Deck 7: Corporate Diversification

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Question
If the different businesses that a single firm pursues are linked on only a couple of dimensions, or if different sets of businesses are linked along very different dimensions, that corporate diversification strategy is called related-linked diversification.
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Question
Operational economies of scope include shared activities and risk reduction.
Question
Shared activities can increase the revenues in diversified firms' businesses, and failure to exploit shared activities across businesses can lead to out-of-control costs.
Question
If all the businesses in which a firm operates share a significant number of inputs, production technologies, distribution channels, similar customers, and so forth, this corporate diversification strategy is called related-constrained diversification.
Question
When less than 90 percent of a firm's revenues are generated in a single product market and when a firm's business share few, if any, common attributes, then that firm is pursuing a strategy of unrelated corporate diversification.
Question
A firm has implemented a strategy of limited corporate diversification when all or most of its business activities fall within a single industry and geographic market.
Question
Economies of scope exist in a firm when the value of the products or services it sells increase as a function of the number of businesses in which the firm operates.
Question
One of the limits of activity sharing is that sharing activities may limit the ability of a particular business to meet its specific customers' needs.
Question
A firm that diversifies by exploiting its resources and capability advantages in its original business will have higher costs than firms that begin new business without these revenues and capability advantages or lower revenues than firms lacking these advantages, or both.
Question
In order for corporate diversification to be economically viable there must either be some valuable economy of scope among the multiple businesses in which a firm is operating or it must be less costly for managers in a firm to realize these economies of scope than for an outside equity holder on his or her own.
Question
Currently, most scholars believe that when a firm implements a corporate diversification strategy it destroys about 25% of its market value.
Question
Core competencies are complex sets of resources and capabilities that link different businesses in a diversified firm through managerial and technical know-how, experience, and wisdom.
Question
A firm implements a corporate diversification strategy when it operates in multiple industries or markets simultaneously.
Question
When a firm operates in multiple industries simultaneously it is said to be implementing a geographic market diversification strategy.
Question
A dominant-business firm is pursuing a related diversification strategy and has between 70 and 95 percent of firm revenues from a single business.
Question
The analysis of limited corporate diversification is logically equivalent to the analysis of business-level strategies.
Question
Over the last decade, more and more diversified firms have been abandoning efforts at managing each business's activities independently in favor of increased activity sharing.
Question
When a firm operates in multiple geographic markets simultaneously it is said to be implementing a product diversification strategy.
Question
Shared activities that can provide the basis for operational economies of scope are quite common among related-constrained and related-linked diversified firms, as well as firms following an unrelated diversification strategy.
Question
Firms that may appear to be unrelated diversified firms, but that are, in fact, related diversified firms without any shared activities are referred to as seemingly related firms.
Question
A firm's dominant logic is a common way of thinking about strategy across different businesses.
Question
Employee compensation is an example of a costly-to-duplicate economies of scope.
Question
The businesses within a diversified firm always gain cost-of-capital advantages by being part of a diversified firm's portfolio.
Question
Core competencies are an example of a costly-to-duplicate economies of scope.
Question
Predatory pricing is a type of cross-subsidization in which a firm uses revenues from other businesses to set its prices in a particular business so that the prices are substantially more than the subsidized business's costs.
Question
A firm's stakeholders include all of those groups or individuals who have an interest in how a firm performs.
Question
Shared activities, risk reduction, tax advantages, and employee compensation as bases for corporate diversification are usually relatively easy to duplicate.
Question
Both shared activities and internal capital allocation are examples of economies of scope that have the potential for generating positive returns for a firm's equity holders.
Question
Core competencies and multipoint competition are usually costly-to-duplicate bases for corporate diversification.
Question
Exploiting market power is an example of a costly-to-duplicate economies of scope.
Question
Shared activities and risk reduction are usually difficult-to-duplicate bases for corporate diversification, but tax advantages and employee compensation are usually relatively easy to duplicate.
Question
One substitute for diversification that exists is that instead of obtaining cost or revenue advantages from exploiting economies of scope across businesses in a diversified firm, a firm may decide to simply grow and develop each of its businesses separately.
Question
Overall, related diversification is less likely to be consistent with the interests of a firm's equity holders than is unrelated diversification.
Question
Multipoint competition requires loose coordination between the different businesses in which a firm operates.
Question
Internal capital allocation is an example of a less costly-to-duplicate economies of scope.
Question
Diversification per se is usually not a rare firm strategy regardless of how rare the particular economies of scope associated with that diversification are.
Question
Strategic alliances are generally viewed as a poor substitute for diversification since the economies of scope in diversification can be found in strategic alliances.
Question
Multipoint competition exists when two or more diversified firms simultaneously compete in multiple markets, and multipoint competition can serve to facilitate a particular type of tacit collusion called mutual forbearance.
Question
The only two economies of scope that do not have the potential for generating positive returns for a firm's equity holders are diversification in order to maximize the size of a firm and diversification to reduce risk.
Question
For an internal capital market to create value for a diversified firm, it must offer some efficiency advantages over an external capital market.
Question
Shared activities are quite common between both ________ and ________ diversified firms.

