20620 - ECONOMICS OF BUSINESS STRATEGY - MODULE II (TRANSACTIONS AND INCENTIVES)
Department of Management and Technology
CLAUDIO PANICO
Prerequisites
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
The course consists of traditional lectures, exercise sessions, experiments, data analysis sessions, and case study discussions, allowing students to understand the managerial implications of the theory and to develop the necessary analytical skills to assess the advantages and challenges of organizing the internal and external sources of innovation. The topics of the course are ideally divided into two parts. The first part looks at the innovation process from a bargaining, contracting, and incentive perspective, using the perspective of transaction costs economics and incomplete contracts to analyze interfirm relationships (e.g., collaborations, strategic alliances, open innovation). The second part is devoted to analyze intrafirm relationships and the strategic management of human capital.
Part I – Interfirm relationships:
- Intro to bargaining.
- Incomplete contracts.
- Managing (open) innovation.
- Co-opetition in strategic alliances.
Part II – Intrafirm relationships:
- Intro to theory of incentives.
- Managing under asymmetry of information.
- Delegation of autonomy and incentives.
- Strategic management of human capital.
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Assess the advantages and challenges faced by entrepreneurial and established firms when choosing innovation-based strategies, understanding the managerial implications of organizing internal and external sources of innovation.
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Conceptualize the main economic frictions of an innovation process.
- Think about strategizing efforts for interorganizational transactions.
- Think about the provision of incentives in human-capital intensive firms.
- Formulate a value creation and capture proposition when organizing for innovation.
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Exercises (exercises, database, software etc.)
- Case studies /Incidents (traditional, online)
- Individual assignments
- Group assignments
- Interactive class activities (role playing, business game, simulation, online forum, instant polls)
DETAILS
The course consists of traditional lectures, exercise sessions, in-class (individual) experiments, data analysis sessions and case study discussions (in groups), allowing students to understand the managerial implications of the theory and to develop the necessary analytical skills to assess the advantages and challenges of organizing the internal and external sources of innovation.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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ATTENDING STUDENTS
Attending students have the choice to take either two partial written exams or a single general written exam. Attending students are required to participate in case study and data analysis sessions. These sessions require the assessment and discussion of specific business cases and datasets with the objective of applying the theoretical frameworks developed in class to real settings. The effective development of these sessions requires the following:
- An individual assessment of the case/dataset prior to the case session.
- A group analysis and discussion of the case/dataset during the case session.
Attending students who effectively participate in these sessions earn 0-2 points towards the final grade of the course.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
The non-attending students can take the general written exam at the end of the course. The exam can consist of true/false questions, multiple choice, exercises, and open-ended questions related to the topics taught in the course and to the papers in the reading list.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING STUDENTS
A suggested (non mandatory) list of readings for each one of the topics covered in class is provided. The readings consist of a mixture of book chapters, journal articles, and business cases. The readings are posted in Bboard (or in the course reserve of the Bocconi Library). Slides of the lectures, problem sets, and their solutions are also posted.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
A list of readings is made availabe on Bboard together with slides of the lectures, problem sets, and their solutions.