Organizational Theory

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How CCIs can contribute to innovation and smart specialisation strategies.
Advertisements

Product Lifecycles & Adoption Curve Presented by Bob Perry.
International Entrepreneurship and International New Ventures Arild Aspelund, PhD.
1 Organizational Life Cycles Population Ecology Institutional Theory Growth and Decline.
Organizational Transformations: Birth, Growth, Decline,
What Is Organizational Theory?
©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Organizational Transformations: Birth, Growth, Decline,
Apple 2006 Ellen Suprun Julie O’Halloran Wojciech Jagiello
Market Structures and Current Changes
Organizational Life Cycles, Size, and Decline
The Balanced Scorecard. Developed by Robert Kaplan and David Norton. Introduced in the early 1990s. Motivated in part by Wall Street’s focus on quarterly.
Developing and Managing Products
Chapter 1 Copyright ©2012 by Cengage Learning Inc. All rights reserved 1 Lamb, Hair, McDaniel CHAPTER 11 Developing and Managing Products © Jasper.
Business Strategy and Policy
19-1 © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin Innovation, Technological Change and Competition Technology  The skills,
What is Marketing? All the activities involved in getting goods and services from the business that produces them to the consumers who wish to purchase.
Strategy and Tactics differ mainly around time scale.
SPE Engagement Survey Results Summary Digital Media Group Masek November 2012 Confidential 1.
12.1 Capon: Understanding Organisational Context 2nd edition © Pearson Education 2004 Understanding Organisational Context 2e Slides by Claire Capon Chapter.
Chapter 10 Developing and Managing Products. There are degrees of “newness” New to the World Discontinuous innovation Dynamically Continuous Innovation.
Marketing 1.Purpose and Roles of Marketing 2.The Product Life Cycle 3.The Four P’s of Marketing 4.The Two C’s of Marketing.
Chapter 30 product planning Section 30.1 Product Development
Class Two Market Potential, Market Demand, and Market Share.
Chapter 11 Copyright ©2012 by Cengage Learning Inc. All rights reserved 1 Lamb, Hair, McDaniel CHAPTER 11 Developing and Managing Products ©
Life Cycles, Size, and Decline BA 152. Industry Life Cycles n Industry Evolution – Entry strategies n – Survival Strategies n Specialist n Generalist.
Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 8 Entrepreneurship and Innovation.
Samsung- Building a Global Brand Content Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Overview of Samsung Marketing Strategies Results and suggestions Overview Results Marketing.
What is a Product Life Cycle?  The marketing theory that a product moves through different stages of life, from birth to death.  Every decision impacts.
Copyright Cengage Learning 2013 All Rights Reserved 1 Chapter 11: Developing and Managing Products Designed & Prepared by Laura Rush B-books, Ltd. Introduction.
Hospitality Sales and Marketing Situational Selling Chapter six 1.
1 Lamb, Hair, McDaniel CHAPTER 11 Developing and Managing Products.
1 Historical roots Age of print Industrial revolution and emergence of consumer society Radio Television Outlet/Audience Fragmentation The Evolution of.
Offensive Strategic Marketing Plans In this section we will examine offensive strategies ranging from improving competitive advantage and market share.
Marketing Mini Lesson for IA.
The Changing Face of Business Chapter 1.
Foundations of Strategy Chapter 5 Group 3. Key Points of the Chapter Different stages of industry development and driving factors Success factors associated.
Innovation and business models
Growth, Decline, and Death
Ch. 5: Business Strategies in Different Industries Cristian Marsico - Larry Griffin - Beau Gould Teresita Pinon.
Chapter 6 – International Opportunities. International Opportunities Ideas, Solutions and Opportunities International markets not right for every company.
1 Categories of New Products New-to-the-World New-to-the-world products (or discontinuous innovations) create an entirely new market and are the smallest.
Product Life Cycle.
1 PROMOTIONAL MIX PROMOTION LAP 1. 2 PROMOTION u Communication activities that inform potential consumers about the existence of goods, services, or ideas.
“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times....” Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,
Torstar Corporation Survival by Controlled Growth by J. Y. Shen.
Producing and Marketing Goods and Services Chapter 8.
Entrepreneurship and Negotiation Marketing in a New Firm 9.
WMG 23– ODC – A Few Rules Punctuality
Strategies for Stock Selection
Chapter Outline Innovation, Technological Change, and Competition
Entrepreneurship and Innovation
Entrepreneurship and Innovation
International Business Dr. Aravind Banakar –
International Business
International Business
1 11 Competitive Dynamics.
9.1 Assessing a change in scale
Product Strategy الفصل التاسع
Chapter 6 Business-Level Strategy and the Industry Environment
Developing and Managing Products
Chapter 5: Industry evolution and strategic change Apple, inc
Managing Organizational Evolution Prof Bharat Nadkarni
Managing Markets Strategically
Product life cycle JUNIOR CYCLE
Growth, Decline, and Death
Oligopoly.
Chapter 6 Business-Level Strategy and the Industry Environment
Tailoring Strategies to Fit Specific Industry and Company Situations
There are 1,000 million websites on the internet If you want to stand out, you need an SEO expert now!SEO Positioning web is a project stage based in Chile.
Presentation transcript:

