top of page

Welcome to the VBNN Digital Library

Unlock a vast knowledge ecosystem featuring +30,000 books, academic papers, illustrations, and expert insights—continuously updated to support your research and professional growth.

Maximize Your Access

Log in using your institutional email to instantly view and download tailored resources directly aligned with your specific program and curriculum.

Ready to begin? Sign in above to explore your personalized dashboard.

Search...

Latest Research Papers

Results found for empty search

  • Simplicity as a Strategy: A Narrative Review of the KISS Principle (Keep It Simple, Stupid) and Its Applications for Students

    The #KISS principle, short for "Keep It Simple, Stupid," is a well known design and problem solving guideline that argues most systems, messages, and solutions work best when they are kept as #simple as reasonably possible. Although the phrase began in mid twentieth century engineering, its logic reaches far beyond aircraft design and now appears in software, communication, education, and everyday study habits. This narrative review explains the KISS principle in plain language for students and connects it to established academic ideas that give it weight: cognitive load theory, the principle of parsimony (often called Occam's razor), minimalism in design, and the plain language movement in science communication. The article traces the origin of the principle, defines what "simple" actually means, and separates useful simplicity from careless oversimplification. It then shows how students can apply KISS to note taking, reading, essay writing, presentations, coding, revision, and time management. The review also examines criticisms, including the danger of removing detail that a problem truly needs. The central argument is that simplicity is not the same as being shallow or lazy. Real simplicity is a skill: it requires understanding a topic well enough to strip away what does not matter while protecting what does. For students, learning to keep things simple is a practical way to reduce mental strain, communicate clearly, and produce work that others can understand and trust. Keywords: KISS principle; simplicity; cognitive load; parsimony; minimalism; plain language; student learning; clarity; academic writing; problem solving 1. Introduction Every student has met the same problem in different forms. A textbook chapter is stuffed with terms that hide a simple idea. A set of lecture slides carries so much text that no one can read them. An essay uses long words to say very little. A piece of code becomes so clever that even its author cannot fix it a week later. In each case the trouble is the same. Something that could have been #simple was made #complicated, and the extra weight made it harder to understand, harder to use, and easier to get wrong. The #KISS principle is a short, memorable response to this pattern. The letters stand for "Keep It Simple, Stupid," and the idea is that most products, plans, systems, and explanations perform best when they are kept as plain as possible while still doing their job. The word "stupid" in the phrase is not an insult aimed at any person. It is a blunt reminder that solutions should be simple enough that they do not depend on the reader being an expert, and that they should not fail just because someone did not have the time or the tools to deal with needless #complexity. At first glance this may sound like common sense, and in a way it is. The value of the principle, though, is not in the slogan itself but in how consistently it is ignored. People tend to add rather than remove. Faced with a problem, a natural instinct is to reach for more features, more words, more steps, and more detail. Adding feels like progress and like effort, while removing can feel risky, as if something important might be lost. KISS pushes back against that instinct. It treats #simplicity as an active goal to work toward, not as a lucky accident. This article is written for students, but it is structured like a research review so that the ideas can be traced to their sources. The aim is to move past the poster slogan and answer real questions. Where did the principle come from? What does research on how people think and learn say about the benefits of keeping things simple? How is KISS related to older ideas such as Occam's razor and to newer movements such as plain language and minimalist design? When does simplicity help, and when does it cross the line into leaving out something that mattered? Most importantly, how can a student use these ideas in ordinary academic life, from revising for exams to writing a dissertation? There is also a reason this topic matters more now than it did a generation ago. Students today work in an environment that pushes constantly toward more. There are more sources to read, more tools to learn, more platforms to manage, and more information arriving every hour than any person can process. In that setting, the ability to cut through noise is not a minor study tip. It is close to a core survival skill. The student who can look at a mountain of material and quickly find the few things that matter has a real advantage over the student who tries to absorb everything and drowns. KISS, understood properly, is a method for building that ability. It trains a person to ask, again and again, what can be safely left out, and this question turns out to be one of the most useful questions in all of learning. The scope of the discussion is deliberately broad because the principle itself is broad. KISS is not a rule that belongs to a single field. It is closer to a general attitude that shows up wherever humans build things or explain things. That said, the article keeps returning to the student experience, because abstract advice about #clarity is not much use unless it can be turned into concrete habits. By the end, the reader should be able to describe the principle accurately, defend it, criticise it fairly, and put it to work. The structure is as follows. Section 2 covers the history and origin of the phrase. Section 3 builds the theoretical foundation by linking KISS to four established ideas. Section 4 explains the review method used here. Section 5 shows how the principle appears across several disciplines. Section 6 is the practical heart of the article and focuses on students. Sections 7 and 8 weigh the benefits against the limitations and risks. Section 9 discusses the wider meaning of the findings, and Section 10 concludes. 2. Origins and Historical Background The KISS principle is usually traced to Kelly Johnson, an American aeronautical engineer who led the Lockheed Skunk Works, a division famous for designing advanced aircraft. The often repeated story is that Johnson challenged his engineers to design planes that an average mechanic could repair in the field, under pressure, using only basic tools and basic training. The lesson was practical rather than philosophical. A #design that only its inventor can maintain is a liability in a real situation, where the person holding the wrench may be tired, rushed, and far from any workshop. A design that stays #simple can be kept working by ordinary people in ordinary conditions. That origin matters because it fixes the meaning of the principle in something concrete. KISS did not begin as an aesthetic preference for clean lines or empty space. It began as a response to failure risk. Complexity was dangerous not because it looked bad but because it created more parts that could break, more steps that could be skipped, and more knowledge that a single person had to carry. Seen this way, keeping things #simple is a form of #reliability engineering. Fewer moving parts means fewer things that can go wrong. It is worth being honest about the historical record. The exact wording, the precise year, and whether Johnson was the first person to use the acronym are matters where popular accounts differ, and some of the retellings have grown more polished than the evidence supports. The core message, however, has been stable across every version: build things that do not collapse under their own #complexity. Similar advice appears in many older traditions of craft and engineering, where experienced makers learned that elegant, robust solutions tend to be lean rather than ornate. From its engineering roots, the phrase spread outward through the second half of the twentieth century and into the present. It became a slogan in the military, in product design, in management, and eventually in software development, where it now sits alongside other short rules of thumb that programmers use to keep their work maintainable. Along the way the harshness of the word "stupid" was softened in many retellings, and gentler versions appeared, such as "Keep It Short and Simple" or "Keep It Simple and Straightforward." The variations differ in tone but not in substance. They all point to the same target: unnecessary #complexity is the enemy, and clarity is the goal. It is also worth noticing how the meaning of the phrase shifted as it travelled. In its engineering home, KISS was about physical robustness and repairability. As it moved into software, it became mostly about #maintainability and readability of code. In design and marketing, it turned into a message about the user's experience and attention. In writing and teaching, it became a plea for #clarity. These are not the same concern, yet they rhyme. Each field discovered independently that beyond a certain point, extra elaboration stopped helping and started hurting, and each reached for a version of the same rule. When one idea keeps being reinvented by people who were not talking to each other, that is usually a sign the idea is tracking something true about the world rather than a passing fashion. The reason the principle survived and spread is that it captured something people kept rediscovering in different fields. Whether the object was a machine, a sentence, a diagram, or a business process, the same pattern held. Past a certain point, adding more tended to make things worse, not better. KISS gave that recurring lesson a name that was easy to remember and easy to repeat, which is part of why it became so widely known. That memorability is itself a small example of the principle at work. A short, plain slogan spreads and sticks in a way that a careful technical paragraph never could, which is precisely the advantage that #simplicity confers. 3. Defining Simplicity: Theoretical Foundations The KISS principle is often stated as if its meaning were obvious, but the word "simple" hides real depth. To use the principle well, a student needs a clearer picture of what simplicity is, why it helps, and how it has been studied. This section connects KISS to four established ideas, each of which supports part of the principle and none of which is just an opinion. 3.1 Cognitive load and the limits of working memory The strongest scientific support for keeping things simple comes from research on how the human mind handles new information. #Cognitive_load theory, developed in educational psychology, starts from a basic fact about people: our working memory, the mental space where we hold and manipulate new information, is very limited. We can juggle only a few new items at once before performance drops. Long term memory is vast, but the narrow gateway of working memory controls how much new material can be processed at any moment (Sweller, 2022). This has a direct consequence for learning and communication. When a task, a text, or a lecture forces a learner to hold too many separate pieces in mind at the same time, the working memory overflows, and understanding suffers. The theory separates the load that comes from the true difficulty of the material from the load that comes from the way the material is presented. The second kind, sometimes described as extra or extraneous load, is the part that poor design adds on top of the real challenge. It is exactly the kind of #complexity that KISS tells us to remove (Sweller, 2023). The practical message is powerful. If you cannot change how hard a concept fundamentally is, you can still change how it is presented, and that change alone can decide whether people learn it or lose it. Cluttered slides, tangled explanations, and disorganised notes all raise #cognitive_load without adding value. Emotional state can interact with this as well, since stress and strong feelings compete for the same limited mental resources during demanding tasks (Hawthorne, Slemp, Vella-Brodrick, & Hattie, 2025). Simplicity, in this light, is not decoration. It is a way of respecting the real limits of the person who has to think. A concrete example makes the point clear. Imagine two versions of the same maths worked example. In the first, the steps are laid out in order, each one labelled, with the relevant formula placed right next to the step that uses it. In the second, the same steps are correct but scattered, the formula sits on a different page, and the diagram is far from the text that refers to it. The mathematics is identical, but the second version forces the learner to hold pieces in mind and search back and forth to connect them. That searching and holding is pure extra load. It uses up the very mental capacity that should have gone into understanding the method. This is the heart of why presentation matters as much as content, and why #simple_design of learning material is not a cosmetic choice but a functional one. There is honest debate about how far the theory should be pushed, and scholars continue to refine, test, and sometimes challenge its claims (Sweller, 2023). But the central point that KISS depends on is not seriously disputed. Human #working_memory is limited, and unnecessary complexity wastes it. For a student, the takeaway is direct: anything you can do to lower the load that comes from messy presentation frees up mind for the load that comes from real thinking, and that trade is almost always worth making. 3.2 Parsimony and Occam's razor A second foundation comes from the philosophy of science and from centuries of scientific practice. The principle of parsimony, popularly known as #Occams_razor, advises that when two explanations account for the same evidence, we should prefer the one that relies on fewer assumptions. The idea is usually associated with the medieval thinker William of Ockham, though the underlying attitude is older. It has been defended as one of the features that separates careful science from superstition, because it stops us from inventing extra causes we do not need (McFadden, 2023). Occam's razor is not identical to KISS, and it is useful to see the difference. The razor is about choosing between rival explanations or models, a fairly strategic judgment about what to believe. KISS is more about how we build and present solutions, a more hands on and tactical concern. Yet they clearly share a common spirit. Both treat needless #complexity as a cost rather than a virtue, and both put the burden of proof on the more complicated option. Modern research also adds an important warning that keeps the razor honest. Parsimony is a useful default, not an iron law. The simplest model is preferred only when it explains the data as well as the alternatives. In statistics and machine learning, choosing an overly simple model can miss real structure in the world, while an overly complex one can fit random noise and fail on new cases (Bargagli-Stoffi, Cevolani, & Gnecco, 2022). The task is to find the right level, and sometimes the simplest available explanation is not the best one (Dyer & Kording, 2023). Newer computational methods even try to locate the point of best #simplicity automatically, trimming a model down to its essential parts without losing what matters (Antal, Chesebro, Strey, Mujica-Parodi, & Weistuch, 2024). The same balance can be built into formal model selection using structural features of the models themselves (Borgqvist & Palmer, 2022). For a student, the lesson is that simplicity should be earned by explaining just as much with less, not bought by ignoring evidence. 3.3 Minimalism and simplicity in design A third foundation comes from design, where the phrase "less is more" has guided a whole tradition. #Minimalism in design is the deliberate removal of anything that does not serve the core purpose, so that the parts that remain stand out clearly. It is not about making things bare for the sake of fashion. Its goal is to communicate an idea in the plainest possible way by cutting clutter and directing attention to what counts (Gumber, 2023). This design tradition connects neatly to cognitive load. A page, screen, or product with fewer competing elements asks less of the viewer's attention and is easier to scan and use. When people do not have to fight through visual noise to find what they need, they process the important content faster and with less effort. In interfaces, packaging, and printed material, simpler layouts have often been linked to better attention, clearer navigation, and a stronger impression of quality. The famous example is the search engine home page that shows almost nothing except a single box, which is instantly understandable precisely because so much has been left out. A key insight from minimalist practice is that removing an element is a decision, not a failure. Designers speak of white space, the empty area around content, as an active tool rather than wasted room. Empty space gives the eye rest and makes the remaining content easier to find and read. The same is true of a well spaced page of notes or a clean chart with only the lines that carry meaning. Crowding everything together to "use the space" often backfires, because it raises the effort needed to read anything at all. For students, the design lens turns KISS into something visible. A study poster, a slide, a chart, or a report is a designed object, and the same rules apply. Every element that does not help the message competes with the elements that do. A chart with three colours, a clear label, and no decorative clutter communicates faster than one drowning in gridlines, shadows, and effects. Good #simple_design is not the absence of effort. It usually takes more thought to decide what to remove than to keep piling things on, which is why beginners tend to overload their work and experienced makers tend to strip it back. 3.4 Plain language and clear communication The fourth foundation is the plain language movement, which applies the logic of simplicity to writing and speech. The core claim is that information should be written so that its intended readers can understand it the first time they read it. This has become a serious field of study, especially in health and science, where confusing writing can have real consequences for people who need to act on it. The evidence here is sobering and useful. Studies of so called plain language summaries, which are meant to make research understandable to non specialists, have found that many of them are still too hard to read and too full of #jargon to reach their intended audience (Lang, King, Boddy, Stein, Asare, Day, & Liabo, 2025). In other words, even documents that are written specifically to be simple often fail at it, which shows how strong the pull toward complexity really is. When simple summaries are done well, though, they can be measurably easier to read than standard technical abstracts, which proves that #clarity is achievable and not just a nice wish (Wen & Yi, 2024). There is a myth worth killing here: the belief that complicated writing signals a clever mind. In reality, the opposite is often true. When a writer truly understands an idea, they can usually explain it plainly, because they can see its core. When understanding is shaky, writing tends to grow foggy and inflated, as if extra words could stand in for missing clarity of thought. Readers sense this, even if they cannot name it. A page of dense jargon can leave an examiner suspecting that the writer is hiding rather than explaining, while a clear page suggests mastery. For students, this is directly relevant. #Academic_writing rewards precision, but precision is not the same as difficulty. Clear writing states ideas in the fewest words that carry the full meaning, defines terms instead of hiding behind them, and prefers a short plain word to a long showy one where both would do. It is worth stressing that plain does not mean simplistic. A plain style can carry the most demanding ideas in science and philosophy. What it removes is not depth but fog. The plain language tradition gives KISS a firm home in the world of words, and it turns "write more simply" from vague advice into a testable goal, since readability and jargon can actually be measured (Wen & Yi, 2024). Taken together, these four foundations show that KISS is not a lone slogan. It is supported by research on memory, by the logic of science, by the practice of design, and by the study of communication. That is why it deserves to be taken seriously. 