Competitive Dynamics: Themes, Trends, and a Prospective Research Platform Ming-Jer Chen Darden Graduate School of Business University of Virginia (434) 924-7260 chenm@darden.virginia.edu Danny Miller HEC Montreal and University of Alberta (514) 340-6501 danny.miller@hec.ca February 8, 2012 Academy of Management Annals (June 2012), 6: 1-89 (forthcoming) Corresponding Author: Ming-Jer Chen, chenm@darden.virginia.edu *This paper is dedicated to Ian C. MacMillan, whose mentorship and guidance has been instrumental not only to Ming-Jer’s work in competitive dynamics, but also to his academic career in management. The authors would like to thank Royston Greenwood, Ken Craddock, George Huber, Dev Jennings, Gavin Kilduff, Hao-Chieh Lin, Isabelle Le Breton-Miller, John Michel, David Sirmon, Wenpin Tsai, and Jing Zhou for their valuable comments on an earlier draft of this paper. Financial support from the Darden Foundation, University of Virginia, and from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada is acknowledged. 1 Competitive Dynamics: Themes, Trends, and a Prospective Research Platform ABSTRACT We provide a critical retrospective of the competitive dynamics perspective before proposing an integrative research platform for the future. We argue that competitive dynamics can serve as a synthesizing framework for linking strategy content and process, resource-based and market perspectives, strategy development and implementation, and macro-competitive and micro-actor viewpoints. We first present the core distinguishing elements and purposes of competitive dynamics. Then, we identify and relate the most prominent research themes in the field: a focus on action/response dyads, strategic competitive behaviors, competitive repertoires, corporate-level competitive and resource analyses, and competitive perceptions. Characteristic methodological concerns are also discussed. Recent trends in each of these areas are highlighted; these include an increased emphasis on context-specific research, cross-border investigations, and behavioral interdependencies. We conclude by identifying gaps in the literature and proposing a general model and research agenda that integrates micro-behavioral and macro-organizational aspects of strategy and connects competitive dynamics to previously unexplored domains in the literature . 2 Competitive Dynamics: Themes, Trends, and a Prospective Research Platform Several major lines of work have emerged in the strategic management field since its rise in the early 1980s. These include the resource-based view (Barney, 1991), the dynamic capabilities perspective (Teece, Pisano, & Shuen, 1997), and the study of top management teams (Hambrick & Mason, 1984). Competition per se has been the focus of scholars of industrial economics and structural analysis (Porter, 1980), strategic groups and configurations (Cool & Schendel, 1987; Miller, 1996), game theory (Brandenburger & Nalebuff, 1996), network theory (Tsai, 2002), population ecology (Freeman, Carroll, & Hannan, 1983), and competitive dynamics (Baum & Korn, 1996; Smith, Grimm, & Gannon, 1992). This chapter reviews the literature on competitive dynamics, first defining its distinctive elements, then highlighting its core themes and research foci. It proceeds to identify prominent trends in the research before pointing out gaps and areas of promise. Competitive dynamics remains notably underdeveloped in several key respects: It lacks an integrative framework that can organize its many facets; its potential to bridge micro and macro perspectives within the discipline has not been realized; and it has yet to establish many fruitful links with other disciplines in the management field. We shall try to address these challenges, concluding by proposing a general model of competitive behavior that can bridge micro and macro approaches and connect with key paradigms in management. The field of competitive dynamics has flourished in recent years, for a variety of reasons. First, it offers a fine-grained approach to understanding what specific firms do when they compete with specific rivals. It studies measurable actions that are subject to rigorous study and therefore yield cumulative findings. It also examines the interactions among competitors, focusing not only on actions but on the responses elicited. Thus competitive dynamics is one of 3 the few areas of strategy study that is quintessentially longitudinal. Moreover, it has benefited from several frameworks that enrich our understanding of the forces driving competition. In this essay, we shall build on a framework, the awareness-motivation-capability (AMC) model, that shows promise for linking micro and macro perspectives of organizations. Finally, competitive dynamics is beginning to demonstrate, to mutual benefit, its potential for forging closer links with other areas of strategy and organization. Historical Roots The term “competitive dynamics” has been used in many contexts, ranging from studies of the competition among species for survival to those considering how different organizational forms vie for dominance, and to studies pursuing game theoretic models. however, and the scope of this essay, is quite specific: Our use of the term, Competitive dynamics is the study of interfirm rivalry based on specific competitive actions and reactions, their strategic and organizational contexts, and their drivers and consequences (Baum & Korn, 1996; Smith, et al., 1992). We situate competitive dynamics quite squarely in the literature on competitive strategy. Although competition is a central element of strategy, too little research has been done to take it beyond simple and static characterization and toward a detailed analysis of dynamic competitive-behavioral patterns. Much of the early work on strategy, for example, relied on approaches such as industry-structure analysis (Porter, 1980). The intent of competitive dynamics research, like other research on strategy, has been to address such fundamental questions as: ways? How do firms interact when they compete? Why do they compete in particular How do competitive behaviors influence organizational performance, and vice versa (Ketchen, Snow, & Hoover, 2004; Smith, Ferrier, & Ndofor, 2001)? 4 Unlike game theoretic formulations, insights are sought from empirical observation rather than formal or logical modeling. In contrast to the traditional approaches taken to study these issues, competitive dynamics research embraces as the primary object of study the competitive actions of a firm. The intellectual roots of this micro-level focus on individual actions can be traced to Schumpeter’s (1950) conception of creative destruction, which he used to characterize the dynamic process by which firms act upon and react to one another in the pursuit of market opportunities. Indeed, creative destruction was defined as the eventual—and inevitable—decline of firms through the process of competitive action and reaction. Firms act and rivals respond, and these actions and reactions determine survival and long-term performance. Similarly, the Austrian School (Jacobson, 1992; Mises, 1949; Young, Smith, & Grimm, 1996) considered competition to be a dynamic market process rather than a static market condition. The focus was on the process by which a market moves toward and away from equilibrium; it is this movement, not the equilibrium per se, that was taken to be of interest. Premised on disequilibrium, Austrian economics viewed advantage as transient, with a limited temporal window for exploitation (Chen, 2009; D'Aveni, Dagnino, & Smith, 2010; Gimeno & Woo, 1996; Roberts & Eisenhardt, 2003; Thomas, 1996; Thomas & D’Aveni, 2009). In the strategic management field, early work using this competitive framework includes MacMillan, McCaffrey, & Van Wijks’s (1985) small-sample study of responses to a banking innovation, and Bettis and Weeks’s (1987) case study of competitive interactions between Polaroid and Kodak, in all cases paying special heed to the impermanence of advantage. 5 The work by MacMillan, et al. (1985) and Bettis & Weeks (1987) marked the beginning of competitive dynamics research in strategic management; only later did scholars in other fields adopt the term to refer to this line of research.1 Defining Features There are a number of essential features that characterize the body of work we designate as competitive dynamics. First, competition is considered to be “dynamic” and interactive, and action/response dyads—and sometimes streams of such actions—constitute the building blocks of competition. Second, the focus is on actual actions exchanged by firms: these may include new product introductions or advertising campaigns, entry into new markets, changes in pricing policy, and relocation or redesign of facilities. This interaction or engagement between firms lies at the heart of strategy, and the action/response dyad lends itself to precise and concrete analysis. Indeed, the emphasis on real actions taken by managers stands in direct contrast to the common use of operating and financial statistics for inferring strategic postures. Third, the pairwise comparison of firms or rivals—their positions, intentions, perceptions, and resources—is central to competitor analysis, an integral part of competitive dynamics. Thus relativity is an essential premise—the notion that a firm’s strategy and market position must be examined within the context of and vis-à-vis its competitors’ strategies and positions. Strategy is not conceived of in the abstract; rather, following Mintzberg, Raisinghani, & Theoret (1976) and Mintzberg (1978), it is regarded as a pattern in the stream of decisions. The term “pattern” implies some thematic consistency. Indeed, a degree of coherence in a firm’s competitive behaviors or actions and reactions is assumed to exist over time. 1 Moreover, the In early years, such terms as “competitive interaction,” “competitive engagement,” or “interfirm rivalry” had been used interchangeably (Chen, 2010). To economists, dynamics involved temporal consideration rather than the interactive nature of competition that competitive dynamics researchers intended to explore. 6 research assumes that each firm is unique, with its own specific resource endowments and market profiles. Similarly, each competitive relationship between firms is said to be idiosyncratic and directional. Underlying organizational forces are believed to explain and predict firm behaviors or (re)actions in the marketplace. Among these forces, leadership and human agency are held to be central to strategy and competition (Hambrick & Mason, 1984; Montgomery, 2008). These features of competitive dynamics stand in contrast to previous approaches such as Porter’s (1980) five-force analysis, which occurs at the macro-industry level. Exhibit1 compares some of the salient features of competitive dynamics to the more conventional Porterian analysis. -Insert Exhibit 1 about hereDistinctive Purposes Predicting competitive behavior. The firm-dyadic approach constitutes a micro analysis that complements the conventional macro analysis of industry structure as a driver of strategic decisions. To predict competitive response, a central component of firm behavior in a rivalrous situation, it is essential to understand how a competitive action affects the internal behavior of the defending organization (Chen & Miller, 1994). The awareness-motivation-capability (AMC) framework, on which we shall build later in this chapter, provides an integrative model of the three key behavioral drivers that shape a competitor’s actions and responses (Chen, 1996; Grimm, Lee, & Smith, 2006; Smith, Ferrier, & Ndofor, 2001; Yu & Cannella, 2007). Simply stated, a competitor will not be able to respond to an action unless it is aware of the action, motivated to react, and capable of responding. An attacker or action-initiator may analyze and predict each of its rivals’ response behaviors (e.g., likelihood and speed of reaction) along these three elements. From an attacker’s viewpoint, the three behavioral drivers represent possible response barriers for a given rival (MacMillan, 7 1988). The AMC framework is useful in analyzing and predicting potential responses. It is action- and competitor-specific, and analysis will vary depending on the action of interest and the competitor under consideration. For an attacker, each of its rivals differs according to these three elements. Capturing asymmetrical competitive relationships between firms. The competitor-specific aspect of competitive dynamics highlights the nature of a critical dimension of interfirm relationships: competitive asymmetry. A strategist cannot assume that a competitive action will affect each of the AMC components equally for all opponents. Competitive asymmetry—the notion that two firms may not view their relationship or interaction in the marketplace equally—is very prevalent in business competition (DeSarbo, Grewal, & Wind, 2006). It is unlikely, for example, that two rivals will perceive every competitive action or relationship in the same way. Due to differences in assumptions about industry outlook and disparate organizational arrangements and preferences, rivals may differ in their views of their competitive relationship. Put symbolically, d(a, b) ≠ d(b, a). As we shall see, such competitive asymmetry has important implications for how rivals engage each other in the marketplace. Linking strategy formulation to implementation. The action-based focus and behavioral orientation of competitive dynamics construe strategy as a set of coherent decisions and actions. Competitive dynamics thus embraces both strategy formulation and implementation, as well as strategic content and process. It also takes into account both external and internal concerns. When developing strategy, a firm must consider possible retaliations from rivals. The quality and depth of a firm’s knowledge of itself and its competitors, therefore, play a central role in competitive dynamics (Barnett, 1997, Barnett & Hansen, 1996; Greve, 1996). 8 Consequently, competitive dynamics scholars have studied both firm actions and the decisionmakers responsible for these actions (Hambrick, Cho, & Chen, 1996), topics that may fall both into traditional strategy content research and into the process domain (Ferrier, 2001), and that encompass both macro-industry forces (Derfus, Maggitti, Grimm, & Smith, 2008) and micro-individual (Kilduff, Elfenbein, & Staw, 2010) or executive team behaviors (Chen, Lin, & Michel, 2010; Ferrier & Lyon, 2004; Marcel, Barr, & Duhaime, 2011). Indeed, competitive dynamics work spans different analytical levels (e.g., action/response dyad, firm or business level, and corporate or multibusiness level), and it provides an important micro-macro link that bridges a wide range of research topics. Our premise, then, is that competitive dynamics can serve as a useful integrative framework for strategic management by linking strategy content (or formulation) and process (or implementation), and macro-competitive and micro-actor viewpoints. It will be useful, however, to discuss the major research themes and thrusts in the competitive dynamics literature before proposing a research platform that provides avenues for further empirical and conceptual elaboration. KEY RESEARCH TOPICS AND THEMES There have been several attempts over the past ten years to review competitive dynamics research (Chen, 2009; Ketchen, et al., 2004; Maggitti, 2006; Smith, et al., 2001). takes an integrative approach to make several distinctive contributions. This chapter It stresses the intellectual connections among research themes (or streams) and highlights the micro-behavioral and macro-strategy linkages informed by competitive dynamics research. It identifies important research trends and opportunities, and it provides a conceptual framework for relating the research to other important domains in the management literature. 