Target Selection by Activists and the Structure of Competition

Author(s):  
Jose Miguel Abito ◽  
David Besanko ◽  
Daniel Diermeier

This chapter extends the model to include two potential targets for campaigns. Activists targeting firms in different industries are shown to be likely to focus on the firm with the weaker reputation or greater sensitivity to reputation. The latter finding rationalizes the practice of secondary targeting in which an activist targets a consumer-facing company that cares a lot about its reputation rather than the companies in its supply chain creating the harm. In the case of two potential targes in the same industry, the competitive interdependence between the two firms affects the targeting decision. When it is weak—e.g., when firms sell differentiated products—the activist tends to target the firm whose characteristics predispose it to engage in more private regulation than its rival (e.g., the more patient firm, the market leader). When competitive interdependence is strong—as in commodities industries—the activist targets the firm predisposed toward less private regulation.

Author(s):  
Cristina Robledo-Ardila ◽  
Marcela Velasquez-Montoya

Inducascos S.A. was first established in 1998 in the city of Medellín, Colombia. After a decade of instability and financial bankruptcy due to lack of capital, scarce infrastructure, and insufficient labor not only in number but also in terms of the qualification level, Inducascos became the market leader in the manufacturing and commercialization of helmets in the Colombian market. Its ability to deal with the unstable local market and the fierce competition resulting from the entry of imported products has positioned Inducascos as the leading brand of motorcycle helmets. For the last decade, the company's strategy has focused on the internationalization of the manufacturing process and the updating of the commercial strategy in order to consolidate an attractive product portfolio, which manages to offer differentiated products for a segmented market at competitive prices. This chapter explores Inducascos S.A.


2021 ◽  
pp. 79-111
Author(s):  
Jinsun Bae

This chapter evaluates whether private regulation has brought about meaningful and sustainable improvements in labor standards and the lives of workers. It first looks at overall progress in terms of the number of violations recorded through more than twenty thousand reliable audits in multiple industries and countries over a seven-year period, before considering progress in specific factories that have been audited multiple times in India to see whether the improvement is being sustained. It appears reasonable to assume that a factory that is audited multiple times over a three-year period will register improvements (in terms of having fewer violations) after each audit. The data for these two examinations were provided by AUDCO, a global auditing company. The chapter then explores progress in specific factories, with data from the Better Work program. Finally, it examines the specific case of the supply chain of a global home products retailer, in which the factories have demonstrated remarkable progress in compliance over a short time frame.


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (1and2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Manoj Kumar ◽  
Jyoti Raman ◽  
Priya

The capability to concurrently design the product and the supply chain is becoming a key competence in manufacturing companies. In spite of this development, this competence is still underdeveloped in industry. Research has not been able to fill this industrial capability gap partly because there is a lack of convergence of the methodologies for concurrent product and supply chain design in the research community. Today, businesses depend on strategic collaboration with their suppliers and customers to create value to develop product and to obtain better market-share. Designing products to match the processes and supply chains processes to match product platforms and supply chains, and supply chains to match the product platforms and process are the ingredients in todays fast developing markets. If this co-design is done well upfront with sufficient focus on product development process managing, product will cost much less overall and the time to market will decrease substantially. This paper presents a supply chain collaboration dynamic model with two innovative R&D sectors for each supplier and buyer: A vertical R&D sector that improves the quality of existing differentiated products and a horizontal R&D sector that creates new differentiated products. The supplier and buyer exchange differentiated products and beneficiate from knowledge spillovers (possibly impulsed by R&D subsidies). The long term policy effects of R&D subsidies in this context had been studied in this paper. In this contribution, we have realized an attempt to integrate the product development model in a supply chain collaboration framework. This enables us to discuss of the optimal research policy integrating some feedback effects from innovation and knowledge spillovers. Our main result is that the effect of a subsidy to vertical R&D (the only subsidy that has a long term effect) depends on the relative innovative capacities of the supplier or buyer that realized this policy.


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