Introduction
Part I: Corporate Success
1: The Structure of Strategy
2: Adding Value
Part II: Business Relationships
Introduction
3: Cooperation and Coordination;
4: Relationships and Contracts
Part III: Distinctive Capabilities
Introduction
5: Architecture
6: Reputation
7: Innovation
8: Strategic Assets
Part IV: From Distinctive Capbilities to Competitive Advantage
Introduction
9: Markets
10: Mergers
11: Sustainability
12: Appropriability
13: The Value of Competitive Advantage
Appendix
Added Value Statements
Part V: Competitive Strategies
Introduction
14: Pricing and Positioning 1
15: Pricing and Positioning 2
16: Advertising and Branding
17: Vertical Relationships
Part VI: The Strategic Audit
Introduction
18: The Industry
19: The Firm
20: The Nation
Part VII: The Future of Strategy
Introduction
21: A Brief History of Business Strategy
22: Conclusions
Glossary
Bibliographic notes
A lucid analysis of what distinguishes a successful business
John Kay is a visiting Professor of Economics at the London School
of Economics, a Fellow of St John's College, Oxford. He is a Fellow
of the British Academy, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh,
and a member of the Scottish Government's Council of Economic
Advisers. He is a director of several public companies and
contributes a weekly column to the Financial Times. He is the
author of many books, including The Truth about Markets
(2003) and The Long and the Short of It: finance and investment for
normally intelligent people who are not in the industry (2009) and
his latest book, Obliquity was published by Profile Books in March
2010.
`it is hard to remember a book which has such richness of
penetrating (and well-written) comments on such a varied and
complex research literature. If you are a business historian with
no strategy text on your shelves, buy this one and you will be well
served ... you will find within its covers freshness of critical
perspective, not arid duplication ... Kay has produced the thinking
business historian's strategy text: vital reading'
Business History
`an exceptionally powerful contribution to thinking on business
strategy'
Ian Hay Davison, Chairman of Storehouse
'A fresh and insightful approach, blending theory and case studies,
to the links between corporate culture, strategy and success.' Sir
Geoffrey Owen, former editor of the Financial Times
`One of the book's pleasures is a collection of figures that
compare the added value of different firms in the same industry.
Another is the fascinating variety of examples and comparisons
illustrated in diagrams or pictures ... Foundations of Corporate
Success is an important book. It does not offer easy answers but
contains much well illustrated advice ... The book is important
also because it provides an original analysis of business
strategy
and one that is European rather than, as is usual, American. It
deserves to be influential.' Rosemary Stewart, Independent
`Kay, succeeds in marrying an authoritative grasp of economic,
legal and sociological theory with an impressively detailed
knowledge of contemporary business practice ... a powerfully argued
book, which casts a fresh light on a range of practical business
challenges.'
Guy de Jonquieres, Financial Times
You must read John Kay's new book Foundations of Corporate Success.
Kay is currently the best management theorist in Britain, bar
none.' Business Age
`impressive and readable volume on corporate strategy ... the scope
and quality of this book put it in the same league as Michael
Porter's celebrated volumes on competitive strategy and signal a
certain coming of age of business education in Britain'
Peter Oppenheimer, Observer
`There is a lot in Kay's book that I agree with.'
Tom Lloyd, Sunday Telegraph
`Foundations of Corporate Success is going to throw a lot of
strategic management thinking and teaching into considerable
turmoil, as Kay very ably deconstructs in good part the ruling
nostrums and approaches to strategic management analysis.
Foundations of Corporate Success represents a signally important
and positive contribution by an economist to the contemporary
analysis of corporate strategy.
Foundations of Corporate Success is, quite simply, a major tour de
force ... Foundations of Corporate Success represents a major
restatement and reconfiguration of strategic management analysis
... and, no doubt, will give rise to a considerable furore within
the learned journals.'
Economic Affairs
`Students of European business may get their teeth into this book
in ways that are not offered by the many acres of American
management texts.' Economic Affairs
`A major new book offers a fresh insight into just what makes
companies tick ... required reading for everyone making investment
decisions ... The new work fills the gap, and it represents
Europe's response to Harvard theories on management. What John Kay
offers is an analysis that is not just based on US multinationals
over the last decade, but deals with strategies for Europe in the
1990s.'
Colin McLean, Scotsman Business Agenda
'...widely hailed as a milestone in its field.'
Economic and Social Research Council Annual Report
`This is an economist's view of corporate strategy, but not a
conventional one. Kay's Foundations of Corporate Success is
well-written, understandable and makes strong claims for its
practical relevance to managerial action ... Thus Kay has stirred
up an important debate, which should concern all readers of this
journal. He has, moreover, provided a book that will be valued by
all those interested in developing economic approaches in
their strategy teaching.'
Richard Whittington, Journal of Management Studies
'Excellent for teaching corporate strategy at final year degree
level'
Eric Carter, UCE Business School
`John Kay's ideas represent an innovative approach to developing a
discussion on the notion of corporate strategy. It is an essential
read for any business/economics under/post graduate. I shall take
pleasure in recommending the text to my students.'
Denis Harrington, South Bank University
`Identify your distinctive capability, select your market, then
build the strategy - the conclusion of one of the most important
"strategic thinking" books in years ... This is a work of
considerable scholarship and the product of a formidable intellect
... As to which market is best suited to this book's own
distinctive capabilities, it is without doubt the MBA student. I
can think of no better way of preparing for an examination in
business
strategy.'
