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Kartei Details

Karten 109
Sprache Deutsch
Kategorie BWL
Stufe Universität
Erstellt / Aktualisiert 01.03.2023 / 14.06.2023
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Nokia 

  • Since 1960s: industrial conglomerate  producing tires, shoes, paper products, computers, cables, televisions, plastics,
  •  1980s and 1990s: big losses in the television division and a severe recession in Finland
  • 1992: new CEO Jorma Ollila makes strategic decision to only focus on telecommunications
  • 1998: largest mobile phone manufacturer in the world

Nokia issues 

  • Organizational structure & over bureaucracy
  • innovation without commercialization 
  • little focus on user experience
  • culture aund communication

Nokia, 

organizational structure and bzreaucracy

  • During growth period: decentralized, fluid, improvisational structure with freedom for people
  • Matrix structure since 2004 •
    • Not fitting for one of the fastest-moving industries
    • Bad coordination: software lease & lease back, incompatible address book features
  • 2009: restructuring of the matrix organization
    • “Solutions” becomes a third dimension •
    • Organization becomes even more rigid and top-heavy
    • Many “yeses” versus one “no”
  • Nokia Headquartes POWER POINT PLACES ( just meeting without a decision) 
  • Suppliers offering novel solutions had to wait months while Nokia managers went through rounds after round of meeting 

Take home: If you grow you have to adapt moving dinamic industry

Nokia 

Innovation without commercialization 

Portfolio of 30’000 patents • Prototype device with large color touchscreen set above a single button 7 years before the iPhone • 2005: Nokia 770 Internet Tablet • iPad launched 2010

  • they were innovative but didnt indtoduce the products because the old ones have been good sellers 

further issues

  • little focus on user experience 
  • communication ( mails about how bad it is going, no trust anymore) 
  •  

what is corporate entrepreneurship' 

It describes entrepreneurial behavior inside established organizations, indicating how entrepreneurial a firm as a whole is. 

Definition of corporate entrepreneurship 

It describes entrepreneurial behavior inside established organizations, indicating how entrepreneurial a firm as a whole is. 

  • The process whereby an individual or a group of individuals, in association with an existing organization, create a new organization, or instigate renewal or innovation within that organization.
  • An organization is entrepreneurial if it develops a higher than average number of new products and/or new markets.
  • 1) the birth of new businesses within existing organizations, i.e. internal innovation or venturing, and (2) the transformation of organizations t

Corporate vs. Start up Eship: both: 

 

  • Involve opportunity recognition, evaluation, and exploitation
  • Require a unique product, service, or process
  • Imply encountering resistance and obstacles
  • Entail risk and uncertainty
  • Entail a window of opportunity

corporate vs. start up Eship: Differences 

Start up Entrepreneurship / corporate entrepreneurship 

  • entrepreneur "owns" the concept od innovative idea / Company owns the concept and usually intelectual rights
  • entrepreneur owns all/much of the business / Enrepreneur may have no /little equity in the company 
  • potential rewards for the entrepreneur unlimited / clear limits on the financial rewards for corporate entrepreneurs
  • one misstep can mean failure / more room for errors; company can absorb failure 
  • flexibility in changing course, experimenting, or trying new directions / rules, procedures, and bureaucracy
  • severe resource limitations / access to finances, R&D, production facilities, sales force, distribution channel, costumer base 

corporate entrepreneurship : combining 2 Worlds 

Advantage of young firms 

  • “Start-up advantage": high level of motivation and effort
  • Flexible structures and good communication
  • Direct and quick decision processes
  • Cost advantages
  • Orientation towards the clients' needs
  • Charismatic entrepreneurs
  • „Can do“ attitude

corporate entrepreneurship : combining 2 Worlds 

Advantage o established firms 

  • Established processes and organization
  •  Know-how, networks, and resources
  • Economies of scale
  • Established brand / better marketing
  • Know about young firm's advantages

Forms of (corporate) Entrepreneurship 

independent entrepreneurship 

corporate Entrepreneurship 

  • strategic Entrepreneurship " innovate for competitive advantafe" ( class 4) 
  • corporate Venturing " Bring new business to the corporation" ( Class 3) 

What is " Corporate entreprneurship? 