9 Five distinct research themes have emerged among competitive dynamics scholars over the years, each of which has contributed to our understanding of firm strategy and the behavioral dynamics of competition: (1) competitive interaction: action-level studies; (2) strategic competitive behavior and repertoire: business-level studies; (3) multimarket and multibusiness competition: corporate-level studies; (4) integrative competitor analysis; and (5) competitive perception. Exhibit 2 schematically outlines the competitive dynamics research domain, highlights the makeup of each research theme, and shows how these themes are linked. (Appendix A presents a more exhaustive summary of the studies within each theme.) We conclude this section with methodological concerns associated with these five lines of competitive dynamics research. -Insert Exhibit 2 about hereCompetitive Interaction: Action-Level Studies Taking the exchange of individual competitive actions and responses as the focal points of analysis, researchers began by analyzing the drivers of competitive response. An action is defined as a specific and detectable market move initiated by a firm, such as introducing a new product or entering a new market; such actions may erode a rival’s market share or reduce its anticipated returns. A response is a specific and datable countermove, prompted by an initial action that a firm takes to defend or improve its share or profit position in its industry (Baum & Korn, 1999; Boyd & Bresser, 2008; Chen & Miller, 1994; Lee, Smith, Grimm, & Schomburg, 2000; Smith, et al., 1992; Smith, et al., 2001). This focus is of theoretical consequence because it is at this very basic, concrete level that competitive interaction occurs. Prior to the work of MacMillan, et al. (1985), the action/response dyad level had not been a preoccupation of strategy or organizational studies. The analysis of competition had centered on more encompassing aggregates such as a firm (Dess 10 & Beard, 1984), strategic group (Cool & Schendel, 1987), industry (Porter, 1980), and community or population (Freeman, et al., 1983). Competitive dynamics, by contrast, operated at a more fine-grained, more specific, indeed more “micro” level—one that continues to lie at the very heart of competitive dynamics and is its primary distinguishing feature. For example, Baum & Korn (1996, 1999), showed that for competitors in a dyad, rates of competitive market entry and exit rose with the degree of overlap between their market domains. Characterizing and predicting competitive response. By employing diverse theoretical perspectives such as expectancy-valence theory and game theory, competitive dynamics scholars conceptualized and measured key attributes of competitive response: the likelihood of response, the number and the speed of responses, and the extent to which a response matches the initial action in breadth and severity. Researchers were able to demonstrate empirically that these attributes of response were functions of three different characteristics: (1) attributes of the attack, such as difficulty of implementation, the amount of effort and time required for execution, and the visibility or degree of industry attention (Young, et al., 1996); (2) characteristics of the attacker, such as the degree of organizational commitment to the attack (Chen, Smith, & Grimm, 1992); and (3) characteristics of the defender, such as a competitor’s dependence or a defender’s stake in the market under attack (Baum & Korn, 1999). The research also demonstrated the performance consequences of different types of competitive interactions (Boyd & Bresser, 2008; Smith, et al., 2001; Young, et al., 1996). Studies of competitive interaction have also shown, for instance, that strategic as opposed to tactical actions, as well as those that require lengthy execution time and those that are less visible, tend to reduce the number (Chen & Miller, 1994) and speed of rivals’ responses (Smith, 11 Grimm, Gannon, & Chen, 1991).2 Moreover, both competitor dependence and action irreversibility are significant predictors of response, and they interact positively in affecting the likelihood of response (Chen & MacMillan, 1992). For example, when attacked in their key markets, competitors tend generally to react decisively. However, they may react slowly to signal their willingness to defend their position and, at the same time, show their desire to avoid escalation. In addition, competitive interaction has been shown to have an impact on performance. For example, Young, et al. (1996), found that competitive activity related positively to a firm’s performance as evidenced by the market-share gains accruing to attackers and early responders. Smith et al. (2001), in their review of competitive dynamics studies in some 30 industries, concluded that one of the most consistent findings is a positive relationship between a focal firm’s performance and the length of time taken by rivals to respond. Attending to irreversibility. A major thrust of the competitive interaction theme is its explicit attention to the issue of irreversibility—the extent to which a firm is irrevocably committed to making economic investments and/or revamping organizational and social arrangements when it undertakes a competitive action. Chen & MacMillan (1992) argued that the property of irreversibility extends beyond the tangible economic investments and capital assets emphasized in previous research (Ghemawat, 1991; Miller, 2003) to include broader organizational, psychological, and socio-economic considerations, such as escalation of commitment (Staw, 1981). Chen, Venkataraman, Black, & MacMillan (2002) identified two kinds of irreversibility: internal, for example the amount of interdepartmental coordination required for execution, and external, for example the degree of top management’s public 2 Competitive actions vary in terms of organizational and resource commitment. Strategic actions (e.g., manufacturing capacity changes and major product introductions), in contrast to tactical actions (e.g., price changes, promotions, distribution and service improvements), require a greater degree of organizational and resource commitment (Smith, et al., 1991). 12 endorsement of a move. They found that the former property tends to escalate competition, while the latter has the opposite effect. The idea of irreversibility is critical to such central competitive constructs as aggressiveness (Ferrier, 2001; Ferrier & Lee, 2002; Yu & Cannella, 2007) and implementation difficulty (Chen & Miller, 1994). A valuable contribution of competitive dynamics studies focusing on individual competitive actions and responses is that they have illuminated the very core exchanges constituting competitive interaction. They have moved strategy from an aggregate, sometimes abstract concept, to one that gets to the core dynamics of individual decisions and the reactions to them. A limitation of these types of studies, however, is that sometimes the strategic context is ignored—the fact that decisions often serve as part of a strategy or a strategic repertoire, and that the rationales behind those decisions as well as the responses to them must inevitably reflect that. Quality leaders, for example, might be less responsive to a rival’s price cuts than are cost leaders. The next section addresses the competitive dynamics literature that takes into account this broader perspective of strategy. Strategic Competitive Behavior and Repertoire: Business-Level Studies Some competitive dynamics research concentrates at the level of the firm or business, while again adopting the individual competitive move as the building block of competition. Studies in this second research stream strive to lay bare the organizational and contextual antecedents that drive competitive behavior and competitive repertoires, and to capture the ensuing performance outcomes. Firm-level data used in this stream are derived by examining a wide variety of the competitive moves firms make in engaging their rivals over time. Strategic competitive behavior: Antecedents and outcomes. This research seeks to understand strategic behaviors via a systematic analysis of the attributes characterizing sets of competitive actions and responses. Through this lens, the behavioral properties of a firm such 13 as propensity to act, responsiveness, execution speed, and action (or response) visibility are brought into focus. As noted, one of the premises underlying competitive dynamics research is that a firm’s competitive profile is reflected in its actions and reactions as it engages with rivals in the marketplace. Consequently, the behavioral properties addressed above find their corresponding attributes at the action/response dyad level. Drawing on theoretical perspectives such as upper-echelons theory, information-processing theory, Austrian economics, and institutional theory, researchers in attempting to understand competitive behavior and its performance consequences have demonstrated empirically the significance of a firm’s information-processing capacity (Smith, et al., 1991), size (Chen & Hambrick, 1995), and top management team (TMT) characteristics (Derfus, et al., 2008; Ferrier, et al., 1999; Ferrier & Lyon, 2004; Hambrick, et al., 1996; Young, et al., 1996). For example, Chen & Hambrick (1995) tested a set of long-held assumptions about the competitive behavior of relatively small firms in an industry. They found that small firms tend to initiate more attacks and are speedier at their execution, yet they retain a low profile in those attacks—which in some ways approximate guerrilla warfare. less likely to respond and slower in execution. Also, small firms under attack are In addition, these firms perform best when their behavior adheres to that typical for firms of their size: deviations from size-group patterns (e.g., a small airline behaving like a large airline) appear to impair performance. Ferrier, Smith, & Grimm (1999) investigated the “dethronement” and market-share erosion of market leaders in approximately 40 industries over a seven-year period. They found that leaders are more likely to be dethroned or to experience share erosion when, compared to their challengers in the industry, they are less competitively aggressive, carry out simpler competitive repertoires, and are less speedy in undertaking competitive actions. 14 Chen, et al. (2010) analyzed the likelihood of attack by examining the role of the socio-behavioral integration of the top management team. They argued that TMT dynamics shape how a firm enacts its environment and engages with rivals. The more cohesive the team and the higher its socio-behavioral integration, the easier it was to launch decisive and swift actions against rivals. This was especially important in hypercompetitive environments in which the competitive context was difficult to decipher and competitive advantage temporary. In such environments, the pressure to act quickly was intense, and generated ample conflict among TMT members. Competitive repertoire. Ferrier (2001), Ferrier & Lee (2002), Ferrier & Lyon (2004), and Miller & Chen (1994, 1996, 1996a) conceptualized competitive strategy as a repertoire of micro competitive behaviors. A competitive repertoire is made up of the entire range of a firm’s competitive moves (e.g., new market entries, major price initiatives). As noted, this conceptualization differs fundamentally from approaches previously adopted by most strategy researchers, including Porter’s well-known generic strategies of low-cost/differentiation focus. It is, however, fully consistent with the long-held view of strategy as a pattern in the stream of decisions (Mintzberg, 1978). Certain vital firm attributes, hitherto neglected, were identified via the study of competitive repertoires: a firm’s competitive inertia or the overall level of activity in its set of competitive actions (Miller & Chen, 1994), the simplicity or diversity in the types of competitive moves it makes (Ferrier & Lyon, 2004; Miller & Chen, 1996), and its nonconformity or degree of departure from industry norms (Miller & Chen, 1996). By employing a repertoire approach, the research offered a novel conceptualization of these three critical constructs of competition, which had traditionally fallen within the realm of organization theorists and sociologists but were shown to hold great promise for deepening our understanding of firm-level strategy. Strategic 15 repertoire studies integrate market-level variables (e.g., diversity and growth) with those at the firm level (e.g., size and age) in explaining the sources of repertoire simplicity, inertia, and nonconformity. The latter, in turn, are shown to have important performance consequences that differ as a function of the competitive environment. For example, Miller & Chen (1994) studied competitive inertia, a firm’s level of overall competitive activity. They argued that whereas poor performance might induce tactical changes, it failed to stimulate policy reversals or strategic actions, which are more difficult to implement, both operationally and politically. Market growth, by contrast, related negatively to inertia in strategic actions but not in tactical ones, suggesting that expanding markets can promote major commitments of organizational resources. The work on strategic simplicity (Ferrier & Lyon, 2004; Miller, 1993; Miller & Chen, 1996) was also interesting as it showed that firms that had performed well tended to simplify their strategic repertoires, focusing on an ever narrower set of action types (e.g. price cuts, or advertising alterations). At first, these changes were salutary as they seemed to show companies concentrating on what they did best and what they believed was most important. But beyond a certain point, simplicity was associated with declines in performance. It seems that under conditions of success, firms engage first in veridical and then in superstitious varieties of learning (Miller, 1990, 1993). Such repertoire studies took competitive dynamics beyond action/ response dyads to look at the entire configuration of competitive actions, and so provide a more holistic picture of competition posture. Ferrier (2001), also adopting a repertoire approach, conceptualized strategy as a sequence of competitive moves taken by a firm over time. He and his colleagues (Ferrier & Lee, 2002; Ferrier, MacFhionnlaoich, Smith, & Grimm, 2002), investigated competitive aggressiveness as reflected in the characteristics of those sequences of moves. Based on a multiyear, 16 multi-industry study of thousands of competitive moves, his findings suggested, among other things, that a firm’s competitive aggressiveness is influenced by past performance, organizational slack, and TMT heterogeneity, as well as industry characteristics such as growth and concentration. Characteristics of firms’ sequences of competitive moves also account for differences in their relative performances, as is evident by the positive impact of attack volume and duration on market-share gains. Conceptual links. The competitive interaction literature and strategic competitive behavior and repertoire research are complementary. The former concentrates on the characteristics of individual competitive actions and reactions, the latter combines these actions at the business level to more richly characterize strategy. Here we see the early promise of moving from decision-level behavior and the micro-influences that drive that behavior, to the more comprehensive strategies that represent combinations or repertoires of decisions. The former have been the province of behavioral analyses by those employing psychological lenses; the latter have been studied by those using economic and sociological perspectives. As we shall see, the competitive dynamics approach shows promise of bridging the two and offering a critical micro-macro link. It is noteworthy that explicit attention to path dependence—the connections between past and current actions—conceptually links research in the action and strategic repertoire domains. Firm attributes such as structure (Smith et al., 1991), top management characteristics (Ferrier & Lyon, 2004; Hambrick et al., 1996), and firm size (Chen & Hambrick, 1995), as well as repertoire inertia (Miller & Chen, 1994), simplicity (Ferrier & Lyon, 2004; Miller & Chen, 1996), nonconformity (Miller & Chen, 1996), and aggressiveness (Ferrier, 2001; Ferrier & Lee, 2002), may all influence the path-dependent capabilities of a firm. More specifically, each strategic action undertaken by a firm is constrained by its prior moves and, in turn, limits future 17 moves. Past investment and commitment will constrain a firm’s range of strategic options in the future, as well as shape its capability and performance in creating and adding value. The main implication of much of competitive dynamics work is that competition is not frictionless, nor is it commenced de novo in any new situation, and history imprints itself on all competitive actions. For all of their richness, however, most competitive dynamics studies at the business level are “under contextualized.” While they do consider the competitive context, they rarely take into account organizational design factors or decision-making proclivities and biases that condition characteristics such as repertoire inertia and simplicity. They examine, or at least empirically control for, strategy and environment but by and large fail to look into how human and organizational agency links the two. Moreover, there has been scant effort to relate the specific strategic actions to the repertoires in which they are embedded; for example, little is known about whether inertial or simple strategic repertoires are a function of specific types of actions and responses. In short, scholars within our first two research streams have not undertaken to integrate their efforts. The firm-level macro orientation is not linked to the decision-level micro orientation. Multimarket and Multibusiness Competition: Corporate-Level Studies Multimarket competition. There has been considerable interest over the past two decades in the application and extension of the theory of multimarket (or multipoint) competition across a wide range of fields (Baum & Korn, 1999; Bernheim & Whinston, 1990; Evans & Kessides, 1994; Gimeno, 1994; Gimeno, 1999; Gimeno & Woo, 1996, 1999; Greve, 2008; Karnani & Wernerfelt, 1985; Knickerbocker, 1973; Haveman & Nonnemaker, 2000; also see Yu, Subramaniam, & Cannella, 2009 for a comprehensive review). The focus of the theory has been on mutual forbearance (Edwards, 1955), that is, the idea that firms operating in the same 18 markets will recognize their interdependence and, as a result, will tailor their competitive interactions to minimize risks of retaliation and escalation. Baum & Korn (1996), in supporting this mutual forbearance hypothesis, found that close competitors avoid engaging in very intense rivalry. Moreover, firms interacting in multiple markets are less aggressive toward each other than those that interact in one or a few markets. In fact, Gimeno & Woo (1996) showed that multimarket contact suppresses the intensity of rivalry, whereas strategic similarity between firms or comparability in their competitive strategy increases it. Gimeno and Woo (1999) demonstrated that multimarket contact, by reducing the rivalry experienced by a market unit, increases the profitability of that unit, and that the positive relationship between multimarket contact and profitability will be stronger if the contacts occur in markets with strong resource-sharing opportunities. In linking multimarket theory to competitive dynamics, Baum and Korn (1999) found an inverted U-shaped relationship between the extent of multimarket contact in competitor dyads and firms’ rates of entry into and exit from each other’s markets. This curvilinear effect, however, varies from dyad to dyad and is influenced by the relative size of competitors in a focal dyad and the relative levels of multimarket contact with competitors in other dyads. Multimarket competition and competitive dynamics are related but distinct research streams, and a number of studies (e.g., Baum & Korn, 1999; Gimeno & Woo, 1996, 1999; Yu, et al., 2007) have integrated the two, in essence by considering the former to be a subset of the latter (Upson, et al., 2011). That is, they have employed notions from multimarket competition to provide, in particular, a theoretical framework that enables competitive dynamics researchers to investigate interfirm rivalry at the corporate level. Following precedent set by studies of multimarket or multibusiness competition (e.g. Collis & Montgomery, 2005; Greve, 2006; Haveman & Nonnemaker. 