Philip Sadler, The Director
`Excellent for teaching corporate strategy at final year degree
level.'
Eric Carter, UCE Business School
`John Kay's Foundations of Corporate Success is refreshingly
inconoclastic. Taking the axe to fashionable theories about
corporate strategy, Kay likens many of the nostrums peddled by
business gurus to quack medicine ... the book is thought-provoking
and thoroughly documented.'
Financial Times
`Book is very good quality, and I will recommend it.'
Paul Broholm, Rotterdam School of Management
`An excellent and very readable account of the state of thinking in
strategic management from a primarily economic perspective.'
N.R. Pandit, Manchester Business School
`Very useful, will no doubt be required reading in many courses
dealing with strategic management.'
Lars Christian Smith, Sacred Heart University
`An excellent book. I am using it to encourage students to see
strategy implications within the field of Organizational
Behaviour.'
Romy Jenkins, City University Business School
`Deserves to be widely read by top management.'
Long Range Planning
`Excellent book - the success/failure insights help to reinforce
concepts developed in the book.'
George Burt, University of Strathclyde
`In this challenging and authoritative book, John Kay, Professor of
Economics at London Business School, vigorously tackles the
questions of what are the origins of corporate success and how it
should be measured ... Kay's iconoclastic approach to the
well-established theories of corporate strategy is backed by
scholarship and lucid argument ... This stimulating text casts a
penetrating and knowledgeable eye over theories of corporate
strategy.'
Journal of the Market Research Society
'The publishers claim, right I think, that the book is probably the
most important contribution to European strategic thinking for many
years.'
John Coleman, New European
'Deserves to be widely read by top management.'
Long Range Planning
`Any review must begin by applauding the verve and proficiency with
which this eclecticism has been performed ... this is by no means a
work of pure analysis. It is also an exercise in iconoclasm ...
stimulating and lucidly argued book which is sure to grace
management bookshelves for many years to come.'
Long Range Planning
`Good, update book of modern business strategy.'
Kaare Sandvik, Buskerud College
`This is a well written book, which covers most of the aspects in
corporate strategies.'
Chris Simango, Business and Management School, Regent's Park.
London
`it is hard to remember a book which has such richness of
penetrating (and well-written) comments on such a varied and
complex research literature. If you are a business historian with
no strategy text on your shelves, buy this one and you will be well
served ... you will find within its covers freshness of critical
perspective, not arid duplication ... Kay has produced the thinking
business historian's strategy text: vital reading'
Business History
`A lot of fresh thinking is coming from less familiar people,
ranging from academics such as John Kay and Sumantra Ghsoshal (both
at the London Business School) to manager pundits such as Percy
Barnevik.'
The Economist
`Mr Kay is well on the way to turning himself into a European
Michael Porter, Harvard's top showman.'
The Economist
'This is a splendid book. Kay shows his colours. He dissociates
himself from the American obsession with advantages of scale and
its attendant zeal for buying businesses and amalgamating them. He
speaks in favour of stable, less destructive competitive
relationships. This is a highly sound piece of work. It is
thoroughly researched. The theoretical foundation is impressive.
The case studies are strongly developed, the examples well chosen.
On the jacket it
says: 'This book is probably the most important European
contribution to strategic thinking for many years.' Only the word
probably is to my mind superfluous. It could safely be changed to
'certainly' ...
this is in every way a giant intellectual feat.'
Prof Dr Marc Buelen, De Financieel-Ekonomische Tijd
'cet ouvrage est de qualité ... Treize ans aprés la parution de The
mind of the strategist (K. Ohmae), J. Kay donne une version des
raisons du succès des entreprises excellentes. L'analyse économique
moderne collabore utilement avec les disciplines de gestion.'
Alain Bienaymé, Analyses de la S.É.D.É.I.S., No. 104, Mars 1995
`For a long time, I and other colleagues have looked for a book on
business strategy which we could recommend unreservedly to MBA and
final year undergraduate students. In Kay's book we have found
one.'
Books for MBAs
`It is an intelligently written book, worth writing. In paperback
it has the potential to reach a wider audience ... it does make a
contribution to entrepreneurship practice and theory ... It is very
comprehensive in its application of current theory and many
extremely intelligent points are made.'
International Small Business Journal
`It approaches its subject in a way which is characteristic of the
economist: That is to say, in a rigorous, analytical fashion, and
thus in a style which sets it apart from that often preferred by
practitioners in business or academics working within other
disciplines ... The argument that there exist concepts and models
which provide valuable insights into the sources of business
success and that it would be almost perverse not to use them, is
very
persuasive and ... Kay presents it well.'
The Economic Journal
`It approaches its subject in a way which is characteristic of the
economist: that is to say, in a rigorous, analytical fashion, and
thus in a style which sets it apart from that often preferred by
practitioners in business or academics working within other
disciplines ... the argument that there exist concepts and models
which provide valuable insights into the sources of business
success and that it would be almost perverse not to use them, is
very
persuasive, and ... Kay presents it very well.'
Economic Journal
`Kay covers most aspects of business strategy including mergers and
acquisitions, pricing and positioning of products, and advertising
and marketing. If you are considering taking an MBA programme then
this book will provide you with an insight to the core subject of
strategy.'
Management; The British Journal of Administrative Management
Ask a Question About this Product More... |