4. Methodology This article is a narrative review rather than an experiment or a systematic review. A narrative review gathers, organises, and interprets existing knowledge on a topic to give a coherent overview and to draw connections that scattered sources do not make on their own. This approach suits the KISS principle well, because the principle itself is not a single measurable variable. It is a cross cutting idea that appears in many literatures under different names, and its value lies partly in how those literatures fit together. The sources used here were selected to meet three conditions. First, they had to be relevant to at least one of the core themes: #simplicity, #cognitive_load, parsimony, minimalist design, plain language, or student learning. Second, priority was given to recent work, with most cited sources published within the last five years, so that the discussion reflects current thinking rather than dated claims. Third, preference was given to peer reviewed journal articles and scholarly sources over informal commentary, so that the argument rests on evidence that other researchers have checked. Because KISS is best understood through its foundations, the review connects the principle to established theories rather than treating it in isolation. This means some cited work does not mention the phrase "KISS" at all, yet supports the same underlying claim, for example that limited #working_memory makes clarity valuable, or that parsimony is a sound default in science. Drawing these links is the main contribution of a narrative review of this kind. The limitations of the method should be stated plainly, in keeping with the article's own theme. A narrative review depends on the author's selection and interpretation of sources, so it cannot claim the exhaustive coverage of a formal systematic review. The goal here is not to count every study but to build an accurate, readable, and useful account for students. Readers who want the full detail of any single area, such as cognitive load theory, should follow the cited works to their original journals. 5. The KISS Principle Across Disciplines One reason the KISS principle is worth learning is that it transfers. A habit of thought that helps in one field tends to help in others, and seeing the same idea in different settings makes it easier to trust and apply. This section surveys how simplicity shows up across a range of disciplines that students are likely to meet. Engineering. This is where the principle was born, and it remains central. In engineering, every added component is a potential point of failure and a cost in weight, money, and maintenance. Designs that achieve the required function with fewer parts are generally more #reliable and easier to repair. The original Skunk Works lesson, that a design must be fixable by an ordinary person under difficult conditions, still captures the engineering value of #simplicity. Software development. Programmers may be the most enthusiastic users of KISS today. In code, complexity is expensive in a very concrete way. Every extra line and every clever trick is something that must be understood, tested, and maintained, often by a different person months later. A #simple solution that solves the problem is prized over an intricate one that shows off, because simple code is easier to read, debug, and change. Programmers often pair KISS with related rules that all push toward lean, clear code, such as avoiding repetition and not building features nobody asked for. The shared aim is #maintainability: software that humans can keep understanding over time. Design and user experience. In product and interface design, KISS aligns with the minimalist tradition discussed earlier. A #usable product does not force people to read a manual or hunt for basic functions. It makes the common actions obvious and hides or removes the rest. Reducing clutter lowers the mental effort a user must spend, which improves both satisfaction and success (Gumber, 2023). The best designed tools often feel simple precisely because a great deal of complexity was handled behind the scenes so the user would not have to face it. Science and modelling. In the sciences, KISS lives on as the principle of parsimony. When building a model or choosing an explanation, researchers prefer the account that fits the evidence with the fewest assumptions, while staying alert to the risk of a model that is too simple to be true (Bargagli-Stoffi et al., 2022). This is not a preference for ignorance. It is a discipline that keeps theories testable and honest, and that resists the temptation to add unseen causes whenever data get messy (McFadden, 2023). Communication and writing. Across journalism, business, and academia, the clearest communicators tend to say more with less. The plain language movement has shown both how often expert writing fails ordinary readers and how much can be gained when #clarity is treated as a goal (Lang et al., 2025). Simple communication is not dumbed down. It is respectful of the reader's time and attention, and it usually signals that the writer understands the topic well enough to explain it plainly. Business and management. Organisations also feel the cost of complexity. Overgrown processes, bloated meetings, and tangled rules slow people down and hide accountability. Many management ideas, from lean methods to the drive to cut red tape, are really the KISS principle applied to how work gets done. A #simple process that people actually follow beats a sophisticated one that they quietly ignore. Mathematics and logic. In mathematics, elegance is often another word for simplicity. A proof that reaches the same conclusion in fewer steps, with fewer assumptions, is usually valued more highly than a longer one, not only because it is easier to check but because it tends to reveal the real reason a result is true. Mathematicians speak of a "clean" proof in much the same admiring tone that engineers speak of a clean design. The parsimony that guides science guides mathematics too, and students who learn to look for the simplest correct path often understand the underlying structure better than those who grind through the longest one. Law and argument. In law, debate, and any field built on argument, #clarity is power. A clear, well ordered argument that a listener can follow is more convincing than a dense one, however clever, that loses its audience. Good advocates strip a case down to its strongest points rather than burying them under every possible point, because a jury or a reader can only hold so much at once. This is the KISS principle applied to persuasion, and it rests on the same limit of #working_memory that governs learning. Education. Finally, teaching itself is an exercise in managed simplicity. Good instruction breaks hard material into pieces that fit within a learner's #working_memory, presents one idea clearly before adding the next, and removes distractions that add load without adding understanding (Sweller, 2022). Evidence in medical and blended learning settings shows that helping students manage their own learning in structured, manageable ways supports achievement (Ballouk, Mansour, Dalziel, McDonald, & Hegazi, 2022; Luo & Zhou, 2024). The teacher who explains something simply has usually done the hard work of understanding it deeply first. The pattern across all these fields is consistent. Where humans build or explain, unnecessary complexity is a tax, and simplicity, done well, is a benefit. 6. The KISS Principle for Students: Practical Applications The previous sections make the case that simplicity is valuable and well supported. This section turns that case into practice. The goal is a set of habits a student can actually use, grounded in the ideas already discussed. Throughout, the aim is not to strip work of substance but to remove the clutter that hides substance. 6.1 Studying and note taking Note taking is one of the clearest places to apply #KISS. A common mistake is to try to copy everything, producing pages that look thorough but are hard to review and harder to remember. Because #working_memory is limited, notes that reproduce every word actually work against learning (Sweller, 2022). Better notes are selective. They capture the main idea, the key steps, and the important examples in the student's own words, and they leave out the padding. Practical moves include writing one clear heading per topic, using short phrases rather than full copied sentences, and summarising each section in a single line that states its core point. If a page of notes cannot be summarised simply, that is usually a sign the idea is not yet understood, which is valuable information in itself. The act of simplifying is not just recording. It is a test of comprehension. 6.2 Reading and processing sources Students often face far more reading than they can absorb word for word. The KISS response is to read with a clear question in mind and to extract only what answers it, rather than treating every sentence as equally important. Skimming for structure first, then reading closely where it matters, keeps #cognitive_load manageable and prevents the fog that comes from trying to hold an entire dense chapter in mind at once. When a source is written badly, which happens often even in respected fields (Lang et al., 2025), simplifying becomes an act of self defence. Rewriting a tangled paragraph into one plain sentence for your own notes turns someone else's #complexity into your own #clarity, and it locks the idea into memory far better than passive rereading. 6.3 Writing essays and reports Academic writing is where the temptation to complicate is strongest. Many students believe that long words, long sentences, and a heavy tone make writing sound more intelligent. The evidence points the other way. Clear, plain writing communicates better, and skilled writers work to make hard ideas readable rather than to make simple ideas sound hard (Wen & Yi, 2024). A KISS approach to writing has a few reliable habits. State the main point of each paragraph early and plainly. Prefer the shorter, more common word when it carries the same meaning. Cut sentences that repeat what has already been said. Define any technical term the first time it appears instead of assuming the reader shares your background. Research on writing strategy suggests that students who plan and monitor their writing in a deliberate way produce stronger work (Teng, Qin, & Wang, 2022), and part of that monitoring is asking of every sentence whether it earns its place. The result is not thinner argument. It is the same argument made visible. Importantly, simple writing is not the same as short writing. A long essay can be simple if every part is clear and necessary, and a short one can be a confusing mess. The target is #clarity per word, not fewer words at any cost. 6.4 Presentations and slides Slides are a classic victim of complexity. A slide crammed with paragraphs forces the audience to read and listen at the same time, which overloads attention and means they do neither well. The design and cognitive load research points to a simple fix: put little on each slide, use it to support what you say rather than to duplicate it, and give each slide one clear job (Gumber, 2023). White space is not wasted space. It is what lets the important element be seen. A useful test before presenting is to ask whether a stranger glancing at a slide for three seconds would grasp its single point. If not, the slide is probably carrying too much. Moving detail into speech or into a handout keeps the visual #simple and the audience with you. 6.5 Problem solving and studying for exams When facing a hard problem, students often reach for the most elaborate method they know, as if difficulty of approach signalled seriousness. KISS suggests the opposite starting point. Try the simplest method that could work first, and add complexity only if the simple approach genuinely fails. This mirrors the scientific habit of parsimony, where the leaner solution is preferred until the evidence forces something more elaborate (Dyer & Kording, 2023). For exam revision, simplicity means focusing effort where it counts rather than spreading thin. Breaking a syllabus into manageable chunks, mastering one before moving to the next, and using clear summaries all reduce load and support retention. Structured, self managed study of this kind is linked to better performance across settings (Theobald, 2021; Luo & Zhou, 2024). Trying to hold an entire course in mind at once is exactly the kind of overload the theory warns against. 6.6 Coding and technical work For students who write code or build technical projects, KISS is close to a professional survival skill. The simplest program that meets the requirement is usually the best, because it is easier to read, test, and fix later. Clever, compressed solutions may feel impressive in the moment, but they often become traps for the very person who wrote them. Writing code that a classmate could read and understand is a strong sign that the solution is #simple in the right way. The same applies to data work and modelling. A #simple model that a student can explain and defend is often more valuable in a project than a complicated one that behaves like a black box, especially since overly complex models can fit noise and mislead (Bargagli-Stoffi et al., 2022; Antal et al., 2024). Being able to say clearly why a method was chosen is itself a product of simplicity. 6.7 Planning, time, and workflow Beyond individual tasks, KISS helps with how a student manages the whole of their work. Overengineered study systems, with elaborate colour codes and apps that take more time to maintain than they save, are a common trap. A #simple plan that is actually followed beats a sophisticated one that collapses after a week. The most sustainable systems tend to have few rules and low friction, which makes them easy to keep up under pressure. Self regulation research suggests that manageable, well structured approaches support persistence, especially when students are adjusting to new academic demands (Ballouk et al., 2022). 6.8 Group work and collaboration Group projects are where hidden complexity does the most damage, because the confusion is now shared among several people. A plan that lives clearly in one person's head is worthless if the others cannot follow it. KISS in a group means agreeing on the simplest workable structure early: who does what, where the shared files live, and how decisions get made. A short, plain set of agreements that everyone understands beats an elaborate system that only the organiser can operate. When communication between members is kept #simple and direct, fewer things fall through the cracks, and the group spends its energy on the actual task rather than on untangling its own process. The same logic applies to explaining your part of the work to teammates. If you cannot describe what you did in a few plain sentences, your collaborators cannot build on it or check it. The discipline of simple explanation is therefore not just polite. It is what makes shared work possible at all. 6.9 Using digital tools and technology wisely Students today have access to an enormous range of apps, platforms, and tools, and each one promises to make life easier. In practice, tools can become their own source of #complexity. A common trap is spending more time configuring, learning, and maintaining a study system than actually studying with it. KISS suggests keeping the toolkit lean. Choose a small number of tools that genuinely help, learn them well, and resist the urge to adopt every new option that appears. A plain notebook used consistently outperforms a sophisticated app abandoned after a fortnight. The rise of automated writing and answer tools sharpens this point. Such tools can produce text that looks polished but is padded, vague, or overcomplicated, and using their output without thought can quietly bury a simple idea under fluent noise. A student who values #clarity will treat any draft, whether written by hand or generated, with the same question: what here is real, and what can be cut? The goal is understanding you can defend and explain, not volume of text. Simplicity remains the test that separates work you own from work that merely fills space. 6.10 Referencing, structure, and academic conventions Even the mechanical parts of academic work benefit from a KISS mindset. Referencing systems, formatting rules, and submission requirements can feel like needless complexity, but they exist to make scholarly communication predictable and clear. The simplest approach is to pick the required style, apply it consistently, and record sources as you go rather than reconstructing them in a panic at the end. Trying to remember every rule is a poor use of limited #working_memory. Keeping a simple running list of sources, with the details you will need, removes that load entirely. Structure itself is a form of simplicity. A clear, conventional structure, with an introduction that signals the plan, body sections that each do one job, and a conclusion that gathers the threads, lets the reader follow the argument without effort. Inventive or unusual structures may feel original, but they usually raise the reader's load and hide the argument rather than showcasing it. Here, as elsewhere, the plain and expected choice is often the strong one. Taken together, these applications share one theme. In every case, the student is asked to do the harder invisible work of deciding what matters, so that the visible result can be #simple. That is the true discipline behind KISS. 7. Benefits of Applying the KISS Principle The advantages of keeping things simple follow directly from the foundations set out earlier, and they are worth naming clearly so students can see what they stand to gain. The first benefit is reduced mental strain. Because human #working_memory is limited, simpler tasks, texts, and tools leave more mental capacity for the thinking that actually matters (Sweller, 2022). A student who is not fighting through clutter can spend that freed attention on understanding and reasoning. The second benefit is better communication. Simple, clear work reaches its audience. Whether the audience is an examiner, a classmate, or a future employer, a message that can be understood on the first reading is more persuasive and more useful than one that has to be decoded (Wen & Yi, 2024). Clarity also builds trust, because readers tend to assume, often correctly, that a writer who explains plainly understands the subject. The third benefit is fewer errors. Every extra part, step, or clause is another place where something can go wrong. In code, in calculations, and in arguments alike, #simpler solutions offer fewer opportunities for mistakes and make the mistakes that do occur easier to find and fix. This is the modern echo of the original engineering insight. The fourth benefit is durability and reuse. Simple work is easier to return to, adapt, and build on later. Notes you can actually review, code you can actually maintain, and writing you can actually revise all pay off over time. Complexity, by contrast, tends to rot, because the effort needed to understand it again grows with every week that passes. The fifth benefit is speed and efficiency. Simpler processes take less time to run and less time to teach to others. A #simple study routine or workflow is easier to sustain, which matters more than raw sophistication when deadlines pile up. A sixth benefit is confidence. There is a quiet psychological gain in producing work you fully understand. When your notes, your argument, or your code are #simple enough that you can hold the whole thing in mind, you can answer questions about it, defend it under pressure, and adapt it on the spot. Complexity that you do not really understand breeds anxiety, because you know, somewhere, that you could not explain it if asked. Simplicity replaces that unease with a solid sense of control over your own work, and that confidence tends to show in exams, presentations, and interviews. None of these benefits requires special talent. They are available to any student willing to do the work of simplifying, which is the encouraging part of the principle. Simplicity is a habit, not a gift. It grows with deliberate practice, and every time a student chooses the clearer word, the leaner method, or the tidier plan, the habit gets a little stronger. 