Hypercompetition

Managing the Dynamics of Strategic Maneuvering

Richard A. D'Aveni, Robert E. Gunther

Publisher: Free Press, 1994, 421 pages

ISBN: 0-02-906938-6

Keywords: Strategy

Last modified: May 4, 2019, 11:10 p.m.

General Motors and IBM have been battered to their cores. Jack Welch, the chairman of General Electric, called the frenzied competition of the 1980's "a white knuckle decade" and said the 1990s would be worse. In this pathbreaking book that will define this new age of "hypercompetition," Richard D'Aveni reveals how competitive moves and countermoves escalate with such ferocity today that the traditional sources of competitive advantage can no longer be sustained. To compete in this dynamic environment, D'Aveni argues that a company must fundamentally shift its strategic focus. He constructs a brilliant operational model that shows how firms move up "escalation ladders" as advantage is continually created, eroded, destroyed, and recreated through strategic maneuvering in four arenas of competition. Using this "Four Arena" analysis, D'Aveni explains how competitors engage in a struggle for control by seeking leadership in the arenas of "price and quality," "timing and know-how," "stronghold creation/invasion," and "deep pockets." Winners set the pace in each of these four competitive battlegrounds.

Using hundreds of detailed examples from hypercompetitive industries such as computers, software, automobiles, airlines, pharmaceuticals, toys and soft drinks, D'Avenie demonstrates how hypercompetitive firms succeed in dynamic markets by disrupting the status quo and creating a continuous series of temporary advantages. They seize the initiative, D'Aveni explains, by employing a set of strategies he calls the "New 7-S's" Superior Stakeholder Satisfaction, Strategic Soothsaying, Speed, Surprise, Shifting the Rules of Competition, Signaling Strategic Intent, and Simultaneous and Sequential Thrusts. Paradoxically, firms must destroy their competitive advantages to gain advantage, D'Aveni shows. Long-term success depends not on sustaining an advantage through a static, long-term strategy, but instead on formulating a dynamic strategy for the creating, destruction, and recreation of short-term advantages.

America must embrace the new reality of hypercompetition, D'Aveni concludes in a compelling analysis of the potential chilling effect of American antitrust laws on competitiveness. This masterful book, essentially an operating manual of strategy and tactics for a new era, will be required reading for managers, planners, consultants, academics, and students of hypercompetitive industries.

  • Part I: Hypercompetition and Escalation toward Perfect Competition in Four Arenas of Competition
    1. How Firms Outmaneuver Competitors with Cost-Quality Advantages
    2. How Firms Outmaneuver Competitors with Timing and Know-How Advantages
    3. How Firms Outmaneuver Competitors that Have Built Strongholds Using Entry Barriers
    4. How Firms Outmaneuver Competitors with Deep Pockets
    5. New Analytical Tools: Analyzing Competition Using the Four Arenas
  • Part II: Implications of Unsustainable Advantage: New Concepts of Competition and Competitive Strategy
    1. The Nature of Hypercompetition: What It Is and Why It Happens
    2. Living with Hypercompetition: The New 7-S's
  • Part III: Disrupting Markets and Seizing the Initiative through the New 7-S's
    1. Using the New 7-S's to Create Disruption
    2. Applying the New /-S's: New Analytical Tools to Seize the Initiative
  • Part IV: The Rise of a New American Ideology: Hypercompetitive Values for a Hypercompetitive Age
    1. Can Companies Cooperate Their Way out of Hypercompetition?
    2. Conclusion: A Call to Arms
  • Appendix: Antitrust Policy and the Need for a Fundamental Shift in American Ideology

Reviews

Hypercompetition

Reviewed by Roland Buresund

Outstanding ********* (9 out of 10)

Last modified: June 11, 2011, 1:43 p.m.

First clear definition of modern competition.

D'Aveni manages to convey and explain the current competitive environment. Why nobody has defined it so easily before, I don't understand (everything is simple after you've had it explained to you).

The great thing about D'Aveni, is that he in principle challenges the Porter's and Ansoff's of this world, and explains that competition today is intense, not very well-ordered and competitive advantages is fleeting and has to be constantly renewed. In short, this is the first book in Strategy that I've read and immediately felt at home with. You can't loose, buy it, read it and contemplate it. If you don't agree with its main theme, you're probably of a dying breed of managers, otherwise you need this book to make sense of the competitive landscape of today.

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