Patterns & Driving Forces of Corporate Development Flashcards

1
Q

Definition Corporate Development

A
  • Conscious and planned process of developing an organization’s capabilities such, that it can attain and sustain competitiveness
  • The driving force behind strategic change
  • -> Redesigned business portfolio
  • -> Changed competitive positioning
  • -> Improved effectiveness/efficiency of operation
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2
Q

How do companies develop over time? (3)

A
  • Incremental change (A->A’, over long period)
  • Radical change (A->A’->Schizoid->B, over short period)
  • Inertia (A, stable over time)
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3
Q

Punctuated equilibrium theory, Tushman & Romanelli (1994)

  • Research question
  • Hypothesis
  • Research design
  • Levels of organizational transformation
  • Main findings
A

RQ: What is the dominant pattern of CD, revolution or evolution?

Hypothesis: Greater likelihood of radical transformation if

a) performance crisis
b) major environmental change in industry
c) leadership succession

RD: quantitative inquiry of CD patterns of 25 US minicomputer companies

Transformation: (within 2 years)

  • strategy shift (customer/product portfolio)
  • structural shift (general mgmt, functional titles)
  • power distribution (executive turnover, change in R&D spend/titles)

Findings:

  • revolutionary patterns dominant (85%)
  • environmental change and CEO succession as drivers
  • CAVEAT: results differ widely between industries in other studies
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4
Q

When do firms initiate radical transformations? (3+1)

A

When..

  • discontinuous market developments occur
  • firms have not been successful for some time
  • management changes
  • -> all 3 factors are mutually reenforcing
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5
Q

Radical transformations are risky (2)

A
  • Organizational changes lead to an immediate increase in the hazard of organizational failure
  • The older the organization, the greater the jump in hazard rate
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6
Q

Excessive change is detrimental (5+3)

A
  • Frequently changing responsibilities
  • Non-functioning middle management (inexperience)
  • Badly structured processes
  • Employee fatigue and fluctuation
  • Increased resource deployment
  • -> Bad implementation of change initiatives
  • -> Focus on internal processes rather than customers/markets
  • -> Detrimental financial results
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7
Q

Inertia is risky, too (3+1)

A
  • Firm size positively correlated with survival rate
  • Deregulation massively impacts survival rate (due to change)
  • Periods without transformation negatively impact survival rates
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