Deck 3: Evaluating a Firms Internal Capabilities

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Question
Inputs whose quantity of supply is fixed and whose demand does not respond to price increases are said to be elastic in supply.
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Question
In the VRIO framework, the R represents resources.
Question
A firm's plant and equipment, its geographic location and its access to raw materials are all examples of physical resources.
Question
Financial resources include only the profits a firm has made earlier in its history and that it has reinvested in itself.
Question
The value chain model developed by McKinsey and Company divides value-creating activities into two large categories: primary activities and support activities.
Question
The assumption of resource immobility holds that it may be very costly for firms without certain resources and capabilities to develop or acquire them.
Question
If a firm creates environmental pollution in the process of manufacturing its goods, the pollution is known as an externality.
Question
One of the key assumptions of the RBV is resource homogeneity.
Question
Resources in the resource based view are defined as the tangible and intangible assets that a firm controls, which it can use to conceive of and implement its strategies.
Question
Organizational resources include the training, experience, judgment, intelligence, relationships and insight of individual managers and workers in a firm, while human resources are an attribute of collections of individuals.
Question
Within the VRIO framework, resources and capabilities that are not valuable are also known as weaknesses.
Question
In general, firms that use their resources and capabilities to exploit opportunities to neutralize threats will see no increase in their net revenues nor a decrease in their net costs compared to the situation where they are not using these resources and capabilities to exploit opportunities or neutralize threats.
Question
Capabilities are a subset of a firm's resources and are defined as tangible and intangible assets that enable a firm to take full advantage of other resources it controls.
Question
In general, as long as the number of firms that possess a particular valuable resource or capability is less than the number of firms needed to generate perfect competition dynamics in an industry, that resource can be considered rare and a potential source of competitive advantage.
Question
Within the VRIO framework, valuable resources and capabilities are also known as strengths.
Question
The value of a firm's resources and capabilities will generally manifest itself in either higher revenues or lower costs or both once a firm starts using these resources and capabilities to exploit opportunities or neutralize threats.
Question
Most firms have a resource base that is composed primarily of valuable but common resources and capabilities, some of which are essential if a firm is to gain competitive parity.
Question
A firm's value chain is the set of business activities in which it engages to develop and produce, but not to market, its products and services.
Question
A resource can be a source of competitive advantage even if the resource is controlled by numerous firms.
Question
Primary value chain activities include activities such as inbound logistics, outbound logistics, sales and marketing and services.
Question
When tacit cooperation has the effect of reducing supply and increasing prices, it is known as tacit collusion.
Question
One reason a firm may not respond to another firm's competitive advantage is because it does not have the resources or capabilities to do so.
Question
When firms without a resource or capability face a cost disadvantage in obtaining or developing it compared to firms that already possess it, this resource or capability is described as perfectly imitable.
Question
A firm's formal reporting structure is a description of who in an organization reports to whom and is often embedded in a firm's organizational chart.
Question
To the extent that a firm's resources and capabilities are continuously evolving, its organizational structure, control systems, and compensation policies must also evolve.
Question
Most technological developments in an industry are diffused throughout firms in a relatively brief period of time, but only if the technology in question has not been patented.
Question
The ability of firms to acquire, develop, and use resources often depends upon their place in time and space, and firms that do not have space-and-time-dependent resources face a significant cost disadvantage in obtaining and developing them.
Question
Decisions made by other firms given the strategic choices of a particular firm define the nature of the competitive dynamics that exist in an industry.
Question
In general, imitation can occur in one of two ways: direct duplication or substitution.
Question
If there is a conflict between the resources a firm controls and the firm's organization, the resources should be changed.
Question
A firm's patents may decrease, rather than increase, the costs of imitation.
Question
A sustained competitive advantage can be competed away by strategic imitation.
Question
Tacit cooperation is only a viable strategy when an industry is perfectly competitive.
Question
The interpersonal relations among managers in a firm, a firm's culture, and a firm's reputation among suppliers and customers can all act to make a firm's resources and capabilities socially complex.
Question
Any actions that a firm takes that have the effect of reducing the level of rivalry in an industry that also do not require firms in an industry to negotiate with each other can be thought of as explicit cooperation.
Question
Formal management controls include a firm's culture and the willingness of employees to monitor each other's behavior.
Question
A process is said to be path dependent when imitating firms are not able to understand the relationship between the resources and capabilities controlled by a firm and that firm's competitive advantage.
Question
Compensation policies are the ways that firms pay employees, and such policies create incentives for employees to behave in certain ways.
Question
If a resource or capability is valuable and rare but not costly to imitate, exploiting this resource will generate a sustainable competitive advantage for a firm.
Question
In the end, competitive advantage is so important to a firm's success, it must remain the sole property of senior management.
Question
The theoretical roots of the resource-based view can be traced to research done by