8. Limitations, Criticisms, and the Risk of Oversimplification An honest review must take the objections seriously, and there are real ones. Applied carelessly, the drive for simplicity can do harm, and understanding where KISS breaks down is part of using it well. The central danger is #oversimplification: removing something that the problem actually needed. Simplicity is only a virtue when the simpler version still does the job. A model, an explanation, or a design can be stripped so far that it becomes wrong, misleading, or useless. This is why the scientific principle of parsimony is stated carefully. The simplest explanation is preferred only when it fits the evidence as well as the alternatives, and sometimes it does not (Dyer & Kording, 2023). Choosing the simplest option in defiance of the facts is not good practice. It is denial dressed up as elegance. There is a related trap in modelling and analysis. A model that is too simple can miss genuine structure in the world, just as one that is too complex can chase random noise. The real skill is finding the appropriate level for the question at hand, which is an active judgment rather than a blind push toward "less" (Bargagli-Stoffi et al., 2022; Antal et al., 2024). For students, this means simplicity should never be an excuse for ignoring detail that matters to the argument. A second criticism concerns the theory behind the principle. Cognitive load theory, which gives KISS much of its scientific backing, is powerful but not beyond dispute. Scholars continue to debate its exact mechanisms and boundaries, and the theory itself has been revised as new evidence and rival ideas have appeared (Sweller, 2023). Emotions, motivation, and individual differences all complicate the neat picture of a simple load meter in the head (Hawthorne et al., 2025). None of this overturns the basic value of reducing needless complexity, but it does caution against treating any single theory as the final word. A third concern is that "simple" is partly relative to the audience. What is simple for an expert may be baffling for a beginner, and what is clear to a beginner may feel incomplete to an expert. The plain language research shows this tension directly, since writing must be judged simple in relation to its intended readers, not in the abstract (Lang et al., 2025). A student applying KISS therefore has to ask "simple for whom," and calibrate accordingly. Removing every technical term is not always the right move if the reader is another specialist who needs that precision. There is a further point worth stating plainly: some complexity is real and cannot be removed. A jet engine, a legal system, a living cell, and a modern economy are complicated because the things they do are complicated, not because their designers were careless. Applying KISS to such systems does not mean pretending the complexity away. It means not adding a single scrap of complexity beyond what the task truly demands, and organising the necessary complexity so that humans can still cope with it. The principle draws a line between essential complexity, which must be respected, and accidental complexity, which is the clutter we bring on ourselves. Only the second kind is the enemy. Confusing the two, and hacking away at difficulty that a problem genuinely needs, is a misuse of the principle that can leave a solution broken. A fourth risk is cultural and rhetorical. The word "stupid" in the acronym, though aimed at solutions and not people, can feel harsh, and the slogan can be misread as an excuse for laziness or for dismissing complexity that is real and necessary. Some problems are hard, and pretending otherwise helps no one. The mature reading of KISS is not "avoid all difficulty." It is "do not add difficulty that the problem did not require." Held together, these criticisms sharpen rather than defeat the principle. They tell us that simplicity is a target to aim at with judgment, not a switch to flip. The goal is the simplest version that still works, which is a far more demanding standard than simply doing less. 9. Discussion Stepping back from the details, a clear picture emerges. The KISS principle is not a shallow slogan but a compact expression of an idea that appears, under different names, across engineering, science, design, communication, and education. Its persistence across so many fields is itself evidence that it captures something real about how humans build, learn, and understand. The most important reframing this review offers is that #simplicity is difficult. The popular image of KISS suggests that keeping things simple is the easy, lazy option, while complexity is the mark of serious effort. The opposite is closer to the truth. Producing something genuinely simple, a clear explanation, a lean design, a tidy proof, usually requires understanding the material more deeply than producing something complicated does. Complexity can be a place to hide when understanding is shallow, because piling on detail can disguise the fact that the core idea was never grasped. Simplicity leaves nowhere to hide, which is exactly why it is hard and why it is valuable. For students, this reframing changes the meaning of the advice. "Keep it simple" is not permission to cut corners. It is an instruction to do the demanding work of sorting what matters from what does not, and then to protect the first and remove the second. Seen this way, the pursuit of simplicity becomes a learning strategy in its own right. The effort of simplifying a topic forces the kind of deep processing that leads to real understanding and lasting memory (Sweller, 2022; Theobald, 2021). The review also shows why balance is essential. Every foundation of KISS comes with a matching warning. Cognitive load theory says reduce load, but not below what the material genuinely requires. Parsimony says prefer the simpler model, but only when it fits the evidence. Minimalism says remove clutter, but keep what serves the purpose. Plain language says write clearly, but for the actual reader you have. The consistent theme is that simplicity is defined against a job to be done. It is never simplicity for its own sake. It is also worth placing the principle in a longer view. The habits that KISS builds do not stop being useful after graduation. The professional who can explain a complex project to a non expert, the manager who can design a process people will actually follow, the researcher who can state a finding plainly, and the engineer who can build something others can maintain are all practising the same discipline a student practises when simplifying a set of notes. In this sense, learning to keep things simple is not just a study technique with a short shelf life. It is early training in a way of thinking that stays valuable for a working lifetime. The stakes simply grow larger as the audience widens from a lecturer to a team, a client, or the public. Finally, the wide reach of the principle is good news for students. A habit of thought that pays off in writing also pays off in coding, in study planning, in presentations, and in reasoning. Learning to ask "what can be removed without loss" is a transferable skill that improves with practice and carries across a whole education and beyond it. Few single ideas repay attention so broadly. 10. Conclusion The KISS principle, "Keep It Simple, Stupid," began as practical engineering advice and grew into a general guide for building and explaining things well. This review has argued that the principle deserves the respect it commands, because it rests on solid foundations: the limits of human working memory, the scientific value of parsimony, the practice of minimalist design, and the study of plain communication. Across every field examined, the same lesson recurs. Unnecessary complexity is a cost, and simplicity, achieved with care, is a benefit. For students, the practical payoff is large and immediate. Simpler notes are easier to learn from. Clearer writing earns better marks and reaches its readers. Leaner code is easier to fix. Focused study plans are easier to keep. In each case, the visible simplicity is the reward for invisible work: the effort of deciding what truly matters. The principle must be handled with judgment. The goal is not the least possible content but the simplest version that still does the job, and crossing into oversimplification does real harm. Kept in balance, though, the pursuit of simplicity is one of the most useful habits a student can build. It is not a way of doing less thinking. It is a way of making thinking count. For a student who wants a single practical habit to carry away, it can be reduced to one question, asked of any piece of work before it is finished: what can be removed here without losing anything that matters? Ask it of a paragraph, a slide, a study plan, a diagram, or a line of code. The answer will often be uncomfortable, because it points to effort that felt productive but added nothing. Acting on that answer, again and again, is what turns the slogan into a skill. Keeping it simple, in the end, is one of the hardest and most rewarding things a learner can choose to do. References Antal, B. B., Chesebro, A. G., Strey, H. H., Mujica-Parodi, L. R., & Weistuch, C. (2024). Achieving Occam's razor: Deep learning for optimal model reduction. PLOS Computational Biology, 20(7), e1012283. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012283 Ballouk, R., Mansour, V., Dalziel, B., McDonald, J., & Hegazi, I. (2022). Medical students' self-regulation of learning in a blended learning environment: A systematic scoping review. Medical Education Online, 27(1), 2029336. https://doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2022.2029336 Bargagli-Stoffi, F. J., Cevolani, G., & Gnecco, G. (2022). Simple models in complex worlds: Occam's razor and statistical learning theory. Minds and Machines, 32(1), 13-42. Borgqvist, J. G., & Palmer, S. (2022). Occam's razor gets a new edge: The use of symmetries in model selection. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 19(193), 20220324. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2022.0324 Dyer, E. L., & Kording, K. (2023). Why the simplest explanation isn't always the best. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 120(52), e2319169120. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2319169120 Gumber, S. (2023). Minimalism in design: A trend of simplicity in complexity. ShodhKosh: Journal of Visual and Performing Arts, 4(2), 357-365. https://doi.org/10.29121/shodhkosh.v4.i2.2023.539 Hawthorne, B. S., Slemp, G. R., Vella-Brodrick, D. A., & Hattie, J. (2025). The relationship between positive and painful emotions and cognitive load during an algebra learning task. Learning and Individual Differences, 117, 102597. Lang, I. A., King, A., Boddy, K., Stein, K., Asare, L., Day, J., & Liabo, K. (2025). Jargon and readability in plain language summaries of health research: Cross-sectional observational study. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 27, e50862. https://doi.org/10.2196/50862 Luo, R.-Z., & Zhou, Y.-L. (2024). The effectiveness of self-regulated learning strategies in higher education blended learning: A five years systematic review. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 40(6), 3005-3029. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcal.13052 McFadden, J. (2023). Razor sharp: The role of Occam's razor in science. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.15086 Sweller, J. (2022). The role of evolutionary psychology in our understanding of human cognition: Consequences for cognitive load theory and instructional procedures. Educational Psychology Review, 34(4), 2229-2241. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10648-021-09647-0 Sweller, J. (2023). The development of cognitive load theory: Replication crises and incorporation of other theories can lead to theory expansion. Educational Psychology Review, 35(4), 95. Teng, M. F., Qin, C., & Wang, C. (2022). Validation of metacognitive academic writing strategies and the predictive effects on academic writing performance in a foreign language context. Metacognition and Learning, 17(1), 167-190. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11409-021-09278-4 Theobald, M. (2021). Self-regulated learning training programs enhance university students' academic performance, self-regulated learning strategies, and motivation: A meta-analysis. Contemporary Educational Psychology, 66, 101976. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cedpsych.2021.101976 Wen, J., & Yi, L. (2024). Are plain language summaries more readable than scientific abstracts? Evidence from six biomedical and life sciences journals. Public Understanding of Science. https://doi.org/10.1177/09636625241252565 #KISS_principle #keep_it_simple_stupid #simplicity #cognitive_load #Occams_razor #minimalism #plain_language #student_learning #academic_writing #study_skills #clarity #problem_solving #design_principles #simple_over_complex #less_is_more

  • The Business Logic of Complimentary Bread and Water in Hospitality: How Low-Cost Service Gestures Generate Guest Value, Satisfaction, and Competitive Advantage

    This article examines a small but revealing practice in food and beverage service: the habit of placing bread and water on the table for free, before a guest has ordered or paid for anything. The practice looks trivial, and its direct cost is close to nothing. Yet many successful restaurants treat it as a serious part of how they win and keep customers. The purpose of this paper is to explain, in plain terms, why a low-cost gesture can produce a level of #guest_value that is far larger than the money spent on it. Drawing on recent research into #perceived_value, the #reciprocity norm, #hospitableness, #customer_satisfaction, and memorable dining, the paper builds a conceptual account of how #free_bread and #free_water shape the guest experience and the restaurant's financial results. The argument is developed as a narrative review that connects ideas from consumer psychology, service management, and food and beverage cost control. The main finding is that complimentary staples act less like a giveaway and more like an investment: they lower waiting anxiety, signal #generosity and #trust, trigger a mild sense of obligation that supports beverage and menu spending, and improve the odds of a good review and a return visit. The paper also discusses the limits of the practice, including cost creep, cultural differences, and the risk that guests come to expect the gesture and stop noticing it. For #hospitality_students, the lesson is direct and practical: the smallest #service_design choices can become strong business tools when they are used with intent, consistency, and genuine care rather than as an empty routine. Keywords: hospitality management; perceived value; complimentary service; reciprocity; guest experience; customer satisfaction; food and beverage cost control; restaurant profitability 1. Introduction Walk into a good restaurant almost anywhere in the world and something quiet happens within the first minute. A server brings a basket of bread and pours a glass of water before anyone has read the menu, chosen a dish, or agreed to spend a single unit of currency. Nobody signs for it. Nobody is charged for it. The guest simply receives it. This everyday moment is so ordinary that most people never stop to ask why it exists, who pays for it, and whether it makes any business sense. That question sits at the center of this paper. On the surface, giving away food and drink for free looks like the opposite of good management. A restaurant exists to sell food and beverages at a margin, so handing over #complimentary_items before an order is placed seems like a small leak in the bucket. Multiply a basket of bread by hundreds of covers a day, across an entire year, and the giveaway starts to look like a real number on the cost sheet. A careful student of business might reasonably ask why any operator would accept that cost with no obvious return. The answer is that the return is real, but it is indirect. Bread and water are among the cheapest inputs a kitchen handles, yet the feeling they create in a guest can be worth much more than their cost. This gap between what something costs to give and what it is worth to receive is the heart of the argument. When the cost of a gesture is low and its #perceived_value is high, the gesture becomes an efficient way to buy goodwill, comfort, and a stronger relationship with the customer. In the language of service management, a tiny expense is converted into #guest_value, and #guest_value is what eventually pays for the lights, the wages, and the profit. This paper is written mainly for #hospitality_students and early-career practitioners who want to understand the reasoning behind the routines they will inherit. Too often, service traditions are taught as rules to follow rather than as decisions with a logic behind them. Learning the logic matters, because a practitioner who understands why a practice works can adapt it, improve it, and know when to drop it. A practitioner who only follows the rule will keep doing it even when it stops making sense. The specific practice of #free_bread and #free_water is a useful teaching case for three reasons. First, the cost is easy to grasp and easy to measure, which makes the economics clear. Second, the practice touches almost every part of the guest journey, from the anxious wait after being seated to the final decision about whether to leave a good review. Third, the practice connects to a wide body of research on #perceived_value, #reciprocity, and #hospitableness, so it can be used to introduce serious academic ideas without heavy jargon. The paper proceeds as follows. Section 2 sets out the background and the core puzzle of cheap gestures with expensive effects. Section 3 reviews the relevant research and builds the theoretical foundation. Section 4 explains the review method used here. Section 5 looks closely at the real cost structure of bread and water. Section 6 describes the main ways these staples create value for the guest. Section 7 turns to the financial logic and shows how a cost item can behave like a revenue driver. Section 8 discusses the limits, risks, and cultural differences that a careful manager must respect. Section 9 draws out the practical implications for students and operators. Section 10 notes the limitations of this analysis and suggests directions for future work, and Section 11 concludes. 