Appropriation of Value from Competitive Advantages
Appropriation of Value from Competitive Advantages
- Andy El-ZayatyAndy El-ZayatyManagement and Human Resources, School of Management, University of Wisconsin-Madison
- and Russell CoffRussell CoffOffice of the Dean, Management and Human Resources, School of Business, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Summary
Many discussions of the creation and appropriation of value stop at the firm level. Imperfections in the market allow for a firm to gain competitive advantage, thereby appropriating rents from the market. What has often been overlooked is the continued process of appropriation within firms by parties ranging from shareholders to managers to employees. Porter’s “five forces” model and the resource-based view of the firm laid out the determinants of value creation at the firm level, but it was left to others to explore the onward distribution of that value. Many strategic management and strategic human capital scholars have explored the manner in which employees and managers use their bargaining power vis-à-vis the firm to appropriate value—sometimes in a manner that may not align with the interests of shareholders. In addition, cooperative game theorists provided unique insights into the way in which parties divide firm surplus among each other. Ultimately, the creation of value is merely the beginning of a complex, multiparty process of bargaining and competition for the rights to claim rents.
Subjects
- Business Policy and Strategy
- Technology and Innovation Management