A) David Ricardo.
B) Adam Smith.
C) Oliver Williamson.
D) Joseph Schumpeter.
Question
Computer hardware and software technology, robots used in manufacturing and automated warehouses are examples of which type of resources?

A) Financial resources
B) Physical resources
C) Human resources
D) Organizational resources
Question
ESPN's development of an extensive offering of X-Games coverage that is unmatched by any other sports outlet is an example of which element of the VRIO framework?

A) Organization
B) Imitability
C) Value
D) Rarity
Question
If firms that do not possess resource or capabilities face a cost disadvantage in obtaining these resources or capabilities compared to the firms that already possess them, these resources and capabilities are termed

A) rare.
B) valuable.
C) imperfectly imitable.
D) perfectly imitable.
Question
If in the process of maximizing its performance, a firm engages in activities that pollute the environment, the impact of that pollution is a(n)

A) capability.
B) externality.
C) competitive advantage.
D) weakness.
Question
The training, experience, judgment, intelligence, relationships and insight of individual managers and workers in a firm are examples of

A) physical resources.
B) human resources.
C) organizational resources.
D) financial resources.
Question
A firm's marketing skills and teamwork as well as its cooperation among managers are examples of

A) financial resources.
B) human resources.
C) physical resources.
D) capabilities.
Question
A firm's formal reporting structure, its formal and informal planning and its controlling and coordinating systems are examples of which type of resources?

A) Financial resources
B) Physical resources
C) Human resources
D) Organizational resources
Question
Most firms have a resource base that is composed primarily of resources and capabilities that are

A) valuable but not rare.
B) neither valuable nor rare.
C) valuable and rare.
D) rare but not valuable.
Question
Which of the following is not one of the six distinct activities in McKinsey and Company's value chain model?

A) Technology development
B) Product design
C) Manufacturing
D) Inbound logistics
Question
To the extent that a firm's resources and capabilities enhance a firm's competitive position by enabling a firm to exploit its opportunities or neutralize its threats, these resources and capabilities are valuable and are known as

A) temporary competitive advantages.
B) sustainable competitive advantages.
C) core competencies.
D) strengths.
Question
Inputs whose quantity is fixed and whose demand does not respond to price increases are said to be

A) elastic in supply.
B) inelastic in supply.
C) elastic in demand.
D) perfectly competitive.
Question
The VRIO assumption that some of the resource and capability differences among firms may be long lasting is known as

A) resource mobility.
B) resource homogeneity.
C) resource immobility.
D) resource heterogeneity.
Question
In general, as long as the number of firms that possess a particular valuable resource or capability is less than the number of firms needed to generate perfect competition dynamics in an industry, that resource or capability can be considered ________ and a potential source of competitive advantage.

A) valuable
B) rare
C) inimitable
D) un-substitutable
Question
The set of business activities in which a firm engages to develop, produce, and market its products or services is known as its

A) value chain.
B) physical resources.
C) organizational resources.
D) human resources.
Question
________ implies that for a given business activity, some firms may be more skilled in accomplishing this activity than other firms.

