Chat with us, powered by LiveChat WEEK 3 ASSIGNMENT – STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT AND STRATEGIC COMPETITIVENESS Week 3 Assignment – Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness Overview Choose one public corporation in a - Writingforyou

WEEK 3 ASSIGNMENT – STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT AND STRATEGIC COMPETITIVENESS Week 3 Assignment – Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness Overview Choose one public corporation in a

 

WEEK 3 ASSIGNMENT – STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT AND STRATEGIC COMPETITIVENESS

Week 3 Assignment – Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness

Overview

Choose one public corporation in an industry with which you are familiar. (Note: you will use this same corporation in every assignment throughout the course)Use any or all of the following resources to conduct research on the corporation:

  • The corporation’s website.
  • Public filings from the Securities and Exchange Commission's Filings & Forms page.
  • Strayer University's online databases.
  • The Nexis Uni database.
  • Other credible sources such as the corporation's annual report, will often provide insights that other resources may not include.
  • It is expected that you will use your textbook as a resource for this assignment.

Instructions:

  • Read Assignment Formatting and Tips [PDF] before starting the assignment. Refer back to this document as needed.
  • Review the scoring guide (rubric) in the course guide before starting the assignment.
  • Download and save the Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness Template [DOCX].
  • (Note: this template is provided as a guide for the first assignment. Refer back to it if needed as guidance for later assignments.)
  • Use the template to write a 4-6 page academic research paper in which you include the following:

Step 1: Assess how globalization and technology changes have impacted the corporation you researched. Support your assessment with specific evidence.Step 2: Apply the industrial organization model and the resource-based model to determine how your corporation could earn above-average returns. Support your response with specific evidence.Step 3: Assess how the vision statement and mission statement of the corporation influences its overall success. Support your assessment with specific evidence.Step 4: Evaluate how each category of stakeholder impacts the overall success of the corporation. Support your response with specific evidence.

  • Use three or more quality sources, including your textbook, to support your writing. Choose sources that are credible, relevant, and appropriate. Cite each source listed on your source page at least one time within your assignment. (Note: Wikipedia and similar websites do not qualify as academic resources)
    • For help with research, writing, and citation, access the library.
  • Produce writing that is clear and well organized and applies appropriate Strayer Writing Standards (SWS) style. Writing contains accurate grammar, mechanics, and spelling.

This course requires the use of Strayer Writing Standards (SWS). The library is your home for SWS assistance, including citations and formatting. Please refer to the Library site for all support. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.The specific course learning outcome associated with this assignment is the following:

  • Determine the impact of globalization and technology changes, strategic models, vision and mission statements, and stakeholders on a corporation's success.

Week 3 Assignment – Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness

Overview

Choose one public corporation in an industry with which you are familiar. (Note: you will use this same corporation in every assignment throughout the course)Use any or all of the following resources to conduct research on the corporation:

  • The corporation’s website.
  • Public filings from the Securities and Exchange Commission's Filings & Forms page.
  • Strayer University's online databases.
  • The Nexis Uni database.
  • Other credible sources such as the corporation's annual report, will often provide insights that other resources may not include.
  • It is expected that you will use your textbook as a resource for this assignment.

Instructions:

  • Read Assignment Formatting and Tips [PDF] before starting the assignment. Refer back to this document as needed.
  • Review the scoring guide (rubric) in the course guide before starting the assignment.
  • Download and save the Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness Template [DOCX].
  • (Note: this template is provided as a guide for the first assignment. Refer back to it if needed as guidance for later assignments.)
  • Use the template to write a 4-6 page academic research paper in which you include the following:

Step 1: Assess how globalization and technology changes have impacted the corporation you researched. Support your assessment with specific evidence.Step 2: Apply the industrial organization model and the resource-based model to determine how your corporation could earn above-average returns. Support your response with specific evidence.Step 3: Assess how the vision statement and mission statement of the corporation influences its overall success. Support your assessment with specific evidence.Step 4: Evaluate how each category of stakeholder impacts the overall success of the corporation. Support your response with specific evidence.

