Journal of Management: Firm Resources and Sustained Competitive Advantage
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Discussions with members of the Strategic Management Group at Texas A&M University, including Mike
Hitt, Tom Turk, Bob Hoskisson, Barry Baysinger, and Abby Mc Williams, have been helpful in the development
of these ideas. The rudiments of the argument were presented and discussed at the second annual Wharton Con•
ference on Models of Strategic Choice. Discussions with Raphael Amit, Birger Wernerfelt, Michael Porter,
David Teece, Dick Rumelt, Margie Petroff, Connie Helfat, Sid Winter, and Garth Saloner have had a significant
impact on the ideas developed here. I would especially like to thank Cynthia Montgomery for convincing me to
write this article.
Address all correspondence to Jay B. Barney, Department of Management, Texas A&M University, College
Station, TX 77843.
99
Opportunities
Weaknesses t
Threats
Figure One. The relationship between traditional "strengths-weaknesses-opportunities-threats" analysis, the re•
source based model, and models of industry attractiveness.
and external analyses of opportunities and threats have received some attention in
the literature, recent work has tended to focus primarily on analyzing a firm's op•
portunities and threats in its competitive environment (Lamb, 1984). As exempli•
fied by research by Porter and his colleagues (Caves & Porter, 1977; Porter, 1980,
1985) this work has attempted to describe the environmental conditions that favor
high levels of firm performance. Porter's ( 1980) "five forces model," for example,
describes the attributes of an attractive industry and thus suggests that opportu•
nities will be greater, and threats less, in these kinds of industries.
To help focus the analysis of the impact of a firm's environment on its compet•
itive position, much of this type of strategic research has placed little emphasis on
the impact of idiosyncratic firm attributes on a firm's competitive position (Porter,
1990). Implicitly, this work has adopted two simplifying assumptions. First, these
environmental models of competitive advantage have assumed that firms within
an industry (or firms within a strategic group) are identical in terms of the strate•
gically relevant resources they control and the strategies they pursue (Porter, 1981 ;
Rumelt, 1984; Scherer, 1980). Second, these models assume that should resource
heterogeneity develop in an industry or group (perhaps through new entry), that
this heterogeneity will be very short lived because the resources that firms use to
implement their strategies are highly mobile (i.e., they can be bought and sold in
factor markets) (Barney, 1986a; Hirshleifer, 1980). 1
There is little doubt that these two assumptions have been very fruitful in clar•
ifying our understanding of the impact of a firm's environment on performance.
However, the resource-based view of competitive advantage, because it examines
1
Thus, for example, Porter ( 1980) suggests that firms should analyze their competitive environment, choose
their strategies, and then acquire the resources needed to implement their strategies. Firms are assumed to have
the same resources to implement these strategies or to have the same access to these resources. More recently,
Porter ( 1985) has introduced a language for discussing possible internal organizational attributes that may affect
competitive advantage. The relationship between this "value chain" logic and the resource based view of the
firm is examined below.
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the link between a firm's internal characteristics and performance, obviously can•
not build on these same assumptions. These assumptions effectively eliminate
firm resource heterogeneity and immobility as possible sources of competitive ad•
vantage (Penrose, 1958; Rumelt, 1984; Wernerfelt, 1984, 1989). The resource•
based view of the firm substitutes two alternate assumptions in analyzing sources
of competitive advantage. First, this model assumes that firms within an industry
( or group) may be heterogeneous with respect to the strategic resources they con•
trol. Second, this model assumes that these resources may not be perfectly mobile
across firms, and thus heterogeneity can be long lasting. The resource-based
model of the firm examines the implications of these two assumptions for the anal•
ysis of sources of sustained competitive advantage.
This article begins by defining some key terms, and then examining the role of
idiosyncratic, immobile firm resources in creating sustained competitive advan•
tages. Next, a framework for evaluating whether or not particular firm resources
can be sources of sustained competitive advantage is developed. As an example of
how this framework might be applied, it is used in the analysis of the competitive
implications of several resources that others have suggested might be sources of
sustained competitive advantage. The article concludes by describing the relation•
ship between this resource-based model of sustained competitive advantage and
other business disciplines.