A) Resource mobility
B) Resource homogeneity
C) Resource immobility
D) Resource heterogeneity
Question
________ in the RBV are defined as the tangible and intangible assets that a firm controls that it can use to conceive of and implement its strategies.

A) Management controls
B) Capabilities
C) Resources
D) Compensation policies
Question
In Porter's value chain model, which of the following activities would be considered a primary activity?

A) Technology development
B) Human resource management
C) Inbound logistics
D) Product development
Question
Firms that possess and exploit costly-to-imitate, rare and valuable resources in choosing and implementing their strategies may enjoy a period of

A) temporary competitive advantage.
B) competitive disadvantage.
C) competitive parity.
D) sustained competitive advantage.
Question
________ are a subset of a firm's resources and are defined as tangible and intangible assets that enable a firm to take full advantage of other resources it controls.

A) Retained earnings
B) Capabilities
C) Human resources
D) Financial resources
Question
If a firm's resources and capabilities are costly to imitate because imitating firms may not understand the relationship between the resources and capabilities controlled by a firm and that firm's competitive advantage, this competitive advantage is said to be protected from imitation by

A) path dependence.
B) casual ambiguity.
C) unique historical conditions.
D) social complexity.
Question
Which of the following statements regarding the resource-based view is accurate?

A) Competitively valuable resources and capabilities are controlled only by a firm's general managers.
B) Only lower level employees need to accept the responsibility of creating, nurturing and exploiting resources and capabilities that can generate competitive advantages for a firm.
C) Employees should define their jobs in functional terms instead of in competitive and economic terms.
D) Competitive advantage is too important to remain the sole property of senior management.
Question
If a resource or capability is valuable and rare but not costly to imitate, exploiting this resource will generate a(n)

A) sustained competitive advantage.
B) perfectly competitive environment.
C) temporary competitive advantage.
D) environment characterized by competitive parity.
Question
Southwest Airlines' strong internal culture that helps ensure that employees act in ways consistent with the company's strategy is an example of a(n)

A) informal management control.
B) formal management control.
C) compensation policy.
D) formal reporting structure.
Question
Which of the following statements regarding patents is accurate?

A) Patents always increase the costs of imitation.
B) Patents may decrease, rather than increase, the costs of imitation.
C) Patents always decrease the costs of imitation.
D) Patents have no impact on the costs of imitation.
Question
If Delta Airlines were to significantly change its fare structure and flight schedule to enhance its competitive position in response to aggressive price cutting by Southwest Airlines, this would be an example of

A) explicit collusion.
B) tacit collusion.
C) competitive dynamics.
D) a harvest strategy.
Question
Resources and capabilities that are valuable, rare, and costly to imitate are best described as

A) distinctive competencies.
B) entry barriers.
C) complementary resources and capabilities.
D) sustainable distinctive competencies.
Question
When tacit cooperation has the effect of reducing supply and increasing prices, it is known as

A) monopolistic competition.
B) explicit collusion.
C) competitive parity.
D) tacit collusion.
Question
Resources that are valuable but not rare can be categorized as

A) organizational weaknesses.
B) distinctive competencies.
C) organizational strengths.
D) complementary resources and capabilities.
Question
If there is a conflict between the resources a firm controls and that firm's organization, ________ should be changed.

A) the resources
B) both
C) nothing
D) the organization
Question
Tacit cooperation is only a viable strategy when

A) an industry is perfectly competitive.
B) an industry is heterogeneous with respect to the products it sells and their cost structure.
C) there is a strong market share leader in the industry.
D) there are low entry barriers in the industry.
Question
According to the research in strategic human resources management,

A) firms that are able to use human resource practices to develop socially complex human and organizational resources are able to gain competitive advantage over firms that do not engage in these practices.
B) firms that are able to use human resource practices to develop socially simplistic human and organizational resources are able to gain competitive advantage over firms that do not engage in these practices.
C) firms that are able to use human resource practices to develop socially complex human and organizational resources gain little advantage over firms that do not engage in these practices.
D) firms that are able to use human resource practices to develop socially complex human and organizational resources are at a competitive disadvantage when compared to firms that do not engage in these practices.
Question
The range of formal and informal mechanisms to ensure that managers are behaving in ways consistent with a firm's strategies are referred to as

A) formal reporting structures.
B) organizational charts.
C) compensation policies.
D) management control systems.
Question
A process is said to be ________ when events early in the evolution of a process have significant effects on subsequent events.