2. Background and Context: The Puzzle of Cheap Gestures with Large Effects Hospitality is unusual among industries because the product and the experience are hard to separate. A guest does not simply buy a plate of food. The guest buys a seat, a welcome, a mood, a wait, a conversation with a server, the sound of the room, and the feeling of being looked after. All of these blend into a single memory. Because the experience is bundled this way, small details can carry weight far beyond their size. A warm greeting, a clean table, a quick refill, or a basket of #free_bread can shift how a person feels about the entire visit. This is why hospitality managers pay attention to what might look like minor points. In many other industries, the customer evaluates a clear, measurable object: the phone works or it does not, the software runs or it crashes. In a restaurant, the customer is evaluating a feeling, and feelings are built from many small signals. Recent work on the guest experience argues that customers increasingly judge a visit not by the product alone but by the sense of #hospitableness, authenticity, and care that surrounds it (Manfreda et al., 2024). In that framework, a cheap gesture that communicates care can matter more than an expensive feature that communicates nothing. The puzzle, then, is not whether small details matter. It is why a specific small detail, given away for free, can pay for itself. To answer that, it helps to separate two ideas that beginners often confuse: cost and value. Cost is what the restaurant spends to produce and deliver something. Value is what the guest believes they have received. These two numbers are almost never equal, and the space between them is where a great deal of hospitality strategy lives. Consider the humble glass of water. Its cost to the restaurant, in most settings with safe tap water, is a fraction of a currency unit once you account for the water itself, a clean glass, and a moment of a server's time. Its value to a thirsty guest who has just arrived on a hot day, or who is nervous about a first date, or who is trying to settle two restless children, can be surprisingly high. The guest is not paying for the water. The guest is receiving relief, a sense of being noticed, and a small proof that the place is paying attention. The same logic applies to bread. A little flour, yeast, and oven time produce something that fills the stomach a little, occupies the hands, and softens the wait. The #perceived_value of that comfort, arriving at the right moment, can be large. This is not a claim that all giveaways are wise. A restaurant that gave away main courses would go out of business quickly, because the cost of a main course is high and giving it away destroys the margin the business depends on. The reason bread and water are special is precisely that they sit at the extreme end of the cost-to-value ratio. They cost almost nothing and can feel like real #generosity. That combination is rare, and smart operators use it deliberately. A useful way to hold this idea in mind is to picture a simple ratio: value received divided by cost spent. For a giveaway to make business sense, this ratio should be high. Bread and water score well on this ratio because the numerator, the felt value, can be meaningful, while the denominator, the cost, stays tiny. Later sections will show that the ratio improves further once we count the indirect returns, such as higher beverage spending, longer and calmer visits, better reviews, and a greater chance of a return visit. 3. Theoretical Foundations To explain how free bread and #free_water create returns, this section draws together five strands of research: perceived value, the reciprocity norm, hospitableness, satisfaction and behavioural intention, and memorable experiences with their link to word of mouth. Each strand offers a piece of the explanation, and together they form a coherent account. 3.1 Perceived Value and Its Many Faces Perceived value is one of the most studied ideas in service research, and for good reason. It captures the customer's overall judgment of what they get compared with what they give up. Value in this sense is not only about money. Researchers commonly separate it into several types. A widely used view identifies functional value, emotional value, social value, and further categories such as epistemic and conditional value (Croitoru et al., 2024). Functional value is the practical benefit, such as food that tastes good and arrives on time. Emotional value is the feeling the experience produces, such as comfort, delight, or a sense of being cared for. Social value is the way the experience affects how a person is seen by others, such as the pride of hosting friends in a place that treats them well. This distinction matters for the bread and water case, because these staples deliver mostly emotional and functional value rather than obvious monetary value. A basket of bread does not save the guest money in any direct way, but it does reduce hunger during the wait and it does create a warm feeling of welcome. A cross-cultural study of restaurant customers found that emotional value was the strongest driver of #customer_satisfaction across three different national settings, while functional and conditional value mattered in more context-dependent ways (Croitoru et al., 2024). If emotional value is the most reliable route to satisfaction, then gestures that generate emotional value cheaply are unusually powerful. Free bread and free water are exactly such gestures. Other research reinforces the idea that perceived value stands between service quality and the behaviour a restaurant wants. In an integrated model of restaurant dining, service quality shaped satisfaction and expectations, while perceived value emerged as a central construct linking the quality of the experience to the guest's later intentions (Tuncer et al., 2021). Studies in the fast-food setting reached a similar conclusion, finding that food quality and the quality of the physical environment were significant drivers of perceived value, even when other factors were less clear (Slack et al., 2021). More recent work in online food delivery again placed perceived value for money at the heart of how service attributes turn into satisfaction and future behaviour (Thuannadee and Praneetpholkrang, 2026). The recurring pattern is simple: raise perceived value and you raise the chance of satisfaction, loyalty, and repeat spending. Where do bread and water fit in this pattern? They raise perceived value at almost no cost. By adding a small functional benefit, food during the wait, and a larger emotional benefit, a feeling of care, they lift the guest's overall sense of what they are receiving. Because value is measured against what the guest gives up, and because the guest gives up nothing for these items, the effect on the value equation is entirely positive. 3.2 The Reciprocity Norm and the Psychology of Small Gifts The second strand explains why a free gift can lead directly to more spending. Human beings across cultures tend to follow a #reciprocity norm, which is the felt social rule that when someone gives us something, we should give something back. This rule is deeply rooted and often operates without conscious thought. In service settings, it has a measurable effect on behaviour. The clearest evidence comes from research on tipping. In a controlled study, servers who offered guests a free gift received noticeably higher tips, and the effect grew even larger when the gift was made salient at the moment the guest was deciding what to leave (Hilkenmeier and Hoffmann, 2022). The authors describe how a benevolent act triggers feelings of gratitude and obligation, and how these feelings translate into a willingness to give more in return. Importantly, the study focused on the short-term benefit to servers and noted that the long-term effect on the restaurant as a whole still needs more research (Hilkenmeier and Hoffmann, 2022). Even with that caution, the core finding is robust: a small, unexpected gift can produce a return that exceeds its cost, because it activates a powerful social rule. Bread and water are, in effect, gifts. They are given before the transaction and without an explicit price. This framing is exactly the kind of setup that activates reciprocity. The guest receives something for nothing, feels a mild and often unconscious sense of obligation, and becomes more open to reciprocating through their own choices, such as ordering a drink, adding a starter, staying for dessert, or leaving a warm review and a good tip. The gesture does not force any of these outcomes, but it gently tilts the odds toward them. It is worth being honest about the ethics here, since students should think about them. Using reciprocity as a tool is not inherently manipulative, but it can become so if it is dishonest or aggressive. The healthiest version of the practice is one where the #generosity is genuine and the guest is free to respond or not. A basket of good bread offered with a real welcome is a gift in the ordinary sense of the word. A cheap trick designed only to extract more money, with no real care behind it, tends to be felt by guests and can backfire. The line between hospitality and manipulation is drawn by sincerity, which the next strand addresses directly. 3.3 Hospitableness and Genuine Care The third strand concerns the difference between doing hospitality and being hospitable. Researchers distinguish between the technical delivery of a service and the deeper quality of hospitableness, which is the genuine, willing desire to care for a guest, driven by real intentions rather than by pure self-interest. In a recent study, hospitableness was framed as a differentiator for commercial hospitality firms and as a mindset that turns ordinary service into something guests actually feel (Manfreda et al., 2024). The same work stresses the role of hospitality educators in developing this mindset in future staff, which places the idea squarely within the concerns of #hospitality_students. This strand explains why the manner of giving bread and water matters as much as the act itself. The same basket of bread can be delivered in two very different ways. In the first, a rushed server drops it on the table without eye contact, as a box to be ticked. In the second, a warm server presents it as a small welcome, perhaps with a word about the bread or a check that everything is comfortable. The cost of the bread is identical, but the guest value is not. The second version carries hospitableness, and it is the hospitableness, not the flour, that the guest remembers. For students, this is one of the most important lessons in the paper. A free item is only as valuable as the care that accompanies it. Generosity that feels mechanical produces weak returns, while generosity that feels sincere produces strong ones. This is why training and culture matter. A restaurant cannot simply order its staff to hand out bread and expect the full effect. It must build a culture where the gesture carries meaning, and that culture is created through hiring, training, and the example set by leaders. 3.4 Satisfaction, Loyalty, and Behavioural Intention The fourth strand links the guest's feelings to the actions a business cares about. #Customer_satisfaction is the guest's overall judgment that the experience met or exceeded expectations. Satisfaction matters because it predicts behaviour: satisfied guests are more likely to return, to spend more, to recommend the place, and to forgive the occasional slip. A large body of research confirms that #service_quality raises satisfaction, and that satisfaction and perceived value together drive #behavioural_intention, which includes the intention to come back and to speak well of the place (Tuncer et al., 2021; Slack et al., 2021). A related idea is #price_fairness, the guest's sense that the price they paid was reasonable for what they received. Research in the fast-food sector found that service quality dimensions and brand image shaped perceptions of price fairness, and that these perceptions fed into customer retention, with satisfaction acting as a link in the chain (Singh et al., 2022). This connects neatly to bread and water. A guest who has been given something for free is primed to see the eventual bill as fairer, because the free items add to the perceived worth of the whole visit without adding to the price. In effect, the giveaway improves the value side of the value-for-money equation, which supports a sense of #price_fairness and, through it, the willingness to return. The result is a chain of effects that students can memorise. A small, sincere gesture raises perceived value. Higher perceived value supports satisfaction and a sense that the price was fair. Satisfaction and fairness support loyalty and the intention to return and recommend. Loyalty and recommendation support revenue over time. Each link is supported by research, and the first link is unusually cheap to pull. 3.5 Memorable Experiences and Word of Mouth The fifth strand concerns what happens after the guest leaves. In the modern market, a single visit does not end at the door. Guests carry their memories into conversations and, more importantly, into online reviews. Positive #word_of_mouth and electronic word of mouth, often shortened to eWOM, can bring in new customers at little cost, while negative reviews can drive them away. Research shows that memorable dining experiences influence eWOM, though the relationship is not automatic. One study found that memorable restaurant experiences do not always produce positive eWOM, and that a guest's own level of behavioural engagement on social media shapes whether the memory turns into a public review (Souki et al., 2023). This is a useful caution against assuming that a good experience will always be shared. Still, the broad direction is clear: experiences that stand out are more likely to be talked about, and small acts of #generosity are one way to make a routine visit stand out. The financial stakes of reviews are real. A firm-level study found links between review ratings, the sentiment in review comments, and restaurant profitability, which means the tone of what guests write online is not just a vanity metric but a factor in the bottom line (Abdullah et al., 2024). Other work has examined how restaurant managers respond to positive and negative reviews, using rapport-building and marketing strategies to strengthen customer relationships and shape brand perception (Baradaran-Rafiee et al., 2025). Within this picture, the free basket of bread plays a modest but real part. It is one of the low-cost details that can nudge an ordinary visit toward the kind of warm memory a guest chooses to describe in a review, and it gives a manager something genuine to point to when thanking a guest for positive feedback. Taken together, these five strands form the theoretical spine of the paper. Perceived value explains why cheap comfort can feel valuable. Reciprocity explains why a free gift can lead to more spending. Hospitableness explains why sincerity multiplies the effect. Satisfaction and behavioural intention explain how good feelings turn into returns and referrals. Memorable experiences and word of mouth explain how the effect spreads beyond a single visit. The rest of the paper applies this spine to the specific case of bread and water. 4. Method This paper is a conceptual, narrative review rather than an empirical study. It does not collect new survey data or run experiments. Instead, it gathers and organises existing peer-reviewed research on perceived value, reciprocity, hospitableness, satisfaction, and word of mouth, and applies that research to a single, well-defined practice: the free provision of bread and water in food and beverage service. The aim is explanation and synthesis, not statistical testing. The sources were selected for relevance and recency, with a focus on work published within roughly the last five years in journals that deal with hospitality, tourism, service management, and consumer behaviour. Priority was given to studies that examined restaurant and food service settings directly, since these settings match the case under discussion. Where a general principle was needed, such as the reciprocity norm, the paper relied on hospitality-specific evidence rather than distant examples, so that the argument stays grounded in the industry it describes. The reasoning follows a simple logic. First, the direct cost of bread and water is established. Second, the mechanisms by which these items create value are identified from the literature. Third, the indirect returns are traced through the chain from perceived value to satisfaction, spending, loyalty, and word of mouth. Fourth, the limits and risks are set out honestly. This structure lets the reader see both the strength of the practice and the conditions under which it works. Because the paper is conceptual, its conclusions are best read as well-supported arguments and teaching frameworks rather than as precise measurements. Section 10 returns to this point when discussing limitations. 5. The Real Cost Structure of Bread and Water Before defending a giveaway, a serious analysis must be honest about what it costs. It is tempting to say bread and water are free, but nothing in a business is truly free. Every item consumes inputs, and a good manager counts them. The point of this section is to show that, once counted carefully, the cost remains very low, which is what makes the practice defensible. Start with water. In places where tap water is safe, the marginal cost of a glass is tiny. There is the water itself, which is inexpensive, the cost of washing the glass, which includes a small amount of water, detergent, energy, and machine time, and a moment of labour to pour and deliver it. There may also be a slice of lemon or a little ice. None of these add up to much per glass. The largest hidden cost is usually labour, because a server's time is not free, but pouring water is folded into service that is happening anyway, so the added labour is marginal. Bottled water is a different story, since it carries a real product cost, which is why many restaurants sell bottled water while giving tap water away. This split is itself a lesson in cost management: give away the item with near-zero cost, and charge for the item with real cost. Bread is slightly more expensive but still cheap. The ingredients, mainly flour, water, yeast, salt, and perhaps a little fat, are among the lowest-cost inputs in any kitchen. There is baking energy and labour if the bread is made in house, or a purchase price if it is bought in. There is also the cost of butter, oil, or spreads that often accompany it. And there is waste, because bread that is not eaten is usually discarded, which adds a real if modest cost. A careful operator will track this waste, because bread waste is one of the few ways this practice can quietly grow expensive. Even with these costs counted, the total remains small relative to the average guest's total spend. This is the key figure a student should hold onto: the giveaway is a tiny share of the check. A basket of bread and a few glasses of water might represent a small fraction of what a table spends on food and drink. When a low cost sits against the potential to lift beverage sales, extend the visit, improve the review, and encourage a return, the math starts to look attractive. The giveaway is not a loss to be minimised. It is a small, controllable expense that can unlock larger returns, provided the returns are real. This framing connects to the discipline of food and beverage cost control, which teaches operators to think in terms of #contribution_margin, the amount left from a sale after the variable costs of producing it are removed. Menu analysis tools such as #menu_engineering classify items by how popular and how profitable they are, so that managers can promote the items that carry the business and rework the items that drag it down. Bread and water sit outside this table in an interesting way. They are not sold, so they have no direct #contribution_margin of their own. Instead, they act as support items whose job is to raise the contribution margin of everything else on the table. A student who understands this reframing has grasped something important: not every item on a menu needs to make money by itself. Some items exist to help other items make money. The practical takeaway is that #food_cost thinking should not lead a manager to cut the giveaway blindly. A crude focus on reducing every cost line would suggest charging for bread and water. A smarter analysis asks what each cost line does for the whole. If the giveaway reliably supports higher spending elsewhere and stronger loyalty, then cutting it to save a small sum could cost far more in lost sales and lost goodwill. This is the difference between #cost_control that protects the business and cost cutting that quietly harms it. 6. How Free Bread and Water Create Guest Value This section is the core of the paper. It describes the main channels through which a cheap gesture becomes valuable. Each channel is grounded in the theory from Section 3 and framed so that a student can apply it in practice. 