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South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences

On-line version ISSN 2222-3436
Print version ISSN 1015-8812

S. Afr. j. econ. manag. sci. vol.15 n.2 Pretoria Jan. 2012

 

06

ARTICLES

 

The strategic implications of black empowerment policy in South Africa: a case study of boundary choice and client preferences in a small services firm

 

 

Willem H. Boshoff1

Senior Lecturer, Department of Economics, Stellenbosch University, Private Bag X1, Matieland, South Africa, 7602. E-mail: wimpie2@sun.ac.za Tel: +27 21 808 2387

 

 


ABSTRACT

This paper studies the relationship between a firm’s boundary choices within its value chain and the BEE pressures it faces from its clients. The paper shows that BEE policy alters the value chain preferences of a firm’s clients. These changes in client preferences motivate the firm to altering its boundaries. More important, boundary changes due to BEE are implemented in a way that ensures that the firm retains crucial architectural knowledge, which preserves its competitive advantage. Firms therefore do not respond passively to BEE-induced changes in client preferences, but aim to meet BEE aims within their broader strategic environment.

Key words: boundaries, vertical integration, black empowerment, demand-side


 

 

Management research recognizes the role of government policy in shaping strategic business decisions in various developing and developed countries (Hall and Soskice, 2001). Studying the impact of government policy on firm strategy is particularly important in the South African context: since 1994, firms in this country have had to deal with extensive institutional change aimed at redressing historic imbalances created under the Apartheid regime (Chabane, Goldstein and Roberts, 2006). Specifically, the post-Apartheid government has introduced a far-reaching black economic empowerment (BEE) policy aimed at increasing black participation in the economy (Black, 2002). The academic literature has studied the impact of BEE policy on mergers and acquisitions as well as investment returns (Jackson, Alessandri and Black, 2005; Strydom, Christison and Matias, 2009; Wolmarans and Sartorius, 2009). In contrast, research on the impact of BEE on strategic decisions and value chain structures is still scarce. Yet such research is of practical importance to managers, who seek to balance BEE requirements with a range of other strategic goals within their existing value chain structures. Research on the impact of BEE on firm strategy may also offer insights to policymakers, given social pressures to focus on 'broad-based' BEE policy that aim to raise black participation in value chains in addition to black ownership or employment (Visser, 2005; Hayes, 2006; Bolton, 2008).

This paper contributes to the literature on the strategic implications of BEE by studying the relationship between a firm's boundary choices within its value chain and the BEE pressures it faces from its clients. To this end, the paper has three research objectives. Firstly, to show that BEE policy alters the value chain preferences of a firm's clients. Secondly, to show that such changes in client preferences lead the firm to alter its boundaries, i.e. to adjust the extent of its activities within the value chain. Thirdly, and most important, to show that boundary changes due to BEE may be implemented in such a way as to ensure that the firm retains crucial architectural knowledge that preserves its competitive advantage. In sum, the paper's overall aim is to show that firms do not respond passively to BEE-induced changes in client preferences, but aim to shape their strategic environment while meeting BEE aims.

The paper involves an in-depth case study of a small South African services firm. As discussed below, single-case studies are useful when developing theory for under-researched areas. The case study is based on a setting where BEE policy is a dominant feature in the strategic landscape due to the large proportion of public sector clients in the meter-reading industry. Despite this idiosyncratic setting, the case provides a starting point for research on the mechanisms through which BEE has changed value chain structures in South Africa. The case suggests that BEE affects the preferences of clients, which confirms the portrayal of BEE policy as demand-based (Jackson et al., 2005) and further shows that the implementation of BEE policy differs significantly among clients. The demand-altering effect and heterogeneous nature of BEE policy are important issues for the manager, who must understand the likely effects of BEE policy on the firm and formulate strategic responses that balance heterogeneous client preferences with firm competences and profit considerations. The case then explores flexible boundaries as one strategic response to this environment.

The paper commences with a short literature review and description of the research questions and then proceeds to the methodology and data sections. These are followed by the case analysis and results, and then the final conclusions.

