Entity Dossier
Company

McDonald’s

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Operating PrinciplePower as Potential, Not GuaranteeOperating PrincipleCrafted Not Designed — Strategy Through ExperimentationMental ModelProcess Power: Complexity Makes Imitation Take DecadesMental ModelSurplus Leader Margin: Price to Zero-Profit the FollowerStrategic ManeuverConvert Variable Costs to Fixed Costs at ScaleStrategic PatternCounter-Positioning Is Partial — Stack Another PowerMental ModelSwitching Costs Only Pay on the Second SaleMental ModelOnly Seven Moats Exist — Name Yours or You Have NoneMental ModelBenefit Without Barrier Is Just a Head StartStructural VulnerabilityFive Stages of Counter-Positioned Incumbent GriefMental ModelThe Incumbent's Strength IS Your BarrierCompetitive AdvantageAgency and Cognitive Bias Amplify the BarrierMental ModelNetwork Tipping Points Make Late Entry UnthinkableStrategic PatternStep-Function Ascent, Not Linear GrowthStrategic ManeuverCounter-Position by Making the Incumbent's Best Move SuicidalMental ModelEvery Power Starts with Invention, Not AnalysisMental ModelStatics Tell You the Destination; Dynamics Tell You the RouteMental ModelIndustry Economics × Competitive Position = Power IntensityRisk DoctrineCollateral Damage Decays Over TimeDecision FrameworkStrategically Separate Businesses Need Separate StrategiesDecision FrameworkCornered Resource Must Be Sufficient AloneCornerstone MoveEight Days to 850 Seats at Expo 67Cornerstone MoveFree Delivery When Everyone Charged for TaxisStrategic PatternRide the Living Room RevolutionCompetitive AdvantageQuiet Revolution TailwindOperating PrincipleTrain From Dishwasher to RotisseurSignature MoveWorkers Smuggled In Chicken OvensIdentity & CultureAthlete's Composure Under Commercial FireSignature MoveA Busy Kitchen Doesn't Move — Dishes DoSignature MovePermanent Renovation as Operating StateCompetitive AdvantageMother-of-the-Family as Brand AnchorSignature MoveBosses on the Spit, Never in the OfficeCornerstone MoveSauce in a Packet: Recipe as Retail ProductSignature MoveEmployee Ideas Built Into the EquipmentCornerstone MoveTV Ads for a 78-Seat Chicken ShopCapital StrategyLandlord as Silent BankerOperating PrincipleSelf-Manufactured Belief Compounds Over TimeImplementation TacticOlympian Expectations Escalate or DieCompetitive AdvantageThe Proprietary Segment of OneImplementation TacticThe Reality Distortion Field as Leadership ToolStrategic ManeuverRide the Pool Vehicle, Then Build Your OwnMental ModelPositioning Beats Performance Every TimeStrategic ManeuverNarrow the Niche Until You're the Only OneMental ModelAnti-Fragile Spirit: Setbacks as Discovery MechanismMental ModelOne Breakthrough Achievement, Not a PortfolioStrategic ManeuverThe Personal Vehicle as Force MultiplierMental ModelBe Profitably Different, Not Just DifferentStrategic ManeuverGet Transformed on Someone Else's DimeStrategic PatternBain's Exclusivity-Intimacy FlywheelDecision FrameworkGap in the Market Plus Market in the GapRelationship LeverageMentors by Adoption, Not PermissionStrategic ManeuverDesire Deeply, Wait, PounceIdentity & CultureSerious Intent as Daily ObsessionOperating PrinciplePersonality Reinvention Through DisplacementMental ModelIntuition as Articulated Hidden KnowledgeCapital StrategyExpected Value Betting at Long OddsSignature MoveBetter Not Different Innovation DisciplineDecision FrameworkMinding the Store Acquisition RuleStrategic PatternFashion Beyond Utility Value CreationStrategic PatternLuxury Accessibility Market ExpansionOperating PrincipleProduct Fanaticism as Performance DriverSignature MoveService Revolution in Snooty IndustriesCornerstone MoveSerial Vision Space Planning RevolutionCornerstone MoveThreshold Resistance Elimination StrategyStrategic PatternConsistent Mediocrity as Brand PromiseSignature MovePersonal Space Reconnaissance ToursSignature Move100 Percent Locations Through Traffic EngineeringOperating PrincipleStock Price Monitoring DisciplineCapital StrategyFee Structure as Values ExpressionSignature MoveTwo-Year Minimum Hold RuleRisk DoctrineManagement Personal Stress AssessmentSignature MoveInformation Sequencing DisciplineDecision FrameworkBridge as Investment TrainingIdentity & CultureInner Scorecard Over Outer RecognitionDecision FrameworkBehavioral Circuit BreakersSignature MoveNetwork Building Through Giving FirstSignature MoveHero Modeling as Learning MethodSignature MoveEnvironmental Design Over WillpowerOperating PrincipleGeographic Arbitrage for Mental ClarityStrategic PatternEcosystem Win-Win Analysis