  • Use three or more quality sources, including your textbook, to support your writing. Choose sources that are credible, relevant, and appropriate. Cite each source listed on your source page at least one time within your assignment. (Note: Wikipedia and similar websites do not qualify as academic resources)
    • For help with research, writing, and citation, access the library.
  • Produce writing that is clear and well organized and applies appropriate Strayer Writing Standards (SWS) style. Writing contains accurate grammar, mechanics, and spelling.

This course requires the use of Strayer Writing Standards (SWS). The library is your home for SWS assistance, including citations and formatting. Please refer to the Library site for all support. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.The specific course learning outcome associated with this assignment is the following:

  • Determine the impact of globalization and technology changes, strategic models, vision and mission statements, and stakeholders on a corporation's success.

Uber

BUS475

Wendy Sanderfer 

April 17, 2023

Reference https://library.strayer.edu/sws/paper for Essay Paper Checklist– The outline below is provided to guide you in meeting the requirements for this assignment. Delete Red text instructions before Submitting Paper.

Introduction

· Three to five lines only.

Summarize the company’s primary products and or services

· Explain what the company does and/or offers to consumers

Suggest three ways in which the primary stakeholders can influence the organization’s financial performance.

#1

· Evidence/support for response

#2

· Evidence/support for response

#3

· Evidence/support for response

Consider summarizing points made in the paragraph.

Describe two critical factors in the organization’s external environment that can affect its success.

#1

· Evidence/support your assertions.

#2

· Evidence/support your assertions.

Assess the company’s biggest success or missed opportunity to respond to a recent or current social issue.

· You are evaluating the selected company’s response to a recent or current social issue – Assess whether is was their biggest success or missed opportunity and why.

How did it impact company performance?

· Explain the impact on the company’s performance

Sources

1. Anne Lawrence. 2020. Business and Society: Stakeholders, Ethics, Public Policy. BUS475 McGraw-Hill Irwin 16th edition textbook.

2. Enter the second source entry here.

3. Enter the third source entry here.

4. Enter the fourth source entry here.

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3 The Internal Organization: Resources, Capabilities, Core Competencies, and Competitive Advantages

Studying this chapter should provide you with the strategic management knowledge needed to:

3-1 Explain why firms need to study and understand their internal organization.

3-2 Define value and discuss its importance.

3-3 Describe the differences between tangible and intangible resources.

3-4 Define capabilities and discuss their development.

3-5 Describe four criteria used to determine if resources and capabilities are core competencies.

3-6 Explain how firms analyze their value chain to determine where they are able to create value when using their resources, capabilities, and core competencies.

3-7 Define outsourcing and discuss reasons for its use.

3-8 Discuss the importance of identifying internal strengths and weaknesses.

3-9 Describe the importance of avoiding core rigidities.

Copyright 2020 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s). Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.

Copyright 2021 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part without explicit permission. November 2019. WCN 03-300-273

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To date, and perhaps surprisingly, the idea of using data strategically remains somewhat novel in some organizations. However, the reality of “big data” and “big data analytics” (which is “the process of examining big data to uncover hidden patterns, unknown correlations, and other useful information that can be used to make better decisions”) is becoming increasingly popular in business. Indeed, in the current competitive landscape, most businesses must use big data analytics (BDA) across all customer channels (mobile, Web, e-mail, and physical stores) throughout their supply chain to help them become more innovative.

This is the situation for large pharmaceutical companies (the firms often called “big pharma”) in that many have been working to develop a core competence in BDA. (We define and discuss core competencies in this chapter.) There are several reasons they are doing this. In addition to the vast increases in the amounts of data that must be studied and interpreted for competitive purposes, “health care reform and the changing landscape of health care delivery” systems throughout the world are influencing these firms to think about developing BDA as a core competence.

