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BUSINESS GROUPS AND INTERFIRM NETWORKS

BUSINESS GROUPS AND INTERFIRM NETWORKS. PROF. MARK FRUIN COLLEGE OF BUSINESS SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY AT WASEDA UNIVERSITY, Summer 2005. WHY THIS TOPIC?. GEOFF JONES, ROCK CENTER FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP, HBS, ASKED ME CHAPTER IN THE FORTHCOMING OXFORD HANDBOOK OF BUSINESS HISTORY

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BUSINESS GROUPS AND INTERFIRM NETWORKS

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  1. BUSINESS GROUPS AND INTERFIRM NETWORKS PROF. MARK FRUIN COLLEGE OF BUSINESS SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY AT WASEDA UNIVERSITY, Summer 2005

  2. WHY THIS TOPIC? • GEOFF JONES, ROCK CENTER FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP, HBS, ASKED ME • CHAPTER IN THE FORTHCOMING OXFORD HANDBOOK OF BUSINESS HISTORY • LIMITED DISCRIMINATION BETWEEN BUSINESS GROUPS & INTERFIRM NETWORKS • BURGEONING LITERATURES ON BUSINESS GROUPS IN EMERGING ECONOMIES & LIMITS TO ORGANIZATION/SOURCES OF INNOVATION

  3. SEMANTIC & CONCEPTUALCONFUSION • BUSINESS GROUPS: OWNERSHIP & CONTROL CENTRALIZED; SUB-UNITS ENJOY LIMITED AUTONOMY • INTERFIRM NETWORK: SUB-UNITS ENJOY MORE AUTONOMY WITH RESPECT TO OWNERSHIP, CONTROL & OPERATIONS • DEGREE OF LOOSE OR TIGHT COUPLING RARELY SPECIFIED

  4. SPECIFICITY CAN BE ADDED • OWNERSHIP • CONTROL • LEVELS OF INTERNAL/INTRAGROUP TRANSACTIONS • RECOGNIZE THAT LEGALLY BOUNDED NATURE OF FIRMS AFFECTS BEHAVIOR AND GOVERNANCE

  5. ORGANIZATIONAL FORM & LEVELS OF OWNERSHIP, CONTROL & TRANSACTIONS Intragroup/Internal Levels of Transactions Low High LOW OWNERSHIP AND CONTROL H IGH

  6. STANDARD OF COMPARISON • NOT INTERESTED IN EVERY BUSINESS GROUP OR INTERFIRM NETWORK • APPLES TO APPLES COMPARISON • ORGANIZATIONS WITH SCALE, SCOPE & SPEED • IN OTHER WORDS, “MODERN” FIRMS: DIVERSIFIED & DIVSIONALIZED

  7. 4 ORGANIZATIONS MEET STANDARD • MODERN FIRMS: FIRMS INTERNALIZE RESOURCES & CAPABILITIES • BUSINESS GROUPS: FIRMS WORK TOGETHER BASED ON COMMON OWNERSHIP & CONTROL • INDUSTRIAL DISTRICTS: FIRMS WORK TOGETHER BASED ON LOCATION, SHARED RESOURCES & COMMON AGENDA • INTERFIRM NETWORKS: FIRMS WORK TOGETHER BASED ON SHARED INFORMATION, FREQUENT INTERACTIONS & MUTUAL BENEFIT

  8. 3 OF 4 REPRESENT ORGANIZED COOPERATION • INTERESTINGLY, WE FOCUS ON ONE ALTERNATIVE (FIRMS) BUT NOT SO MUCH ON THE OTHERS • JONATHAN ZEITLAND IS WRITING A SEPARATE CHAPTER ON INDUSTRIAL DISTRICTS - SO THIS ALTERNATIVE DROPPED FROM MY CHAPTER

  9. COMPETITION & COOPERATION IN BIOLOGY • SINGLE-CELLED PROKARYOTES (no membrane around nucleus) ARE ORIGINS OF LIFE • COMPETE NON-INTERACTIVELY WITH OTHER PROKARYOTES FOR SURVIVAL • MULTICELLED EUKARYOTES INTERNALLY SPECIALIZED - SPECIALIZATION INCREASES FUNCTIONALITY, VARIETY AND VULNERABILITY