A) single-business; dominant-business
B) related-constrained; single-business
C) related-linked; dominant-business
D) related-constrained; related-linked
Question
Currently, most scholars believe that exploiting economies of scope through corporate diversification, on average,

A) destroyed about 25% of a firm's market value.
B) had no impact on a firm's market value.
C) destroyed about 55% of a firm's market value.
D) increased a firm's market value.
Question
A firm implements a ________ when it operates in multiple industries or markets simultaneously.

A) vertical integration strategy
B) corporate diversification strategy
C) business diversification strategy
D) product-differentiation strategy
Question
In which type of limited corporate diversification do firms have greater than 95% of their total sales in a single product market?

A) Dominant-business firms
B) Single-business firms
C) Related-constrained firms
D) Related-linked firms
Question
The analysis of firms pursuing a strategy of ________ is logically equivalent to the analysis of business-level strategies.

A) unrelated diversification
B) related-linked diversification
C) related-constrained diversification
D) limited corporate diversification
Question
Which type of economies of scope includes shared activities and core competencies?

A) Operational economies of scope
B) Financial economies of scope
C) Anticompetitive economies of scope
D) Employee and stakeholder incentives for diversification
Question
When the value of the products or services a firm sells increases as a function of the number of business that the firm operates in, ________ are said to exist.

A) economies of scope
B) vertical economies
C) economies of scale
D) diseconomies of scope
Question
In order for corporate diversification to be economically valuable

A) there must be some valuable economy of scope among the multiple businesses in which a firm is operating and it must be more costly for managers in a firm to realize these economies of scope than for outside equity holders on their own.
B) there must not be any valuable economy of scope among the multiple businesses in which a firm is operating and it must be less costly for managers in a firm to realize these economies of scope than for outside equity holders on their own.
C) there must be some valuable economy of scope among the multiple businesses in which a firm is operating and it must be less costly for managers in a firm to realize these economies of scope than for outside equity holders on their own.
D) there must not be any valuable economy of scope among the multiple businesses in which a firm is operating and it must be more costly for managers in a firm to realize these economies of scope than for outside equity holders on their own.
Question
When a firm operates in multiple geographic markets simultaneously it is said to be implementing a(n)

A) international diversification strategy.
B) product-differentiation strategy.
C) geographic market diversification strategy.
D) geographic market differentiation strategy.
Question
A firm has implemented a strategy of ________ when all or most of its activities fall within a single industry and geographic market.

A) limited corporate diversification
B) related diversification
C) unrelated diversification
D) related-linked diversification
Question
Firms pursuing ________ have between 70% and 95% of their sales in a single product market.

A) dominant-business diversification
B) single-business diversification
C) related-constrained diversification
D) related-linked diversification
Question
Limits of activity sharing include

A) substantial organizational issues that are often associated with a diversified firm's learning how to manage cross-business relationships and in which failure can lead to excess bureaucracy, inefficiency, and organizational gridlock.
B) a significant reduction in an organization's innovation and flexibility.
C) substantial organizational issues related to adequately compensating personnel across businesses and setting transfer prices.
D) a significant reduction in an organization's ability to meet the needs of any of its customers.
Question
Firms such as General Electric that generate less than 70% of their revenues from a single product market and whose businesses share few, if any, common attributes are said to be pursuing ________ corporate diversification.

A) limited
B) related-linked
C) related-constrained
D) unrelated
Question
________ are complex sets of resources and capabilities that link different businesses in a diversified firm through managerial and technical know-how, experience and wisdom.

