What are core competencies?
unique strengths embedded deep within a firm, that are critical to gaining and sustaining a competitive advantage.
What is the importance of core competencies?
they allow a firm to differentiate its products and services from those of its rivals. This results in creating higher value for the customer or offering products and services at a lower cost.
Core Competency Example: Beats Electronics
- created an ecosystem that combines hardware (headphones) with software (streaming).
Core Competency Example: IKEA
Core Competency Example: Facebook
-superior algorithms for targeted electronic ads.
How do companies develop core competencies?
-via the interplay of resources and capabilities.
Resources and Capabilities
How are a firm’s capabilities demonstrated?
through activities: distinct and fine-grained business processes that enable a firm to add incremental value by transforming inputs into goods and services.
Why is it important to continually nourish core competencies?
Core competencies that are not continuously nourished will eventually lose their ability to yield a sustainable competitive advantage.
What are visible elements of core competencies?
superior products or services.
What are invisible elements of core competencies?
more important than visible competencies; e.g., customer-centricity.
What is the Resource-Based View (RBV)?
a model that sees certain types of resources as key to superior firm performance. AKA VRIO method.
What are the properties of resources under the VRIO method?
What 2 categories to resources fall into?
Tangible and Intangible Resources at Google Headquarters.
What are the 2 critical assumptions of RBV?
Resource heterogeneity and resource mobility.
What is Resource Heterogeneity?
assumption in the resource-based view that a firm is a bundle of resources and capabilities that differ across firms.
What is resource immobility?
Assumption in the resource-based view that a firm has resources that tend to be “sticky” and that do not move easily from firm to firm.
What is the VRIO Framework?
a theoretical framework that explains and predicts firm-level competitive advantage.
A resource is valuable if… (3)
A resource is rare if…(1)
only one or few firms possess it.
e.g., Beats Electronics’ celebrity endorsements.
A resource is costly to imitate if…(1)
firms that do not possess the resource are unable to develop or buy the resource at a reasonable price.
e.g., Beats- Dr. Dre’s social capital is likely impossible to imitate.
A resource is organized to capture value if…(2)
What is Direct Imitation?
copying or imitating a valuable and rare resource; usually happens when firms are unable to protect their advantage. e.g., Crocs.