Firm Resources
In this article,firm resources include all assets, capabilities, organizational pro•
cesses, firm attributes, information, knowledge, etc. controlled by a firm that en•
able the firm to conceive of and implement strategies that improve its efficiency
and effectiveness (Daft, 1983). In the language of traditional strategic analysis,
firm resources are strengths that firms can use to conceive of and implement their
strategies (Learned, Christensen, Andrews, & Guth, 1969; Porter, 1981).
A variety of authors have generated lists of firm attributes that may enable firms
to conceive of and implement value-creating strategies (Hitt & Ireland, 1986;
Thompson & Strickland, 1987). For purposes of this discussion, these numerous
possible firm resources can be conveniently classified into three categories: phys•
ical capital resources (Williamson, 1975), human capital resources (Becker, 1964 ),
and organizational capital resources (Tomer, 1987). Physical capital resources in•
clude the physical technology used in a firm, a firm's plant and equipment, its geo•
graphic location, and its access to raw materials. Human capital resources include
the training, experience, judgment, intelligence, relationships, and insight of in•
dividual managers and workers in a firm. Organizational capital resources include
a firm's formal reporting structure, its formal and informal planning, controlling,
and coordinating systems, as well as informal relations among groups within a
firm and between a firm and those in its environment.
JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT, VOL. 17, NO. 1, 1991
Of course, not all aspects of a firm's physical capital, human capital, and orga•
nizational capital are strategically relevant resources. Some of these firm attri•
butes may prevent a firm from conceiving of and implementing valuable strategies
(Barney, 1986b). Others may lead a firm to conceive of and implement strategies
that reduce its effectiveness and efficiency. Still others may have no impact on a
firm's strategizing processes. However, those attributes of a firm's physical, hu•
man, and organizational capital that do enable a firm to conceive of and implement
strategies that improve its efficiency and effectiveness are, for purposes of this dis•
cussion, firm resources (Wernerfelt, 1984). The purpose of this article is to specify
the conditions under which such firm resources can be a source of sustained com•
petitive advantage for a firm.
However, from another point of view, barriers to entry or mobility are only pos•
sible if current and potentially competing firms are heterogeneous in terms of the
resources they control and if these resources are not perfectly mobile (Barney,
McWilliams, Turk, 1989). The heterogeneity requirement is self-evident. For a
barrier to entry or mobility to exist, firms protected by these barriers must be im•
plementing different strategies than firms seeking to enter these protected areas of
competition. Firms restricted from entry are unable to implement the same strat•
egies as firms within the industry or group. Because the implementation of strat•
egy requires the application of firm resources, the inability of firms seeking to en•
ter an industry or group to implement the same strategies as firms within that
industry or group suggests that firms seeking to enter must not have the same stra•
tegically relevant resources as firms within the industry or group. Thus, barriers to
entry and mobility only exist when competing firms are heterogeneous in terms of
the strategically relevant resources they control. Indeed, this is the definition of
strategic groups suggested by McGee and Thomas ( 1986).
The requirement that firm resources be immobile in order for barriers to entry
or mobility to exist is also clear. If firm resources are perfectly mobile, then any
resource that allows some firms to implement a strategy protected by entry or mo•
bility barriers can easily be acquired by firms seeking to enter into this industry or
group. Once these resources are acquired, the strategy in question can be con•
ceived of and implemented in the same way that other firms have conceived of and
implemented their strategies. These strategies are thus not a source of sustained
competitive advantage.
Again, it is not being suggested that entry or mobility barriers do not exist.
However, it is being suggested that these barriers only become sources of sus•
tained competitive advantage when firm resources are not homogeneously dis•
tributed across competing firms and when these resources are not perfectly mo•
bile.
Research that has focused on the impact of opportunities and threats in a firm's
environment on competitive advantage has recognized the limitations inherent in
analyzing competitive advantage with the assumption that firm resources are ho•
mogeneously distributed and highly mobile. In his recent work, Porter ( 1985) in•
troduced the concept of the value chain to assist managers in isolating potential re•
source-based advantages for their firms. The resource-based view of the firm
developed here simply pushes this value chain logic further, by examining the at•
tributes that resources isolated by value chain analyses must possess in order to be
sources of sustained competitive advantage (Porter, 1990).