6.1 Reducing the Anxiety of the Wait The moment after a guest sits down is quietly stressful. The menu is unfamiliar, the order has not been taken, and there is nothing to do. Hunger, especially, makes the wait feel longer and can sour a person's mood before the meal has even begun. Free bread and free water solve this problem elegantly. They give the guest something to do with their hands, something to taste, and a small sign that the meal has started. The wait feels shorter, and the mood improves. This matters because first impressions set the tone for the whole visit. A guest who feels looked after in the first minute is more forgiving of small problems later and more open to enjoying the meal. In terms of perceived value, the giveaway adds emotional value at exactly the point where the guest is most vulnerable to a bad feeling. It converts an empty, anxious moment into a comfortable one, and it does so before the guest has spent anything. Because emotional value is a strong driver of satisfaction (Croitoru et al., 2024), a gesture that adds emotional value early is well placed to shape the entire experience. 6.2 Signalling Generosity, Standards, and Trust Every action a restaurant takes sends a message. Placing free bread and free water on the table before an order signals generosity, and it signals confidence. The message to the guest is that this place is not counting every crumb, that it wants the guest to be comfortable, and that it expects to earn its money through the meal rather than by nickel-and-diming the customer. This message builds #trust, and trust is the foundation of a good relationship between host and guest. The quality of the bread also signals the standards of the kitchen. Fresh, warm, well-made bread tells the guest that care runs through the operation, while stale or careless bread sends the opposite message. In this way, a free item becomes a preview of the paid experience. It is a low-risk sample that lets the guest taste the kitchen's attention to detail before committing to a full order. When the sample is good, the guest orders with more confidence and higher expectations of pleasure, which supports both spending and satisfaction. When it is poor, the guest becomes cautious, which can suppress spending. This is why serving bad bread for free is worse than serving none at all: a poor free item actively damages the signal. The trust created here also links to #price_fairness. A guest who has been treated generously is inclined to see the business as fair, and this inclination carries through to how they read the final bill (Singh et al., 2022). The free items become part of the story the guest tells themselves about whether the visit was worth the money, and that story is more favourable when it opens with a gift. 6.3 Triggering Reciprocity and Supporting Spending The reciprocity channel is the most direct link between the giveaway and revenue. As discussed, a free gift activates a felt obligation to give something back, and this obligation has been shown to raise spending and tipping in service settings (Hilkenmeier and Hoffmann, 2022). In the bread and water case, the guest who has received a gift is more open to the server's suggestions and more willing to add to their order. This shows up in several concrete ways. A guest who feels well treated is more likely to say yes to a drink, to a starter, or to dessert. #Beverage_sales are especially important here, because drinks usually carry high #contribution_margin, meaning a large share of the drink's price is profit once the cheap ingredients are removed. If a free basket of bread makes a guest slightly more likely to order a second glass of wine or a coffee at the end, the extra profit from that drink can dwarf the cost of the bread many times over. This is the mechanism by which a cost item behaves like a revenue driver: it does not earn money directly, but it improves the sale of items that do. Upselling also becomes easier and more comfortable in a generous atmosphere. When the tone of the visit is warm, a server's suggestion feels like a helpful recommendation from a host rather than a pushy sales pitch. The guest is more receptive, and the server is more relaxed, because the relationship has been softened by the opening gift. This is a good example of how a single early gesture can improve the effectiveness of everything that follows. It is important to stress again that reciprocity should be treated as a genuine relationship, not a manipulation. The strongest version of this channel is one where the generosity is real and the guest's response is free. Research on gifts and tipping shows the effect is real, but the same research and the broader idea of hospitableness suggest that sincerity is what sustains the relationship over time (Hilkenmeier and Hoffmann, 2022; Manfreda et al., 2024). 6.4 Anchoring Value and Encouraging Longer, Calmer Stays Free staples also shape how long a guest stays and how they feel about staying. Bread and water make it comfortable to settle in. A guest with something to nibble and drink is content to relax, look at the menu properly, talk with companions, and enjoy the room. #Longer_stays are not always desirable, since a restaurant that needs to turn tables quickly may not want guests to linger. But in many settings, a calm, unhurried guest spends more, because they have time to consider a starter, a second drink, or dessert. The presence of water throughout the meal is quietly important for #beverage_sales in a way that surprises many students. It might seem that free water would reduce drink sales by satisfying thirst. In practice, a well-hydrated, comfortable guest often stays longer and remains open to ordering drinks for pleasure rather than for thirst, such as wine with food or a coffee to finish. Water covers the basic need so that paid drinks can serve the higher need of enjoyment. Removing free water to push drink sales tends to feel mean and can damage the relationship, which usually costs more than it earns. There is also an anchoring effect on perceived value. When a visit begins with something given freely, the guest's mental account of the experience starts in surplus. Every paid item is then added to a foundation of goodwill. This tends to make the whole experience feel more generous and better value, even though the paid prices are unchanged. The giveaway does not lower prices, but it raises the felt worth of the visit, which is the more important number for satisfaction and loyalty. 6.5 Creating Small Moments of Delight and Memory Finally, free staples can be a source of #customer_delight, which is the pleasant surprise of receiving more than expected. Delight is a stronger emotion than mere satisfaction, and it is more likely to be remembered and shared. A basket of unusually good bread, a house-made spread, or a thoughtful touch such as flavoured water on a hot day can lift a routine visit into something a guest notices and talks about. Memory is the bridge to word of mouth. Experiences that stand out are more likely to be described to friends and posted online, and positive reviews are linked to profitability (Abdullah et al., 2024). At the same time, a memorable experience does not automatically become a public review, since the guest's own habits shape whether they share it (Souki et al., 2023). This means the delight from bread and water is best seen as one ingredient among many. On its own it will not make a restaurant famous, but as part of a consistent pattern of thoughtful details, it contributes to the kind of reputation that brings new guests through the door. Together, these five channels show why a cheap gesture can be valuable. It calms the wait, signals generosity and standards, triggers reciprocity that supports spending, anchors the value of the visit and encourages comfortable stays, and adds small moments of delight that feed memory and word of mouth. Each channel is modest, but they reinforce one another, and their combined effect is far larger than the cost of the flour and water that set them in motion. 7. Financial Logic: From Cost Centre to Revenue Driver Having described the channels, this section connects them to money in a way a student can defend to a skeptical manager. The central claim is that free bread and free water should be classified not as a pure cost centre but as a support investment that raises the profitability of the rest of the operation. The logic rests on the idea of contribution margin. Drinks, in particular, usually carry high margins, since the cost of the liquid is small relative to the price. If a free basket of bread raises the chance that a table orders one extra high-margin drink, or a dessert, or a second round, the added profit can exceed the cost of the giveaway several times over. The precise numbers vary by venue, but the direction is consistent: a small, fixed giveaway cost is set against a variable but often larger gain in high-margin sales. The gain does not need to happen at every table to make the practice worthwhile. It only needs to happen often enough that the average return across many tables exceeds the average cost. This is where the giveaway connects to the wider discipline of #menu_engineering and revenue management. Menu engineering sorts items by popularity and profitability so that managers can promote profitable favourites, rework popular but low-margin items, and cut items that neither sell nor earn. Bread and water do not appear on this grid as sold items, but they influence it. By warming the guest and easing #upselling, they help shift the actual mix of orders toward the higher-margin items the business wants to sell. A student who understands this can make a sharp argument: the free bread is part of the strategy for selling the profitable wine, not a separate line to be trimmed. There is a second financial channel through loyalty and word of mouth. Retaining an existing guest is generally far cheaper than winning a new one, and loyal guests tend to spend more over time and to bring others with them. The chain from perceived value to satisfaction to loyalty, supported by the research reviewed earlier, means that consistent small generosity contributes to the lifetime value of a guest, not only to the size of a single check (Tuncer et al., 2021; Singh et al., 2022). Positive reviews add a further return by lowering the cost of attracting new guests, since a strong review profile does marketing work that would otherwise require paid advertising, and reviews are linked to profitability (Abdullah et al., 2024). None of this means the giveaway is free of risk or that it always pays. The financial case depends on the returns being real and on the cost being controlled. A venue with high bread waste, a slow table turnover it cannot afford, or guests who take the gesture without ever reciprocating could find the math less favourable. The honest position is that the practice is usually a sound investment, especially when done with care and measured against the right returns, but it is an investment that a good manager should still watch. Section 8 turns to these risks in detail. A final point for students concerns measurement. Because the returns are indirect, they are harder to see than the cost, which sits plainly on the invoice for flour and glassware. This asymmetry is dangerous, because it tempts managers to cut the visible cost while ignoring the invisible return. The professional response is to look for the returns deliberately: to compare beverage attachment rates, average spend, review sentiment, and repeat visits over time, and to treat the giveaway as a variable to be managed rather than a sacred rule or an obvious waste. The manager who measures both sides of the ledger will make a wiser decision than one who sees only the cost. 8. Risks, Limits, and Cultural Variation A balanced analysis must give equal weight to the ways this practice can fail or mislead. Presenting only the benefits would be poor teaching. This section sets out the main limits and the conditions under which the giveaway loses its power. The first risk is cost creep and waste. Bread that is baked or bought generously but eaten sparingly turns into a real and rising expense. If a kitchen refills baskets without thought, or serves more than guests want, the small cost per table can grow into a meaningful loss across a busy service. The discipline of #cost_control applies here: portion the giveaway sensibly, watch the waste, and adjust. Generosity does not mean carelessness. The most efficient version of the practice gives enough to feel generous without giving so much that it is thrown away. The second risk is expectation inflation, which is the way a gift becomes an entitlement once it is repeated. When free bread and free water are always present, guests stop noticing them and start expecting them. The gesture then loses much of its power to delight, because it has become the baseline. Worse, taking it away is felt as a loss, and losses are felt more sharply than equivalent gains. This creates a trap: the practice must often be maintained to avoid disappointment, even after its power to impress has faded. The lesson is not to abandon the giveaway but to understand that its role shifts over time from a source of delight to a defence against disappointment, and to look for fresh small touches that can renew the sense of generosity. The third risk is insincerity. As the discussion of hospitableness made clear, a gesture delivered without care produces weak returns and can even feel manipulative (Manfreda et al., 2024). Guests are good at sensing when generosity is a script rather than a genuine welcome. A giveaway used purely as a sales tactic, with no real warmth behind it, tends to disappoint. This means the practice cannot be separated from staff training and culture. The physical bread is cheap, but the sincerity that makes it work is not automatic and must be developed. The fourth issue is cultural and contextual variation. The value of free water in particular depends heavily on local norms and infrastructure. In some countries, free tap water at the table is a strong social expectation, and charging for it would offend guests. In others, bottled water is the norm and is expected to be paid for, and the safety or taste of tap water may make free water less appealing. Bread customs vary too, from complimentary baskets to bread that is billed as a small charge, sometimes described in local terms that guests understand and accept. Research on restaurant value also finds that the effect of different value types can vary across cultures, with some kinds of value mattering more in certain settings than others (Croitoru et al., 2024). A manager must therefore read the local context rather than copy a practice from another market. What reads as generosity in one place can read as strange or even cheap in another. The fifth issue concerns operations and table turnover. In venues built on fast turnover, encouraging #longer_stays can reduce the number of guests served in a shift, which can lower total revenue even if each guest is happier. The giveaway that suits a relaxed dinner house may not suit a high-volume lunch spot with a queue at the door. The practice must fit the business model. In fast, high-volume settings, the emphasis may shift toward speed and consistency rather than lingering comfort, and the giveaway, if used at all, should support quick, pleasant service rather than slow enjoyment. A sixth and subtler limit is that bread and water cannot rescue a poor core experience. If the food is bad, the service cold, or the room dirty, no amount of free bread will save the visit. The giveaway is a multiplier of a decent experience, not a substitute for one. Research consistently shows that food quality and core #service_quality are central to satisfaction and value (Slack et al., 2021; Tuncer et al., 2021). The small gesture works at the margin, improving a good experience and easing a decent one. It cannot carry a broken one. Students should resist the temptation to treat clever details as a shortcut around the hard work of getting the fundamentals right. Recognising these limits does not weaken the main argument. It sharpens it. The practice of giving away staples is powerful precisely because it is cheap, but its power is conditional. It depends on control of cost and waste, on genuine care, on fit with local culture and the business model, and on a sound core experience to build upon. A manager who respects these conditions gets the benefit. A manager who ignores them can turn a smart gesture into a quiet drain. 9. Implications for Hospitality Students and Practitioners This section translates the analysis into practical guidance. The goal is to leave students with clear, usable ideas rather than abstract theory. The first and largest implication is a way of thinking, not a single rule. The bread and water case teaches students to evaluate every #small_gestures choice by its ratio of value created to cost spent, and to count both direct and indirect effects. A good practitioner learns to see beyond the invoice. When considering any service detail, from a free item to a warm greeting to a remembered name, the question is not only what it costs but what it does for perceived value, for reciprocity, for satisfaction, and for the chance of a return visit and a good review. This habit of thought turns routine tasks into strategic choices. The second implication concerns delivery. Because hospitableness multiplies the value of any gesture, students should learn to deliver even the smallest act with genuine care. The same basket of bread can be worth a little or a lot depending on the warmth behind it. Training should therefore treat the manner of service as seriously as the content of it. A server who understands why the bread matters will present it better than one who sees it as a chore, and the difference will show up in guest reactions and eventually in revenue. The third implication is about consistency and renewal. A giveaway keeps most of its defensive value when it is reliable, since guests come to trust it, but it loses its power to delight once it becomes routine. Practitioners should therefore maintain their core gestures for consistency while looking for fresh, small touches that renew the sense of generosity. A seasonal spread, a thoughtful adjustment for the weather, or a small extra for a special occasion can keep the sense of care alive without large cost. The aim is a steady baseline of generosity topped with occasional, genuine surprises. The fourth implication is measurement. Since the returns from #small_gestures are indirect, practitioners should build simple ways to observe them. Comparing #beverage_sales attachment, average spend, review sentiment, and repeat visits over time gives a manager evidence about whether the practice is working in their specific venue. This protects the giveaway from thoughtless cuts and also guards against keeping a practice that has stopped paying. Evidence, not habit, should guide the decision. The fifth implication concerns fit and judgment. Students should learn that no practice is universally correct. The value of free water and free bread depends on culture, on the business model, and on the local market. The professional skill is not memorising a list of gestures but reading a situation and choosing the gestures that fit it. This is why the paper has stressed the logic rather than the rule. A practitioner who understands the reasoning can apply it in a fine dining room, a fast lunch spot, a hotel, or a market they have never seen, adjusting the practice to the setting. Finally, the case carries a lesson about the identity of the profession. Hospitality is, at its root, the practice of making a guest feel welcome and cared for. The free basket of bread is a small, daily expression of that identity. When it is done with sincerity, it reminds both the guest and the staff what the business is actually for. This is why the topic, though small, is worth a student's serious attention. The habits formed around tiny gestures reveal and shape the character of the whole operation. A place that gives generously in small ways tends to think generously in large ones, and guests feel the difference. 