Why is it important 

the global entrepreneurial revolution 

  •  Existing assumptions challenged
  • Value creation in novel ways anywhere
  • New product and service introduction at a record rate
  • Redefined: what you make, how you make it, where you sell it, how you distribute it

in a nutshell: 

  • The pace and magnitude of change are significantly greater than ever before
  • Performance and survival at stake
    • Act quickly or miss out opportunities
    • External forces force internal changes
  • Established companies can either become victims of this revolution or join it

Why is corporate entrepnreneurship important ? 

relovution 

in a nutshell

in a nutshell: 

  • The pace and magnitude of change are significantly greater than ever before
  • Performance and survival at stake
    • Act quickly or miss out opportunities
    • External forces force internal changes
  • Established companies can either become victims of this revolution or join it

Why is corporate entrepnreneurship important ? 

relovution 

Implicaitons 

  • Sustainable competitive advantage needed •
  • What is not working
    • Be static and rely on previous success •
    • Too much exploitation
    • Bureaucracy, hierarchy, and «command-and-control»
    •  
  • What is needed
    • Continually adjust, adapt, and redefine
    • Adaptability, flexibility, speed, aggressiveness, innovativeness
    • Sense that turbulence and change mean opportunity
    • Corporate entrepreneurship!

Corporate Entrepreneurship: Positive Outcomes

  • counter the threat of new entrants
  • Satisfy and retain motivated employees
  • Utilise under-exploited resources
  • Divest from non-core activities
  • Grow and diversify business activities

=> Entrepreneurship and innovation on the firm level as a key to long-term growth and performance.

A Conceptual Overview 

Employees’ entrepreneurial behavior (individual level)

  • Creation of entrepreneurial atmosphere
  • Support of subordinates
  • Generation of own ideas •
  • Implementation of entrepreneurial actions

Corporate Entrepreneurship (firm level) 

  •  New products
  • New markets
  • New services
  • Corporate venturing
  • Renewal from within

Company performance 

  • (Financial) performance
  • Growth
  • Success across generations
  • Competitive advantages
  • Survival

 

Joseph Schumpeter’s Theory 

The Theory of Economic Development« (1911)

  •  Interested in how capitalism administers existing structures, but also how it creates and destroys them
  •  Economic development is a dynamic process: it is a disturbance of the economic status quo

Central Theme: «Creative Destruction»

Entreprenurs as a desequillibrium force 

  •  Bring the economy out of the equilibrium by means of "creative destruction“
  • “Process of industrial mutation that incessantly revolutionizes the economic structure from within, incessantly destroying the old one, incessantly creating a new one“

Central Theme: «Creative Destruction»

• “Creative destruction” in detail

  • Occurs when an entrepreneur sets up a new business
  • By destroying existing market structures and shifting market shares to itself, wealth is redistributed
  • “Creative destruction process”: creation of innovations and new wealth combined with the destruction of market structures

Creative Destruction An exapmmple

1. the old ( blockbuster

2. Innovation ( Netflix) 

3. Entrepreneurial rents 

4. Imitation 

5. Growth ( rents get shared over all immitators) 

Schumpeters 5 Types of innovation

  • Introduction of a new or improved product/service
  •  Introduction of a new method of production (Fliessband) 
  • Opening of a new market (REdbull Energy drink) 
  • Utilization of a new source of supply for raw materials ( Öl) 
  • New organizational concepts for an industry (Amazon) 

Sources of Schumpeterian Opportunities 

Technological change ( Internet)

  • Makes it possible to allocate resources in different and potentially more productive ways
  • reduce transaction costs 

changes in attitude/ values ( dont get in a strangers car- uber) 

Political and regulatory changes ( flight to long distance drives) 

  • Re-allocate resources to new uses in ways that are more profitable or to re-distribute wealth from one member of society to another
  • Example: deregulation / privatization

Class 2 Entrepreneurial Orientation 

What is EO? 

  • Core concept of firm-level corporate entrepreneurship
  • Firm-level strategic orientation which captures an organization's strategy-making practices, managerial philosophies, and firm behaviors that are entrepreneurial in nature (Anderson et al., 2009)
  • “The processes, practices, and decisionmaking activities that lead to new entry”

It allows to assess how entreorenurial a business is in a very nuanced way 

EOs Independent Dimensions 

Miler

Lunkin

Zellweger 

Miller 1983: 3 Dimensions that a firm needs to have 

  • Innovativeness 
  • risk taking
  • Proactiveness

Lunkin & Dess 1996

  • Innovativeness 
  • risk taking 
  • proactivesess
  • autonomy 
  • competitive agressiveness 

Zellweger & Sieger 2012 

  • internal innovativeness 
  • external innovativeness 
  • control risk 
  • performance hazard risk
  • ownership risk 
  • proactiveness
  • Internal autonomy 
  • external autonomy 
  • competitive aggressiveness 

EO Measurement 

Questions with oposite statements. choose the one that sutes you better 

 

3x risk 

3x innovativeness 

3x proactiveness 

See folie Class 2

EO Dimensions 

Autonomy 

definisiton 

  • „The freedom granted to individuals and teams who can exercise their creativity and champion promising ideas that is needed for entrepreneurship to occur“ (Lumpkin & Dess 1996) 
  • Taking actions free of organizational constraints

Dimensions

  • Internal dimension: empowering individuals and teams
  • External dimension: autonomy from stakeholders such as banks, suppliers, customers, financial markets

Innovativeness 

  • ideas are not enough for innovation to occur
  • a busienss opportunity needs to be shaped and materialized 
  • engage in and support new ideas, producs, services or technological processes

Innovation: The successful implementation of creative ideas to exploit an opportunity within an organisation. 