A) Managerial competencies
B) Core competencies
C) Competitive advantages
D) Core advantages
Question
Firms such as PepsiCo that operate a number of businesses around the world that share a number of inputs, production technologies, or distribution channels but none of whose businesses account for more than 70% of a firm's revenues are said to be implementing a

A) related-constrained diversification.
B) related-linked diversification.
C) dominant-business diversification.
D) single-business diversification.
Question
Firms such as Disney that own and operate businesses that share a limited number of inputs, production technologies or distribution channels are said to be pursuing a ________ corporate diversification strategy.

A) related-constrained
B) related-linked
C) dominant-business
D) single-business
Question
When a firm operates in multiple industries simultaneously, it is said to be implementing a

A) product diversification strategy.
B) product-differentiation strategy.
C) geographic market diversification strategy.
D) geographic market differentiation strategy.
Question
When a firm implements both a product diversification strategy and a geographic market diversification strategy it is said to be implementing a(n)

A) mixed-market diversification strategy.
B) unrelated-diversification strategy.
C) product-differentiation strategy.
D) product-market diversification strategy.
Question
If a diversified firm had three businesses and these companies shared a common marketing and service operation, as well as common technology and development, this would be an example of which type of economy of scope?

A) Core competencies
B) Shared activities
C) Risk reduction
D) Multipoint competition
Question
Which of the following statements regarding economies of scope is accurate?

A) Only firms pursuing single-business diversification can exploit economies of scope.
B) Only firms pursuing related-constrained diversification can exploit economies of scope.
C) Only firms not pursuing diversification can exploit economies of scope.
D) Only diversified firms can exploit economies of scope.
Question
Which of the following economies of scope is less costly to duplicate?

A) Employee compensation
B) Core competencies
C) Multipoint competition
D) Exploiting market power
Question
Which of the following statements regarding the rarity of diversification is accurate?

A) If only a few competing firms have exploited a particular economy of scope, that economy of scope can be rare.
B) A particular economy of scope can only be rare if no other firms are exploiting that economy of scope.
C) A particular economy of scope can be rare even if many other firms are exploiting that economy of scope.
D) If only a few competing firms have exploited a particular economy of scope, that economy of scope can be rare but only if the firm is pursuing unrelated diversification.
Question
Substitutes for exploiting economies of scope in diversification include

A) growing and developing independent businesses within a diversified firm and vertical integration.
B) vertical integration and strategic alliances.
C) growing and developing independent businesses within a diversified firm and strategic alliances.
D) strategic alliances and multipoint competition.
Question
For multipoint competition to lead to mutual forbearance,

A) the threat of retaliation must be substantial and the firms pursuing this strategy must have strong linkages among their diversified businesses.
B) the threat of retaliation must be low and the firms pursuing this strategy must have strong linkages among their diversified businesses.
C) the threat of retaliation must be low and the firms pursuing this strategy must have weak linkages among their diversified businesses.
D) the threat of retaliation must be substantial and the firms pursuing this strategy must have weak linkages among their diversified businesses.
Question
Which of the following is a less costly-to-duplicate economies of scope?

A) Core competencies
B) Internal capital allocation
C) Employee compensation
D) Exploiting market power
Question
If all of a firm's businesses share the same core competencies, then that firm has implemented a strategy of ________ diversification.

A) single-business
B) related-linked
C) related-constrained
D) dominant-business
Question
________ are substitutes for exploiting economies of scope in diversification.

A) Tax havens
B) Tax shelters
C) Tax freedom
D) Strategic alliances
Question
The only economy of scope that an unrelated firm can try to realize is

A) core competencies.
B) tax advantages.
C) multipoint competition.
D) risk reduction.
Question
Diversified firms that are exploiting core competencies as an economy of scope but are not doing so with any shared activities are sometimes called ________ diversified firms.

A) seemingly related
B) unrelated
C) semi-related
D) link-related
Question
Which of the following economies of scope do not have the potential for generating positive returns for a firm's equity holders since the economies of scope can be realized by outside equity holders at a low cost by investing in a diversified portfolio of stock?

A) Shared activities
B) Diversification to maximize the size of a firm
C) Internal capital allocation
D) Exploiting market power
Question
Which of the following economies of scope is costly to duplicate?