  10. WHICH IS OLDER (BETTER)? • PROKARYOTES APPEARED 3.75-4 BILLION YEARS AGO • EUKARYOTES APPEARED 2 BILLION YEARS AGO • PROKARYOTES TWICE AS OLD • BOTH ARE TERRIBLY OLD AND USEFUL/ FRUITFUL ADAPTATIONS ARE NOT A FUNCTION OF TIME

  11. WHICH IS A BETTER MODEL OF EVOLUTION? • CHARLES DARWIN - SURVIVAL OF FITTEST AT THE INDIVIDUAL LEVEL OF SELECTION • CLOSER TO PROKARYOTE, SINGLE-CELL, INDIVIDUAL UNIT OF SELECTION MODEL • DARWIN DID NOT HAVE THE BENEFITS OF TODAY’S CELLULAR & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, BIOCHEMISTRY, PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY

  12. ALTERNATIVE TO DARWIN • DR. LYNN MARGULIS ADVANCES THE ENDOSYMBIOTIC HYPOTHESIS IN 1981 (Origin of Species, 1859) • EUKAROYOTIC CELLS ORIGINATED AS PROKARYOTIC ELEMENTS THAT ENTERED HOST CELLS • HOST CELLS & FOREIGN ELEMENTS DEVELOP MUTUAL & SYMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIPS

  13. ANOTHER EVOLUTIONARY PATHWAY • “LIFE DID NOT TAKE OVER THE GLOBE BY COMBAT, BUT BY NETWORKING,” Symbiotic Planet, 1998. • ENDOSYMBIOSIS --> MULTICELLULAR LIFE --> SYMBIOTIC VARIATION --> SOURCES OF EVOLUTIONARY NOVELTY

  14. DARWIN WAS HALF-RIGHT • BUT DARWIN GOT THERE FIRST • HIS COMPETITION & SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST AT THE INDIVIDUAL UNIT OF SELECTION MODEL --> CORNERSTONE OF NATURAL & SOCIAL SCIENCES • IN ECONOMICS, MARKETS AND HIERARCHIES ARE COMPETITION-BASED MODELS OF ORGANIZATION

  15. COMPETITION, NOT COOPERATION, IS THE MODEL • COMPETITION AS THE MODEL OF SURVIVAL, GROWTH & EVOLUTION (EVEN THOUGH IT OFTEN FAILS TO EXPLAIN WHY SOME FIRMS SUCCEED) • COOPERATION IS INFERIOR TO COMPETITION, ILLLEGITIMATE, AND POSSIBLY ILLEGAL • EXAMPLES OF COOPERATION IN BUSINESS ARE SUSPECT, OF LIMITED IMPORTANCE & IRREVEVANT

  16. BUSINESS GROUPS & CONGLOMERATES • CONGLOMERATES IN SAME SOUTHWEST QUADRANT AS BUSINESS GROUPS • AS A SINGLE LEGAL ENTITY, HIGH LEVELS OF OWNERSHIP & CONTROL IN CONGLOMERATES • OR, IF OWNERSHIP IS DISPERSED, CONTROL REMAINS HIGH • CONTROL ALLOWS USE OF COMMON & COMPLEMENTARY RESOURCES/CAPABILITIES

  17. BUSINESS GROUPS, BY CONTRAST • EACH BUSINESS A SEPARATE LEGAL ENTITY • WHY SEPARATE ENTITIES? MANY POSSIBILITIES BUT TWO STAND OUT • CANNOT BE RELATED MEANINGFULLY (NO SYNERGY) • MANAGERS DO NOT HAVE SUFFICIENT TOOLS, INFORMATION & EXPERIENCE TO MANAGE MULTIPLE BUSINESSES AS SINGLE ENTITY

  18. INTERFIRM NETWORKS • INTERNALIZED/INTRAGROUP TRANSACTIONS ARE HIGH BUT LEVELS OF OWNERSHIP & CONTROL ARE LOW • ONLY TWO POSSIBILITIES • OFTEN NEEDED RESOURCES & CAPABILITIES ARE SOURCED WITHIN GROUP OF FIRMS • OUTPUTS OF SOME FIRMS IN GROUP ARE THE INPUTS OF OTHERS

  19. JAPAN & SILICON VALLEY • OFFER GOOD EXAMPLES OF BOTH TYPES • INTERMARKET FEDERATIONS OF FIRMS OFFER BANKING, LOGISTICS, ENGINEERING, TRADING & MISC. SERVICES TO EACH OTHER IN JAPAN • ACCOUNTING, LEGAL, VENTURE CAPITAL, HEADHUNTING & CONSULTING FIRMS WORK TOGETHER IN SILICON VALLEY

