Performance improvements seen through the lens of strategic trade-offs
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Performance improvement and competitive advantage are closely related but different concepts. However, the strategic operations management field has often used them interchangeably/equivalently in previous investigations involving Wickham Skinners strategic trade-offs model and related theories. In this study, the relationship between these concepts is clarified by means of thought experiments, which are developed on the basis of methodologies, approaches and rationales used in previous studies. It is logically established that utilising measures of improvement along individual performance criteria is inadequate when testing the trade-offs models core implications, because these, as per Skinner, only apply in comparisons involving market-leading performance in those criteria (realisation of competitive advantage). The incompleteness of approaches such as linear regression/correlation analysis and like methodologies for such studies is also demonstrated. In short, our research attempts to clarify some misconceptions that are prevalent when performance improvements, market-leading performance and strategic trade-offs are investigated and debated. Venues for future research are offered. © 2013 Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
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competitive advantage; cumulative capabilities; regression analysis; strategic trade-offs; thought experiments Competitive advantage; cumulative capabilities; Individual performance; Operations management; strategic trade-offs; Thought experiments; Through the lens; Competition; Experiments; Regression analysis; Commerce
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