2000; Hitt, Ireland, & 19 Hoskisson, 2007), scholars have begun to study competitive modes of resource allocation by multi-divisional corporations, and rivalry among multinational enterprises (MNEs) via competitive moves, foreign direct investments (Barnett, 1993; Chang & Xu, 2008; Meyer & Sinani, 2009), and market entries (Di Gregorio, Thomas, & Gonzalez de Castilla, 2008; Gielens, Van de Gucht, Steenkamp, & Dekimpe, 2008). Resource allocation as competitive moves. McGrath, Chen, & MacMillan (1998) have extended the above three research themes, which apply mainly to the business level, in order to better understand corporate-level competition. They proposed that an acting firm’s resource allocations across its divisions or business units could influence those of its rivals, thereby enhancing its sphere of influence without precipitating an all-out competitive war. This suggests that a firm competing in multiple markets may, via its resource-allocation patterns, orchestrate its spheres of influence and initiate mutual forbearance or tacit collusion with multimarket competitors sharing similar markets (Edwards, 1955; Gimeno & Woo, 1996). In such situations, the allocation of resources across different lines of business and industries may substitute for destructive head-to-head competition. With that in mind, McGrath, et al. (1998) conceptualized stratagems of thrust, feint, and gambit and concluded that corporate strategy decisions cannot be fully understood unless competitive interaction is taken into account explicitly. They demonstrated that organization and market factors such as relative market stake and competitive strength could be used to predict when such stratagems can be employed. MNE rivalry. Yu (2003), Yu & Cannella (2007), and Yu, et al. (2009), by studying rivalry between MNEs in host country markets, have taken an important first step in applying competitive dynamics to the international setting. In employing the AMC perspective and evaluating market-resource considerations, for example, Yu & Cannella (2007) found that the speed of an MNE’s response to a rival MNE’s attack is influenced by resource-related factors 20 such as geographic distance and government constraints, and by market-related factors such as the strategic importance of the initiating country and the portfolio of multimarket contacts between the competitors. The study highlights the significance of host-country market constraints on MNE competitive actions, which go much beyond the constraints imposed in the context of domestic competition. In light of the growing economic significance and prevalence of diversified national, multimarket, and multinational firms, the study of corporate-level strategy and competition is increasingly relevant. Yet, despite the focus on specific decisions for market entry and resource allocation, there remains a glaring omission in some of this literature: a rich characterization of strategy and strategic differences across different markets and business units. As with our earlier streams of research in competitive dynamics, this branch exists generally independent of and unrelated to the others. Consequently, our knowledge of the broader macro-strategic context of the specific decisions being examined is still relatively shallow. Integrative Competitor Analysis Competitive dynamics scholars have expanded the research domain of competitor analysis to include more integrative approaches. As we shall see, a core contribution of this orientation is a model that we shall build on later in our analysis to more systematically organize and unify the field of competitive dynamics and to link it to other management paradigms. Market-resource concerns. strategy and organizational studies. Competitor analysis has been an important approach for Traditional research in the area, however, has focused primarily on static strategic profiles or firm capabilities, often via analyses such as SWOT (strength-weakness-opportunity-threat). Too often, these analyses have only tenuous links to actual competitive behaviors. To address this challenge, Chen (1996) proposed a model uniting two firm-specific, theory-derived constructs: market commonality and resource similarity. The 21 notion of market commonality, or the degree of presence that a competitor manifests in the markets it shares with a focal firm, derives from the literature on multipoint or multimarket competition referred to in the previous section. Resource similarity, or the extent to which a given competitor possesses strategic endowments comparable, in both type and amount, to those of the focal firm, is based in the resource-based theory of the firm (Barney, 1991) and notions of strategic similarity (Gimeno & Woo, 1996). The premise is that each firm has a unique market profile and strategic-resource endowment, and that a pairwise comparison with a given competitor along market commonality/resource similarity dimensions helps to illuminate the tension between the two firms and predicts how they might interact in the market. In that sense the model represents a theoretical integration. The resource-based view (RBV), focusing inwardly on a firm’s unique endowments, has within a short period risen to prominence in the field of strategic management, in much the same way that Porter’s paradigm, which focuses on external market forces, influenced the discipline during the 1980s. Chen (1996) integrated both firm and market perspectives—the internal and the external—suggesting that implementing such a balanced and comprehensive approach is the ultimate challenge of strategic-management research. A number of studies have extended and reinforced this integrative approach. Sirmon, Gove, & Hitt (2008) have linked the resource-based view to competitive dynamics, suggesting that comparative advantage in bundling and deploying resource stocks (as reflected by industry-specific human-capital skills) result in superior outcomes in competitive contests. Ndofor, Sirmon, & He (2011), integrating RBV and competitive dynamics, found that competitive actions that leverage or liberate firm resources enhance organizational performance. Tsai, et al. (2011) linked these market and resource elements in a mediation model, showing that 22 a firm’s ability to view things from a rival’s perspective positively moderates the relationship between resource deployment capability and market share gain. Competitive asymmetry. The simultaneous consideration of market similarity and resource commonality illustrates the complementarity between two prominent but contrasting strategy paradigms and suggests a set of propositions that link the two to interfirm rivalry and the likelihood of action (and response). This approach also highlights the importance of competitive asymmetry, suggesting that two firms facing exactly the same market conditions may view each other and their competitive relationships quite differently. Using Tversky’s (1977) seminal work on the dimensions of similarity, Chen (1996) proposed that competitive relationships between firms, viewed either through market commonality or resource similarity, are rarely symmetrical. Such asymmetry may help to explain perceptual discrepancies and behavioral variations in interfirm competition and information exchanges. Awareness-motivation-capability (AMC). The joint consideration of these market-similarity and resource-commonality constructs, as well as consistent empirical support from prior competitive dynamics studies, has brought to light three essential antecedents that affect a firm’s competitive activity: its awareness of another firm’s moves, its motivation to act (or respond), and its capability to act (or respond). For example, the greater a rival’s market commonality with a focal firm, the less motivated that rival would be to initiate an attack against the firm for fear of retaliation across multiple markets, and the greater a rival’s resource similarity with an attacking firm, the greater would be its ability to respond to the attacker (Chen 1996). This model, as we shall argue, may be used to structure an integrative research platform for competitive dynamics going forward. It should be noted that there is a direct correspondence between the individual components of AMC and market commonality/resource similarity. 23 For example, market commonality constructs, such as Baum & Korn’s (1996) market-domain overlap, tap into motivation, while constructs relating to resource similarity, such as Gimeno’s (1999) strategic similarity, affect action or response capability, and both constructs are often associated with awareness (Chen, 1996). Extensions. Theoretical and empirical studies that have built on the AMC model and its components include Baum and Korn’s (1999) dyadic examination of dynamic competition; Gardner’s (2005) investigation of interfirm rivalry in human resources; and Mas-Ruiz, Nicolau-Gonzalbez, & Ruiz-Moreno’s (2005) study of asymmetrical rivalry between strategic groups. Studies making related contributions include DeSarbo, et al.’s (2006) verification of competitive asymmetry based on consumer survey data; Yu & Cannella’s (2007) study of market and resource antecedents of rivalry among MNEs; Kilduff, et al.’s (2010) exploration of the psychology of rivalry, and Upson, Ketchen, Connelly, & Ranft’s (2011) examination of the impact of competitor analysis on engagement between rivals with “foothold” positions in a multimarket context. The AMC perspective has also been used to predict a range of strategic actions in the fields of marketing (e.g., Gielens, et al., 2008) and management information systems (e.g., Chi, Ravichandran, Andrevski, 2010). Conceptual links. In a real sense, the competitive dynamics work that has been done in the area of integrative competitor analysis is the most encompassing among the four research streams we have dealt with so far. Several recent extensions of the integrative competitor analysis approach are especially noteworthy in highlighting its links with our other competitive dynamics research themes. The first is that market-resource and awareness-motivation-capability lenses have been used to examine corporate-level competition. These studies have investigated MNE rivalry (Yu & Cannella, 2007), foreign direct investment 24 (Meyer & Sinani, 2009), market entry (Gielens, et al., 2008), and foreign-domestic firm rivalry (Chang & Xu, 2008). In a second extension, the three AMC antecedents of competitive behavior were used to predict the levels of interfirm competitive tension that managers perceive (Chen, Su, & Tsai, 2007). These studies have drawn attention to competitive perception as opposed to the objective aspects of competition that were the focus of the first three research themes (Livengood & Reger, 2010). The AMC perspective also offers a useful macro/micro link in the study of competitive dynamics (Kilduff, et al., 2010). Coupled with the idea of competitive asymmetry, this perspective led to the development of a rival-centric perceptual approach (Capron & Chatain, 2008; Tsai, Su, & Chen, 2011) in which seeing through the eyes of a rival is a key requirement of competitive analysis. Such an extension offers an opportune platform for examining rivalry at the individual or micro level (Kilduff, et al., 2010). A third extension of integrative competitor analysis is theorization beyond industry and market boundaries. Markman, Gianiodis, & Buchholtz (2009) focused on the idea of resource dissimilarity and product-market dissimilarity to investigate rivalry in factor markets and in upstream/downstream industries. Capron & Chatain (2008) explored actions that firms take to erode rivals’ resources in factor and political markets, proposing several key drivers and performance implications. A related line of inquiry explores the impact of executive leadership on competition, thereby bringing people and leadership back into strategy research (Montgomery, 2008). Leaders, of course, influence strategic behavior and are a critical resource in factor-market rivalry (Gardner, 2005; Hambrick, et al., 1996). Lastly, researchers have extended the integrative competitor analysis to non-competing stakeholders. Peteraf & Bergen (2003) extended the market commonality/resource similarity 25 framework to include customers, while Markman, Waldron, & Panagopoulos (2011) differentiated “attackers” from “competitors” to theorize interfirm rivalry among non-competitors and NGOs. Chen and Miller (2011), in proposing a relational perspective of competitive dynamics, advanced a multidimensional framework that is more encompassing, places greater emphasis on value creation for the community, and contemplates more stakeholders than the conventional combative view. In fact, by characterizing the relationship between any actors or entities, the market commonality/resource similarity framework can be employed for a multi-level analysis of firms, groups, individuals, and nations. Competitive Perception Thus far our research streams have concentrated on the actual behavior involved in competition—the competitive actions and responses that take place at the level of action/response dyads, businesses, or multibusiness corporations. But implicit in our discussion are the motivations and cognitions of the actors who initiate and respond to competitive actions—all of which relate to human perception (Miller & Droge, 1986; Staw, 1991). A stream of recent work has begun to make those hitherto implicit considerations explicit, acknowledging that action can take place only via human agency, and that all human agency is filtered by perception (Staw, 1991). Strategy and organization studies that have adopted a perceptual lens to investigate competition include Reger’s (1990) analysis of competitive positioning, Reger and Huff’s (1993) examination of strategy group, and Porac, Thomas, & Baden-Fuller (1989) and Porac, Thomas, Wilson, Paton, & Kanfer’s (1995) investigation of intraindustry rivalry among Scottish knitwear producers. The incorporation of perceptions in competitive dynamics research began in earnest with the Chen & Miller (1994) paper, which was a forerunner of the AMC model. Using an expectancy-valence framework (Vroom, 1964), the authors developed a model to predict the 26 features of a competitive attack that would minimize the chances of retaliation. It was proposed that the proclivity to respond to an attack would depend on a rival’s subjective reward or “valence” for launching a successful response (the motivational or “M” component of AMC), coupled with that rival’s perceived probability that it would have ample capability to respond (the “C” component of AMC). The visibility or awareness (the “A” of AMC) of an attack was a third component of the model. The prediction of the model was borne out: that less visible attacks, or actions attacking more peripheral markets and/or requiring more cost and disruption to respond to, elicited the fewest competitive responses. Indeed, highly visible attacks and actions that were relatively easy to respond to had the highest probability of meeting with retaliation. As predicted, the lower the likelihood of response, the more successful the attacker. Although this expectancy-valence model was assessed using concrete measures, it is at heart one that is very much based on managerial perceptions. As noted, Chen (1996) built on this framework in putting forth the AMC perspective. The AMC model itself and each of its elements has a vital perceptual component. Awareness involves perception, motivation is driven by perceptions, and capability cannot lead to action unless it is perceived to be adequate and unless a rival, threat, or advantage is perceived by managers as being important enough to warrant the commitment of capability-building resources. Thus, the components of the AMC model can only have implications for action via the perceptions of managers within attacking and responding companies (Porac et al., 1995). Notably, the model suggests that competitive asymmetries will exist between different pairs of rivals: Perceptions, motivations, and capabilities are apt to vary considerably between the parties. The AMC model, as noted, has served as a focal point for much of the research on managerial perceptions and competition. In all of this work, the perceptions of managers and top management teams regarding the emotional and behavioral significance of specific rivals and 27 “competitive turf” is central. As such, the research in this domain begins to examine directly the perceptions of managers and the contexts that shape those perceptions. In these attempts, new concepts such as competitive tension (Chen, et al., 2007), identity domains (Livengood & Reger, 2010), and competitive acumen (Tsai, et al., 2011) have been developed to incorporate the importance of such perceptions. Chen, et al. (2007), for example, have demonstrated the importance of competitive tension—the strain between a focal firm and a given rival that is likely to elicit an attack on the rival. They argue that each of the components of the AMC model—awareness, motivation, and capability—contributes to potential tension and therefore enhances the likelihood of rivalry-like exchanges. Although competitive tension includes both objective and perceptual considerations, this paper devotes its attention mainly to perceived competitive tension, while controlling for the influence of objective industry-structure tension. All three factors may enhance perceived tension and thereby increase a firm’s propensity to attack a given rival. The significance of competitive perception, demonstrated in this study, has direct bearing on Livengood & Reger’s (2010) discussion of proprietary “turf.” Yet another determinant of competitive behavior driven by perception is a firm’s “identity domain,” or TMT members’ consensual comprehension of the competitive arena that demonstrates and reinforces their marketplace identity (Miller, Le Breton-Miller & Lester, 2011). Livengood & Reger (2010) suggest that firms tend to compete in certain arenas in which they perceive their identity to be at stake—areas of enhanced “psychological consequence.” (Organizational identity refers to its members’ consensual understanding of “who we are as an organization.”) Volvo, for example, with its identity as a safety-driven company, will invest handsomely in keeping its cars safe, perhaps at the expense of emphasizing other rewarding sources of automobile (and company) performance. 