| Any firm strives to get a competitive advantage. This advantage may stem from the physical capital resources (the physical technology used in a firm, a firm’s plant and equipment, its geographic location, and its access to raw materials), human capital resources potential (the training, experience, judgment, intelligence, relationships, and insight of individual managers and workers in a firm) and organizational capital resources (a firm’s formal reporting structure, its formal and informal planning, controlling, and coordinating systems, as well as informal relations among groups within a firm and between a firm and those in its environment). However, from the strategic point of view, there is one more source of competitive advantage - the first move.One of the first lessons of the first-mover literature is that pioneering carries both advantages and disadvantages. For example, the first firm in an industry can get the customer hooked on its product. Such an opportunity, of course, is an advantage for the pioneer. On the other hand, a company that is trying to catch up can use investments made by the pioneer firm (in R&D or market research, for example) at no cost. This is one advantage of a late-comer. (The advantages of a latecomer, as a rule, turn into the disadvantages of the first-mover.) This is what advantages of the first and late movers look like.
FIRST-MOVER ADVANTAGES:
Technology Leadership
- Advantages of the "learning" or "experience" curve (costs fall with cumulative output)
- Success in the R&D race (advances in product or process technology are a function of R&D expenditures)Preemption of assets
- Controlling input factors
- Controlling geographic and product characteristic space
- Preemptive investment in plant and equipment Switching costs
- Initial costs that the buyer makes in adapting to the product
- Late entrants must offer "something extra"
- Buyer risk adverse once an acceptable choice found
SECOND-MOVER ADVANTAGES:
Free-rider effects
- In R&D investments
- In buyer education
- In infrastructure developmentResolution of technological or market uncertainty
- Taking advantage of first-mover mistakesShifts in technology or customer needs
- Speed of change leads no one to be the "first mover"
- Customer’s expectations (needs) change too rapidly
- Focusing on the wrong customers (disruptive technologies)Incumbent inertia
- Firm may be locked-in to a specific set of fixed assets
- Firm may be reluctant to cannibalize existing product lines
- Firm may become organizationally inflexible
The overall implications depend on the firm, on who its competitors are, on the economic environment, and these may well turn out to be negative (as in the case with the PC or the VCR) or positive (as it happened with the instant camera or the microprocessor – see Table 1). So, being the first-mover can give some firms advantages under certain circumstances; however, it is not the superior strategy for all entrants.
|
Product |
First-mover |
Notable Follower(s) |
The Winner |
|
8 mm video camera |
Kodak |
Sony |
Follower |
|
Disposable diaper |
Chux |
Pampers |
Follower |
|
Kimberly Clark |
|
Groupware |
Lotus |
AT&T |
First-mover |
|
Instant camera |
Polaroid |
Kodak |
First-mover |
|
Microprocessor |
Intel |
AMD |
First-mover |
|
Cyrix |
|
Microwave |
Raytheon |
Samsung |
Follower |
|
Personal computer |
MITS (Altair) |
Apple |
Follower |
|
IBM |
|
Personal computer operating system |
Digital Research |
Microsoft (MS-DOS) |
Follower |
|
Spreadsheet software |
VisiCalc |
Microsoft (Excel) |
Follower |
|
Lotus |
|
VCR |
Ampex/Sony |
Matsushita |
Follower |
|
Video game console |
Magnavox |
Atari |
Follower |
|
Nintendo |
|
Web browser |
NCSA Mosaic |
Netscape |
Follower |
|
Microsoft (Internet Explorer) |
|
Word processing software |
MicroPro (WordStar) |
Microsoft (MS Word) WordPerfect |
Follower |
|
Workstation |
Xerox Alto |
Sun Microsystems Hewlett-Packard |
Follower |
Anyway, before making the decision whether or not to enter a new market, a company needs to study the specifics of the market. In some markets, the advantages of the first-mover are easier to gain than in others. The same can be said about the advantages of second-mover. Market analysis can be carried out in the following way (see Table 2).
|
|
Mobile phones |
Banking |
Ice-cream production |
Car production |
|
First-mover advantages |
Degree of intensity |
|
Pre-emption of raw material |
Gaining access to supplies of materials earlier than other competitors |
Low |
Low |
Low |
Low |
|
Spatial pre-emption |
Gaining access to market segments earlier than other competitors |
Low |
High |
High |
Low |
|
Pre-emptive investments |
Attracting investments to a project earlier than other competitors |
Low |
Low |
Low |
Low |
|
Scale effects |
Obtaining economies of scale |
High |
High |
High |
High |
|
Technology leadership |
Using new technology earlier than other competitors |
High |
Low |
Low |
Low |
|
Network externalities |
Obtaining advantage due to growing number of consumers |
High |
High |
Low |
Low |
|
Brand loyalty |
Keeping consumers by positive experience (imperfection of information) |
Low |
Low |
High |
High |
|
Buyer switching cost |
Keeping consumers by developing customer switching costs |
High |
High |
Low |
High |
|
Experience effects |
Maintaining leadership by accumulating working experience |
Low |
High |
Low |
High |
|
Technology diffusion |
Maintaining technology leadership due to low technology diffusion |
Moderate |
High |
Low |
Low |
|
Late-comer advantages |
Degree of intensity |
|
Uncertainty (both in market and technology) |
Avoiding uncertainty of the new market |
High |
High |
Low |
Low |
|
Cost advantage |
Lowering costs when analyzing the pioneer’s experience |
High |
Low |
Low |
High |
|
Free-rider effects |
Free use of the pioneer’s investments |
High |
Low |
Moderate |
High |
|
Interest of managers |
Taking higher risks |
High |
Low |
Low |
Low |
|
Government interference |
Support from the government, not interested in monopoly appearance |
Low |
High |
Low |
High |
In order for a pioneer to appear in a market an opportunity has to emerge. This depends on how much foresight a company and its competitors have, on their skills and luck. However, the probability of a pioneer appearing can be increased, sometimes significantly, with the help of managers’ activities although the emergence of an opportunity for the first-move cannot be controlled by any firm.
A firm has to decide whether or not to invest resources in the search for opportunities in order to gain first-mover advantages, and then whether or not and how to use it. Answers to these questions depend on the specific characteristics of the firm and its skills. Firms whose entrepreneurial vision and new product R&D are excellent will tend to find first-movership attractive, and firms having relative skill bases in manufacturing and marketing may not. |