Many benefits can accrue to big pharma firms that develop BDA as a core competence. For example, having BDA as a core competence can help a firm quickly identify trial candidates and accelerate their recruitment, develop improved inclusion and exclusion criteria to use in clinical trials, and uncover unintended uses and indications for prod- ucts. In terms of customer functionality, superior products can be provided at a faster pace as a foundation for helping patients live better and healthier lives.

In developing their BDA capabilities, many of the big pharma companies are investing in ar- tificial intelligence (AI). AI provides the capability to analyze many different sets of information. For example, AI can help analyze data on clinical trials, health records, genetic profiles, and preclinical studies. AI can analyze and integrate these data to identify patterns in the data and suggest hypotheses about relationships. A new drug generally requires a decade of research and $2.6 billion of investment. And only about 5 percent of the drugs that enter experimental research make it to the market and are successful. Eventually, it is expected that the use of AI could reduce the early research development time from 4-6 years to 1 year, not only greatly reducing the time of development but also the costs.

As we discuss in this chapter, capabilities are the foundation for developing core com- petencies. There are several capabilities big pharma companies need for BDA to be a core competence. Supportive architecture, the proper mix of data scientists, and “technology that integrates and manages new types and sources of data flexibility and scalability while main- taining the highest standards of data governance, data quality, and data security” are examples

LARGE PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES, BIG DATA ANALYTICS, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND CORE COMPETENCIES: A BRAVE NEW WORLD

AI can help analyze data on clinical trials, health records, genetic profiles, and preclinical studies. China has a goal to become the world leader in AI.

Copyright 2020 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s). Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.

Copyright 2021 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part without explicit permission. November 2019. WCN 03-300-273

76

As discussed in the first two chapters, several factors in the global economy, including the rapid development of the Internet’s capabilities and globalization in general, are

making it difficult for firms to develop competitive advantages.1 Increasingly, innovation appears to be a vital path to efforts to develop competitive advantages, particularly sus- tainable ones.2 Innovative actions are required by big pharma companies, and they need to develop new drugs more quickly and at lower costs while improving the success of the drugs that they develop. As the Opening Case shows, they are trying to use artificial intelligence to help develop capabilities in big data analytics that hopefully can become a core competence.

As is the case for big pharma companies, innovation is critical to most firms’ suc- cess. This means that many firms seek to develop innovation as a core competence. We define and discuss core competencies in this chapter and explain how firms use their resources and capabilities to form them. As a core competence, innovation has long been critical to Boeing’s success, too. Today, however, the firm is focusing on incre- mental innovations as well as developing new technologies that are linked to major innovations and the projects they spawn, such as the 787 Dreamliner. The first delivery of the 787-10 Dreamliner was made to Singapore Airlines on March 26, 2018. Boeing believes its incremental innovations enable the firm to deliver reliable products to cus- tomers more quickly and at a lower cost.3 As we discuss in this chapter, firms and organizations—such as those we mention here—achieve strategic competitiveness and earn above-average returns by acquiring, bundling, and leveraging their resources for the purpose of taking advantage of opportunities in the external environment in ways that create value for customers.4

Even if the firm develops and manages resources in ways that create core compe- tencies and competitive advantages, competitors will eventually learn how to duplicate the benefits of any firm’s value-creating strategy; thus, all competitive advantages have

of capabilities that big pharma need if they wish to develop BDA as a core competence. Of course, using artificial intelligence provides strong support for the application of BDA.

Having a strong BDA competence could be critical for pharmaceutical firms in the future. Most Chinese pharmaceutical firms are medium-sized and sell generic drugs and therapeutic medicines, investing in R&D at only about 25% of the amount invested by big pharma in devel- oped countries. However, China has a plan to develop large, competitive pharmaceutical firms by 2025. In 2017, for example, China’s second largest class of investments was biopharma. Interestingly, the largest Chinese investment that year was in information systems, including AI. China has a goal to become the world leader in AI.

In recent years, big pharma has been earning mediocre returns of about 3 percent ROI, down from 10 percent a decade earlier. Thus, big pharma executives feel pressure especially with the initial costs of developing BDA and AI. Hopefully, they soon will be able to reduce their costs and experience higher rates of success in the development of new drugs. Until then, however, analysts are predicting record numbers of mergers and acquisitions in the pharmaceutical industry, with big pharma acquiring successful medium-sized pharmaceuticals and biotechnology firms.