28 From a competitive viewpoint, any attack, even an indirect and weak one, that falls into an organization’s self-constructed identity territory may provoke fierce and forceful retaliation that may seem irrational to outsiders. Again, the AMC model is used to predict competitive actions and reactions. This attention to identity considerations increases awareness of that aspect of the environment most relevant to defending or strengthening the identity domain. Emotional ties to identity enhance the motivation to defend or nurture the identity domain, and managerial attention to the domain increases resource allocation toward it and augments related capabilities. Such ties may result in the asymmetrical perceptions and actions of different competitors operating in the same environment, as in the well-known Boeing versus Airbus case (Casadesus-Masanell, Voigt, & Mitchell, 2006). Their differing views of the industry and its competitive outlook have led these archrivals to adopt fundamentally different strategies and business and operational models. Kilduff, et al. (2010) incorporate perceptions into their analysis in a different way. They are concerned with the subjective intensity of rivalry between individuals, groups, and companies, arguing that aspects such as proximity and prior competitive interactions increase rivals’ attention toward one another and their perceived enmity and intensity of rivalry. For example, a study of auction behavior showed that bidders were more apt to exceed their limits when facing few rather than many opposing bidders. The implication is that rivalry may develop between specific bidders who become targets of one another, and that that induces them to try unreasonably hard to achieve “victory” (Ku, Malhotra & Murnighan, 2005). Thus, Kilduff et al. (2010) argue the importance of prior interactions in enhancing the desire of rivals to best one another, even though from a rational point of view, the results of those prior interactions may have no bearing on the situation at hand. In short, rivalry here is conceived as a subjective competitive relationship that actors have with one another, and that increases their 29 psychological involvement and the perceived stakes of competition—independent of the objective characteristics of the situation. Thus the emotional aspects of competition, much neglected in the field, now assume a new prominence. Finally, Tsai, et al. (2011), adopting a rival-centric view of competitive dynamics, argue that it is important for a focal firm to have “competitive acumen”—an ability to understand its rival’s perceptions and to see things from its rival’s perspective. Only then can it make appropriate competitive decisions. Competitive embeddedness in the market-engagement relationship with those rivals (Gimeno, 2004; Gnyawali & Madhavan, 2001) is shown to be central to understanding a rival’s perceptions, which, in turn, has positive consequences for market-share gain against the rival. Conceptual links. Perceptual studies of competitive dynamics are especially interesting as they bridge micro and macro perspectives (Staw, 1991). The perceptions and inclinations of leaders (Miller & Droge, 1986) and their interactions with other top team members (Chen et al., 2010) may shape competitive actions (Dutton & Jackson, 1987). Over time, that stream of decisions constitutes strategy at the firm and corporate levels—a quintessentially macro-organizational phenomenon (Mintzberg, et al., 1976; Mintzberg, 1978). Individual human perceptions are also at the heart of micro approaches in organizational behavior and behavioral economics, where perceptual biases are the focus of studies of decision making and choice (Ariely, 2008; Barberis & Thaler, 2003; Loewenstein, 1996). Just as individual perceptions lead to actions that are aggregated to influence corporate behavior, so do more macro concepts such as organizational identity, identity domains, and corporate interaction histories shape the perceptions of individual decision makers functioning within organizations (Le Breton-Miller, Miller & Lester, 2011). Porac et al.’s (1995) work on rivalry among Scottish knitwear producers demonstrated that industry and market boundaries 30 were socially constructed around a collective cognitive model formed by firms as they observed each other’s competitive interactions. Thus directions of influence between macro and micro as mediated by perception are clearly bi-directional. In short, the perceptual approach holds promise for multilevel varieties of research that will provide insights into the forces that shape our organizations and competitive engagements with rivals. To sum up, the above five research themes constitute the core of competitive dynamics work. Together, they provide an encompassing overview of the competitive dynamics field and its key contributions to the strategy and organization literature. Exhibit 3 presents schematically the core research themes (denoted in bold/italics), as well as some representative concepts (e.g., the market commonality/resource similarity and rival-centric approaches) and extensions (e.g., factor-market or non-market rivalry). The exhibit, which provides diagrammatic representation of the relationships shown in Exhibit 2, displays how various components of competitive dynamics are connected, and how they constitute an integrated line of work. As shown in the exhibit, the research domains of strategic competitive behavior and repertoire (2) and multimarket/multibusiness competition (3) both derive directly from competitive interaction (1), i.e., the exchange of actions and reactions between two firms (or “actors”). In the lower part of the exhibit the domain of integrative competitor analysis (4) captures the relationship between two actors, and it is this relationship from which the domain of competitive perception (5), and concepts such as competitive asymmetry and tension, are formed. Clearly, integrative competitor analysis, which unites interfirm market-resource relationship and competitive interaction, plays a central role in connecting the various research themes and concepts in competitive dynamics. The “Extensions” box in the exhibit identifies a 31 few areas in which researchers have applied core competitive dynamics work to factor and non-factor markets, to the study of relationships and/or interactions with customers and stakeholders, and to multi-level analysis at the individual or team/group level. -Insert Exhibit 3 about hereThe pivotal role of AMC (awareness, motivation, capability) in competitive dynamics work is also conveyed in the exhibit.3 Indeed, the AMC model has emerged as the theoretical framework with perhaps the greatest potential to connect a wide range of topics in competition and strategy. As we shall see in the proposed synthesis in the “Research Gaps and Opportunities” section, the AMC model can be employed to weave together the various competitive dynamics research streams, incorporate them into an integrative framework, and tie them to research paradigms within and beyond the strategy discipline. Most important, the model provides a foundation for linking micro and macro organizational research and studies in competition and cooperation. Appendix A lists some representative studies for each of the five themes and highlights the key findings and theoretical perspectives of each study. Due to the interconnectedness among various research themes, a study may fit two (or more) themes but we categorize each paper into only one theme, based on its primary theoretical focus and contribution. In order to link the key ideas examined in a given study to the AMC model, the appendix identifies variables used in each analysis that relate to these three primary behavioral drivers. 3 It should be The AMC factors can be either barriers or facilitators to action and response (Haleblian, McNamara, Kolev, & Dykes, 2012). 32 noted that we identify the variables in a given study that correspond to the AMC components, even though the study may not employ the AMC perspective.4 -Insert Appendix A about hereBeyond the five core themes, competitive dynamics has benefited from a range of methodological approaches, none of which has proven to be definitive. In fact, a strength of the field has been its openness to a variety of methods and analytical approaches. Methodological Approaches A wide variety of methods has been used in competitive dynamics research. First, there is a diversity of promising and often very fine-grained data sources. These include revealing archival records of actions taken (Smith, et al., 1991; Yu & Cannella, 2007), managerial responses to questionnaires and also those of knowledgeable industry expert informants (Chen, et al., 2010; DeSarbo, et al., 2006; Marcel, et al., 2011), and detailed field interviews (Lamberg, Tikkanen, & Kokelainen, & Suur-Inkeroinen, 2009). What is telling about these sources is their level of detail and precision, which has lent considerable credibility to many findings in competitive dynamics. Researchers have also availed themselves of analytical approaches ranging from quite original simulation (Chen, 2007; Chen, Katila, McDonald, & Eisenhardt, 2010) and qualitative methodologies (Lamberg, et al., 2009) to the more popular quantitative and econometric methods (Ferrier, 2001). As we have seen, the level of action aggregation in analyses of competitive dynamics spans from action-response dyads (Smith, et al., 1992) to repertoires of competitive moves that an organization exercises within a given time period (Miller & Chen, 1994; 1996; 1996a), to 4 The categorization of a same variable may differ among papers because of differences in their theoretical focus and orientation. Unless a paper states that a variable includes more than one AMC component, each variable is categorized by one component only. 33 streams of competitive moves (Ferrier, 2001). Even interaction histories have figured into recent analysis to examine subjective perceptions of rivalry (Kilduff, et al., 2010). This diversity suggests promising opportunities for blending different methods to conduct studies that bridge micro and macro considerations and take advantage of different approaches. The advantage of the dyadic approach is that it allows researchers to examine the very fine-grained attack and response behavior of particular competitive initiatives—for example, which kinds of actions, by what kinds of organizations, elicit which specific kinds of responses? The disadvantage of this approach is that by focusing on one kind of action and response, one ignores the broader context of other types of decisions that may be taking place and shaping the dyadic interchange being examined. The advantage of the repertoire approach—which studies the majority or full set of market initiatives for a given firm over a specified interval—is that it enables researchers to richly characterize competitive strategy in a concrete way. As we have seen, characterizations include such dimensions as strategic simplicity, inertia, and conformity. For simplicity one assesses the degree to which a firm concentrates on one or two kinds of actions, or employs a wide array—for example, do price increases represent a large fraction of a company’s competitive initiatives (Ferrier & Lyon, 2004)? Researchers could also assess the degree to which actions conform to industry norms (conformity) (Miller & Chen, 1996a) or, in combination, represent a relatively low level of activity (inertia) (Miller & Chen, 1994). Unfortunately, the repertoire approach, by aggregating different actions during a specific interval, makes it difficult to ascertain the reactions from rivals that specific actions engender. Chen (2007), Ferrier (2001), Katila & Chen (2008), Rindova, Ferrier, & Wiltbank (2010) examine sequences of actions carried out over time. For instance, Ferrier (2001) combines all actions such as pricing, marketing, and capacity moves that are said to fall within a single 34 competitive attack—an uninterrupted sequence of competitive moves. He examines the simplicity/complexity, action volumes, and heterogeneity of these sequences. This approach has the advantage of partitioning action sequences into relatively discrete attacks according to the natural rhythm of the focal firm, instead of according to an arbitrary time period. The difficulty is in identifying such distinct periods and finding the true boundaries between attacks. Similarly, by incorporating rigorous sequencing methods (Abbott, 1990; Abbott, 1995), Chen (2007), Katila & Chen (2008), and Rindova, et al. (2010) investigated patterns in competitive moves over time. Their studies of timed action sequences contrast with previous treatments of isolated competitive moves, and reveal the longitudinal processes that characterize competitive dynamics and the pivotal integrative role it plays in linking strategy content (or formulation) and process (or implementation). The emphasis by scholars on novel methods aimed at gathering fine-grained and dynamic longitudinal data on strategic decisions and interaction patterns has yielded a variety of promising examples and models for future researchers, not only of competitive dynamics but of strategy in general. EVOLUTIONARY TENDENCIES WITHIN COMPETITIVE DYNAMICS Having structured and provided an overview of the competitive dynamics field and described its methods, we now examine some important trends in the way it has emerged over the past decades, with some foci falling away, and others receiving more attention. Indeed, the field has itself been dynamic over the past two decades, and is evolving at a healthy pace. It is useful to highlight some of the more consistent trajectories that have characterized the field’s development. 35 From action/response dyad or individual “actions,” to a stream or pattern of actions, to a set of interconnected actions among market players. Initial studies of competitive dynamics concentrated on rivalrous exchanges between two entities (either firms or market actions). Indeed, a core insight of the approach of competitive dynamics was this need to examine company moves in the context of actual competitive engagements. Therefore, the action/response dyad served as the basic unit of observation (Smith, et al., 1991; Smith, et al., 1992). There was interest not only in the investigation of individual moves (either actions or reactions) per se, but also their market antecedents and consequences (Barnett, 1993; Grimm, et al., 2006; Ingram & Baum, 1997). Over time, however, there has been a growing tendency to consider longer and more multifaceted sequences of actions and interactions, driven in part by researchers’ interest in assessing constructs such as competitive aggressiveness over time longer periods of time (Ferrier, 2001). Thus researchers began to explore the action/reaction/counter-reaction (or “triad”) involving more extended exchanges of moves and countermoves (Lamberg, et al., 2009). Still other scholars delved into the study of temporally connected actions taken by a number of firms, considering the behavioral interdependencies among market players such as “red queen” traps of running hard just to keep up (Barnett, 1993; Haleblian, McNamara, Kolev, & Dykes, 2012; Hsih, Tsai, & Chen, 2011) and the “follow-the-leader” behaviors first examined by scholars of international business (Knickerbocker, 1973). Studies also evolved from a focus on individual actions (Smith, et al., 1992) to concentration on entire competitive repertoires encompassing not singular moves but whole sets of interconnected actions that a firm might pursue, say, over the course of a given year. These moves might include initiatives in pricing, advertising, marketing, product lines, and systems of delivery (Yu, 2003; Yu & Cannella, 2007). As noted, these repertoires could be characterized 36 by their simplicity or focus on a single kind of move (Ferrier & Lyon, 2004), their inertia (Miller & Chen, 1994), or their overall conformity to industry practices (Miller & Chen, 1996). In this way, a richer and more elaborate conceptualization of competitive strategy could emerge. From a simple, specific attribute of action (or response) to a more sophisticated one. The early work on competitive dynamics analyzed specific aspects of competitive engagements, for example, the speed of a response (Chen & MacMillan, 1992; Eisenhardt, 1989) or the likelihood that a given competitive move would result in a response (Barnett, 1997; Smith, et al., 1991). The investigation tended to be limited, and the conceptualization of constructs was specific and confined (such as response speed). The selectiveness of a competitive attack was also examined (Chen & Hambrick, 1995). Later studies, however, began to embrace more sophisticated and comprehensive conceptualizations of actions. These included considerations of actions’ inertial nature (Miller & Chen, 1994), their consistency over time (Barnett, 1993; Ferrier, 2001; Lamberg, et al., 2009), their institutional conformity to practice (Miller & Chen, 1996a; Podolny, 1993), or their reflecting or aligning with the theme of a competitive repertoire (Miller & Chen, 1996). Indeed, this increased depth of characterization grew in part by situating competitive actions within a repertoire of types and frequencies of different moves that a firm could pursue over a given time period—usually a year (Ferrier, 2001). It might also apply to a temporal sequence of moves (Rindova, et al., 2010). Scholars building on these accumulating research findings, and driven by a desire for a coherent and parsimonious framework, have recently begun to develop higher-level, more aggregate constructs. These efforts are helping to capture the multi-dimensional complexities of competitive engagements, and reveal a firm’s competitive profile in a manner that is more comprehensive. The field has witnessed an evolution in the conceptualization and measurement 37 of even such specific constructs as competitive aggressiveness, progressing from unidimensional considerations of moves such as volume (Ferrier, 2001), scope (Yu & Cannella, 2007), and speed (Chen & Hambrick, 1995) to more encompassing treatments that consider amalgams of such dimensions (Chen, et al., 2010; Lin & Shih, 2008). From objective to perceptual considerations. Following the then prevailing approach among macro-management scholars, competitive dynamics research began with a focus on the objective and observable aspects of competition: the number of competitive moves a firm made (Smith, et al., 1992), the number of types of such moves (Miller & Chen, 1996), the market scope of a competitive move (Yu & Cannella, 2007), the investment required and aggressiveness of a competitive action (Ferrier, 2001), and the average delays in the responses to different competitive attacks (Boyd & Bresser, 2008). All of these characteristics could be gauged using quantifiable and objective indicators such as dollars, time, or counts. However, with the advent of the expectancy-valence framework (Chen & Miller, 1994) and the awareness-motivation-capability model (Chen, 1996), there developed a desire to get behind observable indicators to discover the perceptions and motivations that give rise to observable market actions. Thus, Kilduff, et al. (2010) delved into the determinants of subjective perceptions of rivalry. Livengood & Reger (2010) examined the impact of organizational identities on the awareness and motivational components motivating interfirm rivalry, and Chen, et al. (2007) focused on perceived competitive tension between a firm and its rivals. Tsai, et al. (2011) showed that the correspondence between the perceptions of a focal firm and a rival (Tsai, et al., 2011) also can shape competitive behavior. This evolution from objective to perceptual aspects of competition has moved research from description to explanation and from action to its underlying drivers. 