10. Limitations and Future Research This paper has limits that readers should keep in mind. It is a conceptual review, not an empirical study, so its conclusions are arguments built on existing research rather than new measurements of the bread and water practice itself. There is, at present, little peer-reviewed work that isolates the exact financial return of free staples as a distinct variable, which means the specific case has been explained by applying broader, well-supported principles rather than by direct evidence about bread and water alone. This is a reasonable approach for teaching and for building hypotheses, but it should not be mistaken for proof of precise effect sizes. Several questions remain open and would reward future study. A controlled field experiment could compare tables that receive free staples with those that do not, measuring differences in beverage attachment, average spend, tips, review sentiment, and return rates. Such a study would move the argument from plausible reasoning to measured effect. Researchers could also examine how the effect changes across cultures, since the value of these gestures clearly depends on local norms (Croitoru et al., 2024). Another useful line of work would test the point at which repetition turns the gift into an expectation, and how operators can renew the sense of generosity once that point is reached. Finally, given the honest caution in the tipping research about long-term firm effects (Hilkenmeier and Hoffmann, 2022), studies that follow guests over time would help clarify whether the loyalty and word of mouth benefits are as durable as the short-term reciprocity effect appears to be. For students, these open questions are an invitation. The topic looks small, but it sits at the meeting point of consumer psychology, service management, and cost control, and it has not been studied to exhaustion. A clear, well-designed project on the economics of #small_gestures could make a genuine contribution and would teach the researcher a great deal about how value is really created in hospitality. 11. Conclusion The free basket of bread and the poured glass of water are among the oldest and quietest gestures in hospitality, and they turn out to be among the smartest. Their cost is close to nothing, yet the value they create for a guest can be large. This paper has argued that the gap between their low cost and their high perceived value is what makes them a powerful business tool. They calm the anxious wait, signal generosity and standards, build #trust, activate the reciprocity that supports beverage and menu spending, anchor the felt value of the visit, and add small moments of delight that feed memory and word of mouth. Through the chain from value to satisfaction to loyalty and referral, a tiny expense supports larger returns. The argument is not that giveaways are always wise, nor that clever details can replace good food and honest service. Bread and water are special because they sit at the extreme of the cost-to-value ratio, and their power is conditional on control of waste, genuine care, a good core experience, and a fit with local culture and the business model. A manager who respects these conditions gains a cheap and reliable edge. A manager who ignores them can turn a smart gesture into a slow leak. For #hospitality_students, the deeper lesson reaches beyond bread and water. It is that the smallest details of service, when chosen with intent and delivered with sincerity, are not decoration. They are strategy. Learning to see a basket of bread as an investment in comfort, trust, and #customer_satisfaction, rather than as a giveaway to be minimised, is a mark of professional maturity. The student who carries this way of thinking into a career will find it useful far beyond the table, because it is really a lesson about how guest value is made: not in grand gestures alone, but in the steady, thoughtful, generous handling of the small things that guests feel and remember. References Abdullah, S., Van Cauwenberge, P., Vander Bauwhede, H., and O'Connor, P. (2024). Review ratings, sentiment in review comments, and restaurant profitability: Firm-level evidence. Cornell Hospitality Quarterly, 65(3), 378-392. https://doi.org/10.1177/19389655231214758 Baradaran-Rafiee, V., Nyadzayo, M. W., and Gomiscek, B. (2025). Mastering the digital dialogue: How restaurant managers tackle positive and negative eWOM in the UAE restaurant industry. Tourism and Hospitality Research. https://doi.org/10.1177/14673584251376635 Croitoru, G., Capatina, A., Florea, N. V., Codignola, F., and Sokolic, D. (2024). A cross-cultural analysis of perceived value and customer loyalty in restaurants. European Research on Management and Business Economics, 30(3), 100265. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.iedeen.2024.100265 Hilkenmeier, F., and Hoffmann, S. (2022). In focus: Effects of an opportune gift on tipping. Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Research. https://doi.org/10.1177/10963480211019841 Manfreda, A., Bruant-Bisson, A., Lee, C., Scerri, M., and Presbury, R. (2024). Conceptualising the "Hospitable Service Mindset" for the future hospitality workforce. Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Management. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhtm.2023.12.001 Singh, G., Slack, N. J., Sharma, S., Aiyub, A. S., and Ferraris, A. (2022). Antecedents and consequences of fast-food restaurant customers' perception of price fairness. British Food Journal, 124(8), 2591-2609. https://doi.org/10.1108/BFJ-03-2021-0286 Slack, N. J., Singh, G., Ali, J., Lata, R., Mudaliar, K., and Swamy, Y. (2021). Influence of fast-food restaurant service quality and its dimensions on customer perceived value, satisfaction and behavioural intentions. British Food Journal, 123(4), 1324-1344. https://doi.org/10.1108/BFJ-09-2020-0771 Souki, G. Q., Oliveira, A. S. D., Guerreiro, M. M. M., Mendes, J. D. C., and Moura, L. R. C. (2023). Do memorable restaurant experiences affect eWOM? The moderating effect of consumers' behavioural engagement on social networking sites. The TQM Journal, 35(8), 2255-2281. https://doi.org/10.1108/TQM-06-2022-0200 Thuannadee, S., and Praneetpholkrang, P. (2026). Effects of service quality, perceived value, customer satisfaction on behavioral intentions in platform-based online food delivery services. British Food Journal, 128(5), 1874-1892. https://doi.org/10.1108/BFJ-05-2025-0611 Tuncer, I., Unusan, C., and Cobanoglu, C. (2021). Service quality, perceived value and customer satisfaction on behavioral intention in restaurants: An integrated structural model. Journal of Quality Assurance in Hospitality and Tourism, 22(4), 447-475. https://doi.org/10.1080/1528008X.2020.1802390 #hospitality_business #free_bread_and_water #perceived_value #guest_experience #small_hospitality_costs #customer_satisfaction #reciprocity_in_service #food_and_beverage_management #restaurant_profitability #hospitableness #creating_guest_value #service_quality #customer_loyalty #hospitality_education #low_cost_high_value

  • A Practical and Theoretical Guide to Conducting SWOT Analysis: A Student-Centred Introduction to Strategic Self-Assessment and Planning

    SWOT analysis is one of the most widely taught and most widely used tools in strategic management, yet many students learn it only as four boxes to fill in and never as a real method for thinking. This article treats #SWOT_analysis as a proper analytical process rather than a template. It explains, in plain language, what the tool is, where it came from, how it works, and how a student can use it well for study planning, career decisions, group projects, and early business ideas. The paper reviews the historical origins of the framework, which recent archival research has traced to the SOFT approach developed at the Stanford Research Institute in the 1960s rather than to the popular but weakly evidenced Harvard story. It then sets out the conceptual logic of the four categories, the difference between internal and external factors, and the difference between present conditions and future possibilities. A step-by-step method is given for defining an objective, gathering evidence, populating the matrix, filtering weak entries, and weighting the strongest ones. The article shows how to convert a finished matrix into action using the TOWS approach, and how SWOT connects to complementary tools such as PESTEL, VRIO, and analytic weighting methods. A full worked example of a personal student SWOT is provided, along with a short quality rubric that students can use to grade their own analyses. The paper closes by examining the documented weaknesses of the tool, including vagueness, listing without prioritising, and inconsistent use in practice, and offers practical recommendations for using it rigorously. The aim is to help students move from mechanical box-filling toward disciplined #strategic_thinking. Keywords: SWOT analysis; strategic planning; self-assessment; career development; decision-making; higher education; TOWS matrix; student learning INTRODUCTION Almost every student meets SWOT analysis at some point. It appears in business courses, in study-skills workshops, in career-service handouts, and in the first pages of countless project reports. The tool is simple to draw: a square divided into four parts labelled Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats. That simplicity is the reason it spread so far, and it is also the reason it is so often used badly. A framework that anyone can draw in thirty seconds tempts people to treat the drawing itself as the work. This article argues the opposite. The value of #SWOT_analysis is not the grid. The value is the disciplined thinking the grid is supposed to organise. Filling in four boxes with vague words produces nothing useful. Asking honest, evidence-based questions about your own situation, and then acting on the answers, can genuinely change a study plan, a job search, or a small business idea. The difference between a weak SWOT and a strong one is method, and method can be taught. The relevance of the tool has not faded with age. A survey of competitive-intelligence and business professionals found that SWOT remained the most popular strategic-management tool in active use, even while academics continued to debate its flaws (King, Freyn, and Morrison, 2023). Its reach also extends well beyond corporations. Researchers have applied it to sustainability planning (Pereira et al., 2021; Farag, 2025), to the strategic planning of schools and universities (Chusniyah, Akhmad, and Putra, 2023; Denchev, Yordanova, and Stoyanova, 2022), and directly to the career decisions of students preparing to leave university (Antoniadou and Kanellopoulou, 2024). If the tool is going to follow students into their working lives, they deserve to learn it properly rather than as a decorative diagram. There is a further reason the tool matters for students specifically. University life is full of decisions made under uncertainty and with limited resources of time, money, and attention. Which modules to choose, how to split study hours across subjects, whether to take an internship or a summer job, how to prepare for a competitive application, whether a business idea is worth pursuing: all of these are strategic decisions in miniature. A student who can look honestly at their own position and at the environment around them, and who can turn that view into a plan, holds a real advantage over one who decides by habit or by hope. This paper is written for students and for the teachers who introduce the tool to them. It has three goals. The first is to explain #strategic_planning clearly enough that a first-year student with no business background can follow it. The second is to keep the standard of reasoning high enough that the same explanation would satisfy a more advanced reader. The third is to be honest about what the tool cannot do, because a method taught without its limits is a method taught badly. The structure follows a conventional research-article format. Section 2 covers the history of the framework and corrects a common myth about its inventor. Section 3 sets out the theory behind it. Section 4 examines each of the four categories in detail. Section 5 gives a step-by-step method. Section 6 explains how to turn a completed analysis into actual strategy through the TOWS approach. Section 7 links SWOT to related tools. Section 8 focuses on student applications. Section 9 works through a full example. Section 10 offers a short quality rubric. Sections 11 and 12 deal with mistakes, limits, and criticisms. Section 13 offers recommendations, and Sections 14 and 15 discuss and conclude. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND AND CONCEPTUAL ORIGINS Most textbooks tell a tidy story about where SWOT came from. The usual version credits either a consultant named Albert Humphrey or a group of Harvard Business School professors writing in the mid-1960s. For decades this account was repeated without much checking. Recent historical work has shown that the tidy story is mostly wrong. Careful archival research, including interviews with people who were present at the time and a review of original reports, traced the technique to the Stanford Research Institute in the early and mid-1960s (Puyt, Lie, and Wilderom, 2023). The method did not begin with the letters S, W, O, and T. It began as #SOFT, standing for Satisfactory, Opportunities, Faults, and Threats. Managers were asked to write down the key planning issues facing their units and to grade each issue as something satisfactory to protect, an opportunity to open, a fault to fix, or a threat to counter. The person most responsible for developing this structured planning work was Robert Franklin Stewart, who led the relevant research group. The familiar letters were only a later relabelling of the same idea. A follow-up study reconstructed the full path from the SOFT approach to the SWOT analysis and placed it within the wider history of strategic-management thought (Puyt, Lie, and Madsen, 2025). Two points from this research matter for students. First, the framework was originally embedded in a serious #planning_process that asked for evidence and for dialogue among managers, not a quick brainstorm done alone. Managers were expected to support each issue with reasons, and subgroups discussed the issues before proposals went up to a planning committee. Second, the popular claim that four Harvard professors invented the tool in a single 1965 textbook was described by the researchers as an academic legend, a story that survived because writers kept citing one another rather than the original record. Why does this history matter to someone just trying to plan their semester? Because the origin reveals the intended spirit of the tool. SWOT was designed as a structured, evidence-led way to surface the real issues an organisation faced, so that decision-makers could act on them. It was never meant to be a list of adjectives written in five minutes and then filed away. Recovering that original spirit is the single most useful correction a student can make to how they use the tool. Almost every weakness of SWOT that this article will describe later can be understood as the result of drifting away from that first, more careful practice. THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS OF SWOT Behind the four boxes sits a clear idea. Any person, team, or organisation exists inside an environment. Success depends on the fit between what that entity is capable of and what its environment demands. Strategy, in the broadest sense, is the effort to improve that fit on purpose rather than by accident. To manage the fit, you need to look in two directions. You look inward at yourself, and you look outward at the world. The inward look produces an honest account of what you are good at and where you fall short. The outward look produces an account of what the world is offering and what it is threatening. SWOT is simply a disciplined way of doing both looks at once and then holding them side by side so they can inform each other. This is why the framework splits along two axes. One axis separates #internal_factors from #external_factors. Strengths and weaknesses live inside the boundary of the person or organisation and are, to a large degree, under your control. Opportunities and threats live outside that boundary and are, to a large degree, outside your control. The second axis separates the helpful from the harmful. Strengths and opportunities help you reach your goal. Weaknesses and threats get in the way. Combine the two axes and the four categories appear naturally: internal and helpful gives strengths, internal and harmful gives weaknesses, external and helpful gives opportunities, external and harmful gives threats. A useful way to describe the underlying logic is matching. Once you can see your internal position and your external position together, you can ask the questions that actually generate strategy. Which strengths can be aimed at which opportunities? Which weaknesses make which threats more dangerous? Which strengths can be used to blunt a threat? Which opportunities are worth chasing even though a weakness stands in the way? These matching questions, not the lists themselves, are where the value lives. Scholars have described the tool as an evolving decision-making model precisely because this matching step keeps being refined by researchers and practitioners (Palazzo and Micozzi, 2024). It also helps to add a time dimension that beginners often miss. Strengths and weaknesses usually describe the present. Opportunities and threats usually describe the future, or at least the near future. A good analysis therefore compares what you can do now against what is coming. Some newer variants of the framework make this explicit by asking not only about the current state of a factor but also about its potential to change over time. A limited resource today, for example, might carry strong potential to become a strength if it is developed. Keeping the time dimension in mind stops the analysis from becoming a frozen snapshot that is out of date the moment it is drawn. There is one more idea worth stating plainly, because it anchors everything that follows. SWOT is a way of organising judgement, not a way of replacing it. The tool does not know anything by itself. It only helps a thinking person arrange what they know into a shape that supports better decisions. This is why the same blank grid can produce a shallow analysis in careless hands and a sharp one in careful hands. The intelligence is supplied by the user; the framework only supplies the structure. ANATOMY OF THE FRAMEWORK: THE FOUR QUADRANTS Each of the four categories has its own logic and its own traps. This section takes them one at a time and then explains the two axes that hold them together. 