| 
81. | 
A
  market that mainly competes on the basis of price and has stagnant growth is
  characteristic of what life cycle stage?  
 
 
 
 
In the maturity stage of the
  industry life cycle, aggregate industry demand softens. As markets become
  saturated, there are few new adopters. Rivalry among existing rivals
  intensifies because of fierce price competition at the same time that
  expenses associated with attracting new buyers are rising. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 05-07 The importance of considering the industry life cycle to determine a firm's business-level strategy and its relative emphasis on functional area strategies and value-creating activities. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Industry Life Cycle Stages: Strategic Implications | 
| 
82. | 
As
  markets mature, ___________.  
 
 
 
 
In the maturity stage of the
  industry life cycle, advantages based on efficient manufacturing operations
  and process engineering become more important for keeping costs low as
  customers become more price sensitive. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-07 The importance of considering the industry life cycle to determine a firm's business-level strategy and its relative emphasis on functional area strategies and value-creating activities. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Industry Life Cycle Stages: Strategic Implications | 
| 
83. | 
The
  size of pricing and differentiation advantages between competitors decreases
  in which stage of the market life cycle?  
 
 
 
 
In the maturity stage of the
  industry life cycle, rivalry among existing rivals intensifies because of
  fierce price competition at the same time that expenses associated with attracting
  new buyers are rising. It also becomes more difficult for firms to
  differentiate their offerings, because users have a greater understanding of
  products and services. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-07 The importance of considering the industry life cycle to determine a firm's business-level strategy and its relative emphasis on functional area strategies and value-creating activities. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Industry Life Cycle Stages: Strategic Implications | 
| 
84. | 
Which
  of the following is most often true of mature markets?  
 
 
 
 
In the maturity stage of the
  industry life cycle, rivalry among existing rivals intensifies because of
  fierce price competition at the same time that expenses associated with
  attracting new buyers are rising. It also becomes more difficult for firms to
  differentiate their offerings, because users have a greater understanding of
  products and services. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-07 The importance of considering the industry life cycle to determine a firm's business-level strategy and its relative emphasis on functional area strategies and value-creating activities. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Industry Life Cycle Stages: Strategic Implications | 
| 
85. | 
In
  the __________ stage of the industry life cycle, there are few segments, the
  emphasis on process design is low, and the major functional areas of concern
  are general management and finance.  
 
 
 
 
In the decline stage of the
  industry life cycle, there are few segments, the emphasis on process design
  is low, and the major functional areas of concern are general management and
  finance. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 05-07 The importance of considering the industry life cycle to determine a firm's business-level strategy and its relative emphasis on functional area strategies and value-creating activities. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Industry Life Cycle Stages: Strategic Implications | 
| 
86. | 
The
  most likely time to pursue a harvest strategy is in a situation of
  _______.  
 
 
 
 
Four basic strategies are
  available in the decline phase: maintaining, harvesting, exiting, or
  consolidating. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-07 The importance of considering the industry life cycle to determine a firm's business-level strategy and its relative emphasis on functional area strategies and value-creating activities. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Industry Life Cycle Stages: Strategic Implications | 
| 
87. | 
During
  the decline stage of the industry life cycle, __________ refers to obtaining
  as much profit as possible and requires that costs be decreased
  quickly.  
 
 
 
 
Harvesting involves obtaining
  as much profit as possible and requires that costs be reduced quickly. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 05-07 The importance of considering the industry life cycle to determine a firm's business-level strategy and its relative emphasis on functional area strategies and value-creating activities. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Industry Life Cycle Stages: Strategic Implications | 
| 
88. | 
Research
  shows that which of the following is not a strategy used by firms engaged in
  successful turnarounds?  
 
 
 
 
A study of 260 mature
  businesses in need of a turnaround identified three strategies used by
  successful companies: asset and cost surgery, selective product and market
  pruning, and piecemeal productivity improvements. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 05-08 The need for turnaround strategies that enable a firm to reposition its competitive position in an industry. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Industry Life Cycle Stages: Strategic Implications | 
| 
89. | 
Piecemeal
  productivity improvements during a turnaround typically do NOT involve _______.  
 
 
 
 
Piecemeal productivity
  improvements include improving business processes by reengineering them,
  benchmarking specific activities against industry leaders, encouraging
  employee input to identify excess costs, increasing capacity utilization, and
  improving employee productivity. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-08 The need for turnaround strategies that enable a firm to reposition its competitive position in an industry. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Industry Life Cycle Stages: Strategic Implications | 
| 
90. | 
Which
  of the following is not a reason for the successful turnaround that Ford
  experienced in 2011 under CEO Mulally?  
 
 
 
 
First, a plan was executed to
  undertake a dramatic refinancing of the business by raising bank loans
  secured against company assets. Second, the firm concentrated resources on
  the Ford brand and sold off the Premier Automotive Group (PAG) businesses.
  Third, Ford narrowed the range of cars down to 36 from 97 different models.
  Fourth, emphasis was placed on quality and being the best in class. Fifth,
  more shared platforms for building cars economically were installed. Sixth,
  Ford cut half of its shop-floor workforce and a third of its office jobs. By
  2011, 17 factories had been closed and employment was reduced to 75,000 from
  128,000. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 05-08 The need for turnaround strategies that enable a firm to reposition its competitive position in an industry. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Industry Life Cycle Stages: Strategic Implications | 
 
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