 

1. LITERATURE REVIEW AND RESEARCH QUESTIONS

Since 1994, the post-Apartheid government in South Africa has embarked upon an ambitious social transformation programme in an attempt to address inequalities generated under the Apartheid system. An important component of this transformation effort has been the roll-out of an extensive black economic empowerment (BEE) policy. This policy has three focus areas, all aimed at assisting black South Africans in entering and succeeding in the mainstream economy: firstly, 'direct' empowerment (referring to the increase in ownership and management by black persons); secondly, 'human resource development' (referring to affirmative action and skills development among black employees); and, thirdly, 'indirect' empowerment (referring to black business development and preferential procurement) (Republic of South Africa, 2006).

An important feature of BEE, therefore, is that black ownership and management is not considered sufficient (or even necessary) to earn high BEE scores: suppliers also earn BEE points based on their own procurement and skills development decisions (Bolton, 2008). The aim is to alter demand along value chains in a cascading fashion, ensuring that the policy consequences transform the larger economy. It is important, from a strategic perspective, exactly what value chain transformation entails. Structural change in value chains suggest changes in the boundaries of individual firms and this leads to Research Question 1 of this paper: If BEE is aimed at altering demand along value chains, does it lead to changes in the boundary decisions of firms?

BEE policy alters demand via an incentive-based policy based on a scorecard system. Under the scorecard system, firms that engage in meaningful BEE practices earn BEE scores that enhance their ability to win government contracts (Department of Trade and Industry, 2007). The private sector has adopted similar practices in evaluating contracts (Republic of South Africa, 2006). The scorecard system, however, evolved slowly over time and the lack of uniform guidelines resulted in heterogeneous practices across sectors -see, for example, Fauconnier and Mathur-Helm (2008) for a mining sector perspective and Horn (2007) for an automotive industry perspective. Consequently, policymakers introduced a balanced scorecard awarding specific points for specific aspects of a supplier's empowerment profile. Table 1 presents the balanced scorecard. As mentioned above, the scorecard seeks to promote direct empowerment (e.g. awarding points to firms that are owned or managed by black South Africans), human resource development (e.g. awarding points to firms that promote the development of skills under black workers) and indirect empowerment (e.g. awarding points to firms that source from black subcontractors).

 

 

For illustration purposes, consider the 20% awarded to indirect empowerment efforts in the form of 'preferential procurement' . An allocation of 20% implies that, where a firm buys 100% of its inputs from 'preferential' (i.e. black) suppliers, it will be awarded 20 points. Conversely, sourcing all inputs from suppliers with 100% white ownership will attract 0 points.

Despite the guidelines provided by the balanced BEE scorecard, actual BEE requirements vary significantly. This variety is at least partly a path-dependent result of pre-scorecard sector-specific initiatives to accelerate transformation, which have had to be incorporated into formal scorecards (Arya, Bassi and Phiyega, 2008). More important, however, is that the variety is a function of implementation: certain features of BEE, such as community development, may be considered more important in certain contexts, depending inter alia on local political conditions (see the summary of the institutional features of BEE policy by Arya and Bassi (2009)). Implemented weights may therefore differ from the official weights. If demand leads to boundary change, as suggested by Research Question 1, the heterogeneity in BEE preferences leads to Research Question 2: If heterogeneity in BEE policy leads to heterogeneity in client preferences faced by a particular firm, does it lead the firm to adopt heterogeneous boundary structures?

Even though firms will respond to BEE-based preferences of clients, firms also act strategically. In particular, firms may engage in unproductive strategies to acquire BEE status. The South African government and industry organizations therefore increasingly emphasise the need to eliminate so-called 'fronting' (Martin and Root, 2010), which implies a recognition on the part of policymakers that firms accommodate BEE policy as part of a complex strategic environment. This suggests Research Question 3: If firms are not merely passive responders to policy, how do they use changes in boundary structure to maintain their competitive advantage in light of BEE requirements?

The three research 'questions' developed above are better described as research 'themes', as the paper follows a case study approach to develop new theoretical propositions rather than to test particular hypotheses. The following section explains the rationale for employing case study research.

 

2. RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

The paper employs case study as research method to explain the three research questions. The case study is an appropriate research method for developing theory, as it facilitates an exploratory and explanatory research mode essential to theory-building: case study research supports exploratory analysis by allowing multiple forms of evidence, while it is also better suited to explaining "why" and "how" questions than quantitative analysis (Yin, 2003).