A) causally ambiguous
B) path dependent
C) socially complex
D) path independent
Question
Resources that generate a temporary competitive advantage are

A) valuable, rare and costly to imitate.
B) valuable but neither rare nor costly to imitate.
C) valuable and either rare or costly to imitate.
D) valuable and rare but not costly to imitate.
Question
Resources and capabilities, such as relations among managers and a firm's culture, that may be costly to imitate because they are beyond the ability of firms to systematically manage and influence are referred to as

A) socially complex.
B) casually ambiguous.
C) path dependent.
D) the result of unique historical conditions.
Question
Which of the following statements regarding competitive parity and competitive advantage is accurate?

A) Some firms develop valuable, rare, and costly-to-imitate resource and capabilities in being efficient second movers that is, imitating and improving on the product and technological innovations of other firms.
B) Firms that benchmark their performance against the performance of successful competitors can expect to develop at least a temporary competitive advantage.
C) Firms must be first movers to gain competitive advantages.
D) Even if all a firm does is create value in the same way as its competitors, the firm can expect to earn at least a temporary competitive advantage.
Question
The specific actions a firm takes to implement its strategies are known as

A) competitive advantages.
B) objectives.
C) goals.
D) tactics.
Question
Which of the following is an example of formal management controls?

A) A firm's culture
B) The willingness of employees to monitor each other
C) Budgeting and reporting activities
D) Managerial motivation
Question
Any actions a firm takes that have the effect of reducing the level of rivalry in an industry that also do not require firms in an industry to directly communicate or negotiate with each other can be thought of as