A) Shared activities
B) Internal capital allocation
C) Risk reduction
D) Task advantages
Question
Which of the following is an example of a costly-to-duplicate economies of scope?

A) Employee compensation
B) Core competencies
C) Shared activities
D) Risk reduction
Question
________ is an example of a less costly-to-duplicate economies of scope.

A) Tax advantages
B) Core competencies
C) Internal capital allocation
D) Multipoint competition
Question
Compared to two very risky businesses that have cash flows that are not highly correlated over time and that are operating separately, the risk of a diversified firm operating in those same two businesses simultaneously is

A) somewhat higher.
B) lower.
C) the same.
D) substantially higher.
Question
In general, as a source of capital a diversified firm has ________ information about a business that it owns compared to external sources of capital.

A) more and better
B) the same
C) less and inferior
D) more but biased
Question
________ exists when two or more diversified firms simultaneously compete in multiple markets.

A) Multipoint competition
B) Dynamic competition
C) Multipoint cooperation
D) Dynamic cooperation
Question
A firm that diversifies by exploiting its resources and capability advantages in its original business will have ________ costs than (as) firms that begin a new business without these resource and capability advantages, or ________ revenues than (as) firms lacking these advantages.

A) higher; lower
B) the same; higher
C) lower; the same
D) lower; higher
Question
Research over the years has demonstrated conclusively that the primary determinant of the compensation of top managers in a firm is

A) not the size of the firm, usually measured in sales, but the economic performance of the firm.
B) both the economic performance of the firm as well as the size of the firm, usually measured in sales.
C) not the economic performance of the firm but the size of the firm, usually measured in sales.
D) neither the economic performance of the firm nor the size of the firm.
Question
A common way of thinking about strategy across different businesses within a firm is known as the firm's

A) core competency.
B) competitive advantage.
C) economy of scope.
D) dominant logic.
Question
When diversified firms use the revenues from profitable businesses to subsidize the operations of another business and then set the prices of the subsidized firm's products at a level that is below the subsidized business's cost to produce these items, this is known as ________ pricing.