Single-case studies are often employed when the case at hand offers a 'critical' test of a particular theory or when the case is 'extreme', i.e. where a particular phenomenon is rare and every case involving the phenomenon is worth documenting. Another motivation, and the one underlying this paper, is that the case represents a 'revelatory' case. A case is revelatory when it affords the researcher the opportunity to study phenomena not previously investigated, usually due to a lack of data (Yin, 2003: 42). Black empowerment is a common strategic challenge facing many South African firms, but research on its deep strategic implications is limited, as it requires unrestricted access to corporate data sources and, furthermore, continuous engagement with managers and other agents within the firm. A case that affords such access can assist the researcher in uncovering new organizational phenomena related to black empowerment that are difficult to identify using conventional research techniques such as surveys (Eisenhardt and Graebner, 2007).

The usefulness of the single-case study is demonstrated by its position in contemporary management research, especially where the aim is the development of new theory (examples of recent single-case studies in front-ranking strategic management journals include Jacobides (2005), Jacobides and Billinger (2006) and Helfat and Eisenhardt (2004)). Yet some critics have argued that the generalization and validation of research findings from a single-case study are challenging. The following paragraphs respond to these criticisms.

Critics of case study research often question the external validity of case study findings, arguing that case study findings do not readily generalize to a larger population of firms. This critique relies on an implicit comparison of the case study method with survey research. However, surveys are aimed at 'statistical generalization', i.e. at selecting a representative sample of firms and inferring from this sample some specific features of the population. Case studies, on the other hand, are aimed at 'analytical generalization' (Yin, 2003). Like a single experiment, a single-case study is aimed at building or generalizing a theory from empirical data (Eisenhardt, 1989). In an overview of the epistemology of single-case studies, Buchanan quotes Mitchell (1983) to explain the aims of a single-case study (Buchanan, 1999: S75):

"In case studies statistical inference is not invoked at all. Instead, the inferential process turns exclusively on the theoretically necessary linkages among the features in the case study. The validity of the extrapolation depends not on the typicality or representativeness of the case but upon the cogency of the theoretical reasoning"

A research approach focusing on the development rather than the generality of a theory is particularly important in under-researched areas (such as the strategic implications of BEE). Edmondson and McManus (2007) advocate the use of case studies (including single-case studies) to develop 'suggestive' theory. In fact, even if a single-case study merely aims to identify a set of 'stylized facts', it is already an important contribution towards understanding under-researched phenomena (Flyvbjerg, 2006).

Some critics may insist that generalisation is required for scientific research. But generalisation is not essential to scientific research and the skill to generalise is but one of many practical skills that scientists must possess in order to carry out scientific research (Kuhn, 1970). Scientific research requires, first and foremost, an openness to scrutiny and critical feedback as established via the peer-review process (Popper, 1963). On this basis, the rich account in a case study arguably allows for a much more thorough challenge to assumptions and biased views than many quantitative techniques. Furthermore, single-case studies are no less scientific than multiple-case studies. Flyvbjerg (2006: 235) notes that multiple-case studies do not necessarily outperform single-case studies, as "even single-case studies 'are multiple in most research efforts because ideas and evidence may be linked in many different ways' ". In fact, Runde and De Rond (2010) show that causal explanations derived from single-case studies can be assessed on objective standards.

The single-case study is therefore an appropriate scientific method for the purposes of studying the strategic implications of BEE policy. The following section explains the various data sources employed for the case study.

 

3. DATA

The firm under investigation is MRS2, a small South African firm providing meter-reading services to municipalities and private sector clients. Meter-reading refers to the periodic collection (reading) of water and electricity consumption data. The consumption data is registered on metering devices located at homes, industries and businesses and meter-readers visit each site in person to collect the consumption data. In developed countries meter-reading no longer involves visits in person and data is transmitted electronically, but this is not yet implemented extensively in South Africa (Clark, 2000). South African municipalities and private property managers therefore outsource meter-reading to private contractors.

For the purposes of this paper the MRS case is particularly useful in demonstrating the effect of BEE on the demand side of the market, as MRS and the meter-reading industry do not experience significant supply-side related changes over the same period (Siggelkow, 2007).

The author was actively involved with MRS as a part-time consultant since 1999. This involvement provided the author with the spatial and temporal understanding necessary to study structural change at MRS. The research was conducted over December 2007 to June 2009, as part of a larger research project. The analysis relies on multiple sources of evidence, including documentary evidence, interviews and direct observation. Interviews took the form of extensive semi-structured discussions with the owner and IT manager of MRS and with MRS's joint venture partners.