A) tacit cooperation.
B) tacit collusion.
C) explicit collusion.
D) competitive parity.
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Deck 3: Evaluating a Firms Internal Capabilities
1
Inputs whose quantity of supply is fixed and whose demand does not respond to price increases are said to be elastic in supply.
False
2
In the VRIO framework, the R represents resources.
False
3
A firm's plant and equipment, its geographic location and its access to raw materials are all examples of physical resources.
True
4
Financial resources include only the profits a firm has made earlier in its history and that it has reinvested in itself.
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k this deck
5
The value chain model developed by McKinsey and Company divides value-creating activities into two large categories: primary activities and support activities.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
6
The assumption of resource immobility holds that it may be very costly for firms without certain resources and capabilities to develop or acquire them.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
7
If a firm creates environmental pollution in the process of manufacturing its goods, the pollution is known as an externality.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
8
One of the key assumptions of the RBV is resource homogeneity.
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9
Resources in the resource based view are defined as the tangible and intangible assets that a firm controls, which it can use to conceive of and implement its strategies.
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k this deck
10
Organizational resources include the training, experience, judgment, intelligence, relationships and insight of individual managers and workers in a firm, while human resources are an attribute of collections of individuals.
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11
Within the VRIO framework, resources and capabilities that are not valuable are also known as weaknesses.
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12
In general, firms that use their resources and capabilities to exploit opportunities to neutralize threats will see no increase in their net revenues nor a decrease in their net costs compared to the situation where they are not using these resources and capabilities to exploit opportunities or neutralize threats.
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13
Capabilities are a subset of a firm's resources and are defined as tangible and intangible assets that enable a firm to take full advantage of other resources it controls.
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14
In general, as long as the number of firms that possess a particular valuable resource or capability is less than the number of firms needed to generate perfect competition dynamics in an industry, that resource can be considered rare and a potential source of competitive advantage.
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15
Within the VRIO framework, valuable resources and capabilities are also known as strengths.
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16
The value of a firm's resources and capabilities will generally manifest itself in either higher revenues or lower costs or both once a firm starts using these resources and capabilities to exploit opportunities or neutralize threats.
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17
Most firms have a resource base that is composed primarily of valuable but common resources and capabilities, some of which are essential if a firm is to gain competitive parity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
18
A firm's value chain is the set of business activities in which it engages to develop and produce, but not to market, its products and services.
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19
A resource can be a source of competitive advantage even if the resource is controlled by numerous firms.
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20
Primary value chain activities include activities such as inbound logistics, outbound logistics, sales and marketing and services.
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21
When tacit cooperation has the effect of reducing supply and increasing prices, it is known as tacit collusion.
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22
One reason a firm may not respond to another firm's competitive advantage is because it does not have the resources or capabilities to do so.
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23
When firms without a resource or capability face a cost disadvantage in obtaining or developing it compared to firms that already possess it, this resource or capability is described as perfectly imitable.
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24
A firm's formal reporting structure is a description of who in an organization reports to whom and is often embedded in a firm's organizational chart.
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25
To the extent that a firm's resources and capabilities are continuously evolving, its organizational structure, control systems, and compensation policies must also evolve.
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26
Most technological developments in an industry are diffused throughout firms in a relatively brief period of time, but only if the technology in question has not been patented.
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27
The ability of firms to acquire, develop, and use resources often depends upon their place in time and space, and firms that do not have space-and-time-dependent resources face a significant cost disadvantage in obtaining and developing them.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
28
Decisions made by other firms given the strategic choices of a particular firm define the nature of the competitive dynamics that exist in an industry.
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k this deck
29
In general, imitation can occur in one of two ways: direct duplication or substitution.
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30
If there is a conflict between the resources a firm controls and the firm's organization, the resources should be changed.
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31
A firm's patents may decrease, rather than increase, the costs of imitation.
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32
A sustained competitive advantage can be competed away by strategic imitation.
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33
Tacit cooperation is only a viable strategy when an industry is perfectly competitive.
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34
The interpersonal relations among managers in a firm, a firm's culture, and a firm's reputation among suppliers and customers can all act to make a firm's resources and capabilities socially complex.
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35
Any actions that a firm takes that have the effect of reducing the level of rivalry in an industry that also do not require firms in an industry to negotiate with each other can be thought of as explicit cooperation.
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36
Formal management controls include a firm's culture and the willingness of employees to monitor each other's behavior.
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37
A process is said to be path dependent when imitating firms are not able to understand the relationship between the resources and capabilities controlled by a firm and that firm's competitive advantage.
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38
Compensation policies are the ways that firms pay employees, and such policies create incentives for employees to behave in certain ways.
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39
If a resource or capability is valuable and rare but not costly to imitate, exploiting this resource will generate a sustainable competitive advantage for a firm.
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40
In the end, competitive advantage is so important to a firm's success, it must remain the sole property of senior management.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The theoretical roots of the resource-based view can be traced to research done by

A) David Ricardo.
B) Adam Smith.
C) Oliver Williamson.
D) Joseph Schumpeter.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Computer hardware and software technology, robots used in manufacturing and automated warehouses are examples of which type of resources?

A) Financial resources
B) Physical resources
C) Human resources
D) Organizational resources
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
ESPN's development of an extensive offering of X-Games coverage that is unmatched by any other sports outlet is an example of which element of the VRIO framework?

A) Organization
B) Imitability
C) Value
D) Rarity
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
If firms that do not possess resource or capabilities face a cost disadvantage in obtaining these resources or capabilities compared to the firms that already possess them, these resources and capabilities are termed

A) rare.
B) valuable.
C) imperfectly imitable.
D) perfectly imitable.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
If in the process of maximizing its performance, a firm engages in activities that pollute the environment, the impact of that pollution is a(n)

A) capability.
B) externality.
C) competitive advantage.
D) weakness.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
The training, experience, judgment, intelligence, relationships and insight of individual managers and workers in a firm are examples of

A) physical resources.
B) human resources.
C) organizational resources.
D) financial resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
A firm's marketing skills and teamwork as well as its cooperation among managers are examples of

A) financial resources.
B) human resources.
C) physical resources.
D) capabilities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
A firm's formal reporting structure, its formal and informal planning and its controlling and coordinating systems are examples of which type of resources?