A) dynamic
B) monopoly
C) predatory
D) beneficial
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Deck 7: Corporate Diversification
1
If the different businesses that a single firm pursues are linked on only a couple of dimensions, or if different sets of businesses are linked along very different dimensions, that corporate diversification strategy is called related-linked diversification.
True
2
Operational economies of scope include shared activities and risk reduction.
False
3
Shared activities can increase the revenues in diversified firms' businesses, and failure to exploit shared activities across businesses can lead to out-of-control costs.
True
4
If all the businesses in which a firm operates share a significant number of inputs, production technologies, distribution channels, similar customers, and so forth, this corporate diversification strategy is called related-constrained diversification.
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5
When less than 90 percent of a firm's revenues are generated in a single product market and when a firm's business share few, if any, common attributes, then that firm is pursuing a strategy of unrelated corporate diversification.
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6
A firm has implemented a strategy of limited corporate diversification when all or most of its business activities fall within a single industry and geographic market.
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7
Economies of scope exist in a firm when the value of the products or services it sells increase as a function of the number of businesses in which the firm operates.
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8
One of the limits of activity sharing is that sharing activities may limit the ability of a particular business to meet its specific customers' needs.
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9
A firm that diversifies by exploiting its resources and capability advantages in its original business will have higher costs than firms that begin new business without these revenues and capability advantages or lower revenues than firms lacking these advantages, or both.
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10
In order for corporate diversification to be economically viable there must either be some valuable economy of scope among the multiple businesses in which a firm is operating or it must be less costly for managers in a firm to realize these economies of scope than for an outside equity holder on his or her own.
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11
Currently, most scholars believe that when a firm implements a corporate diversification strategy it destroys about 25% of its market value.
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12
Core competencies are complex sets of resources and capabilities that link different businesses in a diversified firm through managerial and technical know-how, experience, and wisdom.
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13
A firm implements a corporate diversification strategy when it operates in multiple industries or markets simultaneously.
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14
When a firm operates in multiple industries simultaneously it is said to be implementing a geographic market diversification strategy.
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15
A dominant-business firm is pursuing a related diversification strategy and has between 70 and 95 percent of firm revenues from a single business.
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16
The analysis of limited corporate diversification is logically equivalent to the analysis of business-level strategies.
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17
Over the last decade, more and more diversified firms have been abandoning efforts at managing each business's activities independently in favor of increased activity sharing.
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18
When a firm operates in multiple geographic markets simultaneously it is said to be implementing a product diversification strategy.
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19
Shared activities that can provide the basis for operational economies of scope are quite common among related-constrained and related-linked diversified firms, as well as firms following an unrelated diversification strategy.
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20
Firms that may appear to be unrelated diversified firms, but that are, in fact, related diversified firms without any shared activities are referred to as seemingly related firms.
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21
A firm's dominant logic is a common way of thinking about strategy across different businesses.
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22
Employee compensation is an example of a costly-to-duplicate economies of scope.
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23
The businesses within a diversified firm always gain cost-of-capital advantages by being part of a diversified firm's portfolio.
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24
Core competencies are an example of a costly-to-duplicate economies of scope.
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25
Predatory pricing is a type of cross-subsidization in which a firm uses revenues from other businesses to set its prices in a particular business so that the prices are substantially more than the subsidized business's costs.
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26
A firm's stakeholders include all of those groups or individuals who have an interest in how a firm performs.
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27
Shared activities, risk reduction, tax advantages, and employee compensation as bases for corporate diversification are usually relatively easy to duplicate.
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28
Both shared activities and internal capital allocation are examples of economies of scope that have the potential for generating positive returns for a firm's equity holders.
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29
Core competencies and multipoint competition are usually costly-to-duplicate bases for corporate diversification.
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30
Exploiting market power is an example of a costly-to-duplicate economies of scope.
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31
Shared activities and risk reduction are usually difficult-to-duplicate bases for corporate diversification, but tax advantages and employee compensation are usually relatively easy to duplicate.
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32
One substitute for diversification that exists is that instead of obtaining cost or revenue advantages from exploiting economies of scope across businesses in a diversified firm, a firm may decide to simply grow and develop each of its businesses separately.
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33
Overall, related diversification is less likely to be consistent with the interests of a firm's equity holders than is unrelated diversification.
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34
Multipoint competition requires loose coordination between the different businesses in which a firm operates.
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35
Internal capital allocation is an example of a less costly-to-duplicate economies of scope.
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36
Diversification per se is usually not a rare firm strategy regardless of how rare the particular economies of scope associated with that diversification are.
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37
Strategic alliances are generally viewed as a poor substitute for diversification since the economies of scope in diversification can be found in strategic alliances.
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38
Multipoint competition exists when two or more diversified firms simultaneously compete in multiple markets, and multipoint competition can serve to facilitate a particular type of tacit collusion called mutual forbearance.
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39
The only two economies of scope that do not have the potential for generating positive returns for a firm's equity holders are diversification in order to maximize the size of a firm and diversification to reduce risk.
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40
For an internal capital market to create value for a diversified firm, it must offer some efficiency advantages over an external capital market.
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41
Shared activities are quite common between both ________ and ________ diversified firms.

A) single-business; dominant-business
B) related-constrained; single-business
C) related-linked; dominant-business
D) related-constrained; related-linked
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42
Currently, most scholars believe that exploiting economies of scope through corporate diversification, on average,

A) destroyed about 25% of a firm's market value.
B) had no impact on a firm's market value.
C) destroyed about 55% of a firm's market value.
D) increased a firm's market value.
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43
A firm implements a ________ when it operates in multiple industries or markets simultaneously.

A) vertical integration strategy
B) corporate diversification strategy
C) business diversification strategy
D) product-differentiation strategy
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44
In which type of limited corporate diversification do firms have greater than 95% of their total sales in a single product market?

A) Dominant-business firms
B) Single-business firms
C) Related-constrained firms
D) Related-linked firms
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45
The analysis of firms pursuing a strategy of ________ is logically equivalent to the analysis of business-level strategies.

A) unrelated diversification
B) related-linked diversification
C) related-constrained diversification
D) limited corporate diversification
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46
Which type of economies of scope includes shared activities and core competencies?

A) Operational economies of scope
B) Financial economies of scope
C) Anticompetitive economies of scope
D) Employee and stakeholder incentives for diversification
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47
When the value of the products or services a firm sells increases as a function of the number of business that the firm operates in, ________ are said to exist.

