Foundations of Strategy
208 reviews
Recommended experience
208 reviews
Recommended experience
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12 assignments
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There are 4 modules in this course
Strategy is a complex field and intrinsically related to economics. In this first week of this course you will learn the basic logic of how firms and markets function by using economic logic from a distinctly strategic perspective.
The economic logics discussed in the first week have shaped the field of strategic analysis from very early on. Porter’s Five Forces – probably the most well-known strategic analysis tool – directly builds on the notion of market structures and helps us to get a deeper understand of how the competitive environment affects the ability of firms to generate true economic profits. In this week, we´ll look at how Porter's Five Forces are related to market structures, economies of scale, and begin to touch on how firms leverage these to create competitive advantage. Week three, we will move away from exclusively considering the external structure of an industry as the source of competitive advantage and instead focus our view on the internal resources and capabilities within firms – and the associated “resource based view” to look at how internal resources and capabilities play out in competitive situations. Looking through the lens of the five forces at the industry, or through that of the resource-based view at firm internal resources and capabilities, feels a bit like swings of a pendulum – and, indeed, strategic theory and practice over the last decades has veered from a near-exclusive focus on the environment to being entranced by firms’ core capabilities. However, to get the full picture of where your firm stands (and where it and its industry may move) requires us to consider both of these perspectives! In this final week we will work on this crucial integration by building our understanding of what a competitive advantage truly is – and what distinct forms it can take.
Strategy is a complex field and intrinsically related to economics. In this first week we will establish the basic logic of how firms and markets function by using economic logic from a distinctly strategic perspective.
What's included
6 videos5 readings2 assignments
6 videos•Total 47 minutes
- Welcome to Foundations of Strategy•6 minutes
- What is Strategy?•9 minutes
- Rent•6 minutes
- Monopoly vs. Perfect Competition•9 minutes
- Moving Away From Perfect Competition: Strategies at Industry Level (Part 1)•11 minutes
- Moving Away From Perfect Competition: Strategies at Industry Level (Part 2)•6 minutes
5 readings•Total 42 minutes
- Welcome to Foundations of Strategy!•10 minutes
- A Note on the Readings in This Lesson•2 minutes
- 7 Near-Monopolies That Are Perfectly Legal in America •10 minutes
- America's Monopoly Problem •10 minutes
- Apple, Google Urge Monopoly Watchdog to Leave Them Alone•10 minutes
2 assignments•Total 25 minutes
- Graded Quiz - Week 1, Part 1•10 minutes
- Ungraded Practice Questions - Rent, Monopoly, and Perfect Competition•15 minutes
The economic logics discussed in the first week have shaped the field of strategic analysis from very early on. Porter’s Five Forces – probably the most well-known strategic analysis tool – directly builds on the notion of market structures and helps us to get a deeper understand of how the competitive environment affects the ability of firms to generate true economic profits. In this week, we´ll look at how Porter's Five Forces are related to market structures, economies of scale, and begin to touch on how firms leverage these to create competitive advantage.
What's included
4 videos7 readings3 assignments2 app items
4 videos•Total 21 minutes
- Introduction to Competitive Advantage: The External Perspective•4 minutes
- Five Forces•7 minutes
- Economies of Scale: The Basic Logic•3 minutes
- Economies of Scale: Minimum Efficient Scale•7 minutes
7 readings•Total 71 minutes
- Porter's Five Forces•15 minutes
- A Note on the Readings in This Lesson•1 minute
- Economies of Scale•15 minutes
- Why Economies of Sale Can Act as a Barrier to Entry •10 minutes
- Strategy in the Post-Fixed Costs Economy•10 minutes
- Getting Ready for the Arrogant Brewing Case•10 minutes
- How Companies Used These 8 Strategies for a Competitive Advantage•10 minutes
3 assignments•Total 27 minutes
- Graded Quiz - Week 1, Part 2•10 minutes
- Ungraded Practice Questions - Porter's Five Forces•10 minutes
- Practice Questions: Arrogant Brewing Case•7 minutes
2 app items•Total 60 minutes
- Multimedia Tutorial - The S.W.O.T. Analysis Tool•30 minutes
- Multimedia Case - Arrogant Brewing•30 minutes
This week, we will move away from exclusively considering the external structure of an industry as the source of competitive advantage and instead focus our view on the internal resources and capabilities within firms – and the associated “resource based view” to look at how internal resources and capabilities play out in competitive situations.
What's included
6 videos8 readings5 assignments1 app item
6 videos•Total 49 minutes
- Introduction to Competitive Advantage: The Internal Perspective•5 minutes
- Industry Evolution•5 minutes
- Learning Curve•7 minutes
- The Resource-Based View•7 minutes
- Resource Position Barriers to Entry•14 minutes
- Walmart: A Study in Strategy•10 minutes
8 readings•Total 68 minutes
- Learning Curve Management Of New Products And Services •10 minutes
- A Note on the Readings in This Lesson•1 minute
- Why Humans, Not Machines, Are Companies' Biggest Competitive Advantage •10 minutes
- Examples of Resources That Help Competitive Companies •10 minutes
- A Note on the Readings in This Lesson•2 minutes
- Why An Emboldened Walmart Is Looking To Beyond Retail For Future Growth •10 minutes
- Walmart is Using Its Thousands of Stores to Battle Amazon for E-Commerce Market Share•10 minutes
- How to Perform a Value Chain Analysis (Explained with Example) •15 minutes
5 assignments•Total 50 minutes
- Graded Quiz - Week 1, Part 3•10 minutes
- Ungraded Practice Question - Learning Curve•10 minutes
- Ungraded Practice Questions - Resource-Based View•15 minutes
- Ungraded Practice Questions - Walmart•5 minutes
- Ungraded Practice Question - Value Chains•10 minutes
1 app item•Total 30 minutes
- Multimedia Tutorial - The Value Chain as an Analytical Tool •30 minutes
Looking through the lens of the five forces at the industry, or through that of the resource based view at firm internal resources and capabilities, feels a bit like swings of a pendulum – and, indeed, strategic theory and practice over the last decades has veered from a near-exclusive focus on the environment to being entranced by firms’ core capabilities. However, to get the full picture of where your firm stands (and where it and its industry may move) requires us to consider both of these perspectives! In this final week we will work on this crucial integration by building our understanding of what a competitive advantage truly is – and what distinct forms it can take.
What's included
5 videos2 assignments
5 videos•Total 23 minutes
- Putting It All Together: The Holistic View•2 minutes
- What is Competitive Advantage?•11 minutes
- Wrapping Up Basic Logic: The Pendulum Swing Between External and Internal Analysis •3 minutes
- The Implications of Scale and Learning Curves: The Tesla Example•4 minutes
- Congratulations on Completing This MOOC!•2 minutes
2 assignments•Total 25 minutes
- Graded Quiz - Week 1, Part 4•10 minutes
- Ungraded Practice Questions - Types of Competitive Advantage•15 minutes
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Reviewed on Feb 11, 2025
Professor Carl Kock has a real energy to him! I enjoyed this course:)
Reviewed on Jul 25, 2023
Very nice course! Practical exercises, clear explanations, rather dynamic. Fully recommend!
Reviewed on Mar 5, 2025
A course that gives the strategy essential basics in the simple and persuavasive language of Prof. Carl.
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