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Hypercompetition

Managing the Dynamics of Strategic Maneuvering

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  • 444 pages
  • 16 hours of reading

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General Motors and IBM have faced significant challenges, with Jack Welch describing the 1980s as a "white knuckle decade" and predicting even greater competition in the 1990s. In this groundbreaking work on "hypercompetition," Richard D'Aveni illustrates how today's competitive landscape demands a fundamental shift in strategic focus. He presents an operational model that reveals how companies ascend "escalation ladders," where advantages are continuously created, eroded, and recreated through strategic moves across four competitive arenas: "price and quality," "timing and know-how," "stronghold creation/invasion," and "deep pockets." D'Aveni supports his analysis with numerous examples from hypercompetitive sectors like computers, automobiles, and pharmaceuticals, showing how successful firms disrupt the status quo and maintain a cycle of temporary advantages. He introduces the "New 7-S's" strategies—Superior Stakeholder Satisfaction, Strategic Soothsaying, Speed, Surprise, Shifting the Rules of Competition, Signaling Strategic Intent, and Simultaneous and Sequential Thrusts. His findings suggest that firms must often dismantle their own advantages to establish new ones, emphasizing the need for dynamic strategies over static long-term plans. D'Aveni warns that American antitrust laws may hinder competitiveness, making this essential reading for managers, planners, and students navigating hypercompetitive industries.

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Hypercompetition, Richard A. D'Aveni, Robert Günther, Ian C. MacMillan

Language
Released
1994
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Paperback),
Book condition
Damaged
Price
€5.30

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Subtitle
Managing the Dynamics of Strategic Maneuvering
Language
English
Publisher
Free Press
Released
1994
Format
Paperback
Pages
444
ISBN10
0029069386
ISBN13
9780029069387
Series
Description
General Motors and IBM have faced significant challenges, with Jack Welch describing the 1980s as a "white knuckle decade" and predicting even greater competition in the 1990s. In this groundbreaking work on "hypercompetition," Richard D'Aveni illustrates how today's competitive landscape demands a fundamental shift in strategic focus. He presents an operational model that reveals how companies ascend "escalation ladders," where advantages are continuously created, eroded, and recreated through strategic moves across four competitive arenas: "price and quality," "timing and know-how," "stronghold creation/invasion," and "deep pockets." D'Aveni supports his analysis with numerous examples from hypercompetitive sectors like computers, automobiles, and pharmaceuticals, showing how successful firms disrupt the status quo and maintain a cycle of temporary advantages. He introduces the "New 7-S's" strategies—Superior Stakeholder Satisfaction, Strategic Soothsaying, Speed, Surprise, Shifting the Rules of Competition, Signaling Strategic Intent, and Simultaneous and Sequential Thrusts. His findings suggest that firms must often dismantle their own advantages to establish new ones, emphasizing the need for dynamic strategies over static long-term plans. D'Aveni warns that American antitrust laws may hinder competitiveness, making this essential reading for managers, planners, and students navigating hypercompetitive industries.