What Dynamic Managerial Capabilities Are Needed for Greater Strategic Alliance Performance?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Dynamic Managerial Capabilities
2.2. Dynamic Managerial Capabilities and Strategic Alliances
2.3. Dynamic Managerial Capabilities, the Online Grocery Industry, and Blockchain Technologies
3. Research Design and Methodology
4. Data Analysis, Findings, and Discussion
5. Case Analysis to Interpretation
Google’s Alphabet is Carrefour’s Partner in E-Commerce
6. Conclusion, Limitations, and Future Work
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Theoretical Perspective | Formation | Design | Post Formation |
---|---|---|---|
The phase of the single alliance life cycle [9] | Formation and selection phase | Governance and design phase | Post formation phase |
Key drivers of single alliance success [9] | Partner complementarity. Partner compatibility. Partner commitment. | Contractual provisions. Relational governance. Equity sharing or ownership. | Use of coordination mechanisms. Development of thrust and relational capital. Conflict resolution and escalation. |
Three stages of alliance portfolio development [32] | Adapting strategy: ‘exploration alliances.’ | Shaping strategy: ‘probing alliances’ or ‘platform alliances’ | Stabilizing strategy: ‘exploitation alliances’ |
Strategic intentions [32] | Develop new resources and capabilities and to explore new development opportunities. | Broadening the resource base and increasing strategic flexibility by exploring new opportunities without making high investments. | Commercialize resources and capabilities gained through exploitation. Use a hybrid strategy (explore and exploit) in situations with high environmental uncertainty. |
Three process dimensions of alliance portfolio management capability [32] | Partnering proactiveness: an organization’s deliberate efforts to discover and act on new alliance opportunities. | Relational governance: an organization’s engagement in activities for the development of collaborative relationships. | Portfolio coordination: an organization’s engagement in synchronizing knowledge and activities across its alliances |
Source of the strategic advantage of alliance portfolio [33] | First-mover advantages in imperfect market factors for partners. | Lowering contracting and monitoring costs and increasing incentives for value-creating initiatives by alliance partners. | Increasing knowledge flows and brokering information across the portfolio of alliances. |
Dynamic managerial capabilities [17] | Sensing, discovering, and deliberating. | Seizing, broadening, and engaging. | Reconfiguring, synchronizing, brokering, and commercializing. |
Micro-foundations of dynamic managerial capabilities | Sensing first-mover advantages, discovering new development opportunities, deliberating efforts to develop new resources and capabilities, and acting with new partners. | Seizing collaborative relationships, broadening the core competencies base, and engaging alliance partners in activities. | Reconfiguration of existing resources and capabilities, synchronizing knowledge and key activities, brokering information across the alliance, resolving conflict and escalation in the alliance, and commercializing alliance resources and capabilities. |
Theoretical Perspective | Formation | Design | Post Formation |
---|---|---|---|
The phase of the single alliance life cycle [9] | Formation and selection phase | Governance and design phase | Post formation phase |
Dynamic managerial capabilities [17] | Sensing, discovering, and deliberating. | Seizing, broadening, and engaging. | Synchronizing, brokering, and commercializing. |
Micro-foundations of dynamic managerial capabilities of the Carrefour and Google alliance | Carrefour has been lagging behind its peers for several years now in terms of e-commerce with a 9 % market share, compared to the market leader Leclerc with a 43.5 % share and Auchan with 25.3%, which has dominated the online French grocery market. Carrefour has pledged to significantly increase its digital investment to €2.8 bn over five years [38]. | Europe’s largest retailer has reacted to an increasingly competitive market in France by entering into a strategic partnership with the tech giant Google to create a “new grocery shopping experience” for its customers [38]. Carrefour opened an innovation lab in Paris with Google Cloud to work on developing new services based on artificial intelligence [38]. | From 2019, Carrefour customers will be able to buy Carrefour products through Google Assistant-connected speakers, such as Google Home, as well as a new Google shopping website in France [38]. Google will also have a crucial role in implementing a culture of innovation at Carrefour [38]. |
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Čirjevskis, A. What Dynamic Managerial Capabilities Are Needed for Greater Strategic Alliance Performance? J. Open Innov. Technol. Mark. Complex. 2019, 5, 36. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc5020036
Čirjevskis A. What Dynamic Managerial Capabilities Are Needed for Greater Strategic Alliance Performance? Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity. 2019; 5(2):36. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc5020036
Chicago/Turabian StyleČirjevskis, Andrejs. 2019. "What Dynamic Managerial Capabilities Are Needed for Greater Strategic Alliance Performance?" Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity 5, no. 2: 36. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc5020036
APA StyleČirjevskis, A. (2019). What Dynamic Managerial Capabilities Are Needed for Greater Strategic Alliance Performance? Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity, 5(2), 36. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc5020036