Types of Innovation 

what step? 

Types 

  • product and service innovaiton
  • product process innovation
  • delivery process innovation 

Types : 

  • Invention; Nover, untried revolutionary producs, service or process (Birne) 
  • Extension; New use or different application of product that already exist ( facebook) 
  • Duplikaiton; creative replication of an existing concept ( pepsi coce)
  • Synthesis; Combination of existing factors and concepts nto a new formula ( recombination) 
  •  

Innovative form 

  • continuour innovation; incremental, stepwise innovation (cola)
  • dynamically continuous innovation; dramatic improvement over state of the art solution ( TV) 
  • discoutinous innovaitn; Breakthrough innovation, addresses need not adresses before ( Internet) 

categories of innovation

Radical innovation vs incremental innovation 

Radical innovation: 

  • fundamental rethink
  • disruptive technologies
  • nurtured for long periods 
  • worse initial performance 
  • capture new markets
  • can create new standadrs

Incremental Innovation 

  • steady improvements 
  • sustaining technologies 
  • can be repidly implemented 
  • immediate gians
  • develop customer loyalty 
  • may hiner radical change 

Product vs market innovation 

where to play , how to win matrix 

CORE: optimizing existing products for existing customers

  • use existing products and assets, serve existing markets and costumers

Adjacent: expanding from existing business into " new to the company " business 

  • add incremental products and assets, enter adjacent markets and costumers

Transformational(developing breakthroughs and inventing things for markets that dont yet exist

  • develop new producs, create new markets 

Innovativeness in the EO Context

internal and external innoaiton 

Internal innovation ( not spectacular but very important) 

  • Invisible and "unspectacular" innovation often within the firm 
  • Examples: reporting systems, management systems, governance structure, leadership styles

External innvovation 

  • innovation in the original sense 
  • Examples: new markets, products, techonological processes 
  • innovation 

Risk taking 

  • The degree to which managers are willing to make large and risky resource commitments – i.e. those which have a reasonable chance of costly failures“ (Miller & Friesen 1978, p. 932)
  • Positively associated with proactiveness

3 dimensions of risk taking 

Control risk 

  • risk of losing control over the company ( i.e. leverage) 

Performance hazard risk 

  • risk of organizational failure induced by opertative business decisions 
  • wheter a projects failure will threaten firm survival
  • ( All budget in one prototjpe very risky)

Ownership risk

  • having invested most personal wealth in only one undiversified asset 

Risk Taking vs types on innovation 

Risk high; Innvoaiton low 

  • Imitation

Risk semi Inovation semi 

  • continous ( Coce) 
  • dynamically continuos ( bit more innovation) TV

Risk high, Innovaiton high: 

  • Discntinuous ( internet) 

Proactiveness and competitive aggressiveness 

Proaciveness

  • „Processes aimed at anticipating and acting on future needs by seeking new opportunities […], introduction of new products and brands ahead of competition, strategically eliminating operations which are in the mature or declining stages of life cycle“
  • Acting on rather than reacting to environments
  • Potential first-mover advantages ( be the first to exploit it) 

Proactive: premium league asia 

Proactiveness and competitive aggressiveness 

competitive aggressiveness

  • “Refers to a firm’s propensity to directly and intensely challenge its competitors to achieve entry or improve position, that is, to outperform industry rivals in the marketplace” (Lumpkin & Dess, 1996)
  • Can be reactive (imitation of product/service)
  • Non-traditional methods of competition (e.g., distribution, marketing) SIXT COMERCIALS 

Capture Value form Innovation 

degree f behaviour change required

degree of product change involved 

behaviour change low and product change low 

  • easy sells;

limited product changes, significant behaviour changes 

  • sure failure 

significant product changes, limited behaviur changesn ( google ) 

  • smash hits 

significant product and behaviour changes ( self scan) 

  • long hauls 

EO: The more the better? 

EO and performance 

proactiveness is importand 

innovation middle

U shaped, risk taking, too much is not goof and less is not good