older cost leaders are often locked into their way of
competing and are unable to respond to the newer, lower-cost means of
competing. This is what happened to the U.S. auto industry in the 1970s.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-03 The pitfalls managers must avoid in striving to attain generic strategies. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
14.
|
A
cost leadership strategy is not susceptible to the risk of reduced
flexibility.
FALSE
Building up a low-cost advantage
often requires significant investments in plant and equipment, distribution
systems, and large, economically scaled operations. As a result, firms often
find that these investments limit their flexibility. As a result, they have
great difficulty responding to changes in the environment.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-03 The pitfalls managers must avoid in striving to attain generic strategies. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
15.
|
The
example of Lexus automobiles in the text points out that a firm can
strengthen its differentiation strategy by achieving integration at multiple
points along the value chain.
TRUE
Lexus provides an example of
how a firm can strengthen its differentiation strategy by achieving
integration at multiple points along the value chain. By the early 1990s it
soared to the top of J. D. Power customer satisfaction ratings. It found that
quality perceptions (design, engineering, and manufacturing) can be strongly
influenced by downstream activities in the value chain (marketing and sales,
service).
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-03 The pitfalls managers must avoid in striving to attain generic strategies. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
16.
|
A
successful differentiation strategy lowers entry barriers because of customer
loyalty and the ability of the firm to provide uniqueness in its products and
services.
FALSE
Differentiation provides
protection against rivalry since brand loyalty lowers customer sensitivity to
price. By increasing margins of the firm, differentiation also avoids the
need for a low-cost position. Higher entry barriers result because of customer
loyalty and the ability to provide uniqueness in its products or services.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-03 The pitfalls managers must avoid in striving to attain generic strategies. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
17.
|
A
successful differentiation strategy increases rivalry since buyers become
more price-sensitive.
FALSE
Differentiation provides
protection against rivalry since brand loyalty lowers customer sensitivity to
price and raises customer switching costs.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-03 The pitfalls managers must avoid in striving to attain generic strategies. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
18.
|
If
a firm has a successful differentiation strategy, it is necessary to attain
parity on cost.
FALSE
Differentiation provides
protection against rivalry since brand loyalty lowers customer sensitivity to
price and raises customer switching costs. By increasing company margins,
differentiation also avoids the need for a low-cost position. Higher entry
barriers result because of customer loyalty and the company's ability to
provide uniqueness in its products or services. Differentiation also provides
higher margins that enable a firm to deal with supplier power. And it reduces
buyer power, because buyers lack comparable alternatives and are therefore
less price sensitive. Supplier power is also decreased because there is a certain
amount of prestige associated with being the supplier to a producer of highly
differentiated products and services. Last, differentiation enhances customer
loyalty, thus reducing the threat from substitutes.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-03 The pitfalls managers must avoid in striving to attain generic strategies. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
19.
|
One
potential pitfall of a differentiation strategy is that identification of the
brand in the marketplace may become diluted through excessive product line
extensions.
TRUE
Potential pitfalls of a
differentiation strategy include dilution of brand identification through
product-line extensions. Firms may erode their quality brand image by adding
products or services with lower prices and less quality. Although this can
increase short-term revenues, it may be detrimental in the long run.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-03 The pitfalls managers must avoid in striving to attain generic strategies. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
20.
|
Focus,
by itself, often constitutes a competitive advantage.
FALSE
A focus strategy is based on
the choice of a narrow competitive scope within an industry. A firm following
this strategy selects a segment or group of segments and tailors its strategy
to serve them. The essence of focus is the exploitation of a particular
market niche. As you might expect, narrow focus itself (like merely being
different as a differentiator) is simply not sufficient for above-average
performance.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-03 The pitfalls managers must avoid in striving to attain generic strategies. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Types of Competitive Advantage and Sustainability |
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