Primary Evidence

"Power must be considered relative to each competitor, actual and implicit. With Counter-Positioning, this is particulary important, because this type of Power only applies relative to the incumbent and says nothing regarding Power relative to other firms utilizing the new business model. So it remains only a partial strategy. To assure value creation, it must be complemented by a route to Power respective to other like competitors. For example, In-N-Out has Counter-Positioning Power over McDonald’s, but this helps them not at all in facing like competitors such as Five Guys Burgers and Fries."

Source:7 Powers

"And as if that were not enough, competition is intensifying. New players in fast food are making an appearance in the market. Nineteen seventy-two marks the strong arrival of the “empire” McDonald’s in Quebec. Six years later, about fifty establishments will be set up there. In 1973, it was ten Mikes Submarines restaurants that made their home in the beautiful province. In the United States, where spending on food away from home exploded between 1960 and 1972, increasing by 103%, the growth of fast food is showing signs of slowing down. Canada and Quebec thus appear as a Klondike for American chains in search of new markets: Pizza Hut, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and Burger King are also preparing to cross the border. Although indirect, this imminent competition threatens to shake the foundations—and the plates!—of St-Hubert Bar-B-Q. It’s fair play, but a counterattack is becoming urgent."

Source:St Hubert: 50 Years of Great Success

"the problem with pragmatism is that it rapidly becomes a habit, and short-term gratification – expressed in profits, cash and the praise which goes with them – becomes a drug that drives out long-term customer-related aspirations. It takes a rare visionary – people such as Henry Ford, Ray Kroc of McDonald’s, Ingvar Kamprad of IKEA, and Southwest Airlines’ Herb Kelleher – to insist on rock-bottom prices; or, as with Steve Jobs, fantastic products and a simple, intuitive customer experience. It takes an exceptional person to take on the risk of this approach – the risk of going bust."

Source:Unreasonable Success and How to Achieve It

"America’s first franchise motel company, Holiday Inn, was founded in the early 1950s by Memphis home builder Kemmons Wil¬ son with much the same promise. You never wrote home about the accommodations, but every Holiday Inn met certain standards of cleanliness and service, regardless of its location. Pull in with your weary family after a day of dusty driving, and you knew just what to expect. I call this type of consumer promise consistent mediocrity. Don’t un¬ derestimate its power, especially at lower price points. Howard John¬ son restaurants and Holiday Inn motels had the same underlying appeal that food giants such as McDonald’s, Burger King, and Wendy’s have. Are you passionately drawn to the sandwich you order at Wendy’s, or are you more interested in its competitive price, con¬ sistency, and convenience? McDonald’s rarely comes out on top in newspaper surveys of the best burgers in town. America’s quick-serve burger franchises, now doing successful business around the world, are really in the frozen food distribution business. They specialize in serving customers a protein fix in environments of little excitement or delight. But a Quarter Pounder with cheese tastes the same in Bal¬ timore or Beijing. And McDonald’s bathrooms are clean all over the planet—no small feat!"

Source:Threshold Resistance

"Jonathan Brandt when I noticed that Don Keough was standing nearby. Keough is a renowned business leader who has served on the boards of companies like Berkshire, Coca-Cola, and McDonald’s."

Source:The Education of a Value Investor

Appears In Volumes