38 It has also raised a deceptively simple, but critical, question. Is competition objective or perceived, and to what extent, and under what conditions, are the two likely to converge or diverge? From observable behavior to underlying behavioral and organizational drivers. As noted, early studies concentrated on observable market behavior, on actions per se and their various tangible—often market-related—characteristics. Gradually, however, interest grew concerning the behavioral and organizational contexts that produced such actions, as well as the responses to these actions. For example, the competitive identity of an organization can shape which competitive attacks managers notice and feel obliged to react to and defend: self-described innovators may be especially likely, for example, to respond to the product introductions of rivals. By the same token, a firm’s definition of its “turf” can determine which attacks managers feel they can ignore because they do not threaten what is perceived to be an essential distinctive element or competency (Livengood & Reger, 2010). The nature of interfirm rivalry—its aggressiveness and responsiveness—has also been shown to be influenced by the heterogeneity (Hambrick et al., 1996) and behavioral integration (Chen, et al., 2010) of the top management team, as well as human-resource practices (Gardner, 2005) and resource management practices (Sirmon, et al., 2008). Such organizational characteristics help not only to explain observable competitive behavior, but also to surface some of its intrinsic richness. From a phenomenon (or topic) to a theoretical perspective. Early competitive dynamics work tended to be phenomenon-driven and aimed to articulate some important competitive concerns. At the same time, it applied theories from relevant fields and adopted quite rigorous empirical and methodological standards. The initial studies focused on testing simple relationships observed from business competition. They began with a naïve but critical question: What is the relationship between competitive action and response (Chen, 2009)? From this simple beginning the research broadened to explore a wide range of action and 39 response constructs and their relationships, such as the likelihood of response (or attack) and the volume and speed of actions (Lee, et al., 2000; Ferrier, 2001). Over the years, progress in the field has accelerated toward building a predictive theory of competitive action and response. For example, for a given competitive context, recent research attempts to predict which actions (or responses) are likely to occur, which are likely to produce successful results, and what impact such action/response choices may have on diverse organizational outcomes. Studies have yielded consistent findings across different industries, suggesting, for instance, that action volume and response speed enhance firm performance (Smith, et al., 2001). Other trends. Additional research trends include progression from a comprehensive study of the whole range of various types of actions taken by a firm (Chen & Miller, 1994; Miller & Chen, 1994, 1996; Nokelainen, 2010; Smith, et al., 1992) to the examination of a specific type of move, such as new product introduction (Krider & Weinberg, 1998; Lee, et al., 2000; Lee, Smith, & Grimm, 2003; Srivastava & Lee, 2005), R&D (Chen, et al., 2010), innovation (Katila & Chen, 2008; Semadeni & Anderson, 2010), IPO (Certo, Holcomb, & Holmes, 2009), and mergers and acquisitions (Haleblian, et. al, 2012). There has also been a tendency to move from context-free to context-specific research (e.g., Derfus, et al., 2008; Upson, et al., 2011; Zhang & Gimeno, 2010); from the U.S. domestic to the global setting (e.g., Di Gregorio, Musteen, & Thomas, 2008; Di Gregorio, et al., 2008; Hermelo & Vassolo, 2010; Nokelainen, 2010; Yu & Cannella, 2007) from an analysis centered on the focal firm to a “rival-centric” approach (Tsai, et al., 2011); and from dyad to triad (Madhavan, Gnyawali, & He, 2004) or to group-level competition (Rowley, Baum, Shipilov, Greve, & Rao, 2004; Smith, Grimm, Young, & Wally, 1997). Methodologically, we have witnessed a trend from empirical or quantitative (Smith, et al., 1991) to theoretical (Chen, 1996; Gnyawali & Madhavan, 2001), 40 case/qualitative analysis (Lamberg, et al., 2009), or formal modeling (Park & Zhou, 2005). Finally, there has been a tendency to move from an analysis of competition to analyses that embrace both competition and cooperation (Gimeno, 2004; Gnyawali & Madhavan, 2001; Gnyawali, He, Madhavan, 2006; Silverman & Baum, 2002; Young, et al., 1996) or that examine the interdependence between competition and cooperation (Chen, 2008). Although the evolution of the competitive dynamics domain is salutary, it appears that sometimes the progress to new topics has been accompanied by the premature retirement of important older ones. Instead of developing a more holistic conception of the field, research has tended to “move on” instead of accumulating to form a more integrated whole. In the next section we shall identify some important research gaps and hence opportunities for developing the field. RESEARCH GAPS AND OPPORTUNITIES Certainly, the trends we have described show a promising evolution of the field. There are several gaps, however, that indicate areas of neglect, and from these it is possible to identify some corresponding research opportunities. In attempting to bridge macro and micro approaches to competitive dynamics and by building on the AMC model, we shall first provide an integrative micro-macro research platform for the field—one that links it to other prominent conceptual domains. Then we shall turn to more specific research opportunities. Linking Macro and Micro Organization Research One chasm that looms large in the literature on organizations is that between micro and macro analysis (Miller & Droge, 1986; Miller & Lee, 2001; Nightingale & Toulouse, 1977; Schneider, 1987; Staw, 1991). This divide occurs between scholars of organization behavior or organizational psychology and those studying macro-organizational theory and strategic 41 management. It is also to be found between those who study decision making from a psychological point of view and those who focus on organizational sociology and corporate strategy. Competitive dynamics represents an underexploited but fertile domain for integrating these macro and micro perspectives. Competitive actions can be seen as products of the perceptions, personalities, intentions, and motivations of individual actors in an organization (Dutton & Jackson, 1987; Chen & Miller, 1994). As such, they are “micro” in nature. However, they may also be a product of human talents, committees, task forces, departments, and top management teams (Hambrick & Mason, 1984; Gardner, 2005). Moreover, actions accumulate to reflect and compose strategies (Mintzberg, 1973), and strategies are in turn a guiding context in which perceptions and motivations are molded to shape future actions (Barnett, 1993; Miller, 1990). This interplay among internal and external forces at different organizational levels represents a neglected area that can enlighten our understanding of strategy formulation and execution, and of individual and group decision making. The context of organizational design in which actions take place (Galbraith, 1995; Smith, et al., 1991) constitutes another link between micro and macro analysis. How, for example, do information systems, reporting hierarchies, job definitions, accountabilities, and reward structures influence competitive actions? How do these actions in turn influence the commitments made by an organization and its members that shape the resources and administrative arrangements of the firm (Barnett & Hansen, 1996)? Again, far too little is known about these interactions. Another opportunity for macro-micro integration bridges the organization and its environment via competitive action and response. Such actions, especially those taken in the factor-market arena (Markman, et al., 2009), lie at the heart of an organization’s boundary-spanning activity. They represent sources of information by which an organization 42 comes to understand and represent its environment via key actors. Conversely, competitive actions also accumulate to characterize an organization in the eyes of its key external stakeholders (Parmar, Freeman, Harrison, Wicks, Prunell, & de Colle, 2010). Thus, in effect, competitive actions represent not merely a central nexus between organization and environment, their implementation and its consequences have major implications for how the environment is “enacted” by the organization, and also for how the organization is reified and represented by actors in the environment. Building a research platform. By building on the logic of the AMC model, we present a research platform for competitive dynamics that integrates micro and macro perspectives of organizations and connects them to some of the more prominent management theories. We hope that doing so will lead to a more systematic and comprehensive treatment of competitive dynamics, and one that connects more integrally to other schools of management thought. The promise of using competitive dynamics to integrate micro and macro perspectives of organizations can best be articulated via the AMC model. possible platform for such a research program. Table 1 presents the elements of a The outcomes, not specified in the table, are the qualities of the competitive actions engaged in by a firm; these may be initial actions of attack or responses. Such qualities might include scale and scope, speed of response, irreversibility, consistency with a firm’s past actions, and conformity to industry norms or precedents. We have already argued that actions are a function of the relevant AMC components of awareness, motivation, and capability, and hence of the drivers of those components (Chen, 1996; Chen & Miller, 1994). To date, however, the factors underlying each of the components of the model have been neglected or studied only sporadically. We shall argue that there are both micro and macro elements that underlie each of these components, and, indeed, there may well be interactions between these micro and macro elements. The former reside in the characteristics of 43 the executive. The latter apply to the characteristics of an organization and its external environment. -Insert Table 1 about hereTable 1 summarizes some of the micro and macro factors that may be instrumental in shaping each of the components of the AMC model; in that sense it represents both a platform for further research as well as the skeleton of a more elaborated model. The cells of the table can be considered as the bases for hypotheses on the drivers and outcomes of competitive dynamics. The underlying logic of the model specifies a multiplicative prediction function, such that better prediction of competitive dynamics behavior is obtained by incorporating simultaneously awareness, motivation, and capability components. However, given the early stage of development of the field, we believe that it would be useful to perform research even within single cells of the table. Ultimately, cumulative progress in the field might come as we employ multiple AMC components and integrate both micro and macro factors on the table—for example, individual and group factors, or organizational and inter-organizational factors. That combination also holds promise for bringing together the diverse theoretical paradigms referenced in the table. In short, Table 1 may serve both as a general model of competitive behavior, and a potential platform for organizing and situating subsequent research efforts. We consider the cells of Table 1 in turn. First are the drivers of awareness. An actor’s breadth of experience may make the actor more or less aware of different aspects of the competitive environment. Thus, short job tenure may impede effective scanning, while very long tenure may lead to too many assumptions and cause tunnel vision. Research into these questions may be informed by existing work on executive life-cycles (Hambrick & Fukutomi, 1991; Miller, 1990). The rapidly growing domain of behavioral economics has identified important cognitive biases that channel individual perceptions such that past experience and 44 priorities drive what types of information are attended to in the environment (Barberis & Thaler, 2003). Awareness is also influenced by group-level phenomena such as information sharing and top management team demographics and diversity (Chen, et al., 2010; Hambrick & Mason, 1984; Hambrick, et al., 1996), as well as organizational-level concerns such as attention (Ocasio, 1997) and reputation (Basdeo, Smith, Grimm, Rindova, & Derfus, 2006). Awareness also will be influenced by macro-level factors. For example, heterogeneous top management teams will have more sources of information and a variety of perspectives from which to view the environment (Chen, et al., 2010). Organizational scanning and information systems will influence the breadth, accuracy, and relevance of the factors considered in taking (or refraining from taking) action; collaborative and coordinative mechanisms will ensure that external information goes to the appropriate parties inside the firms to enable an appropriate response. These organizational factors are reflected in the literature on TMT demographics (Hambrick & Mason, 1984), contingency theory (Lawrence & Lorsch, 1967), and information processing views of firms (Aguilar, 1967; Galbraith, 1995; Tsai, et al., 2011; Wildavsky, 1979). Finally, there are the macro-level factors influencing awareness that lie outside the organization. The position of a firm within a network of stakeholders can influence the kind of information the firm is able to gather on what is occurring both within the competitive environment and the markets for the factors of production. Network theory has much to say on these matters, especially with respect to the distinction between bonding ties that bring richly intimate and focused information, and bridging ties that provide a broader range of information (Granovetter, 1973; Kilduff & Tsai, 2003). The motivation component of our AMC general action model is also influenced by both micro and macro factors. An actor’s motivation may be a function of a wide variety of variables, including personality (aggressiveness versus passivity, for example, or need for 45 achievement or locus of control (Miller & Toulouse, 1986)). Career stage may also come into play, as those very early or late in their careers may be less willing to risk an erroneous or controversial response than those in more secure positions, while those in powerful positions will have more confidence to respond (Miller & Shamsie, 2001). A person’s wealth, social identity, or social status may also influence his or her reference group and thus temper decision-making behavior (Hogg & Terry, 2001). Behavioral economists, too, have contributed to our understanding of motivation as it affects choice behavior, especially via their conceptualizations of the factors driving attitudes toward risk (Ariely, 2008; Loewenstein, 1996). For example, according to behavioral economists, there is risk propensity in the domain of loss. Therefore, executives with poor track records may be more willing to take risky competitive actions to rescue their reputations than would successful executives who have more to lose. Micro factors also come into play at the group level, with the social identity of a group driving how it contrasts itself with other groups inside and outside the organization, and hence impacts the kinship or rivalry that induces cooperation or competition (Tajfel & Turner, 1979). Again, there are organizational factors that also influence the motivation to act. These include firm reporting structures and accountability systems that either enable individual initiative or induce people to remain more conservative (Galbraith, 1995; Thompson, 1967). Also of relevance are reward systems that encourage or extinguish such initiative (Kerr, 1975), or corporate cultures that do the same (Martin, 2002). Finally, there is the competitive turf that the organization defines as particularly relevant given its perceptions of its competitive strengths and areas of vulnerability (Livengood & Reger, 2010). Factors in the external environment of the organization may be equally important. For example, in some industries or national cultures, institutional norms will discourage certain types of competitive behavior. In China, it may be more socially acceptable to launch stealthy and indirect attacks than face-to-face ones 46 (Greenwood, Oliver & Suddaby, 2008). Similarly, in family businesses, social ties with the community and the prevalence of paternalistic family pressures over market logic will shape the motivation to launch an attack, or respond to one (Thornton & Ocasio, 2008). The capability component of the AMC model takes us to the final column of Table 1. Certainly, the skill of the actor is vital: his or her understanding of the competitive environment, the competency to formulate plans