Sources: S. Mukherjee, 2018, How big pharma is using AI to make better drugs, Fortune, fortune.com, March 19: Z. Torrey, 2018, China prepares for big pharma, thediplomat.com, March 14; E. Corbett, 2018, European mid-sized pharma companies-biotechs and big pharma? The Pharmaletter, www.thepharmaletter.com, March 9; M. Jewel, 2018, Signs that 2018 will be a record year for pharma M&A, The Pharmaletter, www.thepharmaletter.com, March1; B. Nelson, 2018, Why big pharma and biotech are betting big on AI, NBC News, www.nbc.news, March 1; Big data analytics: What it is & why it matters, 2015, SAS, www .sas.com, April 2; Big data for the pharmaceutical industry, Informatica, www.informatica.com, March 17; B. Atkins, 2015, Big data and the board, Wall Street Journal Online, www.wsj.com, April 16; S. F. DeAngelis, 2014, Pharmaceutical big data analytics promises a healthier future, Enterrasolutions, www.enterrasolutions.com, June 5; T. Wolfram, 2014, Data analytics has big pharma rethinking its core competencies, Forbes Online, www.forbes.com, December 22.

Copyright 2020 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s). Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.

Copyright 2021 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part without explicit permission. November 2019. WCN 03-300-273

Chapter 3: The Internal Organization: Resources, Capabilities, Core Competencies, and Competitive Advantages 77

a limited life.5 Because of this, the question of duplication of a competitive advantage is not if it will happen, but when. In general, a competitive advantage’s sustainability is a function of three factors:

1. The rate of core competence obsolescence because of environmental changes 2. The availability of substitutes for the core competence 3. The imitability of the core competence6

For all firms, the challenge is to effectively manage current core competencies while simultaneously developing new ones.7 Only when firms are able to do this can they expect to achieve strategic competitiveness, earn above-average returns, and remain ahead of competitors in both the short and long term.

We studied the general, industry, and competitor environments in Chapter 2. Armed with knowledge about the realities and conditions of their external environment, firms have a better understanding of marketplace opportunities and the characteristics of the competitive environment in which those opportunities exist. In this chapter, we focus on the firm. By analyzing its internal organization, a firm determines what it can do. Matching what a firm can do (a function of its resources, capabilities, and core competen- cies in the internal organization) with what it might do (a function of opportunities and threats in the external environment) yields insights for the firm to select strategies from among those we discuss in Chapters 4 through 9.

We begin this chapter by briefly describing conditions associated with analyzing the firm’s internal organization. We then discuss the roles of resources and capabilities in developing core competencies, which are the sources of the firm’s competitive advantages. Included in this discussion are the techniques firms use to identify and evaluate resources and capabilities and the criteria for identifying core competencies from among them. Resources alone typically do not provide competitive advantages. Instead, resources cre- ate value when the firm uses them to form capabilities, some of which become core competencies, and hopefully competitive advantages. Because of the relationship among resources, capabilities, and core competencies, we also discuss the value chain and exam- ine four criteria that firms use to determine if their capabilities are core competencies and, as such, sources of competitive advantage.8 The chapter closes with comments about outsourcing as well as the need for firms to prevent their core competencies from becom- ing core rigidities. The existence of core rigidities indicates that the firm is too anchored to its past, a situation that prevents it from continuously developing new capabilities and core competencies.

3-1 Analyzing the Internal Organization 3-1a The Context of Internal Analysis One of the conditions associated with analyzing a firm’s internal organization is the real- ity that in today’s global economy, some of the resources that were traditionally crit- ical to firms’ efforts to produce, sell, and distribute their goods or services—such as labor costs, access to financial resources and raw materials, and protected or regulated markets—although still important, are now less likely to be the source of competitive advantages.9 An important reason for this is that an increasing number of firms are using their resources to form core competencies through which they successfully implement an international strategy (discussed in Chapter 8) as a means of overcoming the advantages created by more traditional resources.