  20. PREWAR & POSTWAR • CLEARLY, ZAIBATSU ARE BUSINESS GROUPS • POSTWAR KIGYO SHUDAN/GURUPU (BOTH LEGACY AND NON-LEGACY) ARE WEAK INTERFIRM NETWORKS • POSTWAR KEIRETSU ARE STRONG INTERFIRM NETWORKS

  21. MORE THAN A METAPHOR • NETWORK ORGANIZATIONS ARE MODELS OF HOW THINGS WORK IN THE WORLD • NETWORK ORGANIZATIONS EMBODY A THEORY OF LIFE : EVOLUTION MOVES BY SPECIALIZATION, VARIATION, SYMBIOTIC & STRUCTURED INTERACTIONS

  22. INTERFIRM NETWORK Formal Definition • “NETWORK ORGANIZATIONS ARE COMPOSED OF SETS OF INDEPENDENT ACTORS WHO COOPERATE OFTEN FOR MUTUAL ADVANTAGE AND, IN THE PROCESS, CREATE COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE,” • Fruin, Network, Markets & the Pacific Rim, Oxford University Press, 1998, 4

  23. KEY WORDS • SETS • INDEPENDENT ACTORS • COOPERATE OFTEN • MUTUAL ADVANTAGE • COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE

  24. TYPES OF NETWORKS (BIOLOGY & SOCIAL SCIENCE) • REGULAR NETWORKS (HUMAN DESIGNED) • SCALE-FREE, SMALL WORLD (HUB-BASED) • HIERARCHICAL, NESTED NETWORKS • CHAOTIC (REGULAR OSCILLATION BETWEEN LIMITED ALTERNATIVES)

  25. EXAMPLES OF EACH TYPE EASY TO FINE • REGULAR: HOT SPOTS IN MOBILE PHONE NETWORK; SALES OFFICE & CONVENIENCE STORE LOCATIONS • SCALE-FREE: WHICH HOSPITAL TO VISIT; WHICH LAWYER TO HIRE • HIERARCHICAL/NESTED: TOYOTA’S MULTI-TIERED SUPPLIERS • CHAOTIC: TMC DESIGNERS vs DEVELOPERS vs PARTS MAKERS vs SYSTEM SUPPLIERS

  26. BUSINESS GROUPS & NETWORKS IN NEOCLASSICAL WORLD • NETWORKS SUPPLEMENT & COMPLEMENT MARKETS & FIRMS • THE TRANSNATIONAL FIRM • NETWORK ORGANIZATIONS SUBSTITUTE WHEN MARKETS & HIERARCHIES FAIL • THE METANATIONAL FIRM • (BOOK DOESN’T GO THIS FAR; SOMEWHERE IN-BETWEEN)

  27. IS THE FIRM DEAD? • NO, BUT FIRM ISN’T VERY GOOD AT HANDLING LARGE, COMPLEX PROBLEMS • OR, RISKY, UNFOCUSED, CONGLOMERATE-LIKE PROBLEMS IN EMERGING ECONOMIES • IN NATURE & LIFE, LARGE, COMPLEX & RISKY PROBLEMS BEST HANDLED COOPERATIVELY • COOPERATION IN LARGE COMPLEX, NETWORK SYSTEMS DIFFERS FROM FIRM-BASED, QUASI-NETWORK (DECENTRALIZED), LARGE FIRMS

  28. COOPERATION-AS-LIFE (AND A LIFE-WINNING STRATEGY) • COOPERATION AS STRUCTURED SYMBIOTIC INTERACTIONS IN NETWORKS • GLOBALIZATION REQUIRES COOPERATION • NEW TECHNOLOGIES ENABLE COOPERATION • NEW INDUSTRIAL DISTRICTS OFFER GLOBAL MODULARIZATION • BUSINESS GROUPS (?) & INTERFIRM NETWORKS ====> MORE SIGNIFICANT & CENTRAL GOING FORWARD

  29. FROM 2X2 TO 3X3:THE VARIETIES OF COMPLEX ORGANIZATION LEVELS OF INTERNAL/INTRAGROUP TRANSACTIONS LOW MEDIUM HIGH LOW MED HIGH PRIVATE OWNERSHIP & CONTROL

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