vertical combination
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: 1. The absorption into a single firm of several firms involved in all aspects of a product's manufacture from raw materials to distribution. This is a business strategy where a company gains control over multiple stages of its production or supply chain, typically from sourcing raw materials to delivering the final product to the consumer.
Usage
This term is used in business, economics, and corporate strategy contexts to describe a specific type of corporate consolidation or growth strategy. - It is often discussed in contrast to horizontal combination (merging firms at the same stage of production). - It can be used to analyze a company's structure, competitive advantages, and market control.
Examples
- The oil company achieved a vertical combination by acquiring drilling operations, refineries, and gasoline stations.
- Economists studied the effects of the vertical combination within the steel industry on market prices.
- Their strategy of vertical combination gave them complete control over their supply chain, from the farm to the retail store.
Advanced Usage
- Backward Vertical Combination: When a company acquires or merges with a firm that supplies its raw materials or components (e.g., a car manufacturer buying a tire company).
- Forward Vertical Combination: When a company acquires or merges with a firm that is closer to the end consumer, such as a distributor or retailer (e.g., a clothing manufacturer buying a chain of retail stores).
Variants and Related Words
- Vertical Integration (n): This is a more common and general synonym for vertical combination. It describes the same process of controlling multiple stages of production.
- Vertically Integrated (adj): Describing a company that operates using a vertical combination/integration strategy.
- Example: They are a vertically integrated corporation.
Synonyms
- Vertical Integration
- Vertical Merger
- Supply Chain Integration
Antonyms
- Horizontal Combination / Horizontal Integration: The merging of companies that are at the same stage of production in the same or similar industries.
- Disintegration: The process of a company splitting off or selling parts of its operations.
Related Concepts
- Monopoly Power: A vertical combination can sometimes be scrutinized for potentially reducing competition and leading to monopoly power.
- Supply Chain: The network of all the individuals, organizations, resources, activities, and technology involved in creating and selling a product, which a vertical combination seeks to control internally.
- Conglomerate: A large corporation formed by merging diverse companies, which is different from a vertical combination as it involves unrelated businesses.
Noun
- absorption into a single firm of several firms involved in all aspects of a product's manufacture from raw materials to distribution