4.1 Strengths A #strength is an internal quality that helps you reach your goal. For a student, strengths might include strong writing, reliable time management, fluency in more than one language, a supportive network of classmates, access to a good library, comfort with public speaking, or a habit of asking for help early. For a small student business, strengths might include a low-cost supplier, a distinctive product, or a founder with directly relevant technical skills. The main trap with strengths is flattery. People list qualities they wish they had, or generic virtues that everyone claims. Writing hard-working in your strengths box means little unless you can point to evidence, such as a record of meeting deadlines or grades that improved after a change in study habits. A genuine strength should pass two tests. It should be something you actually possess, supported by evidence, and it should be relevant to the specific goal you are analysing. A talent for painting is a real strength, but it is not relevant if the goal is passing a statistics exam. A second useful test is comparison. A strength is most powerful when it is something you have that others in the same situation do not. In business language this is called a relative advantage. For a student, being able to write clearly is a strength in general, but it becomes a strategic strength on a coursework-heavy course where many peers struggle with structure. The stronger the comparison, the more the strength can be turned into a real edge. 4.2 Weaknesses A #weakness is an internal quality that gets in the way of your goal. Common student weaknesses include procrastination, weak mathematical foundations, anxiety before presentations, poor note-taking, an unstable study routine, or a tendency to avoid subjects that feel difficult. For a student venture, weaknesses might include limited funds, no brand recognition, or a founder stretched too thin across coursework and the business. The trap with weaknesses is the opposite of the one with strengths. Here people are dishonest by omission. They either leave the box thin, or they list safe weaknesses that do not really cost them anything, such as I care too much or I work too hard. A useful weakness entry is uncomfortable to write. If nothing in your weaknesses box makes you slightly uneasy, you have probably not been honest enough, and the analysis will be weaker for it. Honesty about weaknesses is where the tool earns its keep. In a study of senior dental students, the exercise of identifying weaknesses and threats was found to sharpen how the students thought about their readiness to start independent practice, and it helped them make clearer career decisions (Antoniadou and Kanellopoulou, 2024). The lesson generalises well beyond dentistry. Naming a weakness plainly is the first step toward reducing it, and the whole analysis is only as valuable as it is candid. A weakness left unnamed cannot be planned around. 4.3 Opportunities An #opportunity is an external condition that you could use to your advantage. For students, opportunities might include a new scholarship, an internship programme, a growing job market in a particular field, a free online course, a visiting lecturer with useful contacts, or an assignment topic that overlaps with an existing interest. For a venture, opportunities might include an underserved customer group, a change in regulation, or a new distribution channel. The trap with opportunities is confusing them with strengths. If it is inside you, it is a strength or a weakness. If it exists in the world whether or not you are there, it is an opportunity or a threat. A scholarship exists in the outside world, so it is an opportunity; your eligibility for it depends on your strengths. Keeping this boundary clear prevents the internal and external categories from blurring into one vague list, which is one of the most common ways a student analysis loses its usefulness. A second point about opportunities is that they are only opportunities if you can plausibly act on them. A prestigious international fellowship is a real opportunity in the abstract, but for a specific student with no relevant experience it may be closer to background noise than to a live option. Good analysis screens opportunities against the strengths available to seize them. An opportunity you cannot reach is not yet an opportunity for you; it may become one once a matching strength is built. 4.4 Threats A #threat is an external condition that could harm your chances. Student threats might include rising living costs, a competitive job market, a demanding course schedule that clashes with paid work, health issues in the family, or a technology shift that makes a chosen skill less valuable. For a venture, threats might include a new competitor, a supplier that raises prices, or a downturn in customer spending. The value of thinking about threats is that it moves planning from hope to preparation. Organisations that read their external threats early and responded deliberately tended to weather shocks better than those that reacted late, a pattern visible in studies of how firms handled severe disruption such as the pandemic period in the hospitality sector (Kim and Han, 2022). For a student, the equivalent is noticing early that a rent increase or a heavy exam period is coming, and planning around it before it becomes a crisis rather than after. The trap with threats is either ignoring them or drowning in them. Some students avoid the box because it feels negative, and they lose the chance to prepare. Others fill it with every possible disaster until the analysis becomes paralysing and useless. The aim is a short list of the threats that are both likely and serious, not a catalogue of everything that could ever go wrong. A threat that is very unlikely or very minor can be noted and set aside; the ones that are both probable and damaging deserve real attention. 4.5 The Two Axes: Internal Against External, Helpful Against Harmful The four quadrants only work when the two dividing lines are respected. The first line separates internal from external. Strengths and weaknesses sit inside your control, so you can build or fix them. Opportunities and threats sit outside your control, so you can only respond to them. The second line separates helpful from harmful. Strengths and opportunities push you toward the goal. Weaknesses and threats pull you away from it. Beginners routinely violate the internal-external line, and this single error causes most weak analyses. A useful discipline is to test every entry with one question: would this factor still exist if I were not in the picture? A rising job market would exist without you, so it is external. Your interview skills would not, so they are internal. Applying this test to every entry keeps the four boxes distinct and keeps the later matching step meaningful. When the boxes blur, the matching step collapses, because you can no longer tell what you control from what you merely react to. METHODOLOGY: HOW TO CONDUCT A SWOT ANALYSIS STEP BY STEP A SWOT analysis is a sequence, not a single act of filling in boxes. The steps below turn the framework into a repeatable #methodology that a student can apply to almost any decision. 5.1 Step One: Define a Specific Objective Every strong analysis begins with a clear objective, and this is the step most often skipped. Strengths and weaknesses only mean something relative to a goal. Being organised is a strength for managing a heavy course load and largely irrelevant for improving your fitness. A vague objective such as do better at university produces a vague analysis. A specific objective such as raise my average grade by one full band this semester, or secure a summer internship in data analysis, gives every later entry a clear test of relevance. Write the objective at the top of the page before drawing the grid. If you cannot state it in one sentence, the problem is not the tool; the problem is that you have not yet decided what you are trying to achieve. It is common, and healthy, to spend more time sharpening the objective than filling the boxes, because a sharp objective makes the boxes almost fill themselves. 5.2 Step Two: Gather Evidence Before Opinions The original SOFT and SWOT process asked managers to grade issues with evidence, not just to assert them (Puyt, Lie, and Wilderom, 2023). Students should do the same. Before deciding your strengths, look at real signals, such as past grades, written feedback from tutors, results of practice tests, or an honest note of which tasks you avoid. Before deciding your opportunities and threats, look outward, at course requirements, deadlines, job listings in your target field, funding announcements, and the plans of the people you are effectively competing with for the same places. This #evidence step is what separates a reflective analysis from a mood. Feelings are useful data, but they are not the only data, and they are easy to distort. A student who feels weak at mathematics may discover, on checking, that the real weakness is only in one specific topic, which is a far more fixable problem than a general fear. Evidence turns a vague dread into a precise target. 5.3 Step Three: Populate the Matrix Through Structured Brainstorming Now fill the four boxes. The most productive way is to work one quadrant at a time and to generate more entries than you will keep. Aim for a handful of candidate points in each box. It often helps to ask guiding questions rather than to stare at an empty square. For strengths, ask what you do better than most peers, what others compliment you on, and what resources you can call on. For weaknesses, ask where you lose marks, what you postpone, and what others do more easily than you. For opportunities, ask what is changing in your field, what help is on offer, and what gaps others are not filling. For threats, ask what could reduce your chances, who or what stands in your way, and what trend might make your plan harder over the coming year. If you are doing the exercise for a group project or a student organisation, run this step with the whole team rather than alone. Different members see different factors, and a fuller picture emerges when the internal views of several people are combined and compared. This is closer to how the tool was originally meant to be used, as a dialogue rather than a solo checklist, and it tends to catch blind spots that no single person would notice. 5.4 Step Four: Filter, Sharpen, and Prioritise A raw matrix is a draft. The next step is to cut and sharpen. Delete anything vague, anything irrelevant to the objective, and anything you cannot support with evidence. Replace broad words with specific ones. Good communicator becomes able to explain technical ideas clearly to people outside my subject, which is testable and useful. Bad at exams becomes lose marks by running out of time in the final section, which points straight at a fix. The most important part of this step is #prioritisation, and it is the part most often ignored. A common criticism of SWOT in practice is that people produce long, unranked lists and then treat every item as equally important, which it never is (King, Freyn, and Morrison, 2023). To prioritise, rank the entries in each box, or mark the two or three that matter most. A simple approach is to score each factor on two scales, one for how important it is to the goal and one for how much you can influence it, and to focus on the factors that score high on both. A student weakness that is both damaging and fixable deserves far more attention than one that is minor or permanent. This ranking is the difference between a description and a plan. 5.5 Step Five: Validate Before Acting Before using the analysis, check it against someone else's view. Show it to a tutor, a mentor, a career adviser, or a trusted classmate and ask where they disagree. Self-assessment is prone to blind spots in both directions, overrating strengths and hiding weaknesses. A short conversation often relocates a factor from the wrong box, adds a threat you had not seen, or downgrades an opportunity you had overrated. This validation step is quick and repeatedly proves its worth, and it costs nothing beyond a little humility. FROM ANALYSIS TO STRATEGY: THE TOWS MATRIX A finished SWOT grid describes a situation. It does not, by itself, tell you what to do. This is the single most common failure in student work: the grid is drawn, admired, and then abandoned. The missing link is a step that turns the four lists into actions. The best-known way to do this is the TOWS matrix, developed by Heinz Weihrich in the early 1980s as a companion to SWOT. TOWS is the same four letters in reverse, and it exists to force the matching that plain SWOT often skips. The idea is to pair the internal factors with the external factors and ask what each pairing suggests. Four kinds of #strategy come out of this. The first is the strength-opportunity pairing, which produces offensive moves. Here you ask which of your strengths let you seize which opportunities. A student strong in writing who notices an opportunity in a competitive scholarship essay should aim the strength directly at the opportunity by applying, and by making the writing quality the centrepiece of the application. The second is the strength-threat pairing, which produces defensive moves. Here you ask which strengths can reduce which threats. A student with strong time-management skills facing the threat of a crowded exam period can use that strength to build a schedule that defuses the threat before it bites, rather than being overwhelmed when several deadlines land at once. The third is the weakness-opportunity pairing, which produces improvement moves. Here you ask which weaknesses are blocking you from opportunities worth taking, and how to reduce them. A student who sees an opportunity in a data-analysis internship but has a weakness in statistics should treat closing that gap as a priority, perhaps through a short online course taken before the application window opens. The fourth is the weakness-threat pairing, which produces protective moves. Here you ask where a weakness and a threat combine dangerously, and how to limit the damage. A student who is weak at budgeting and also faces the threat of rising costs should treat this combination as an early warning and act on it, perhaps by setting a simple monthly spending limit before the pressure builds. Working through these four pairings is what converts a description into a plan. Every matched pair should end in a concrete action with a deadline attached. Without this step, a SWOT analysis is only an interesting picture. With it, the tool becomes a genuine engine for #decision_making. Research that traces the origins of the framework stresses exactly this point: the technique was always meant to feed into concrete resolutions and proposals, not to stop at a list (Puyt, Lie, and Madsen, 2025). The list is the raw material; the matched actions are the product. COMBINING SWOT WITH COMPLEMENTARY TOOLS SWOT is a general-purpose tool, and its generality is both a strength and a weakness. It gives structure but not depth. To gain depth, analysts often pair it with more specialised tools. Students who understand these pairings will produce far richer work and will avoid the shallow, everything-at-once feeling that a bare SWOT can have. The most common companion is #PESTEL analysis, which examines the external environment across six lenses: political, economic, social, technological, environmental, and legal. PESTEL is a systematic way to generate the opportunities and threats that then feed the external half of the SWOT grid. In studies of strategic planning at universities, SWOT and PESTEL are frequently used together for exactly this reason, with PESTEL supplying the external scan that SWOT then organises (Denchev, Yordanova, and Stoyanova, 2022). A student analysing career prospects in a field can run a quick PESTEL first, noting for example how a technological shift or a legal change might affect that field, and then place the results in the opportunities and threats boxes with far more confidence. A second companion looks at the internal side. The VRIO framework examines whether a resource is Valuable, Rare, hard to Imitate, and supported by the Organisation. It is a sharper test than simply asking whether something is a strength, because it asks whether a strength is actually rare and hard to copy. A student can borrow the logic informally by asking, of each listed strength, whether peers also have it and how easily it could be matched. A strength that everyone shares is real but rarely decisive; a strength that is rare and hard to copy is the kind worth building a plan around. A third kind of companion adds numbers to the prioritisation step. Analysts sometimes combine SWOT with weighting methods such as the Analytic Hierarchy Process, which compares factors in pairs to produce a ranked, quantified list rather than an unranked one. This approach has been used, for example, to assess the competitiveness of ventures by turning a qualitative SWOT into weighted priorities (Lee and Lee, 2022). Students rarely need the full mathematics, but the underlying habit, forcing yourself to rank factors rather than treating them as equal, is exactly the discipline that plain SWOT tends to lack, and it can be adopted with nothing more than a simple scoring sheet. Finally, some scholars have proposed more positive or forward-looking variants. The SOAR approach replaces weaknesses and threats with aspirations and results, aiming for a more motivating exercise, though it trades away some of the critical honesty that makes SWOT valuable for spotting real problems. Others have extended the tool toward sustainability, arguing for a version fit for long-term environmental and social goals (Pereira et al., 2021). A student does not need to master every variant. The point is to see SWOT as part of a family of tools that can be mixed to fit the question at hand, rather than as a lone technique that must do everything by itself. APPLICATIONS FOR STUDENTS The framework is often taught with corporate examples, which can make it feel distant from a student's daily life. In fact it adapts easily to the decisions students actually face. This section covers five settings. 8.1 Academic Performance and Study Planning The most direct use is planning your own studies. Set an objective for the semester, then map your academic strengths and weaknesses honestly against the opportunities and threats in your course structure. A strength in essay writing paired with an opportunity in a coursework-heavy module suggests where you can score well and should invest confidence. A weakness in a foundational subject paired with the threat of a difficult upcoming module suggests where to invest early effort. The point of an #academic_planning SWOT is not to produce a pretty grid but to decide where your limited study hours will do the most good, which is one of the most valuable decisions any student makes. 8.2 Personal SWOT and Self-Development A personal SWOT turns the tool inward for the sake of growth rather than a specific deadline. Here the objective is broad, such as becoming more employable or more confident, and the analysis becomes a form of structured #self_assessment. The honesty required in the weaknesses box is the hard part, but it is also where most of the benefit sits. Naming a weakness plainly, without excuses, is the beginning of a plan to reduce it. Revisiting the same personal SWOT each year gives a clear picture of progress, because you can see which weaknesses have shrunk and which strengths have grown, and adjust your effort accordingly. 