A) economies of scope
B) vertical economies
C) economies of scale
D) diseconomies of scope
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48
In order for corporate diversification to be economically valuable

A) there must be some valuable economy of scope among the multiple businesses in which a firm is operating and it must be more costly for managers in a firm to realize these economies of scope than for outside equity holders on their own.
B) there must not be any valuable economy of scope among the multiple businesses in which a firm is operating and it must be less costly for managers in a firm to realize these economies of scope than for outside equity holders on their own.
C) there must be some valuable economy of scope among the multiple businesses in which a firm is operating and it must be less costly for managers in a firm to realize these economies of scope than for outside equity holders on their own.
D) there must not be any valuable economy of scope among the multiple businesses in which a firm is operating and it must be more costly for managers in a firm to realize these economies of scope than for outside equity holders on their own.
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49
When a firm operates in multiple geographic markets simultaneously it is said to be implementing a(n)

A) international diversification strategy.
B) product-differentiation strategy.
C) geographic market diversification strategy.
D) geographic market differentiation strategy.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
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50
A firm has implemented a strategy of ________ when all or most of its activities fall within a single industry and geographic market.

A) limited corporate diversification
B) related diversification
C) unrelated diversification
D) related-linked diversification
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51
Firms pursuing ________ have between 70% and 95% of their sales in a single product market.

A) dominant-business diversification
B) single-business diversification
C) related-constrained diversification
D) related-linked diversification
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52
Limits of activity sharing include

A) substantial organizational issues that are often associated with a diversified firm's learning how to manage cross-business relationships and in which failure can lead to excess bureaucracy, inefficiency, and organizational gridlock.
B) a significant reduction in an organization's innovation and flexibility.
C) substantial organizational issues related to adequately compensating personnel across businesses and setting transfer prices.
D) a significant reduction in an organization's ability to meet the needs of any of its customers.
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53
Firms such as General Electric that generate less than 70% of their revenues from a single product market and whose businesses share few, if any, common attributes are said to be pursuing ________ corporate diversification.

A) limited
B) related-linked
C) related-constrained
D) unrelated
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54
________ are complex sets of resources and capabilities that link different businesses in a diversified firm through managerial and technical know-how, experience and wisdom.

A) Managerial competencies
B) Core competencies
C) Competitive advantages
D) Core advantages
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55
Firms such as PepsiCo that operate a number of businesses around the world that share a number of inputs, production technologies, or distribution channels but none of whose businesses account for more than 70% of a firm's revenues are said to be implementing a

A) related-constrained diversification.
B) related-linked diversification.
C) dominant-business diversification.
D) single-business diversification.
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56
Firms such as Disney that own and operate businesses that share a limited number of inputs, production technologies or distribution channels are said to be pursuing a ________ corporate diversification strategy.

A) related-constrained
B) related-linked
C) dominant-business
D) single-business
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
When a firm operates in multiple industries simultaneously, it is said to be implementing a

A) product diversification strategy.
B) product-differentiation strategy.
C) geographic market diversification strategy.
D) geographic market differentiation strategy.
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k this deck
58
When a firm implements both a product diversification strategy and a geographic market diversification strategy it is said to be implementing a(n)

A) mixed-market diversification strategy.
B) unrelated-diversification strategy.
C) product-differentiation strategy.
D) product-market diversification strategy.
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k this deck
59
If a diversified firm had three businesses and these companies shared a common marketing and service operation, as well as common technology and development, this would be an example of which type of economy of scope?

A) Core competencies
B) Shared activities
C) Risk reduction
D) Multipoint competition
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
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60
Which of the following statements regarding economies of scope is accurate?

A) Only firms pursuing single-business diversification can exploit economies of scope.
B) Only firms pursuing related-constrained diversification can exploit economies of scope.
C) Only firms not pursuing diversification can exploit economies of scope.
D) Only diversified firms can exploit economies of scope.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
61
Which of the following economies of scope is less costly to duplicate?

A) Employee compensation
B) Core competencies
C) Multipoint competition
D) Exploiting market power
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k this deck
62
Which of the following statements regarding the rarity of diversification is accurate?