Interview evidence was complemented with documentary evidence. As South African municipalities procure services via tender bid processes (Bolton, 2010), tender bid documents offer significant insights into the preferences of MRS clients. In addition, other project-related documents and general corporate documents were also available for analysis. Table 2 summarises the various pieces of documentary evidence, showing which pieces of documentary evidence were important in exploring which research questions. The table also distinguishes between evidence used to build theories surrounding research question 1 and 2, and evidence used to refute rival theories that could undermine the inferred theories.

Direct observation served as a reliability test for interview and documentary evidence, but where direct observation did provide specific operational evidence, its interpretation was discussed with MRS.

Given this background, the following section proceeds to develop the three research themes highlighted earlier. Firstly, is there a link between BEE policy and the boundary decisions of firms? Secondly, if so, how do firms accommodate variety in BEE requirements of various clients in their boundary decisions? Thirdly, how do firms use BEE-induced changes in their boundary structures to maintain competitive advantage?

 

4. ANALYSIS

To develop the three research themes, the first subsection provides an overview of the evolution of firm boundaries at MRS. Subsequent subsections then investigate the links between these boundary changes and BEE policy.

4.1 Overview of MRS boundaries

The meter-reading process can be divided into three consecutive steps: (1) planning of monthly meter-reading projects according to dates set by clients; (2) collection of meter-readings; and (3) processing of meter-readings by uploading the data onto a central database, identifying discrepancies (and re-reading if required), and transmitting processed data to clients. Each of these steps involves a set of highly interdependent activities with a distinct knowledge base: planning requires the ability to manage human resources and adjust work schedules, collection requires geographic knowledge of the areas in which meter-readings are collected as well as numerical skills, and processing requires computer skills and a familiarity with meter-reading processing procedures. The meter-reading value chain can therefore be described as modular (Grant, 2006), as shown in Figure 1:

 

 

This modular structure has enabled MRS to occupy a variety of positions along the value chain, that is, to choose a variety of boundaries along the value chain. To investigate this variety, the paper studies five clients with whom MRS has been involved from 1997 to 2007. These five clients represent 90% of MRS revenue over this period. Table 3 presents a summary of information for the five clients.

 

 

Information from invoices, supplemented by discussions with the owner, shed light on the vertical structure of MRS over this period. The data shows that MRS offered a vertically- integrated service to client 1. According to discussions with the owner, MRS offered such an integrated service since its foundation in 1989. However, for clients 2 to 5, all acquired after 1999, MRS has also rendered services limited to specific modules. Figure 2 summarizes the boundary configurations along the metering value chain suggested by the invoice data. Highlighted cells indicate activity by MRS, whereas blank cells indicate outsourced activity.

 

 

Even though three types of boundary configurations are identified in Figure 2, these are not pre-defined. As will be shown in the empirical analysis, MRS created new configurations depending on the requirements of particular clients. Furthermore, it is important to note that the above-mentioned configurations do not follow one another in chronological order, but that several boundary configurations were operative simultaneously, as shown in Figure 3.

 

 

Figure 3 shows that meter-reading projects have life times varying from one to ten years and illustrates the overlap in project life times. This confirms that MRS employs flexible boundaries to meet heterogeneous requirements, rather than a periodic adjustment of its overall boundaries. The empirical analyses following later in the thesis provides additional support that the boundaries are set in accordance with the requirements of particular projects.

MRS has evolved from a vertically integrated service provider in the mid-nineties to a solution provider offering client-specific services constructed using flexible boundaries along the value chain. The aim of this paper is to study the link between these boundary changes and BEE policy. To this end, the following subsections consider the three research questions highlighted earlier.

4.2 Research question 1 and 2: linking firm boundaries and demand-side preferences

A study of the link between demand-side preferences and boundary changes requires explicit evidence on demand-side preferences, which may be difficult to measure for most firms. However, the municipal clients of MRS all specify their value chain requirements and preferences in tender bid documents. Table 4 summarises these preferences for the five major clients of MRS, who together account for approximately 90% of revenue over the study period. Value chain preferences are measured in two ways: first, via the bid evidence mentioned above, and, second, via semi-structured interviews. The evidence from the two sources is summarised in the third column, which is titled "value chain preference". The column distinguishes between clients with no strong value chain preferences and those with particular preferences. For clients in the latter group, a short description of the specific value chain requirements is provided.

