Week #10 Chun

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Corporate strategy differs from business-unit-level strategy because it answers different questions and creates value in different ways. Business-unit strategy focuses on how to win in one market (cost leadership, differentiation, positioning), while corporate strategy focuses on where to compete and how multiple businesses together create more value than they would separately (Dyer et al., 2020). The advantage of corporate strategy is potential synergy (shared capabilities, cross-selling, internal knowledge transfer). The disadvantage is the corporate parenting problem: executives often overestimate synergy and underestimate coordination and governance costs (Cretu, 2012; Hoechle et al., 2012). By contrast, business-unit strategy is typically clearer and easier to execute, but it can miss cross-business leverage and portfolio learning.

In the Cisco case, related-linked diversification appears to generate the stronger ROI relative to related-constrained diversification. Cisco repeatedly used acquisitions to expand into adjacent networking and software spaces while keeping enough flexibility to avoid forcing tight integration where it was unnecessary (Dyer et al., 2020). The case emphasizes Ciscos repeatable acquisition process and use of integration specialists early after deal close, which supports speed-to-value while preserving acquired capabilities. That pattern aligns with what diversification research suggests: value is most likely when businesses share transferable resources and market relationships, but do not require full operational uniformity to capture benefits (Yigit & Behram, 2013).

Diversification most often fails to add value because leaders treat it as growth rather than a disciplined test of economic logic. The recurring failure modes are predictable: overpaying for targets, underestimating integration friction, and misallocating capital internally because power and politics distort investment decisions (Hoechle et al., 2012; Stein, 1997). Governance matters here. Diversification discounts are often linked to weaker oversight and agency problems, meaning more businesses becomes cover for lower accountability, not smarter strategy (Hoechle et al., 2012). In practical terms, diversification fails when executives cannot name the specific mechanism of value creation (shared customers, shared IP, shared platforms) and then build metrics and integration plans that make that mechanism real.

Executives deciding between greenfield entry vs. acquisition should weigh four factors: (1) speed and access to capabilities (acquisitions win), (2) integration risk and culture clash (greenfield often wins), (3) institutional and legitimacy constraints in the host environment, and (4) control over operating routines and quality (greenfield often wins) (Brouthers & Hennart, 2007; Li et al., 2025). If the needed capability is scarce and time-sensitive, acquisition dominates. If execution reliability and cultural alignment drive success, greenfield is usually safer.

References

Brouthers, K. D., & Hennart, J. F. (2007). Boundaries of the firm: Insights from international entry mode research. Journal of Management, 33(3), 395425.

Cretu, R. F. (2012). Corporate governance and corporate diversification strategies. Review of International Comparative Management, 13(4), 621633.

Dyer, J., Godfrey, P., Jensen, R., & Bryce, D. (2020). Strategic management: Concepts and cases (3rd ed.). John Wiley & Sons.

Hoechle, D., Schmid, M., Walter, I., & Yermack, D. (2012). How much of the diversification discount can be explained by poor corporate governance? Journal of Financial Economics, 103(1), 4160.

Li, Y., Xie, E., & [additional authors if required by your library record]. (2025). Family business legitimacy and foreign subsidiary establishment mode choice: An institutional and mixed gamble approach. International Business Review, 34(2), 102360. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ibusrev.2024.102360

Stein, J. C. (1997). Internal capital markets and the competition for corporate resources. Journal of Finance, 52(1), 111133.

Yigit, I., & Behram, N. K. (2013). The relationship between diversification strategy and organizational performance in developed and emerging economy contexts: Evidence from Turkey and Netherlands. Eurasian Business Review, 3(2), 121136.

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