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petition, (c) it must be imperfectly imitable, and (d) there cannot be strategically
equivalent substitutes for this resource that are valuable but neither rare or imper•
fectly imitable. These attributes of firm resources can be thought of as empirical
indicators of how heterogeneous and immobile a firm's resources are and thus how
useful these resources are for generating sustained competitive advantages. Each
of these attributes of a firm's resources are discussed in more detail below.
Valuable Resources
Firm resources can only be a source of competitive advantage or sustained com•
petitive advantage when they are valuable. As suggested earlier, resources are
valuable when they enable a firm to conceive of or implement strategies that im•
prove its efficiency and effectiveness. The traditional "strengths-weaknesses-op•
portunities-threats" model of firm performance suggests that firms are able to im•
prove their performance only when their strategies exploit opportunities or
neutralize threats. Firm attributes may have the other characteristics that could
qualify them as sources of competitive advantage (e.g., rareness, inimitability,
non-substitutability), but these attributes only become resources when they ex•
ploit opportunities or neutralize threats in a firm's environment.
That firm attributes must be valuable in order to be considered resources ( and
thus as possible sources of sustained competitive advantage) points to an impor•
tant complementarity between environmental models of competitive advantage
and the resource-based model. These environmental models help isolate those
firm attributes that exploit opportunities and/or neutralize threats, and thus spec•
ify which firm attributes can be considered as resources. The resource-based
model then suggests what additional characteristics that these resources must pos•
sess if they are to generate sustained competitive advantage.
Rare Resources
By definition, valuable firm resources possessed by large numbers of compet•
ing or potentially competing firms cannot be sources of either a competitive ad•
vantage or a sustained competitive advantage. A firm enjoys a competitive advan•
tage when it is implementing a value-creating strategy not simultaneously
implemented by large numbers of other firms. If a particular valuable firm re•
source is possessed by large numbers of firms, then each of these firms have the
capability of exploiting that resource in the same way, thereby implementing a
common strategy that gives no one firm a competitive advantage.
The same analysis applies to bundles of valuable firm resources used to con•
ceive of and implement strategies. Some strategies require a particular mix of
physical capital, human capital, and organizational capital resources to imple•
ment. One firm resource required in the implementation of almost all strategies is
managerial talent (Hambrick, 1987). If this particular bundle of firm resources is
not rare, then large numbers of firms will be able to conceive of and implement
the strategies in question, and these strategies will not be a source of competitive
ad• vantage, even though the resources in question may be valuable.
To observe that competitive advantages (sustained or otherwise) only accrue to
firms that have valuable and rare resources is not to dismiss common (i.e., not
rare) firm resources as unimportant. Instead, these valuable but common firm
resources
JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT, VOL. 17, NO. 1, I 99
I
can help ensure a firm's survival when they are exploited to create competitive
parity in an industry (Barney, l 989a). Under conditions of competitive parity,
though no one firm obtains a competitive advantage, firms do increase their prob•
ability of economic survival (McKelvey, 1980; Porter, 1980).
How rare a valuable firm resource must be in order to have the potential for gen•
erating a competitive advantage is a difficult question. It is not difficult to see that
if a firm's valuable resources are absolutely unique among a set of competing and
potentially competing firms, those resources will generate at least a competitive
advantage and may have the potential of generating a sustained competitive ad•
vantage. However, it may be possible for a small number of firms in an industry to
possess a particular valuable resource and still generate a competitive advantage.
In general, as long as the number of firms that possess a particular valuable re•
source (or a bundle of valuable resources) is less than the number of firms needed
to generate perfect competition dynamics in an industry (Hirshleifer, 1980), that
resource has the potential of generating a competitive advantage.
Substitutability
The last requirement for a firm resource to be a source of sustained competitive
advantage is that there must be no strategically equivalent valuable resources that
are themselves either not rare or imitable. Two valuable firm resources (or two
bundles of firm resources) are strategically equivalent when they each can be ex•
ploited separately to implement the same strategies. Suppose that one of these
valuable firm resources is rare and imperfectly imitable, but the other is not. Firms
with this first resource will be able to conceive of and implement certain strategies.