Table 4 shows that the five clients have heterogeneous value chain preferences. One client prefers meter-reading firms to use locally procured labour from the areas in which the firms are collecting meter-readings. Two other clients expect more intensive collaboration efforts between meter-reading firms and favoured local suppliers, with the aim of improving the business skills of local suppliers. The remaining two clients have no strong preferences and are willing to accept the structure proposed by the bidding firm.

This paper is concerned with understanding whether this heterogeneous demand environment influences the boundary decisions of MRS. In particular, Research Question 1 focuses on whether BEE-based value chain views influence MRS boundary choice and, if so, Research Question 2 focuses on whether heterogeneity in value chain preferences (as shown in Table 4) is correlated with heterogeneity in MRS boundary decisions described earlier.

Table 5 studies the role of client preferences in the boundary decisions of MRS. The table relies on two sources of evidence to assess how boundary decisions respond to clients: documentary evidence and discussions with management. The findings are summarized in the final column by, firstly, classifying boundary responses at MRS into "none" and "adjust boundaries" and, secondly, mentioning to which modules MRS chooses to restrict its boundaries.

Table 5 shows that boundary decisions at MRS are highly correlated with the value chain preferences of its clients: Client 2 values community procurement and MRS responds to this preference by outsourcing the collection module. The value chain preferences of Clients 3 and 4 extend beyond community procurement and include both procurement and promotion of local business and MRS responds by restricting its boundaries to the processing module and outsourcing the collection and planning module. Clients 1 and 5 do not exhibit strong value chain preferences and MRS chooses to perform all activities inhouse. Heterogeneity in value chain preferences is therefore reflected in heterogeneity in firm boundaries. Figure 4 highlights the modules in which MRS is active for each client:

 

 

To guarantee the internal validity of the claim that it was demand-side pressures that led MRS to adopt flexible boundaries, it is necessary to eliminate potential supply-side explanations. One competing explanation could be that technological change has caused MRS boundary change. Hand-held devices, used to electronically capture readings in the field, are slowly replacing traditional paper-based meter-reading in South Africa. However, while the hand-held technology does generate minor reallocation of tasks among modules, the technology does not alter the modular structure of the value chain or favour vertical disintegration3. Apart from technology, the literature suggests a range of conventional supply-side explanations for flexible boundaries, including transaction cost economics and neoclassical economic theories (Parmigiani, 2007). However, dimensions of asset specificity or production uncertainty did not change fundamentally since the late nineties, precluding these as serious alternative explanations for the MRS boundary decision (Williamson, 1975; Whinston, 2003).

4.3 Research question 3: strategic benefits of flexible boundaries

Flexible boundaries may not appear to be a long-run strategic solution for MRS, given that clients increasingly prefer the involvement of more firms along the meter-reading value chain. If the majority of clients prefer vertically specialized players, why not permanently change the boundaries of the firm to adopt a fully specialized position in the value chain? This question is the rationale underlying Research Question 3, which focuses on how the firm may implement flexible boundaries in a way that balances the BEE demands of its clients and its competitive advantage.

At first glance, it appears that MRS implements flexible boundaries to serve those few remaining clients still preferring a single vertically-integrated firm. However, the strategic benefits of flexible boundaries extend well beyond an ability to meet heterogeneous client preferences. In particular, the case suggests that flexible boundaries confer so-called architectural knowledge, i.e. knowledge of how the modules along the value chain interrelate and co-function to produce the final product (see Jacobides (2006)).

To understand the salience of architectural knowledge in meter-reading, consider clients 2, 3 and 4, for which MRS restricts its boundaries to the processing module only. This specialized focus enables MRS to meet the value chain preferences of these clients, as it outsources the collection and planning modules to community-based firms. The problem with outsourcing to community-based firms is that they do not hold operational knowledge beyond their own activities and hold little knowledge of how modules co-function to produce the final product - an accurate meter reading delivered to the client on time. In contrast, MRS holds architectural knowledge of all modules and their interrelationships because of the vertically-integrated service it provides to Clients 1 and 5. A vertically integrated solution requires MRS to have knowledge of all modules and their interrelationships. If MRS chooses to restrict its boundaries and not provide a vertically integrated solution to clients 1 and 5, it would not be able to manage the value chain for clients 2, 3 and 4: MRS would gradually lose the capability to understand and manage the interrelationships across the value chain.

