Examlex
When videocassette recorders first became popular in the mid-1980s, a new form of mom-and-pop (i.e., small) business sprang up across the country: the video rental store. At the time, new videotapes of popular movies cost anywhere from $80-$200, and as the popularity of videocassette recorders grew, these small, independent video rental stores grew rapidly to meet the demand of consumers for inexpensive rentals of movies. There was considerable competition among them to be the first to have expensive, new movies available for rental. However, some stores disappointed customers by not having enough copies of new films when they were most in demand, i.e., upon their initial release on video. Within about 5 to 8 years of competition, most of these mom-and-pop video rental stores were ultimately put out of business by the large regional and national chains such as Blockbuster. Using the concept of sustainable competitive advantage along with the four conditions required to produce it, explain how such a transition from hundreds of independent mom-and-pop video stores to a few national chains could have taken place so quickly.
Enhance Performance
The process of improving or augmenting the effectiveness, efficiency, or quality of an action or function.
Violin Player
An individual who plays the violin, a four-stringed musical instrument played with a bow.
Audience
A group of individuals who actively listen, view, or read any form of communicative work.
Social Dominance
A theory positing that societies are structured into hierarchies of group-based social hierarchies, where some groups are dominant over others.
Q6: Traditional college students who think about their
Q9: Planning works best when the goals and
Q9: Which of the following is the most
Q16: When doing an analysis of strategic groups
Q17: Refer to Levi Strauss. Which of the
Q32: The Hawthorne Studies proved that financial incentives
Q61: Which management theorist would most likely have
Q75: The European Union encourages companies to abandon
Q81: Tom Valerio was the point man on
Q81: In May 2005, U.S. Attorney Michael J.