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30 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Strategy research from the world's top business school, July 1, 2001
By 
Gerard Kroese (The Netherlands) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy (Hardcover)
Both editors are marketing professors at The Wharton School (University of Pennsylvania), which is the world's leading business school (BusinessWeek and Financial Times). George Day is well-known for his market-driven strategy, while David Reibstein is one of the leading scholars in the field of competitive marketing strategy. The book is split in 4 parts, each consisting of 3-to-5 stand-alone chapters.

Part I - Understanding Advantages in a Changing Competitive Environment - discusses competitive arenas, competitor analysis, and competitive advantage. The first two chapters expand largely on Michael Porter's (Harvard Business School) frameworks, whereby the other two chapters introduce approaches to include policy and technology trends into the strategic planning process.

The aim of Part II - Anticipating Competitors' Actions - is to get inside the heads of competitors. Chapters 5 and 6 explain the possible use of the game theory within competitive strate!gy and strategic decision making. Chapter 7 builds on these chapters to integrate the economic frame (chapter 5), the behavioral frame (chapter 6), with an coevolution frame. The final chapters of this part introduce frameworks and approaches to understanding competitor response and competitive relationships.

Part III - Formulating Dynamic Competitive Strategies - builds on the first two parts and introduces approaches to designing strategies. It introduces reactive strategies, preemptive strategies, signaling opportunities and uses, competitive positioning, and antitrust constraints (which is increasingly important to companies).

In Part IV - Choosing Among Alternative Competitive Strategies - the three chapters introduce methods and frameworks for choosing the right strategy. Chapter 15, in which conjoint analysis is combined with scenario analysis, is perhaps the most complicated chapter of the book. Part IV also introduces the possibilities to use simulation !tests for analyzing and testing strategies.

Although this book is named "Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy", there are various chapters from other academic institutions. Each chapter is an excellent piece of work and can be read on a stand-alone basis. For beginners in the strategic field I recommend chapters 1 and 2 highly. The book is written in business US-English.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Must Read for Business Leaders and Consultants, August 18, 1997
This review is from: Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy (Hardcover)
This book is wonderful. Unlike many business books which take one very simple concept and drive it into the ground over 400 pages, Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy has several (17) discrete topics which are interlinked through common themes. Need to understand applications of game theory to strategy formulation? Want to understand how to structure scenario analysis for a working session with a group of business unit directors? This book will help you understand some very academic concepts with very real, material impact when used properly.


This is also a great book for MBA students who want to understand a topic before taking to a whole class.


One final point, the caliber of the authors is incredible. Each author is writing about his/her specific areas of expertise, and the topics are extremely timely.


These are my opinions alone and not necessarily those of my employer.

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential strategy handbook, June 23, 2001
This review is from: Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy (Hardcover)
This book is amazingly well written and goes from the basics of strategy to more complex subjects such as game theory. But the best of it is not the wide variety of strategy subjects or the amount of real world examples it uses but the integration between chapters. One can easily read this book at once or skip to chapters that are more interesting to him/her.

I consider this book essential for MBA students, management consultants and managers in general. Excellent choice!

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A well-chosen set of essays, February 19, 2002
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This review is from: Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy (Hardcover)
A well-chosen set of essays is compiled, based on a 4-level framework: i)Analyze the competitive environment, ii)Anticipate competitor's actions & reactions, iii) Formulate Dynamic Strategies, iv) Choose among alternative strategies. 'Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy' provides a great way to update one's strategy knowledge; but I find 'Mastering Strategy: The Complete MBA Companion in Strategy' by Financial Times Editors to be a better book with greater depth and broader spectrum.
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very interesting but don't expect as much as the title says, January 23, 1999
This review is from: Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy (Hardcover)
The book is a collection of various articles from academics. Some articles are excellent like Clemons that describes the "killer app" (although the term was not coined at the writing) principle and its relations with pricing and customer base. Most articles are well written but the treatment is MBA oriented rather that for practitionner. Also, most authors have a marketing backgroung with gives a bias toward "market oriented strategies" rather than "ressource based" , alas, in most case the truth is in the middle ...
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Wish there were more like this, September 3, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy (Hardcover)
Although not a very fluid reading, this book covers some very hard to understand topics in a simple way and makes you find them understandable. The book could prove to be your port of entry to some very interesting topics like game theory, scenario planning and simulation. Definitely a good one from Wharton, I sincerely hope there would be more coming from where this one came from.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very useful reference in the market., December 29, 2005
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This review is from: Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy (Hardcover)
I am working on a strategic analysis report for my company, and this book is very helpful in synthesizing the mainstream strategy theories in the market to bridge the gap between theory and practice. I found the explanation of the usefulness of game theory satisfying but still not much breakthrough on defining a universal framework for formulating strategies even though much attempts on putting together all the theory. Hence, the practical usefulness is still limited. I would say, as another review suggests, Mastering Strategy providing a more practical treatment of overviewing the subject. Nonetheless, Wharton on Dynamic is definitely a good guide to have for bridging theories to practices.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Rigorous, Comprehensive, and Stunning Achievement, August 3, 2006
This is one of the volumes which comprise a series published by John Wiley & Sons. It was edited by George S. Day and David J. Reibstein with Robert E. Gunther. As they explain in their Introduction, "This book proposes a process for developing dynamic competitive strategies: Assess the context of competitive moves and advantages, understand the potential moves and mind-sets of competitors, formulate strategies, and test these strategies before making irreversible moves in the market." The material is carefully organized within Four Parts:

"Understanding Advantages in a Changing Competitive Environment" (Chapters 1-4): The contributors assert that any approach to competitive strategy must begin with "an understanding of the definition of arenas, sources of advantages, and the forces of change." Hence the provision of tools and insights to increase the reader's understanding of the nature of advantages and how they can change in dynamic competitive environments.

"Anticipating Competitors' Actions" (Chapters 5-9): In these chapters, the contributors rigorously examine a number of challenges from a variety of perspectives, including game theory, behavioral theory, and the view of coevolution. I especially appreciate the insights into the choices and mental models of rivals because they can help readers to anticipate competitors' responses to a given strategy. This is covered in great depth and with uncommon clarity by Venkataraman, Chen, and MacMillan in Chapter 8.

"Formulating Dynamic Competitive Strategies" (Chapters 10-14): This section examines a variety of important factors that should be considered when developing competitive strategies, including reactions, preemptions, signaling, commitment. And antitrust constraints. "While there are many other issues to consider in formulating strategy, these are among the most important considerations in developing dynamic strategies."

"Choosing Among Alternative Competitive Strategies" (Chapters 15-17): For me, the most interesting and valuable section but only because of the other three which precede it. Chapters 1-14 create a context, a frame-of-reference within which all of the essential components are identified, explained, and correlated. Now in this final section, the contributors succeed brilliantly when examining and cross-ranking alternative competitive strategies.

More a quibble than a complaint, I wish the editors had provided one more chapter, perhaps identified as "Conclusion," in which they review central themes and reiterate key points concerning the formulation and implementation of a "dynamic competitive strategy." That said, I think this volume (by no means an "easy read") will generously reward careful readers.

To George S. Day, David J. Reibstein, and Robert E. Gunther, I offer a dynamic "Bravo!"

Those who share my high regard for it are urged to check out Lawrence G. Hrebiniak's Making Strategy Work: Leading Effective Execution and Change, Michael E. Porter`s Competitive Strategy: Techniques for Analyzing Industries and Competitors and Competitive Advantage: Creating and Sustaining Superior Performance, Kellogg on Strategy: Concepts, Tools, and Frameworks for Practitioners co-authored by Daniel Dranove and Sonia Marciano, and Mastering Strategy: The Complete MBA Companion in Strategy produced by a collaboration which involved the University of Chicago, INSEAD, University of Michigan Business School, SAID Business School, and Financial Times's Editors.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fundamental presentation in case study., February 16, 2001
This review is from: Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy (Hardcover)
My understanding of dynamic strategies is crystal clear for reading chapter to another. This book will not give you the framework nor general ideas about strategics; but the compilation of significant works in stregies, particulary, the dynamic compettition. While the technology may be obsolate, the fundamental always remains. This book serves the later purpose very well and I don't feel bored whenever I read it over and over. Well done.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars comprehensive review on strategy, September 9, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy (Hardcover)
It is a good book for everyone who want to have a further understanding and comprehensive scope on strategy. However, it maybe a hard one for somebody, who recently study this subject!
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Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy
Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy by Robert Gunther (Hardcover - May 2, 1997)
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