A) Financial resources
B) Physical resources
C) Human resources
D) Organizational resources
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Most firms have a resource base that is composed primarily of resources and capabilities that are

A) valuable but not rare.
B) neither valuable nor rare.
C) valuable and rare.
D) rare but not valuable.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Which of the following is not one of the six distinct activities in McKinsey and Company's value chain model?

A) Technology development
B) Product design
C) Manufacturing
D) Inbound logistics
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
To the extent that a firm's resources and capabilities enhance a firm's competitive position by enabling a firm to exploit its opportunities or neutralize its threats, these resources and capabilities are valuable and are known as

A) temporary competitive advantages.
B) sustainable competitive advantages.
C) core competencies.
D) strengths.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Inputs whose quantity is fixed and whose demand does not respond to price increases are said to be

A) elastic in supply.
B) inelastic in supply.
C) elastic in demand.
D) perfectly competitive.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
The VRIO assumption that some of the resource and capability differences among firms may be long lasting is known as

A) resource mobility.
B) resource homogeneity.
C) resource immobility.
D) resource heterogeneity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
In general, as long as the number of firms that possess a particular valuable resource or capability is less than the number of firms needed to generate perfect competition dynamics in an industry, that resource or capability can be considered ________ and a potential source of competitive advantage.

A) valuable
B) rare
C) inimitable
D) un-substitutable
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
The set of business activities in which a firm engages to develop, produce, and market its products or services is known as its

A) value chain.
B) physical resources.
C) organizational resources.
D) human resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
________ implies that for a given business activity, some firms may be more skilled in accomplishing this activity than other firms.

A) Resource mobility
B) Resource homogeneity
C) Resource immobility
D) Resource heterogeneity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
________ in the RBV are defined as the tangible and intangible assets that a firm controls that it can use to conceive of and implement its strategies.

A) Management controls
B) Capabilities
C) Resources
D) Compensation policies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
In Porter's value chain model, which of the following activities would be considered a primary activity?

A) Technology development
B) Human resource management
C) Inbound logistics
D) Product development
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
Firms that possess and exploit costly-to-imitate, rare and valuable resources in choosing and implementing their strategies may enjoy a period of

A) temporary competitive advantage.
B) competitive disadvantage.
C) competitive parity.
D) sustained competitive advantage.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
________ are a subset of a firm's resources and are defined as tangible and intangible assets that enable a firm to take full advantage of other resources it controls.

A) Retained earnings
B) Capabilities
C) Human resources
D) Financial resources
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61
If a firm's resources and capabilities are costly to imitate because imitating firms may not understand the relationship between the resources and capabilities controlled by a firm and that firm's competitive advantage, this competitive advantage is said to be protected from imitation by

A) path dependence.
B) casual ambiguity.
C) unique historical conditions.
D) social complexity.
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62
Which of the following statements regarding the resource-based view is accurate?

A) Competitively valuable resources and capabilities are controlled only by a firm's general managers.
B) Only lower level employees need to accept the responsibility of creating, nurturing and exploiting resources and capabilities that can generate competitive advantages for a firm.
C) Employees should define their jobs in functional terms instead of in competitive and economic terms.
D) Competitive advantage is too important to remain the sole property of senior management.
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63
If a resource or capability is valuable and rare but not costly to imitate, exploiting this resource will generate a(n)

A) sustained competitive advantage.
B) perfectly competitive environment.
C) temporary competitive advantage.
D) environment characterized by competitive parity.
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64
Southwest Airlines' strong internal culture that helps ensure that employees act in ways consistent with the company's strategy is an example of a(n)

A) informal management control.
B) formal management control.
C) compensation policy.
D) formal reporting structure.
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65
Which of the following statements regarding patents is accurate?