Organizational Theory This liability of newness—the dangers of being the first in a new environment—is due to the following: Entrepreneurship is a risky process New organizations lack formal structure Resources may be scarce because of established organizations.

Organizational Theory A population ecology model of organizational birth Population ecology theory seeks to explain the rate at which new organizations are born (and die) in a population of organizations.

“When Being First Doesn’t Make You No. 1” In Jan. 2000 – almost two years before Apple Computer’s iPod hit market – Singapore-based Creative Technology unveiled similar product Creative best known for Sound Blaster audio cards, product category it pioneered and still dominates But Creative is niche player, w/ sales one-tenth of Apple’s More importantly, because its roots are in commodity world of PC peripherals, Creative had little understanding of branding and marketing tactics Apple uses Problem for many Asian companies as they enter global consumer markets (Sony and Samsung are exceptions) Creative’s advertising had only run in computer trade magazines, were designed in-house, pitched specific products rather than overall brand Creative’s MP3 global market share was 31% in 2001, fell to 17% in 2003 (iPod has 54%) CEO: “Marketing is important, I know that. But we’ve always had the best technology and we still do. That’s how we’ll fight back: innovation.” Source: Wall Street Journal, 8/12/04

Organizational Theory The r versus K issue addresses timing of entry into the population. R-strategy involves entering a new environment early. K-strategy involves entering an environment late, after other organizations have tested the waters.

Organizational Theory The specialist versus generalist issue addresses the set of resources for which an organization competes. Specialists concentrate their skills to pursue a narrow range of resources in a single niche. Generalists spread their skills thinly to compete for resources in many niches.

Strategies for Competing in the Resource Environment FIGURE 11-3 Strategies for Competing in the Resource Environment r–Strategy (early entry into environment) K–Strategy (late entry into Specialist Strategy (operates in one niche) r–Specialist r– Generalist K–Specialist K– Generalist Strategy (operates in several niches)

Greiner’s Model of Organizational Growth FIGURE 11-4 Greiner’s Model of Organizational Growth Age of organization Y oung Mature Large Small Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4 Stage 5 1. Crisis of leadership 2. autonomy 3. control 4. red tape 5. Crisis of ? Growth through creativity direction delegation coordination collaboration Size of organization

Weitzel and Jonsson’s Model of Organizational Decline FIGURE 11-6 Weitzel and Jonsson’s Model of Organizational Decline T ime Decline begins Dissolution and organizational death Stage 1: Blinded Stage 2: Inaction Stage 3: Faulty action Stage 4: Crisis Stage 5: Dissolution Good information Prompt action Corrective action Acceptable performance Effective reorganization Actual Acceptable organizational performance Actual organizational performance Performance

Organizational Theory IBM’s Gerstner indicates there are two critical ingredients for managing during crisis: communication and performance Ees need to be treated like adults and not handed trite memos about costs being too high Ees also need to understand entire picture of why Co isn’t competitive; message needs to come from CEO, often face to face Leaders need to provide clear sense of strategy quickly Eliminating bureaucracy helped IBM refocus on customers Source: Wall Street Journal, 7/13/04