Radical innovations create economic growth in the long term while some of the well established firms decline. In Internet world no leadership position is secure or sustainable.Schumpeter & the Austrian school described the innovation as a process of creative destruction. Innovation is a dynamic market process by which firms engage in a race to get ahead of one another. Creative destruction imply that:
- innovative actions undermine the competitive advantage of established competitors
- firms commit resources to develop new products, new technologies and distribution channels
- the success of these innovations provokes competitive responses from existing firms and new entrants
Competitive Actions
Competitive action can be defined as all action that are taken in the pursuit of discovered profit opportunity
As a rule, a leader that carry out more actions will exploit more opportunities and, hence, close the potential for challengers. Firms undertaking more competitive actions have superior performance. Continous innovation may be more important to competitive advantage than protection of assets.
Competition
Hypercompetition
Firm performance is an outcome of a continous series of competitive actions. Speed allows companies to disrupt the status quo, because it creates new advantages before competitors are able to preempt these moves. Speed is negatively correlated with complexity, thus there is a danger of simplicity. Simple actions become predictable and can be easily immitated.
Successful firms ”hit” competitors from several different directions at once. Market-leader choosing a complacent strategy may lose its position, being vulnerable to more aggressive challengers.
Competitive Dynamics
The interplay of actions and response and their implications on firms’ performance is defined as competitive dynamics
Firm aggressiveness is the outcome of three factors:
- Timing/speed
- Frequency
- Range/complexity
Timing of action
A company that is first to introduce a new product/service, or first to enter a market, may gain competitive advantage. The advantage may be derived from:
- Monopolistic profits
- Technological leadership
- Establishment of brand loyalty
- Establishment of buyers’ switching costs
- Economies of scale
- Learning and experience
What about the second mover?
In some cases it is actually the second mover or the imitator who has a better performance. The reason for that is the learning from the first mover mistakes and the ability to create a better product/service through reverse engineering or other methods.
It is very important to note that though the theory stresses the importance of quick reaction/imitation, it is undeceive regarding the benefits of being a pioneer.
Number of actions
Firms take actions in the pursuit of profits and untapped market opportunities. Generally, firms taking more actions are expected to exploit more opportunities and have better performance.
According to Ferrier et al (1999) "market-share leaders were more likely to be dethroned by challengers or to lose market share when they are less competitively aggressive". We expect aggressive firms, those carrying out more competitive actions than rivals, to have better performance than their competitors.
Competitive repertoire
To gain advantage, firms should constantly develop new types of actions. Firms carrying out a broader variety of actions are expected to perform better because they will be perceived as more capable and may be less predictable. On the other hand, a simple repertoire of actions may be too predictable and may erode a firm’s competitive position.
As Ferrier et al (1999) has found in his research "market leaders using a narrower set of actions (relatively to their challengers) experienced market share erosion and dethronement".
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