Effects of competitive superiority on firms' strategic behaviour across stages of industry evolution.
Firms are constantly faced with the decision to either adapt or change their strategy based on the stage of industry evolution as well as the actions of their competitors. They often benchmark their own strategies against the actions of competitors who are superior to them. However, they do not alwa...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-354592023-05-19T06:24:03Z Effects of competitive superiority on firms' strategic behaviour across stages of industry evolution. Chung, Joseph Wei Peng. Kim, Luther Yong Wei. Lee, Kuok Howe. Lim Kui Suen, Lewis Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business::Management::Competition Firms are constantly faced with the decision to either adapt or change their strategy based on the stage of industry evolution as well as the actions of their competitors. They often benchmark their own strategies against the actions of competitors who are superior to them. However, they do not always know the likely behaviors of superior competitors across the different stages of industry evolution. To address this knowledge gap, this study examines the behavioral tendencies of competitively superior firms at the different phases of the industry. We consider five major behavioral tendencies of superior firms, namely, advertising aggressiveness, sales force aggressiveness, R&D aggressiveness, exploit versus exploration of growth resources and push versus pull marketing strategies. We measured these tendencies using quantitative data from Markstrat, a marketing strategy simulation which served as a microcosm of real life competitive behavior. We find that competitively superior firms exhibit different behaviors at different phases of the industry evolution: In the initial phase, these firms allocate a greater part of their budget to both advertising and sales force to defend their position, whereas in the uncertainty phase, they allocate more of their budget to R&D to defend their position. In the growth phase, superior firms exploit their resources more than they explore them. Finally, in the maturity phase, these firms tend to employ a push strategy as opposed to a pull strategy. We discuss how the findings of the study can aid mangers in making more informed decisions and how the decisions made by the dominant firm may not always be the best decision despite their superiority. BUSINESS 2010-04-19T03:13:54Z 2010-04-19T03:13:54Z 2010 2010 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/35459 en Nanyang Technological University 64 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Business::Management::Competition Chung, Joseph Wei Peng. Kim, Luther Yong Wei. Lee, Kuok Howe. Effects of competitive superiority on firms' strategic behaviour across stages of industry evolution. |
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Firms are constantly faced with the decision to either adapt or change their strategy based on the stage of industry evolution as well as the actions of their competitors. They often benchmark their own strategies against the actions of competitors who are superior to them. However, they do not always know the likely behaviors of superior competitors across the different stages of industry evolution. To address this knowledge gap, this study examines the behavioral tendencies of competitively superior firms at the different phases of the industry. We consider five major behavioral tendencies of superior firms, namely, advertising aggressiveness, sales force aggressiveness, R&D aggressiveness, exploit versus exploration of growth resources and push versus pull marketing strategies. We measured these tendencies using quantitative data from Markstrat, a marketing strategy simulation which served as a microcosm of real life competitive behavior. We find that competitively superior firms exhibit different behaviors at different phases of the industry evolution: In the initial phase, these firms allocate a greater part of their budget to both advertising and sales force to defend their position, whereas in the uncertainty phase, they allocate more of their budget to R&D to defend their position. In the growth phase, superior firms exploit their resources more than they explore them. Finally, in the maturity phase, these firms tend to employ a push strategy as opposed to a pull strategy. We discuss how the findings of the study can aid mangers in making more informed decisions and how the decisions made by the dominant firm may not always be the best decision despite their superiority. |
author2 |
Lim Kui Suen, Lewis |
author_facet |
Lim Kui Suen, Lewis Chung, Joseph Wei Peng. Kim, Luther Yong Wei. Lee, Kuok Howe. |
format |
Final Year Project |
author |
Chung, Joseph Wei Peng. Kim, Luther Yong Wei. Lee, Kuok Howe. |
author_sort |
Chung, Joseph Wei Peng. |
title |
Effects of competitive superiority on firms' strategic behaviour across stages of industry evolution. |
title_short |
Effects of competitive superiority on firms' strategic behaviour across stages of industry evolution. |
title_full |
Effects of competitive superiority on firms' strategic behaviour across stages of industry evolution. |
title_fullStr |
Effects of competitive superiority on firms' strategic behaviour across stages of industry evolution. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Effects of competitive superiority on firms' strategic behaviour across stages of industry evolution. |
title_sort |
effects of competitive superiority on firms' strategic behaviour across stages of industry evolution. |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/35459 |
_version_ |
1770566026523574272 |