When would a company use a vrio analysis?
VRIO framework is the tool used to analyze firm’s internal resources and capabilities to find out if they can be a source of sustained competitive advantage. Term VRIO comes from the words value, rarity, imitability and organization. Understanding the toolIn order to understand the sources of competitive advantage firms are using many tools to analyze their external (Porter’s 5 Forces, PEST analysis) and internal (Value Chain analysis, BCG Matrix) environments. One of such tools that analyze firm’s internal resources is VRIO analysis. The tool was originally developed by Barney, J. B. (1991) in his work ‘Firm Resources and Sustained Competitive Advantage’, where the author identified four attributes that firm’s resources must possess in order to become a source of sustained competitive advantage. According to him, the resources must be valuable, rare, imperfectly imitable and non-substitutable. His original framework was called VRIN. In 1995, in his later work ‘Looking Inside for Competitive Advantage’ Barney has introduced VRIO framework, which was the improvement of VRIN model. VRIO analysis stands for four questions that ask if a resource is: valuable? rare? costly to imitate? And is a firm organized to capture the value of the resources? A resource or capability that meets all four requirements can bring sustained competitive advantage for the company. Adopted from Rothaermel’s (2013) ‘Strategic Management’, p.91 Valuable Rare Even though competitive parity is not the desired position, a firm should not neglect the resources that are valuable but common. Losing valuable resources and capabilities would hurt an organization because they are essential for staying in the market. Costly to Imitate A firm that has valuable, rare and costly to imitate resources can (but not necessarily will) achieve sustained competitive advantage. Barney has identified three reasons why resources can be hard to imitate:
Organized to Capture Value Using the toolStep 1. Identify valuable, rare and costly to imitate resources There are two types of resources: tangible and intangible. Tangible assets are physical things like land, buildings and machinery. Companies can easily by them in the market so tangible assets are rarely the source of competitive advantage. On the other hand, intangible assets, such as brand reputation, trademarks, intellectual property, unique training system or unique way of performing tasks, can’t be acquired so easily and offer the benefits of sustained competitive advantage. Therefore, to find valuable, rare and costly to imitate resources, you should first look at company’s intangible assets. Finding valuable resources: An easy way to identify such resources is to look at the value chain and SWOT analyses. Value chain analysis identifies the most valuable activities, which are the source of cost or differentiation advantage. By looking into the analysis, you can easily find the valuable resources or capabilities. In addition, SWOT analysis recognizes the strengths of the company that are used to exploit opportunities or defend against threats (which is exactly what a valuable resource does). If you still struggle finding valuable resources, you can identify them by asking the following questions:
Finding rare resources:
Finding costly to imitate resources:
Step 2. Find out if your company is organized to exploit these resources Following questions might be helpful:
Step 3. Protect the resources When you identified a resource or capability that has all 4 VRIO attributes, you should protect it using all possible means. After all, it is the source of your sustained competitive advantage. The first thing you should do is to make the top management aware of such resource and suggest how it can be used to lower the costs or to differentiate the products and services. Then you should think of ideas how to make it more costly to imitate. If other companies won’t be able to imitate a resource at reasonable prices, it will stay rare for much longer. Step 4. Constantly review VRIO resources and capabilities The value of the resources changes over time and they must be reviewed constantly to find out if they are as valuable as they once were. Competitors are also keen to achieve the same competitive advantages so they’ll be keen to replicate the resources, which means that they will no longer be rare. Often, new VRIO resources or capabilities are developed inside an organization and by identifying them you can protect you sources of competitive advantage more easily. VRIO exampleGoogle’s capability evaluated using VRIO framework Google’s VRIO capabilityExcellent employee management Valuable?Rare?Costly to Imitate?Is a company organized to exploit it?YesYesYesYesResult: sustained competitive advantage Google’s ability to manage their people effectively is a source of both differentiation and cost advantages. Unlike other companies, which rely on trust and relationship in people management, Google uses data about its employees to manage them. This capability allows making correct (data based) decisions about which people to hire and the best way to use their skills. As a result, Google is able to hire innovative employees that are also very productive ($1 million in revenue per employee). Besides being valuable, it is also a rare capability because no other company uses data based employee management so extensively. Is it costly to imitate? It is costly to imitate, at least, in the near future. First, companies should build the highly sophisticated software, which is both costly and hard to do. Second, HR managers should be trained to make data based decisions and forget their old management methods. Is Google organized to capture value from this capability? Certainly, it has trained HR managers that know how to use the data and manage people accordingly. It also has the needed IT skills to collect and manage the data about its employees. There are many more businesses that have VRIO resources or capabilities, including many of the companies we analyzed using swot analysis. |