MRS uses its architectural knowledge to undertake a managerial role to ensure the accuracy and timeliness of meter-readings. Electronic and printed marketing documents, with ubiquitous references to "management", "administration" and "experience" as well as similar references (to "operations management", among others) in tender bid documents provide evidence on this management role. MRS "management" involves more than the coordination of daily activity in a given meter-reading value chain, important as that may be. It also entails the establishment of the underlying language and organizing concepts used across the meter-reading value chain. At MRS, this language is articulated in the firm's unique proprietary computer software system. The software system assists MRS in establishing a standard language by specifying a vocabulary of organizing concepts ("meter books", "walk sequences") as well as a system of standard codes to be used, for example, by meter-readers when recording problems encountered during meter-reading (e.g. code "11" refers to inaccessible meters, code "12" to defective meters, etc.). Figure 5 illustrates the managerial role of MRS in these different modules and their interfaces:

 

 

Figure 5 shows that, even where it is only responsible for the processing module in the value chain, it still manages the planning and collection modules as well as the interfacing between collection and planning.

During interviews concerning their management role in the value chain, MRS management noted that "the client wants you to involve these guys but they also want readings delivered on time without a lot of problems". Adopting such a management role provides MRS with a competitive advantage relative to the specialized community-based firms, as acknowledged by MRS: "Our IT [the MRS meter-reading software system]and our experience of getting the job done is what sets us apart. You know, meter-reading is not just about reading, it's about planning and sticking to dates. A lot of guys [other meter-reading firms]just don't know how to do this and that's why they fail". MRS therefore adopts flexible boundaries rather than a fully specialized vertical position in order to both deal with heterogeneity in the preferences of its clients and because flexible boundaries enable MRS to continue to manage the entire value chain. In sum, the adoption of flexible boundaries at MRS was not merely a response to survive, but also a strategy to ensure growth going forward.

 

5. Results

As argued in the section on methodology, the case study method is aimed at developing theory in an inductive fashion. This requires distilling three general theoretical propositions from the specific empirical case. The analysis of the MRS case in the preceding section assists in developing three theoretical propositions, corresponding to the three research questions developed earlier. The following paragraphs outline each of these theoretical propositions and, in each case, situates the emerging theoretical proposition within the larger literature, consistent with the case study approach by Eisenhardt (1989).

5.1 Research question 1: BEE policy and boundary choice

The first research question centres on whether BEE policy leads to changes in the boundary decisions of firms. The case confirms that BEE policy is a demand-based intervention, i.e. that BEE policy aims to alter demand along value chains in a cascading fashion. In particular, the case study provides systematic evidence for the following theoretical proposition:

Proposition 1: Changes in demand-side preferences shaped by BEE considerations lead to concomitant changes in boundary structure to match these preferences.

The demand-side interpretation of BEE policy is consistent with a view of BEE as a form of corporate social responsibility (CSR), albeit involuntary (Arya and Bassi, 2009; Arya and Zhang, 2009). CSR is recognized as demand-side driven: for example, in the international food and textile value chains, firms have developed outsourcing practices and governance mechanisms to accommodate smaller players, mostly because of demand-side pressure from activists and socially-conscious buyers (Gereffi, Humphrey and Sturgeon, 2005).

5.2 Research question 2: Heterogeneity in BEE policy and heterogeneity in boundary choice

The second research question centres on whether a firm faced by heterogeneous client preferences regarding BEE will adopt heterogeneous boundary structures. The case shows that BEE is a market-based policy that may be implemented in a variety of corporate forms depending on market context. BEE policy documents emphasize that the BEE balanced scorecard discussed earlier enables agents to tailor their BEE strategy to their individual environments. Andrews (2008: 87-88) explores the possibility of multiple corporate responses to BEE policy and suggests that "BEE will catalyze structural change more effectively when there is decision space for organizations and sectors to ... self discover the appropriate change for their setting". The paper supports the view that different industries may exhibit different BEE patterns: the MRS case is set in the meter-reading industry, where clients strongly emphasize BEE's value chain aspects than the affirmative action employment or ownership aspects. In fact, the paper goes further by showing that within a given sector, heterogeneity in BEE approaches of individual clients manifest in substantial heterogeneity in demand-side preferences. This suggests the following theoretical proposition:

Proposition 2: Heterogeneity in BEE-based value chain preferences of its clients leads the firm to choose heterogeneous boundaries.