A) Patents always increase the costs of imitation.
B) Patents may decrease, rather than increase, the costs of imitation.
C) Patents always decrease the costs of imitation.
D) Patents have no impact on the costs of imitation.
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66
If Delta Airlines were to significantly change its fare structure and flight schedule to enhance its competitive position in response to aggressive price cutting by Southwest Airlines, this would be an example of

A) explicit collusion.
B) tacit collusion.
C) competitive dynamics.
D) a harvest strategy.
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67
Resources and capabilities that are valuable, rare, and costly to imitate are best described as

A) distinctive competencies.
B) entry barriers.
C) complementary resources and capabilities.
D) sustainable distinctive competencies.
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68
When tacit cooperation has the effect of reducing supply and increasing prices, it is known as

A) monopolistic competition.
B) explicit collusion.
C) competitive parity.
D) tacit collusion.
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Unlock Deck
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69
Resources that are valuable but not rare can be categorized as

A) organizational weaknesses.
B) distinctive competencies.
C) organizational strengths.
D) complementary resources and capabilities.
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70
If there is a conflict between the resources a firm controls and that firm's organization, ________ should be changed.

A) the resources
B) both
C) nothing
D) the organization
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71
Tacit cooperation is only a viable strategy when

A) an industry is perfectly competitive.
B) an industry is heterogeneous with respect to the products it sells and their cost structure.
C) there is a strong market share leader in the industry.
D) there are low entry barriers in the industry.
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72
According to the research in strategic human resources management,

A) firms that are able to use human resource practices to develop socially complex human and organizational resources are able to gain competitive advantage over firms that do not engage in these practices.
B) firms that are able to use human resource practices to develop socially simplistic human and organizational resources are able to gain competitive advantage over firms that do not engage in these practices.
C) firms that are able to use human resource practices to develop socially complex human and organizational resources gain little advantage over firms that do not engage in these practices.
D) firms that are able to use human resource practices to develop socially complex human and organizational resources are at a competitive disadvantage when compared to firms that do not engage in these practices.
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73
The range of formal and informal mechanisms to ensure that managers are behaving in ways consistent with a firm's strategies are referred to as

A) formal reporting structures.
B) organizational charts.
C) compensation policies.
D) management control systems.
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74
A process is said to be ________ when events early in the evolution of a process have significant effects on subsequent events.

A) causally ambiguous
B) path dependent
C) socially complex
D) path independent
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75
Resources that generate a temporary competitive advantage are

A) valuable, rare and costly to imitate.
B) valuable but neither rare nor costly to imitate.
C) valuable and either rare or costly to imitate.
D) valuable and rare but not costly to imitate.
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76
Resources and capabilities, such as relations among managers and a firm's culture, that may be costly to imitate because they are beyond the ability of firms to systematically manage and influence are referred to as

A) socially complex.
B) casually ambiguous.
C) path dependent.
D) the result of unique historical conditions.
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77
Which of the following statements regarding competitive parity and competitive advantage is accurate?

A) Some firms develop valuable, rare, and costly-to-imitate resource and capabilities in being efficient second movers that is, imitating and improving on the product and technological innovations of other firms.
B) Firms that benchmark their performance against the performance of successful competitors can expect to develop at least a temporary competitive advantage.
C) Firms must be first movers to gain competitive advantages.
D) Even if all a firm does is create value in the same way as its competitors, the firm can expect to earn at least a temporary competitive advantage.
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78
The specific actions a firm takes to implement its strategies are known as

A) competitive advantages.
B) objectives.
C) goals.
D) tactics.
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79
Which of the following is an example of formal management controls?

A) A firm's culture
B) The willingness of employees to monitor each other
C) Budgeting and reporting activities
D) Managerial motivation
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k this deck
80
Any actions a firm takes that have the effect of reducing the level of rivalry in an industry that also do not require firms in an industry to directly communicate or negotiate with each other can be thought of as

A) tacit cooperation.
B) tacit collusion.
C) explicit collusion.
D) competitive parity.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.