Identifying competitors is an essential first step in creating a competitive advantage to generate superior business performance. Diverse methods for competitor identification have been introduced in the literature, but financial… Click to show full abstract
Identifying competitors is an essential first step in creating a competitive advantage to generate superior business performance. Diverse methods for competitor identification have been introduced in the literature, but financial transactions are overlooked in these models even though such transactions among firms, as the basic economic unit of interfirm business activities, contain critical information. This article proposes a novel method for the identification of firm-level competitors using a network constructed from financial transactions among firms. To identify competitors by the intensity of interfirm competition, the proposed method is based on two dimensions of pairs of firms, resource similarity and market commonality, which are represented in a data-driven approach using a transaction network. We propose network-theoretic similarity measures to quantify the resource similarity and market commonality between firms by considering both direct and indirect transactions in a transaction network. Then, based on the two dimensions, three types of competitors are identified with respect to a focal firm: direct, potential, and indirect competitors. The proposed method is applied to toy network data and a real-world case that includes the financial transactions of firms in Korea in 2014.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.