Given the increasing importance of the global economy, those analyzing their firm’s internal organization should use a global mind-set to do so. A global mind-set is the

A global mind-set is the ability to analyze, understand, and manage an internal organization in ways that are not dependent on the assumptions of a single country, culture, or context.

Copyright 2020 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s). Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.

Copyright 2021 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part without explicit permission. November 2019. WCN 03-300-273

Part 1: Strategic Management Inputs78

ability to analyze, understand, and manage an internal organization in ways that are not dependent on the assumptions of a single country, culture, or context.10 Because they are able to span artificial boundaries, those with a global mind-set recognize that their firms must possess resources and capabilities that allow understanding of and appropriate responses to competitive situations that are influenced by country-specific factors and unique cultures. Using a global mind-set to analyze the internal organization has the potential to significantly help the firm in its efforts to outperform rivals.11

Finally, analyzing the firm’s internal organization requires that evaluators examine the firm’s entire portfolio of resources and capabilities. This perspective suggests that individual firms possess at least some resources and capabilities that other companies do not—at least not in the same combination. Resources are the source of capabilities, some of which lead to the development of core competencies; in turn, some core competencies may lead to a competitive advantage for the firm.12 Understanding how to leverage the firm’s unique bundle of resources and capabilities is a key outcome decision makers seek when analyzing the internal organization.13 Figure 3.1 illustrates the relationships among resources, capabilities, core competencies, and competitive advantages and shows how their integrated use can lead to strategic competitiveness. As we discuss next, firms use the resources in their internal organization to create value for customers.

3-1b Creating Value Firms use their resources as the foundation for producing goods or services that will create value for customers.14 Value is measured by a product’s performance characteristics and by its attributes for which customers are willing to pay. Firms create value by innova- tively bundling and leveraging their resources to form capabilities and core competencies.15 Firms with a competitive advantage create more value for customers than do competitors.16

Walmart uses its “every day low price” approach to doing business (an approach that is grounded in the firm’s core competencies, such as information technology and distribution

Core Competencies

Discovering Core

Competencies

• Outsource

Capabilities

Resources • Tangible • Intangible

Competitive Advantage

Strategic Competi- tiveness

Four Criteria of Sustainable Advantages

Value Chain

Analysis

• Valuable • Rare • Costly to Imitate • Nonsubstitutable

Figure 3.1 Components of an Internal Analysis

Value is measured by a product’s performance characteristics and by its attributes for which customers are willing to pay.

Copyright 2020 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s). Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.

Copyright 2021 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part without explicit permission. November 2019. WCN 03-300-273

Chapter 3: The Internal Organization: Resources, Capabilities, Core Competencies, and Competitive Advantages 79

channels) to create value for those seeking to buy products at a low price compared to competitors’ prices for those products. The stronger these firms’ core competencies, the greater the amount of value they’re able to create for their customers.17

Ultimately, creating value for customers is the source of above-average returns for a firm. What the firm intends regarding value creation affects its choice of business-level strategy (see Chapter 4) and its organizational structure (see Chapter 11).18 In Chapter 4’s discussion of business-level strategies, we note that value is created by a product’s low cost, by its highly differentiated features, or by a combination of low cost and high differ- entiation compared to competitors’ offerings. A business-level strategy is effective only when it is grounded in exploiting the firm’s capabilities and core competencies. Thus, the successful firm continuously examines the effectiveness of current capabilities and core competencies while thinking about the capabilities and competencies it will require for future success.19

