Abstract
Firms allocate their limited resources between two fundamental processes of creating value (i.e., innovating, producing, and delivering products to the market) and appropriating value (i.e., extracting profits in the marketplace). Although both value creation and value appropriation are required for achieving sustained competitive advantage, a firm has significant latitude in deciding the extent to which it emphasizes one over the other. What effect does strategic emphasis (i.e., emphasis on value creation versus value appropriation) have on firms's financial performance? The authors address this issue by examining the effect that shift in strategic emphasis has on stock return. They find that the stock market reacts favorably when a firm increases its emphasis on value appropriation relative to value creation. This effect, however, is moderated by the firm, and the technological environment in which the firm operates. These results do not negate the importance of value creation capabilities, but rather highlight the importance of isolating mechanisms that enable the firm to appropriate some of the value it has created.
Full Citation
Jacobson, Robert. “Trading Off Between Value Creation and Value Appropriation: The Financial Implications of Shifts in Strategic Emphasis.”
Journal of Marketing
vol. 67,
(January 01, 2003): 63-76.