If there were no strategically equivalent firm resources, these strategies would
generate a sustained competitive advantage (because the resources used to con•
ceive and implement them are valuable, rare, and imperfectly imitable). However,
that there are strategically equivalent resources suggests that other current or po•
tentially competing firms can implement the same strategies, but in a different
way, using different resources. If these alternative resources are either not rare or
imitable, then numerous firms will be able to conceive of and implement the strat•
egies in question, and those strategies will not generate a sustained competitive
advantage. This will be the case even though one approach to implementing these
strategies exploits valuable, rare, and imperfectly imitable firm resources.
Substitutability can take at least two forms. First, though it may not be possible
for a firm to imitate another firm's resources exactly, it may be able to substitute a
similar resource that enables it to conceive of and implement the same strategies.
For example, a firm seeking to duplicate the competitive advantages of another
firm by imitating that other firm's high quality top management team will often be
unable to copy that team exactly (Barney & Tyler, 1990). However, it may be pos•
sible for this firm to develop its own unique top management team. Though these
two teams will be different ( different people, different operating practices, a dif•
ferent history, etc.), they may likely be strategically equivalent and thus be substi•
tutes for one another. If different top management teams are strategically equiva•
lent (and if these substitute teams are common or highly imitable), then a high
quality top management team is not a source of sustained competitive advantage,
even though a particular management team of a particular firm is valuable,
rare and imperfectly imitable.
Second, very different firm resources can also be strategic substitutes. For ex•
ample, managers in one firm may have a very clear vision of the future of their
company because of a charismatic leader in their firm (Zucker, 1977). Managers
in competing firms may also have a very clear vision of the future of their com•
panies, but this common vision may reflect these firms' systematic, company-wide
strategic planning process (Pearce, Freeman, & Robinson, 1987). From the point
of view of managers having a clear vision of the future of their company, the firm
resource of a charismatic leader and the firm resource of a formal planning
system may be strategically equivalent, and thus substitutes for one another. If
large num• bers of competing firms have a formal planning system that generates
this com-
JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT, VOL. 17, NO. 1, 1991
mon vision (or if such a formal planning is highly imitable), then firms with such
a vision derived from a charismatic leader will not have a sustained competitive
advantage, even though the firm resource of a charismatic leader is probably rare
and imperfectly imitable.
Of course, the strategic substitutability of firm resources is always a matter of
degree. It is the case, however, that substitute firm resources need not have exactly
the same implications for an organization in order for those resources to be equiv•
alent from the point of view of the strategies that firms can conceive of and imple•
ment. If enough firms have these valuable substitute resources (i.e., they are not
rare), or if enough firms can acquire them (i.e., they are imitable), then none of
these firms (including firms whose resources are being substituted for) can expect
to obtain a sustained competitive advantage.
Figure Two. The Relationship Between Resource Heterogeneity and Immobility, Value, Rareness, Imperfect Im•
itability, and Substitutability, and Sustained Competitive Advantage.
ineffective in others, that informal processes are effective where formal processes
are not and are ineffective when formal processes are effective (Fredrickson,
1984; Fredrickson & Mitchell, 1 Q84). If these processes are not substitutes for
one
another, and if the conditions of rareness and imperfect imitability hold, informal
strategy-making processes may be a source of sustained competitive advantage.
The question of the subtitutability of informal strategy making in firms needs to
be resolved empirically before the impact of these firm resources on sustained
competitive advantage can be fully understood.
Discussion
The brief analyses of strategic planning, information processing, and a firm's
reputation among customers and suppliers and sustained competitive advantage
are suggestive of the kinds of analyses that are possible with the framework pre•
sented in Figure Two. This framework suggests the kinds of empirical questions
that need to be addressed in order to understand whether or not a particular firm
resource is a source of sustained competitive advantage: is that resource valuable,
is it rare, is it imperfectly imitable, and are there substitutes for that resource? This
resource-based model of sustained competitive advantage also has a variety of im•
plications for the relationship between strategic management theory and other
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