required for an effective attack or response, and the ability to understand and marshal the resources and capabilities of the focal organization and predict the vulnerabilities and likely reactions of rivals (Tsai et al., 2011). The actor’s interpersonal network will also come into play wherever it is important to receive information, advice, or political support from others (Granovetter, 1973). Group factors too have an impact on capabilities—for example, the ease with which group members work together represents a potentially vital source of tacit knowledge, while the networks of interaction formed within a group contribute to the ability to mobilize joint efforts (Kilduff & Tsai, 2003). Numerous macro factors also shape the capability to act. The resource-based view of the firm signals the importance of rare, inimitable, valuable, and non-substitutable assets such as patents, special physical properties, and tacit knowledge that reside in teams (Barney, 1991; Wernerfelt, 1984). Building on insights from the RBV, the dynamic capabilities perspective proposes that resources can be developed over time and in a time-dependent manner, such that a firm can keep renewing its skills and adapting them to stay ahead of the competition (Easterby-Smith, Lyles, & Peteraf, 2009; Miller, 2003; Sirmon, Hitt, Arregle, & Campbell, 2010; Teece, et al., 1997). Porter (1985) presented a value-chain scheme for evaluating which stage of a company’s input-output cycle contributes the most to returns. The extent to which the critical stages are rich in resources and talent also might contribute to the capabilities underlying competitive actions. Strategic alliances can be helpful where non-critical stages may be 47 outsourced to enable a firm to focus on its most critical competencies and the actions that build or capitalize on those competencies (Hamel, 1991). Finally, there are the macro factors that lie beyond the boundaries of the organization. These include industry conditions such as barriers to entry and exit and levels of demand growth (Porter, 1980), macro-economic forces, and degrees of sophistication and development in the legal, social, and political infrastructure of a nation (Khanna & Palepu, 2002). Each of these factors might constrain or enhance a firm’s capabilities to undertake competitive actions. We should emphasize that many of the factors mentioned here are not independent. Organizational factors can shape personal ones, as, for example, when corporate cultures favor the hiring or promotion of managers with specific personality types and skills. Also, the external environment can shape organizational conditions, as when economic constraints cause the need to centralize power, or legal requirements impose higher levels of bureaucracy. It would be useful to examine the importance of these kinds of interactions in furthering this “multi-level” approach to competitive dynamics. Our model represents a first attempt at integrating the complex field of competitive dynamics. In an effort both to enrich competitive dynamics and to inform and bridge the perspectives that connect to it, the model also maps out a general framework for integrating macro and micro perspectives of organizations and for connecting the burgeoning field to some of today’s most fruitful management theories. Linking Competition and Cooperation Another major research opportunity for scholars is to do more to examine cooperative interactions, which have been shown to be vital aspects of competitive strategy. competition and cooperation are both cornerstones of business strategy. Indeed, There has been significant interest in the study of cooperation between firms (see reviews by Ahuja, 2000; Dyer 48 & Singh, 1998). Strategy and organizational scholars have also undertaken the study of competition and cooperation, owing in part to the seminal co-opetition work by Brandenburger & Nalebuff (1996). Defined as simultaneous cooperation and competition, co-opetition has been linked to better opportunities for organizational learning (Dussauge, Garrette, Michell, 2000), inter-unit coordination and resource-sharing capabilities (Tsai, 2002), and firm performance (Lado, Boyd, & Hanlon, 1997; Loebecke, Van Fenema & Powell, 1998). In related studies, researchers have used competitive attributes such as industry structure and interfirm competitive intensity to predict cooperative outcomes such as joint ventures and alliances (Harrigan, 1988; Powell & Brantley, 1992) and other forms of cooperation among competitors (e.g., Gimeno & Woo, 1996a; Gimeno & Jeong, 2001; Gimeno, 2004; Park & Zhou, 2005). Scholars also have used attributes of cooperative networks to predict the nature of competitive actions (Gnyawali & Madhavan, 2001). Competition-cooperation relationships. As noted, many scholars view competition, competitors, and competitive actions in relative terms, and defined by context—that is, relationally and by situation. Moreover, the relationship between competition and cooperation can be considered to be interdependent. The focus of comparative competitor analysis is thus on the relationship between firms in a given market because, although each firm is unique, its strengths and weaknesses are relative and only relate to a specific competitor of interest. Integrative competitor analysis therefore devotes attention to understanding how two firms relate to one another along particular strategy dimensions, such as markets or resources. A pairwise, market-resource comparison of interfirm relationships expands strategic vision beyond industry boundaries and direct competitors. More importantly, it can also be used to identify and analyze partners for joint ventures, alliances, or M&A, both within and beyond a focal industry, since the emphasis is on the relationship between any two firms and not on the rivalry per se. Indeed, both 49 competitor and collaborator may be regarded as different forms of “the other.” Thus one can apply the same AMC- market commonality/resource similarity approach to predicting a competitor’s response as to projecting a joint venture partner’s reaction, so long as one strives to understand a situation from the other party’s viewpoint. This “relational” view of competition allows a firm to “walk in the shoes” of its rivals (Tsai, et al., 2011) and other stakeholders (Parmar, et al., 2010; Peteraf & Bergen, 2003). An expansive conception of competition may, in fact, be found in the roots of the word “compete.” The original meaning of compete is “to strive or come together” (from the Latin roots com-together + petere to seek). The “togetherness” embedded in the word’s etymology reveals much about its nature: Even in an oppositional contest, two opponents are inextricably linked and mutually influential. Moreover, any interfirm relationship—as a result of the uniqueness and asymmetry of perceptions among the parties —is fundamentally fluid and involves a constant, intricate interplay between competitive and cooperative forces, as suggested in two examples. General Motors once offered a $1,000 rebate certificate for auto parts with the purchase of a GM car, but the certificate could be redeemed at any competitor’s outlet. Should a competitor, such as Ford, have considered GM’s action a cooperative move, one that could boost Ford’s sales, or a competitive action? Similarly, Acer Computer built up a network of suppliers in Taiwan that were as useful to its direct competitors as they were to Acer. Yet this network gave Acer greater access to the resources it needed to enter the global market and to compete in Taiwan (Chen & Miller, 2010, 2011a). for Acer? Was this network building a competitive or a cooperative move Clearly, it was both. Initially competitive dynamics distinguished between actions and responses (XXX versus YYY) and between the moves of aggressive rivals and cooperative competitors (AAA versus 50 BBB). Because, however, the elements in a continuing series of events often have no obvious beginning and, in effect, no end, there typically is no clear distinction between an action and a response. Most actions can also be responses either to some general economic condition or to the actions of a rival, and most responses can have original components that could be perceived as competitive initiatives to some organizations (Lamberg, et al., 2009). To take a simple example, party A may “act” by cutting prices, causing a response in kind by rival B, whose reaction could seem an aggressive move toward rival C—forcing A to re-enter the battle by cutting prices once more or altering its strategy. In such processes, it is best to look for interactions and sequences of moves; that is to move toward a general theory of action (Smith, et al., 1992; Smith et al., 2001), rather than to characterize dyads of actions and responses. The topic of competition-cooperation suggests a wealth of other research questions. How can the AMC and market commonality/resource similarity frameworks be applied to examine the mix between cooperation and competition? Which lenses can be used to examine competitive-cooperative relationships among firms in a supply chain? What roles do national culture, incentive systems, and organizational structures play in influencing the balance between competition and cooperation? How do the “either/or” Western mindset and the “both/and” Eastern perspective inform competitive-cooperative engagements? Finally, what are the implications of the Chinese conception of “self-other integration” for competitive, cooperative, and competitive-cooperative relationships? To sum up, Exhibit 4 presents additional research questions for the micro-macro and competition-cooperation links articulated above. These are intended to stimulate further thought for prospective researchers. -Insert Exhibit 4 about hereOther Research Gaps and Opportunities 51 Exhibit 5 lists some research questions for each of the five themes (competitive interaction, strategic competitive behavior and repertoire, multimarket and multibusiness competition, integrative competitor analysis, competitive perception) and methodological concerns. -Insert Exhibit 5 about hereWhat follows are additional research areas that have received too little attention but show promise of furthering the field. Corporate governance. The domain of corporate governance represents a critical emerging field in management, finance, and economics. For the most part it has adopted a macro perspective, examining, for example, the relationships between different forms and distributions of ownership and performance (Morck, Shleifer & Vishny, 1988; Morck, Wolfenzon & Yeung, 2005). Yet results have been non-cumulative, in part because aggregates are being related to aggregates (Miller, Le Breton-Miller, 2011; Miller, Le Breton-Miller, Lester, & Cannella, 2007). Increasingly insightful results might be forthcoming were we to move more to micro-conceptions that lie between ownership structure and performance—specifically, just who are the owners and what types of competitive initiatives are they most apt to sponsor (Connelly, Tihanyi, Certo, & Hitt, 2010; Miller et al., 2007)? For example, firms run by first-generation entrepreneurs may favor aggressive engagement, while those owned by conservative family members may be slower and more timid in their competitive actions and responses (Miller, et al., 2010). Surely, there is opportunity for further research along these lines. A few questions may serve as starting points. What are the underlying differences in action/response attributes and competitive repertoires among the different generations of family owners and managers in a family business? How does the interplay among boards of directors, top management teams, and CEOs shape competitive behavior? How can we study competition 52 and rivalry among different forms of enterprise (e.g., for-profit, nonprofit, business family, and state-owned)? Market entry and entrepreneurship. Competitive dynamics research has tended to focus on large established Western firms.5 Its central ideas and premises, however, can be extended to research issues pertinent to the study of entrepreneurial organizations (Lumpkin & Dess, 1996) and firms that are small, young, or limited in market scope or resource endowment (Certo, et al., 2009). Competitive dynamics lenses can also be applied to study local champions in emerging economies who desire to expand internationally (Dawar & Frost, 1999). One of the key issues for entrepreneurial ventures—as challengers, or late movers—is anticipating and minimizing the responses of entrenched incumbents. There are several ways in which this research can be advanced. One may examine how a challenger minimizes a defender’s awareness; how it can reduce a defender’s motivation to retaliate; and, if retaliation is unavoidable, how it may prepare for head-on capability-based competition (Gielens, et al., 2008). Future research also might study the timing of entrepreneurial initiatives or disruptive attacks, and their retaliatory responses, paying special attention to the drivers of awareness, motivation, and capability and thus developing a process view of competitive dynamics (Lamberg, et al.; 2009). Competitive asymmetry. The study of competitive asymmetry may be especially relevant to market entry and entrepreneurship, particularly when conducted through the lens of competitive perception (Marcel, et al., 2011). What are some conditions under which an entrant can create and maintain the advantage of asymmetry? How can a new entrant or late mover position itself to maximize both market non-commonality and resource dissimilarity in the eyes of key incumbents or defenders (Chen, 2011; Markman, et al., 2009)? Which potential disruptions might the attacker create in the marketplace? How likely, quickly, and in which markets, will 5 This section draws considerably from Chen (2011). 53 defenders be able to mount effective retaliations? Which strategic and market considerations can an entrepreneurial venture employ to outmaneuver its larger local or global rivals (McGrath, et al., 1998)? How do original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) expand and transform themselves to become MNEs? Specifically, how do OEMs engage simultaneously with their global rivals and partners in their international expansion? How do local champions fight against attacking MNEs or defend their home turf? The notion of asymmetry has broad implications not only in a competitive context but also for interfirm cooperation. Indeed, it can be extended to the study of many kinds of relationships, at both individual and organizational levels. The market commonality/resource similarity framework can also be used to study interorganizational cooperation and partnership as well as competition and cooperation among firms from different countries. Such efforts should highlight the promise of competitive dynamics in advancing action-based general strategy theory and a competition-cooperation link. East-West competitive thinking. With its emphasis on duality and relativity, the study of competitive dynamics represents a compelling vehicle for comparing and possibly integrating Eastern and Western approaches to management (Chen & Miller, 2010). Many of the ideas explored in competitive dynamics trace their intellectual roots to Chinese philosophy and traditional systems of thought. Indeed, China’s long history is rich with philosophical thinking that has been applied to commercial, social, and military practices over the millennia. Resource-diversion strategies (McGrath, et al., 1998), for instance, correspond to the competitive wisdom of “making noise in the East when attacking in the West”. The idea of “irreversibility” (Chen & MacMillan, 1992) is exemplified by the proverb about “sinking your boat before attacking your enemy”. Indeed, Tsai, et al. (2011) have put to the test Sun Tzu’s doctrine of, “If you know yourself and know your opponent, you can win 100 wars.” 54 Questions worthy of exploration might include the following. culture affect competitive behavior? How does national How might a philosophy of Chinese competition be evaluated systematically in subsequent competitive dynamics research? How can Sun Tzu’s competitive wisdom and other popular Eastern philosophies inform our knowledge of strategy and competition? Western rivals? How do firms in the East use a non-Western approach to compete with With today’s dramatic changes in the global economic landscape, how can West-based perspectives of competition be adapted to Eastern environments? Might an “ambicultural” approach be used to examine competition and/or competitive dynamics? Research methods. A variety of data collection approaches, such as survey, qualitative, or simulation approaches, should be encouraged. In light of the burgeoning interests in competitive dynamics research in the international arena, this call is especially pertinent. Research has tended to use a structured content analysis approach to identify action and response characteristics. This method captures daily business operations and has merit when public competition information is valid and accessible. In many non-Western contexts, however, secondary or objective data are invalid or unavailable. It is also challenging to identify actions and responses in the complicated, fast-changing competition that characterizes many emerging economies (Chen, et al., 2010). Moreover, since competition has both objective and subjective elements, a well-designed survey can capture the latter while probing into the “dynamic” and “relative” aspects of competitive dynamics. Indeed, the literature thus far has paid too little attention to the “process” that shapes competitive decisions—a gap that might be addressed in part by employing fine-grained qualitative studies (Lamberg, et al., 2009) or laboratory simulation methodologies (Chen, 2007). Moreover, competitive dynamics research usually treats competition at a single level of analysis. Competitive strategy, nonetheless, involves multilevel considerations. For example, 55 the industry environment can affect strategy, which in turn may lead to particular actions and responses. Here we have interactions among phenomena at the industry level, firm level, and action level. This kind of multilevel analysis, which is popular in the study of organization behavior (Hofmann, 1997; Liao & Chuang, 2004; Staw, Sandelands, & Dutton, 1981), may represent a useful approach