A) If only a few competing firms have exploited a particular economy of scope, that economy of scope can be rare.
B) A particular economy of scope can only be rare if no other firms are exploiting that economy of scope.
C) A particular economy of scope can be rare even if many other firms are exploiting that economy of scope.
D) If only a few competing firms have exploited a particular economy of scope, that economy of scope can be rare but only if the firm is pursuing unrelated diversification.
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63
Substitutes for exploiting economies of scope in diversification include

A) growing and developing independent businesses within a diversified firm and vertical integration.
B) vertical integration and strategic alliances.
C) growing and developing independent businesses within a diversified firm and strategic alliances.
D) strategic alliances and multipoint competition.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
For multipoint competition to lead to mutual forbearance,

A) the threat of retaliation must be substantial and the firms pursuing this strategy must have strong linkages among their diversified businesses.
B) the threat of retaliation must be low and the firms pursuing this strategy must have strong linkages among their diversified businesses.
C) the threat of retaliation must be low and the firms pursuing this strategy must have weak linkages among their diversified businesses.
D) the threat of retaliation must be substantial and the firms pursuing this strategy must have weak linkages among their diversified businesses.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
Which of the following is a less costly-to-duplicate economies of scope?

A) Core competencies
B) Internal capital allocation
C) Employee compensation
D) Exploiting market power
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
If all of a firm's businesses share the same core competencies, then that firm has implemented a strategy of ________ diversification.

A) single-business
B) related-linked
C) related-constrained
D) dominant-business
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k this deck
67
________ are substitutes for exploiting economies of scope in diversification.

A) Tax havens
B) Tax shelters
C) Tax freedom
D) Strategic alliances
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
The only economy of scope that an unrelated firm can try to realize is

A) core competencies.
B) tax advantages.
C) multipoint competition.
D) risk reduction.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Diversified firms that are exploiting core competencies as an economy of scope but are not doing so with any shared activities are sometimes called ________ diversified firms.

A) seemingly related
B) unrelated
C) semi-related
D) link-related
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70
Which of the following economies of scope do not have the potential for generating positive returns for a firm's equity holders since the economies of scope can be realized by outside equity holders at a low cost by investing in a diversified portfolio of stock?

A) Shared activities
B) Diversification to maximize the size of a firm
C) Internal capital allocation
D) Exploiting market power
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
Which of the following economies of scope is costly to duplicate?

A) Shared activities
B) Internal capital allocation
C) Risk reduction
D) Task advantages
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
Which of the following is an example of a costly-to-duplicate economies of scope?

A) Employee compensation
B) Core competencies
C) Shared activities
D) Risk reduction
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
________ is an example of a less costly-to-duplicate economies of scope.

A) Tax advantages
B) Core competencies
C) Internal capital allocation
D) Multipoint competition
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Unlock Deck
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74
Compared to two very risky businesses that have cash flows that are not highly correlated over time and that are operating separately, the risk of a diversified firm operating in those same two businesses simultaneously is

A) somewhat higher.
B) lower.
C) the same.
D) substantially higher.
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k this deck
75
In general, as a source of capital a diversified firm has ________ information about a business that it owns compared to external sources of capital.

A) more and better
B) the same
C) less and inferior
D) more but biased
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k this deck
76
________ exists when two or more diversified firms simultaneously compete in multiple markets.

A) Multipoint competition
B) Dynamic competition
C) Multipoint cooperation
D) Dynamic cooperation
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77
A firm that diversifies by exploiting its resources and capability advantages in its original business will have ________ costs than (as) firms that begin a new business without these resource and capability advantages, or ________ revenues than (as) firms lacking these advantages.

A) higher; lower
B) the same; higher
C) lower; the same
D) lower; higher
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
Research over the years has demonstrated conclusively that the primary determinant of the compensation of top managers in a firm is

A) not the size of the firm, usually measured in sales, but the economic performance of the firm.
B) both the economic performance of the firm as well as the size of the firm, usually measured in sales.
C) not the economic performance of the firm but the size of the firm, usually measured in sales.
D) neither the economic performance of the firm nor the size of the firm.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
79
A common way of thinking about strategy across different businesses within a firm is known as the firm's

A) core competency.
B) competitive advantage.
C) economy of scope.
D) dominant logic.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
When diversified firms use the revenues from profitable businesses to subsidize the operations of another business and then set the prices of the subsidized firm's products at a level that is below the subsidized business's cost to produce these items, this is known as ________ pricing.

A) dynamic
B) monopoly
C) predatory
D) beneficial
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.