At one time, firms’ efforts to create value were largely oriented toward understand- ing the characteristics of the industry in which they competed and, in light of those characteristics, determining how they should be positioned relative to competitors. This emphasis on industry characteristics and competitive strategy underestimated the role of the firm’s resources and capabilities in developing core competencies as the source of competitive advantages. In fact, core competencies, in combination with product-market positions, are the firm’s most important sources of competitive advantage.20 A firm’s core competencies, integrated with an understanding of the results of studying the condi- tions in the external environment, should drive the selection of strategies.21 As Clayton Christensen noted, “successful strategists need to cultivate a deep understanding of the processes of competition and progress and of the factors that undergird each advantage. Only thus will they be able to see when old advantages are poised to disappear and how new advantages can be built in their stead.”22 By emphasizing core competencies when selecting and implementing strategies, companies learn to compete primarily on the basis of firm-specific differences. However, while doing so they must be simultaneously aware of changes in the firm’s external environment.23

3-1c The Challenge of Analyzing the Internal Organization The strategic decisions managers make about the internal organization are nonrou- tine,24 have ethical implications,25 and significantly influence the firm’s ability to earn above-average returns.26 These decisions involve choices about the resources the firm needs to collect and how to best manage and leverage them.

Making decisions involving the firm’s assets—identifying, developing, deploying, and protecting resources, capabilities, and core competencies—may appear to be rel- atively easy. However, this task is as challenging and difficult as any other with which managers are involved; moreover, the task is increasingly internationalized.27 Some believe that the pressure on managers to pursue only decisions that help the firm meet anticipated quarterly earnings makes it difficult to accurately examine the firm’s inter- nal organization.28

The challenge and difficulty of making effective decisions are implied by preliminary evidence suggesting that one-half of organizational decisions fail.29 Sometimes, mistakes are made as the firm analyzes conditions in its internal organization.30 Managers might, for example, think a capability is a core competence when it is not. This may have been the case at Polaroid Corporation, as decision makers continued to believe that the capa- bilities it used to build its instant film cameras were highly relevant at the time its com- petitors were preparing to introduce digital cameras. In this instance, Polaroid’s decision makers may have concluded that superior manufacturing was a core competence, as was the firm’s ability to innovate in terms of creating value-adding features for its instant

Copyright 2020 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s). Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.

Copyright 2021 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part without explicit permission. November 2019. WCN 03-300-273

Part 1: Strategic Management Inputs80

cameras. If a mistake is made when analyzing and managing a firm’s resources, decision makers must have the confidence to admit it and take corrective actions.31

A firm can improve by studying its mistakes; in fact, the learning generated by making and correcting mistakes can be important in the creation of new capabilities and core com- petencies.32 One capability that can be learned from failure is when to quit. Polaroid should have obviously changed its strategy earlier than it did, so it could have been able to avoid demise. Another potential example concerns News Corp.’s Amplify unit (founded 2011), which was created to change the way children are taught. As of mid-2015, the firm had invested over $1 billion in the unit, which makes tablets, sells online curricula, and offers testing services. In 2014, Amplify generated a $193 million loss, facing competition from well-established textbook publishers enhancing their own ability to sell similar digital products. In September 2015, News Corp. decided to sell Amplify to a team of managers and private investors, incurring a significant loss.33

As we discuss next, three conditions—uncertainty, com- plexity, and intraorganizational conflict—affect managers as they analyze the internal organization and make decisions about resources (see Figure 3.2).

When studying the internal organization, managers face uncertainty because of a number of issues, including those of new proprietary technologies, rapidly changing economic and political trends, transformations in societal values, and shifts in customers’ demands.34 Environmental uncertainty increases the complexity and range of issues to examine when studying the internal environment.35 Consider how uncertainty affects the ways to use resources at coal com- panies such as Peabody Energy Corp. and Murray Energy

Corp. Coal companies have been suffering in the last decade or more with significant regulations and the competition from cleaner forms of energy such as natural gas. They have been aided some by the reduction of regulations by the Trump administration, but the competition from cleaner and cheaper forms of energy remains. Thus, they still have to deal with a complex and uncertain environment.

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At one time, Polaroid’s cameras created a significant amount of value for customers. Poor decisions may have contributed to the firm’s subsequent inability to create value and its initial filing for bankruptcy in 2001.

Conditions

Uncertainty Uncertainty exists about the characteristics of the firm’s general and industry environments and customers’ needs.