for future studies. Finally, most competitive dynamics studies assume that Firm A responds because of an action taken by Firm B, but often we cannot know with certainty whether a move is an action or a counteraction. In contrast to litigation where it is clear who is charging whom (Markman, et al., 2011), in business competition an outsider may not be able to discern whether a price cut is in fact an attack, a defense, or a response to an exogenous event. Similarly, internal responses may be hard to observe and conceptualize, and thus remain unexplored in literature. Future researchers may wish to address these issues by applying more precise measurements and research designs. CONCLUSION Competitive dynamics remains a young and expanding field. We have in this review attempted to explain its roots and defining features, laid out its core purposes, and identified its major research themes of the past two decades. These include action-based studies of competitive interaction, business-level studies of strategic competitive behavior and behavioral repertoires, corporate-level analyses of multimarket and multibusiness competition, integrative models of competitor analysis, and studies of how managers’ perception influences competitive behavior. We have also described the distinctive research methods used in these sub-domains. Certainly, the field has not been stagnant, and several evolutionary trends have become apparent. There has been, for example, a movement from dyadic studies of individual competitive actions to streams or repertoires of more richly characterized actions among sets of players. There has 56 also been a trend from examining objective behavior to combining that research with probes of managerial perceptions and other underlying drivers of behavior, as well as a progression from simple topics to situating those topics within more integrative and general theoretical perspectives. And yet, for all this progress, there remain important gaps in the field. Throughout our analysis we have pointed out the relative lack of integration. Studies within particular research themes tend to stay within the boundaries of those themes, rarely making direct connections with neighboring ideas or motifs. The reach of repertoire studies, for example, rarely extends to interactions between actors, while most action-level research has been conducted without considering the strategic context of those actions. On a more general level, the promise of competitive dynamics research to link micro and macro research domains, and to bridge studies of competition and cooperation, remains largely unexploited, leaving rich opportunities for connecting the field to other research paradigms. To begin to address these gaps and challenges, we have built on the AMC model to create a research platform for further exploration into competitive dynamics. In the process, we have sought to demonstrate how micro and macro perspectives might be situated within a more encompassing conceptual model of competition, one that enjoys some promise of linking with paradigms such as TMT demography, identity theory, network theory, and institutional perspectives of organizations. This is a field with vast horizons. One cannot help but think that future research in competitive dynamics will mine even greater riches, and that we have only begun to explore the possibilities for creating a more integrative discipline. continue. 57 Let the efforts REFERENCES Abbott, A. 1990. A primer on sequence methods. Organization Science, 1: 375-392. Abbott, A. 1995. Sequence analysis: New methods for old ideas. Annual Review of Sociology, 21: 93-113. Aguilar, F. J. 1967. Scanning the business environment. New York: Macmillan Co. Ahuja, G. 2000. Collaboration networks, structural holes, and innovation: A longitudinal study. 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Academy of Management Journal, 53: 743-768. 67 FIGURE 1 Comparison of Five-Force Analysis and Competitive Dynamics Perspective Five-Force Analysis Competitive Dynamics Basic premise Industry structure determines competition and profitability Competition is “dynamic” (or interactive) and relative; actions/ responses matter for firm performance Level of analysis Macro industry level Micro firm and action level Intellectual origin Industrial organization economics Theoretical and empirical work in strategic management extended from Schumpeter and Austrian economics Focus Five forces that make up the industry structure Action/response dyad and/or individual action Competitive advantage Competitive advantage can be created and sustained Competitive advantage is time-dependent and ephemeral; only relative advantages exist Orientation Industry/environment Relationship between firms Symmetrical Asymmetrical Competitive strategy Generic types Repertoires of actions and responses Dynamic consideration Comparison between two time points Exchange of actions and responses or interactive behaviors between two firms 68 Balanced market-resource (or external-internal) consideration FIGURE 2 Competitive Dynamics Research Competitive Interaction 1a. Predicting 1b. Irreversibility Competitive Response -Attack -Attacker -Defender -Economic -Organizational -Psychological -Socio-economi c Strategic Competitive Behavior & Repertoire 2a. Strategic Competitive Behavior -Information processing -Size -TMT -Aggressiveness 2b. Competitive Strategy Repertoire -Inertia -Nonconformity -Simplicity -Sequence of moves Multimarket and Multibusiness Competition 3. Multimarket Competition -Resource diversion -Sphere of influence -MNE rivalry -Foreign direct investment -Market entry Firm Performance -Objective -Perceptual 69 Integrative Competitor Analysis 4a. Market-Resource Concerns -Dyadic comparison -Customer analysis -HR/TMT competition -International business 4b. 4c. Competitive Awareness-Motiv Asymmetry ation-Capability -Strategic group -Competitive -Customer tension perspective -Rival-centric -Factor rivalry Competitive Perception 5. Human Perception -Psychological concerns -AMC -Perceived tension -Competitive acumen -Identity domain -TMT dynamics -Subjective intensity of rivalry FIGURE 3 Interconnections and Integration in Competitive Dynamics: Core Themes, Concepts, and Extensions 1. Competitive Interaction 2. Strategic Competitive Behavior and Repertoire 3. Multimarket-business Competition Extensions: • Factor-market rivalry Action (Re)action Performance • Non-market rivalry • Customer & other Action/Reaction drivers: • Awareness • Motivation • Capability stakeholder analysis • Competition-cooperation • Multi-level analysis (e.g., individual and Actor A Actor B team/group) 4. Integrative Competitor Analysis • Market-commonality & resource-similarity (MC/RS) • Competitive asymmetry • Competitive tension • Rival-centric approach 5. Competitive Perception 70 FIGURE 4 Research Issues and Questions: Micro-Macro and Competition-Cooperation Link Research Opportunities Micro- and MacroOrganizational Research Competition-Cooperation Research Research Issues and Questions 1. How do micro-concerns such as perceptions, personalities, intentions, and motivations shape actions/responses? How does the organizational context shape those perceptions, intentions and motivations? 2. How do organizational characteristics (e.g., the degree of structure, complexity, and formality; reward system) influence competitive actions? 3. How do external actions affect the deployment of internal resources and arrangements? 4. How do competitive actions characterize an organization? 5. What are the underlying differences of action/response attributes between various business generations? 6. How do corporate governance concerns affect action/response characteristics? 7. How can we investigate rivalry at the individual/interpersonal level and team/group level? What is the relationship between these levels of competition? 1. How can the AMC and MC/RS frameworks be applied to examine cooperation, and competition-cooperation issues? 2. How might a firm balance competition and cooperation so as to best a given rival? What roles might national culture, incentive systems, and organizational structure play? 3. How can we characterize the nature and discern the consequences of competitive-cooperative relationships among firms in a supply chain? 4. How can a firm leverage its competitors to advance its capabilities? 5. How can a firm ethically cooperate with its competitors to maximize one another’s benefits? 6. Is it best to cooperate with second-ranked competitors to defeat (or defend) a first-ranked competitor? 7. What is unique about competition in R&D and patents in high-tech industries? 8. What are the implications of the Chinese conception of “self-other integration” for competitive, cooperative, and competitive-cooperative relationships? 71 FIGURE 5 Research Issues and Questions by Major Themes Key Themes Competitive Interaction Strategic Competitive Behavior and Repertoire Research Issues and Questions 1. How does the interaction between an action and a response or between a set of actions and responses give rise to subsequent action/response behaviors? 2. How do the combinations of various action attributes (e.g., speed and volume) affect competitive responses? 3. How should more sophisticated constructs (e.g., aggressiveness, proactiveness, and responsiveness) be conceptualized in order to reveal robust action/response characteristics? 4. In addition to structural or resource concerns, what role do human factors of attackers and defenders play in action-response relationships (e.g., organizational politics, family/nonfamily CEOs, first- and second-generation owners, CEOs’ educational background)? 5. How do periodic actions/responses (e.g., seasonal promotion) affect performance? 6. How do cultural factors (e.g., face issue) affect irreversibility and other action/response attributes and competitive behaviors and/or engagements? 7. How does the stock market react to a specific action/response? A. Strategic Competitive Behavior 1. Which attributes can be used to capture firm competitive behavior and which theories can be used to explain competitive dynamics? 2. How do industry characteristics shape the competitive behavior of firms? 3. Why do firms in a specific industry launch certain characteristic actions/responses? Is there an industry recipe or typical “industry repertoire” for interfirm rivalry? 4. How do TMT/CEO relationships and task-related characteristics affect competitive behavior? 5. How does the interplay between and among the board of directors, the top management team, and the CEO affect competitive behavior of firms? 6. How do a firm’s internal decisions (e.g., R&D investment, new CEO) affect its competitive actions and competitors’ responses? 7. How does downstream competition inform upstream competition (see e.g., Google vs. Microsoft; Google vs. Facebook)? 8. How are actions/responses predicted based on both the resource profile and the market domain? Fundamentally, how is the most critical resource in an industry defined? How are markets segmented for a more effective approach? 9. How can we study competition and rivalry among different forms of enterprise (for-profit, nonprofit, business family, and state-owned enterprises)? B. 1. 2. 3. Multimarket and Multibusiness 4. 1. 2. Competitor Strategy Repertoire In addition to simplicity, inertia, and nonconformity, what other repertoire strategies could be proposed and investigated? What factors drive a firm’s tendency to adopt a particular repertoire? Can a repertoire strategy be sustained? What factors interrupt the relationship between a repertoire and its determinants or consequences? When and under what conditions will a firm change its strategy repertoire? How does a firm orchestrate various business units or external forces to engage in corporate-level competition? What array of competitive dynamics can be used with a given rival across various regional markets or across countries? 72 Competition Integrative Competitor Analysis Competitive Perception Methodological Concerns 3. How do the organizational and strategic characteristics of a corporate headquarters affect the competitive behavior of its business units? 4. How do MNEs select particular countries to launch their new products in order to avoid certain rivals or the escalation of competition? 5. How do various business units compete for internal resources? How can internal competition or inter-unit competition within a company be investigated? What are the implications of internal competition for firm strategy and competitive dynamics? 6. How best can we study rivalry at the city, national, and regional level? 1. How are competitors defined from a customers’ perspective? How does that definition affect customer behaviors? 2. What are the similarities and differences between product-market and factor-market competition? 3. How are direct, indirect, potential, and “noncompetitors” identified based on the MC/RS framework? 4. How can the AMC framework be applied to predict extended competitor behaviors? 5. What are the performance and competitive implications of competitive asymmetry? 6. How does a competitor’s generic strategy affect interfirm competitive dynamics? 7. How does a firm cultivate rival-centric capability? What are some organizational barriers of adopting a rival-centric perspective? What are the performance implications of adopting a rival-centric approach? 8. How are competitor and customer analyses applied and integrated to advance firm advantage? 9. How can we study factor-market rivalry and non-market competitors? 10. How can we study group-based competition or rivalry between alliance networks, each with a group of upstream/downstream players or a set of companies that span different industry boundaries? 1. How does a low-profile or high-profile perception of a competitive action affect response attributes? 2. How can perceptual tendencies and biases be exploited to mislead a competitor? 3. How does the perception of a firm’s CEO affect the perception of a rival’s actions? 4. How does a firm’s or its CEO’s reputation affect its rival’s attacks? 5. How do the social, cognitive, and psychological characteristics of decision makers affect competitive actions and responses? 6. How are competitive actions/responses utilized to shape the general public’s perception of a firm? 7. To what extent is competition a socially constructed phenomenon? How can we investigate that? 8. How can the outcomes of perceived vs. objective competitive indicators be compared and examined? 1. How can data on competitive behavior be collected when objective information is hard to obtain or where actions and responses are hard to identify and/or connect? 2. How can a multilevel approach identify the associations among industry-, firm-, and action-level concerns. *We acknowledge Hao-Chieh Lin’s valuable input in identifying issues and questions for future research presented in Exhibits 4 and 5. 73 TABLE 1 A Research Platform for Bridging Micro- & Macro-Organization Studies Micro-factors Macro-factors Individual Group Organizational Extra-organizational Actor experience Information-sharing Top team heterogeneity Network connections -Awareness Actor tenure within groups Scanning routines and bonding vs. bridging ties Cognitive biases TMT or group diversity information systems with stakeholders Collaborative and coordinative devices Sample CEO effects TMT demographics TMT demographics Network theory theoretical lenses Behavioral economics Information processing Social embeddedness views theory Contingency theory Actor personality. need Group cohesion and Reporting structure, History of competitive Motivation structure, position and morale accountabilities engagements career stage, wealth, role Group identities Reward systems Institutional context identity, risk profile Organizational culture and turf definitions Sample Behavioral economics Social identity theory Agency Theory Social identity theory theoretical lenses Motivation theory Organization culture Institutional logics Identity theory Human resources Institutional theory perspectives Actor training, Group stability and tacit Firm resources and Alliances, state wealth, Capability connections, relationships, knowledge capabilities infrastructure development expertise, skills Intra-group Dynamic capabilities and Strengths of competitors communication path-dependent capacities Sample Learning theory Resource-based view Resource-based view Competitive analysis theoretical lenses Network theory Network theory Dynamic capabilities Institutional theory Stakeholder theory Value chain analysis Industrial economics 74 APPENDIX A* Awareness-Motivation-Capability in Competitive Dynamics Author(s) Key AMC Constructs** Awareness Motivation Key Findings Conceptual-Theoretica l Paradigm Capability I. Competitive Interaction: Action-Level Studies Chen & MacMillan (1992) Competitor dependence Irreversibility Chen, Smith, & Grimm (1992) Attack intensity Competitive impact Implementation requirements Derfus, Grimm, & Smith (2008) Volume of focal-firm actions Industry demand Industry concentration Rival action speed Relative market position Dependence on a competitor decreases chances of nonresponse while increasing response delay and the likelihood that a responder will match a move. Action irreversibility generally has the opposite effect. Competitive impact, attack intensity, and tactical actions increase the number of responses. Implementation requirements reduce the number and slow the speed of responses. “Red Queen” is a contest in which each firm’s performance depends on the firm’s matching or exceeding the actions of rivals. The Red Game theory Stimulus-response model Evolutionary theory Organizational ecology Queen effect depends on industry context and a focal firm’s market position. Lamberg, Tikkanen, Nokelainen, & Suur-Inkeroinen (2009) Central administration (focused/resourceful vs. fragmented/weak) Strategic direction (widely-accepted vs. contested) Slack resources (sufficient vs. insufficient) Strategic consistency is related to both organizational survival and efficient changes in key elements of strategy. Evolutionary theory Austrian economics Competitive dynamics perspective MacMillan, Mccaffery, & Van Wijk (1985) Visibility Perceived market Radicality of move Complexity Misfit with organization’s political system Organizational inertia (influenced by radicality, complexity, and misfit) is