Analyze Resource-Based View for an MBA-style case study.
Case-style analysis
For a case-style analysis of Resource-Based View, start with the definition and move through framework, evidence, evaluation, and recommendation.
Definition
The resource-based view holds that sustained competitive advantage stems from the firm's bundle of resources and capabilities, not from industry positioning alone. Resources that are valuable, rare, inimitable, and supported by organization (the VRIO test) generate persistent advantage.
Framework to apply
Resources include tangible assets (plants, capital, location), intangible assets (brand, intellectual property, data), and capabilities (the firm's ability to coordinate activities — innovation processes, customer-relationship know-how, manufacturing excellence). The strongest competitive positions rest on resource bundles whose value depends on combinations rivals cannot replicate, often built through path-dependent learning over years.
Illustrative case
A pharmaceutical firm's portfolio of patents is valuable and rare but eventually expires, so it must be paired with a capability to discover and develop the next generation. The discovery capability — the talent, processes, and data accumulated over decades — is harder for rivals to replicate than the patents themselves.
Risks and assumptions
Treating any unique resource as advantage ignores whether the resource is actually valuable to customers. Strategy built on resources that are not VRIO-passing creates only temporary advantage.
Recommendation logic
Run the VRIO test on each major resource. Resources that fail any one of the four criteria do not generate advantage; they generate competitive parity at best.
Source basis: Open Textbook Library: Communication for Business Success