It is particularly significant that the paper studies the impact of this heterogeneity on small firms with only a few large clients, given that much of research focuses on the corporate structure of large firms (Chabane et al., 2006). The case suggests that where South African firms face heterogeneous client preferences because of heterogeneous BEE requirements they may adopt flexible structures. The use of flexible structures to deal with BEE is consistent with the recent literature on the strategic use of flexibility under conditions of uncertainty (van Wyk, Dahmer and Custy, 2004; Kogut and Kulatilaka, 2006) and, specifically, with the strategic value chain literature (Nadkarni and Narayanan, 2007).

5.3 Research question 3: Using BEE-induced boundary changes to retain competitive advantage

The third research question asks how a firm implements boundary structures to both meet BEE requirements and maintain competitive advantage. The case shows that firms do not passively respond to BEE policy but explore strategic responses that balance BEE requirements with other organizational goals. MRS did not merely respond to the demand-side pressures, but implemented a particular boundary choice that carried architectural benefits. In particular, MRS employed flexibility in its boundaries that enabled the firm to accommodate joint ventures and the involvement of other firms while maintaining architectural knowledge allowing MRS to manage the overall value chain processes (Santos and Eisenhardt, 2005; Jacobides and Billinger, 2006). The case therefore provides support for the following theoretical proposition:

Proposition 3: Flexible boundaries allow the firm to accommodate BEE preferences of clients while retaining architectural knowledge, which can be used to manage the overall value chain. Flexible boundaries therefore offer a competitive advantage to the firm.

A strategy of this type is consistent with the literature's view of flexible boundaries as both a cooperative and a competitive device: architectural management ensures cooperation across the value chain to improve efficiency, while it is also a distinctive capability distinguishing the firm from competitors.6.

 

Conclusions

The paper seeks to initiate a research programme on the strategic implications and, more specifically, the value chain and boundary implications of BEE policy in South Africa. The MRS case study is therefore a first attempt at analyzing the mechanisms through which BEE policy is linked to strategic outcomes. The case study develops three theoretical propositions regarding BEE policy as a strategic variable. Firstly, BEE policy can act as a demand-side driver of boundary change. Secondly, heterogeneity in the BEE preference of clients leads to heterogeneity in a firm's boundary structures. Thirdly, a firm implements BEE-driven boundary change in such a way that its competitive advantage is preserved.

The paper relies on a single-case study, given the 'revelatory' nature of the case. The aim is therefore analytical rather than statistical generalization. However, the next step is to investigate the extent to which this emergent theory generalises to a larger population of firms. Future research should therefore be extended to a variety of industries.

Also, the case study and emergent theories suggests a number of areas that require further investigations. Firstly, it is necessary to study under which conditions ownership and employment issues, rather than value chain issues, dominate the BEE requirements of clients. Secondly, it is crucially important to study the conditions under which firms will respond to BEE requirements: do firms (both local and international) avoid industries with particular BEE emphases and what is the role of competitive pressure? Thirdly, it is necessary to understand how smaller firms differ from larger firms in their responses to BEE policy. Finally, and perhaps most important to practitioners, it is important to study how firms develop value chain structures that both enhance their own competitive advantage and ensure sustainable long-run BEE partners in their value chains. It is not helpful to argue that firms should "co-operate" on the basis of "the greater good". Organizations, especially profit-seeking firms, have specific long-run goals and act strategically in their response to government policy. Understanding the strategic nature of corporate responses to BEE is crucial and this paper is an important step towards better understanding in this regard.

 

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1 This paper is a summary of earlier research conducted under supervision of Prof. Mari Sako of the Saïd Business School, Oxford University. I wish to thank Prof. Servaas van den Berg and seminar participants at Stellenbosch University as well as the anonymous referees for their comments.
2 Name changed for confidentiality reasons.
3 Hand-held technology results in a re-allocation of tasks between the collection and processing modules, by allowing the upload of data and an important part of the processing activity to take place during the collection, rather than the processing, phase.

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