positively related, and strategic pressure (influenced by strategic attack and perceived potential) is negatively related, to response lag to easily imitated new products. Organization change perspective Organization process perspective potential of a new product Strategic attack on rival’s key market 75 Strategic group Smith, Grimm, Ferrier, & Young (1997) Competitive response cannot be predicted by strategic group membership. However, strategic group membership predicts the manner in which firms compete with one another, and the frequency with which they undertake competitive actions, cut prices, instigate warfare, and imitate rivals. Strategic groups perspective II. Strategic Competitive Behavior and Repertoire: Business-Level Studies Viability Competitive strength Firm size Barnett (1997) Chen & Hambrick (1995) Firm size Firm size Chen, Katila, McDonald, & Eisenhardt (2010) Markets with moderately or highly temporary advantages Prior performance Chen & Miller (1994) Visibility of attack Centrality of attack Chen, Venkataraman, Black, & MacMillan (2002) Public commitment Firm size Response difficulty Internal commitment 76 Stronger competitors are more likely to survive when they are small; but viability and competitive strength diverge when organizations are large, thus leading to the survival of weak competitors. Small airlines induce scanning (A), motivate stealth (M), and facilitate speedy response (C). Small firms more actively initiated competitive challenges and were speedy but subtle in executing their actions. High vs. low performers exhibit different types of competitive moves (e.g. bold vs. conservative); such variations are influenced by the type of market (established vs. new). Organizational ecology and adaptation Visibility of attack, centrality of attack, and response difficulty may serve as “weak links in the chain,” increasing the chances of retaliation. These variables also demonstrated interactions that compound the threat of retaliation. Irreversibility has two component dimensions, internal commitment and public commitment, which have opposite effects on response likelihood, response delay, and likelihood of a matching response. Expectancy-valence theory Contingency theory Institutional theory Evolutionary search Temporary advantage Competitive dynamics perspective Behavioral theory Escalation of commitment Chi, Ravichandran, & Andrevski (2010) Structural holes IT-enabled capabilities (sensing and responding) Structural holes Network density Network density IT-enabled capabilities (sensing and responding) Connelly, Tihanyi, Certo, & Hitt (2010) Dedicated ownership Transient ownership Ferrier (2001) Past performance Industry environment (growth, concentration, and entry barriers) TMT heterogeneity Organizational slack Ferrier, Fhionnlaoich, Smith, & Grimm (2002) Competition-buffered industry environment (industry growth, concentration, and entry barriers) Financial distress Market share erosion TMT heterogeneity Ferrier & Lee (2002) Strategic intensity Strategic unpredictability Strategic complexity Strategic heterogeneity Ferrier & Lyon (2004) TMT heterogeneity (firm tenure, industry tenure, function, and education) 77 The positive effects of a strong network on the quantity and range of competitive action is moderated by firms’ IT-enabled capabilities. Ownership of a firm by dedicated institutional investors, who hold concentrated portfolios over time, is positively associated with the firm’s use of strategic competitive actions. Ownership by transient institutional investors, who hold broad portfolios and make frequent trades, has the opposite effect. TMT heterogeneity, past performance, slack, and the industry entry barriers, growth, and concentration shape competitive actions, which in turn affect performance. TMT heterogeneity negatively moderates, and competition-buffered industries positively moderate, the relationship between performance distress and aggressive competitive behaviors (more actions, innovative or radical actions, quick responses, and complex and differentiated action repertoires). A firm’s strategic complexity and heterogeneity each exhibited a U-shape relationship with its stock price. A focal firm’s strategic intensity and unpredictability each exhibited a negative relationship with its rival’s stock price. TMT heterogeneities positively moderate the relationship between competitive repertoire simplicity and firm performance. Social network perspective Information systems perspective Agency theory AMC perspective Upper echelons perspective Resource-based view Organizational learning Industry economics Contingency theory Prospect theory Corporate finance Organizational learning Threat-rigidity Industry organization economics Competitive dynamics perspective Strategic view of finance Upper echelons perspective Ferrier, Smith, & Grimm (1999) Haleblian, McNamara, Kolev, & Dykes (2012, forthcoming). Strategic orientation (technology and marketing intensity) Firm structure (size and diversification) Strategic orientation (technology and marketing intensity) Firm structure (size and diversification) Hambrick, Cho, & Chen (1996) Miller & Chen (1994) Market diversity Competitive experience Miller & Chen (1996) Miller & Chen (1996a) Ndofor, Sirmon, & He (2011) Continuity of industry traditions Firm age Total competitive activity Action timing Action repertoire simplicity Leader-challenger action dissimilarity Firm resources (slack and past performance) Leaders are more likely to be ousted when they are less aggressive in competitive situations, carry out simple repertoires of action, and are slow to take action. Austrian economics A firm’s strategic orientation, structure, and available resources influence the timing of its mergers. AMC perspective TMT heterogeneity (Function, education, and tenure) TMT heterogeneity is positively related to action propensity and magnitude, but negatively related to the speed of action and response. Good past performance contributed to competitive inertia, whereas a diversity of markets discouraged it. Antecedents for inertia differed for tactical versus strategic actions, the former being driven more by performance and market diversity, the latter by growth in markets. Firm age, size, breadth of competitive experience, and past performance, as well as market growth and market diversity, influence the simplicity of competitive repertoires. Upper echelons perspective Customer and competitor diversity, firm size, slack resources, and market growth increase the nonconformity of competitive repertoires; Time elapsed since deregulation, market growth, and prior performance decrease it. Action deviance and complexity mediate the relationship between technological resource Institutional theory Market growth Past performance Firm age Firm size Breadth of competitive experience Market diversity Past performance Firm age Firm size Market growth Market uncertainty Market growth Prior firm performance Competitor and customer diversity Firm size Slack resources Breadth and complexity of technological 78 Organizational learning Organizational change Decision-making Organizational learning Contingency theory Resource-based view Competitive dynamics resources Rindova, Ferrier, & Wiltbank (2010) Environmental ambiguity associated with a firm Action simplicity, predictability, grouping, and motif Sirmon, Gove, & Hitt (2008) Smith, Grimm, Gannon, & Chen (1991) External orientation Young, Smith, & Grimm (1996) Industry-level horizontal cooperative mechanisms Zhang & Gimeno (2010) Goal heterogeneity among competitors Earnings pressure Market concentration Dominant competitors’ earnings pressure Comparative resource stocks Managers’ bundling and deployment actions Resource parity Deployment flexibility of resources Type of action Structural complexity (specialization) Organizational slack TMT education and experience A firm’s participation in horizontal cooperative mechanisms Capacity share Competitors’ capacity constraints breadth and firm performance. Dynamic action sequencing may provide firms with advantages; the properties of “simplicity, grouping, and motif” are associated with increases in the market value of high-ambiguity firms, but not of low-ambiguity firms. Comparative advantages in resource stocks and managerial actions affect performance; these effects are moderated by resource parity and deployment flexibility. perspective Pattern perception Holistic information processing The likelihood of imitation and the timing of a competitive response are influenced by type of action, external orientation, structural complexity, firm slack, and TMT education and experience. Organizational information processing theory Firm-level cooperative mechanisms increase competitive activity, which in turn relates positively to firm performance. Firms facing earnings pressure restrict output in oligopolistic markets, even though avoiding such restrictions would encourage rival output expansion. Thus, output restrictions enacted under such circumstances tend not to produce their intended effects. Austrian economics Industrial organization economics Agency theory Resource-based view III. Multimarket and Multibusiness Competition: Corporate-Level Studies Baum & Korn (1996) Market density Multimarket contact Market concentration Market domain overlap 79 Market domain overlap raised airlines' rates of market entry and exit while multimarket contact lowered them, especially in markets dominated by a single airline. Multipoint competition Mutual forbearance Industry organization economics Baum & Korn (1999) Multipoint contact Competitor’s relative size Gimeno & Woo (1996) Multimarket contact Strategic similarity Gimeno & Woo (1999) Multimarket contact Strong resource-sharing opportunities Haveman & Nonnemaker (2000). Multipoint contact Spillover from mutual forbearance Market dominance Market stake Relative competitive strength Considering the resource commitment and market stake of an action, and its relative competitive strength with target competitors, a firm can use the thrust, feint, and gambit strategies to divert competitors' resource allocations without precipitating a destructive all-out war. Multimarket contact Importance of the Home–host country distance The speed of an MNE’s response to a rival’s attack McGrath, Chen, & MacMillan (1998) Yu & Cannella (2007) Credibility (resource commitment) 80 An inverted U-shaped relationship exists between firms’ rates of entry into and exit from each other’s markets and the level of multimarket contact in competitor dyads. This curvilinear effect varies from dyad to dyad as a function of relative levels of multimarket contact with competitors in other dyads and relative sizes of competitors in a focal dyad. Strategic similarity increases the intensity of rivalry, while multimarket contact decreases it. The effect of strategic similarity on rivalry intensity may be biased if the effect of multimarket contact is not taken into consideration. The confluence of scope economies and multimarket contact results in superior economic performance. However, scope economies may not result in superior performance if rivals can obtain similar scope economies in non-overlapping markets. Multipoint competition affects all rivals—multi- and single-market firms alike. Mutual forbearance is more pronounced in markets dominated by a few large firms. is influenced by both resource-related and Organizational ecology Multipoint competition Mutual forbearance Hypercompetition Strategic groups Multimarket competition Multimarket contact Mutual forbearance Economics of scope Sociological and economical theories Multipoint competition Mutual forbearance Resource-partitioning Multipoint competition Mutual forbearance AMC perspective action-initiating country Within-country response Yu, Subramaniam & Cannella (2009) Presence of local competitors Multimarket contact Subsidiary ownership Host government constraints Home government constraints Subsidiary control Cultural distance Regulatory restrictions market-related factors. The presence of local competitors, MNC subsidiary ownership, cultural distance, and local regulatory restrictions moderate the relationship between multimarket contact and competitive aggressiveness. Multimarket competition International business Mutual forbearance IV. Integrative Competitor Analysis Capron & Chatain (2008) Formation or discontinuity in the resource environment Small number of competitors Performance culture heterogeneity Competitive impact of focal firm’s actions Market commonality Chen (1996) Chen, Su, & Tsai (2007) Relative scale of a given rival Rival’s attack volume Markman, Gianiodis, & Product-market overlap Factor-market overlap Property-based resources Resource heterogeneity Political influence of consumer groups Difficulty of imitation of focal firm’s actions Competitors’ retaliation capabilities Competitors’ ability to switch to substitutes Resource similarity Rival’s capability to contest 81 A firm can best understand the relationship between its resources and competitive advantage by examining the actions it can take to control the resource environment. Resource-based view First mover advantage, Industrial organization economics Corporate political activity Competitive dynamics perspective A pairwise comparison of two competitors along market commonality and resource similarity dimensions illuminates the notion of competitive asymmetry and the pre-battle competitive tension between the two firms. Perceived competitive tension is influenced by the independent and interactive effects of three factors: relative scale of a rival, rival’s attack volume, and rival’s capability to contest. A theory of factor-market rivalry is developed to shed light on atypical rivals and competitive Resource-based view Multiple-point competition AMC perspective Mutual forbearance Blind spots Buchholtz (2009) Market needs correspondence Peteraf & Bergen (2003) Semadeni & Anderson (2010) Firm-level: competitoroffering relatedness Silverman & Baum (2002) Rivals’ downstream alliances Rival partners’ number of alliances Resource equivalence Firm-level: competitor organizational innovativeness Offering-level: innovativeness of a competitor’s offering Rivals’ number of alliances Rivals’ vertical (downstream and upstream) and horizontal alliances Resource similarity Market commonality Upson, Ketchen, Connelly, & Ranft (2011) blind spots. The study introduces dynamic constructs—resource discontinuities, leapfrogging, and captivity—and explains their role in triggering competitive cascade effects. Chances for resource substitution shape the attainment and sustainability of competitive advantage. Competition is driven not by similarities in resource type, but by similarities in resource functionality. Organizational innovations are more apt to spur imitation by rivals than innovations in offerings. Resource-based view Information-based imitation A firm’s chances of exit increases with rivals’ alliances, however the effect is moderated by alliance types and the rival partners' number of alliances Transaction cost economics Resource-based view Organizational ecology Market commonality and resource similarity influence the likelihood of establishing a foothold in a new market. Competitive dynamics perspective Action aggressiveness mediates the relationship between TMT integration and firm performance, particularly under hypercompetitive conditions. Partner co-specialization determines the nature of alliances and the evolution of competition within an alliance network. Teams’ similarities and interaction histories Upper echelons perspective Hypercompetition Temporary advantage Transaction cost economics Social exchange theory Relational perspective, V. Competitive Perception Chen, Lin, & Michel (2010) Hypercompetitive environment Gimeno (2004) Kilduff, Elfenbein, Repeated competition TMT socio-behavioral integration Rivals’ cospecialized or nonspecialized alliances Competitors’ similarity Competitive embeddedness Historic competitiveness 82 & Staw (2010) (quantity and quality) (location and actors’ characteristics) are positively related to rivalry between competitors, which in turn increases team members’ motivation and performance. Lin & Shih (2008) Executive SHRM TMT social integration and action system aggressiveness partially mediate the TMT social integration relationship of an executive SHRM system and firm performance. Livengood & Reger Perceived shared turf Perceived shared turf Perceived shared turf Shared competitive turf, which relates to the (2010) identity domain and psychological value of a focal firm’s management, increases the awareness, motivation, and capability to respond to competitors’ actions. Marcel, Barr, & Executive-level Similarity (location and Information-processing Differences in executives’ cognitive Duhaime (2011) cognitive frameworks actors’ characteristics) propensity (unabsorbed frameworks influence whether and how (strategic importance) slack, TMT age, TMT quickly they commit their firms to challenge External cues industry tenure) an adversary’s action. Porac, Thomas & Competitive groups Only through multidisciplinary research that Baden-Fuller (1989) integrates resource, power, and cognitive theories of industrial dynamics can we understand the sources of industrial decline and revitalization. Porac, Thomas, Organizational Market boundaries are socially constructed Wilson, Paton, & categories in an industry around a collective cognitive model within an Kanfer (1995) model (core vs. industry. The model is produced when firms peripheral, large vs. observe each other's actions and define unique small) product positions in relation to each other. Tsai, Su, & Chen Structural competitive Relational competitive A focal firm’s relational and structural (2011) embeddedness embeddedness competitive embeddedness vis-à-vis a given Resource deployment rival is positively associated with the firm’s capability acumen regarding that rival. *We acknowledge the valuable input from Hao-Chieh Lin, Jennifer Chen, Sheng-Tsung Hou, and Wan-Chien Lien in constructing this exhibit. **Except in a few cases, we use original variable names to characterize AMC components. 83 behavioral economics Upper echelons perspective SHRM perspective Identity theory Managerial cognition Strategic groups perspective Organizational cognition Social construction Organizational cognition Organizational ecology Structural equivalence Competitive embeddedness