Creating Profit Through Alliances - business models for collaboration E-book | Page 62

   Being a market leader: this provides sufficient scale size in itself. Having a technological head start: this is a condition for supplying distinctive products. Being a supplier to a limited number of large customers: this diminishes the need for distribution partners and customer knowledge. Aside from the absolute profit achieved by the network, a significant issue is the share that each of the participating companies will receive. The size of this share will often be a matter for negotiation, with a view to what each partner contributes. The more essential a partner's contribution in achieving synergy, the greater its negotiating power to claim a larger a share of the added revenue. Synergy factor In practice it appears that participating in a network is mainly advantageous for companies that are relatively small in their market or industry, and thus benefit from the advantages of scale or scope offered by collaboration. Three factors cause certain companies to be less inclined to enter into alliances: A Area in which network participation is beneficial Neutral 1 (no synergy) Area in which network participation is detrimental B 0 1 Neutral (no extra negotiating power) Profit equal to operating independently Negotiating power factor Figure 24. Benefit of operating in a network based on synergy and negotiation power In Figure 24, Company A might contribute a small component of a compound product and thus not wield much negotiating power in the network, but the network is sufficiently effective for A to benefit Taking into account synergy and negotiating power, from participating, rather than to operate on its own. the profit that a company can make in a network can Company B might be a relatively large player that shares his production capacity with others, and has be expressed in a formula29: therefore succeeded in negotiating a Company‟s profit Company‟s Synergy Negotiating = × × in a network individual profit factor power factor disproportionally large share of the network's The possible outcomes of this formula are given in profit. However, since they are all part of a network, Figure 24. With a synergy factor of 1 (neutral) and a the individual companies are less committed to negotiating power factor of 1 (equivalent), acting in a marketing efforts. For that reason, it would better network yields a profit equal to what the company serve Company B to leave the network. would make independently. At the upper right of the curve, network participation is attractive (a lot of synergy and/or negotiating power), at the lower left it is not. 60