8.3 Career Planning and Employability SWOT is well suited to career decisions, which is why career services use it so often. The objective might be entering a particular profession. Strengths and weaknesses describe your current profile against that profession's demands. Opportunities and threats describe the state of that job market. The exercise then feeds directly into TOWS: use a strength to pursue an opening, close a weakness that blocks a target role, and prepare for a threat such as strong competition. Direct study of this use, with students preparing to move from education into professional practice, found that the exercise improved the clarity and confidence of their #career_planning decisions (Antoniadou and Kanellopoulou, 2024). A career SWOT is especially powerful because it converts a large, anxious question into a set of small, doable steps. 8.4 Group Projects and Student Organisations Because the tool was designed for group planning, it works well for teams. A student society planning an event, or a project group starting an assignment, can build a shared SWOT that combines each member's view. Group use has a further benefit beyond the analysis itself: it surfaces disagreements early, when they are cheap to resolve, rather than late, when they are costly and personal. Studies of strategic planning in educational institutions show the tool being used in exactly this collective way to align people around a shared picture before committing to action (Chusniyah, Akhmad, and Putra, 2023). When a team agrees on its strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats, it usually finds that the division of tasks becomes obvious. 8.5 Entrepreneurship and Early Business Ideas Many students test business ideas alongside their studies, and SWOT is a fast, cheap way to pressure-test an idea before investing time or money. The objective is the launch of the idea. Strengths and weaknesses describe the founding team and the product. Opportunities and threats describe the market. Research on the use of SWOT in marketing and business development highlights how the tool helps small ventures identify a defensible position and align their limited resources with the most promising openings (Haque et al., 2024; Farag, 2025). For a student founder with almost no budget, this kind of early clarity is worth a great deal, because it can reveal a fatal weakness or a decisive strength before any money has been spent. A WORKED EXAMPLE: A STUDENT'S PERSONAL SWOT Abstract advice is easier to follow with a concrete case. Consider a fictional second-year student, Sara, whose objective is to secure a paid summer internship in digital marketing. Sara begins with evidence rather than impressions. She reviews her grades, notes the feedback tutors have given her, lists the skills she has actually used, and scans current internship listings in her city to see what employers ask for. Only after gathering this material does she draw the grid. Her strengths, stated specifically, include the following. She writes clearly and has managed a small social-media account for a student society, growing its following by a measurable amount over one year. She is comfortable learning new software quickly. She has a tutor who is willing to give a reference. Each of these is internal, evidenced, and relevant to the objective, and each passes the comparison test because not every applicant will have run a real account with real results. Her weaknesses are harder to write, which is a sign she is doing it properly. She has never used the paid-advertising platforms that several listings require. She tends to postpone applications until close to deadlines. She has no formal work experience in a company setting. These are uncomfortable to admit and precisely for that reason worth admitting, because each one is a target rather than a verdict. Her opportunities lie outside her. Several local firms have advertised summer internships. Her university runs a free short course on digital-advertising tools. A careers fair is scheduled for the coming month. None of these depends on Sara existing; they are features of her environment that she could use. Her threats are also external. Competition for these internships is strong, with many applicants for each place. The application window is short and overlaps with her exams. Some employers prefer final-year students over second-years. Each of these could reduce her chances regardless of her own qualities. Sara then prioritises rather than treating every point as equal. Among her weaknesses, the lack of paid-advertising skill stands out, because listings demand it and it is fixable in a few weeks. Among her threats, the overlap between the short application window and her exams stands out, because it is both likely and damaging. She marks these two as her focus. Finally she converts the analysis into action using the matching logic of TOWS. Pairing a weakness with an opportunity, she enrols in the university's free advertising course to close the skills gap before applying. Pairing a strength with an opportunity, she uses her measurable social-media results as the centrepiece of her application and rehearses talking about them at the careers fair. Pairing a strength with a threat, she uses her clear writing and her willing referee to make a strong early application before the window narrows. Pairing a weakness with a threat, she blocks out application time in her calendar now, so her habit of postponing does not collide with the exam period. Sara's grid took about an hour to build. Its value is not the grid. Its value is that she now knows what to do this week, and why. That is what a completed SWOT should deliver, and it is the difference between a diagram in a notebook and a decision that changes what happens next. EVALUATING THE QUALITY OF A SWOT ANALYSIS Because the same blank grid can produce excellent or useless work, it helps to have a way of grading an analysis after it is done. Students can use the following short rubric on their own work, or on each other's, to tell a strong SWOT from a weak one. First, is there a single, specific objective written down before the grid? An analysis without a clear goal cannot be judged for relevance and usually drifts. Second, does every entry sit in the correct box, respecting the internal-external line? A grid with strengths hidden among opportunities, or threats listed as weaknesses, will produce confused matching later. Third, is each entry specific and testable rather than a vague adjective? Good attitude fails this test; explains ideas clearly to non-specialists passes it. Fourth, is there evidence behind the strengths and honesty in the weaknesses? Strengths without support are wishes, and a thin weaknesses box usually means the analysis was too comfortable. Fifth, are the entries ranked or marked for importance, rather than left as equal-length lists? Without ranking, the analysis offers no guidance about where to act, which is the failure most often reported in practice (King, Freyn, and Morrison, 2023). Sixth, has the grid been converted into concrete actions with deadlines through matching? An analysis that stops at description has left its main job undone. Seventh, has anyone else reviewed it? A second pair of eyes catches misplaced factors and blind spots that the author cannot see alone. An analysis that passes all seven checks is genuinely useful. One that fails several is a decorative diagram. The rubric is worth applying because it turns a vague sense that a SWOT feels thin into a specific list of what to fix. COMMON MISTAKES AND HOW TO AVOID THEM Because the tool is so easy to draw, it is easy to do badly. The mistakes below are the ones that appear most often in student work, together with their corrections. The first mistake is starting without a clear objective. Without a goal, strengths and weaknesses have nothing to be measured against, and the analysis drifts into a general list of facts about yourself. The correction is to write a specific one-sentence objective before anything else. The second mistake is confusing internal and external factors. Students routinely put an external opportunity in the strengths box or an internal weakness in the threats box. The correction is the simple test from Section 4.5: ask whether the factor would exist if you were not in the picture. The third mistake is vagueness. Entries such as good attitude or bad at exams say almost nothing and cannot be acted on. The correction is to force every entry to be specific enough to test, replacing bad at exams with lose marks by running out of time in the final section. The fourth mistake is dishonesty, usually inflating strengths and hiding weaknesses. The correction is to demand evidence for strengths and to treat discomfort in the weaknesses box as a sign of progress rather than a problem to be smoothed away. The fifth mistake, and perhaps the most damaging, is listing without ranking. A wall of unranked factors gives the illusion of thoroughness while providing no guidance about where to act. Practitioner research confirms that this failure to prioritise, and the related failure to run the tool as a structured process rather than a quick brainstorm, are among its most persistent problems in real use (King, Freyn, and Morrison, 2023). The correction is to rank each box and to focus on the few factors that are both important and actionable. The sixth mistake is stopping at the grid. A finished matrix that is never converted into action is wasted effort. The correction is to run the TOWS matching step from Section 6 and to end every analysis with concrete actions and deadlines. The seventh mistake is treating the analysis as permanent. A SWOT done in September may be stale by January because circumstances change. The correction is to revisit and update it at sensible intervals, especially before a major decision. LIMITATIONS AND ACADEMIC CRITIQUES An honest guide must state what the tool cannot do. SWOT has been criticised for decades, and students who understand the criticisms will use it more wisely rather than abandoning it in frustration. The first limitation is that SWOT is descriptive, not analytical, on its own. It organises factors but does not, without extra steps, weigh them, test them, or tell you which to trust. This is why the prioritisation and TOWS steps are essential rather than optional additions. The second limitation is subjectivity. The output depends entirely on who fills in the boxes and how honest and informed they are. Two people analysing the same situation can produce very different grids. Group use and outside validation reduce this problem but do not remove it. The third limitation is the tendency toward flat, unranked lists. As already noted, treating every factor as equally important is one of the most common failures, and it drains the tool of its value (King, Freyn, and Morrison, 2023). The framework does not force ranking; the user must impose it deliberately. The fourth limitation is ambiguity at the boundaries. A single factor can sometimes be read as both an opportunity and a threat, or as both a strength and a weakness depending on framing, and the framework offers no built-in rule for resolving such cases. Analysts have to make judgement calls, and different judgements produce different results. The fifth limitation is that a SWOT is a snapshot in time. Environments change, and an analysis done at the start of a year may be stale by the middle of it. Newer variants that add a dimension of future potential try to address this, but the basic tool assumes a fixed moment. None of these criticisms means the tool is useless. They mean it is a starting point rather than a finished answer. The ongoing academic debate about its flaws has not displaced it, precisely because a simple, flexible frame for organising thought remains genuinely helpful when it is used with discipline (Palazzo and Micozzi, 2024). The correct response to the critiques is not to abandon SWOT but to use it as designed, as the first structured step in a longer process rather than the whole of it. BEST PRACTICES AND RECOMMENDATIONS Bringing the argument together, the following practices separate a rigorous SWOT from a superficial one. Each recommendation restates a point made earlier in a form a student can act on directly. Begin every analysis with a single, specific objective, written down before the grid is drawn. Gather real evidence before forming opinions, drawing on grades, feedback, listings, and other concrete signals rather than mood alone. Respect the internal-external boundary strictly, testing each entry against the question of whether it would exist without you. Make every entry specific enough to be tested, deleting anything vague. Be uncomfortable in the weaknesses and threats boxes, since honesty there is where most of the benefit sits. Rank the factors in each box and concentrate on the few that are important and actionable rather than treating all as equal. Validate the analysis with a tutor, mentor, or peer before acting on it. Convert the completed grid into action through the TOWS matching step, ending with concrete tasks and deadlines. Where depth is needed, pair the tool with companions such as PESTEL for the external scan or a weighting method for prioritisation. Finally, revisit the analysis periodically, because a snapshot loses accuracy as the environment changes. A student who follows these practices will find that the same tool that produces empty grids in careless hands produces genuinely useful plans in careful ones. The difference, once more, is method rather than the diagram, and method is entirely within the student's control. DISCUSSION Two themes run through this article. The first is that the popularity of SWOT and the quality of its use are largely independent of each other. The tool is used everywhere, from corporate boardrooms to university career offices to student assignments, and its documented persistence as the most popular strategic-management tool confirms this reach (King, Freyn, and Morrison, 2023). Yet the same body of research shows that it is frequently applied without structure and without prioritisation. Popularity has not produced rigour. For students, this gap is an opportunity in itself. Because so many people use the tool poorly, a student who uses it well gains a real advantage in the clarity of their thinking and the quality of their plans. The second theme is that the framework's history illuminates its correct use. The recovery of the SOFT origins at the Stanford Research Institute shows that the tool was born as a serious, evidence-based, dialogue-driven planning process, not as a quick brainstorm done in a spare moment (Puyt, Lie, and Wilderom, 2023; Puyt, Lie, and Madsen, 2025). The gap between that original spirit and the casual box-filling common today explains most of the tool's bad reputation. When students restore the missing pieces, a defined objective, real evidence, honest ranking, and a conversion into action, they are not adding decoration to SWOT. They are returning it to what it was always meant to be. The applications reviewed here suggest that the tool travels well across contexts. It supports individual study planning, personal development, career decisions, group work, and early ventures, and the evidence from educational settings shows measurable benefits when it is used to structure real decisions rather than to fill space in a report (Antoniadou and Kanellopoulou, 2024; Chusniyah, Akhmad, and Putra, 2023). The extensions toward sustainability and toward more forward-looking variants further show that the frame remains adaptable to new priorities (Pereira et al., 2021; Farag, 2025). What unites every successful use is the same discipline described throughout this paper. There are limits to what a general guide can offer. The right depth of analysis depends on the stakes of the decision. A choice of which optional module to take does not need a weighted, multi-tool analysis, while a decision about which career to pursue may deserve one. Part of using the tool well is judging how much rigour a given decision warrants, and matching the effort to the stakes rather than applying the same heavy process to every question. A final observation concerns learning itself. The act of building a careful SWOT is a form of practice in structured reasoning. Students who repeat it across different decisions are training a general habit, the habit of separating what they control from what they do not, of demanding evidence, of ranking before acting, and of turning analysis into steps. That habit outlasts any single grid, and it may be the most durable benefit the tool offers. CONCLUSION SWOT analysis is easy to underestimate and easy to misuse. Its four boxes make it look trivial, and the very ease of drawing it tempts users to mistake the drawing for the thinking. This article has argued that the tool's real value lies not in the grid but in the disciplined process the grid is meant to organise, a process of defining a goal, gathering evidence, looking honestly inward and outward, ranking what matters, and turning the result into action. For students, the practical takeaways are simple to state and harder to practise. Start with a clear objective. Use evidence, not mood. Keep the internal and external categories distinct. Be honest, especially about weaknesses. Rank before you act. Convert the analysis into concrete steps through the matching logic of TOWS. And remember that the tool is a beginning, not an end, best paired with other methods when the decision is important. The history of the framework offers a final lesson. What began as a structured, evidence-led planning method was gradually flattened, in popular use, into a five-minute checklist. The students who get the most from SWOT will be the ones who reverse that flattening and treat it, once again, as a serious method for thinking clearly about themselves and their situation. Used that way, a tool old enough to predate the students who draw it remains a genuinely useful guide to #strategic_thinking, #self_assessment, and #decision_making in academic life and well beyond it. REFERENCES Antoniadou, M., and Kanellopoulou, A. (2024). Educational Approach: Application of SWOT Analysis for Assessing Entrepreneurial Goals in Senior Dental Students. European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education, 14(3), 753 to 766. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe14030049 Chusniyah, A., Akhmad, R. A., and Putra, H. R. (2023). Strategic Planning for Education Quality Improvement Based on SWOT Analysis: A Case Study. Tarbawi: Jurnal Keilmuan Manajemen Pendidikan, 9(02), 199 to 210. https://doi.org/10.32678/tarbawi.v9i02.8366 Denchev, S., Yordanova, S., and Stoyanova, D. (2022). SWOT Analysis of the Educational Sector before and after the Beginning of Total Globalization. In INTED2022 Proceedings (pp. 3433 to 3437). IATED. https://doi.org/10.21125/inted.2022.0963 Farag, M. I. H. (2025). The Role of SWOT Analysis in Enhancing Business Growth and Long-Term Management Sustainability. Management Science Advances, 2(1), 304 to 329. Haque, M. G., Yasir, M., Suradji, R., and Istianingsih, I. (2024). Benefits of SWOT Analysis in Marketing Strategy for Sustainable Business Management. Return: Study of Management, Economic and Business, 3(3). https://doi.org/10.57096/return.v3i3.218 Kim, J. J., and Han, H. (2022). Saving the Hotel Industry: Strategic Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic, Hotel Selection Analysis, and Customer Retention. International Journal of Hospitality Management, 102, 103163. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhm.2022.103163 King, T., Freyn, S., and Morrison, J. (2023). SWOT Analysis Problems and Solutions: Practitioners' Feedback into the Ongoing Academic Debate. Journal of Intelligence Studies in Business, 13(1), 30 to 42. https://doi.org/10.37380/jisib.v13i1.989 Lee, D., and Lee, S. (2022). A Study of the Competitiveness and Development Strategy of Korean Venture Companies in the Fourth Industrial Revolution Using SWOT/AHP. Sustainability, 14(9), 5154. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095154 Palazzo, M., and Micozzi, A. (2024). The SWOT Analysis: An Evolving Decision-Making Model. In Rethinking Decision-Making Strategies and Tools: Emerging Research and Opportunities (pp. 53 to 70). Emerald Publishing Limited. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83797-204-320241004 Pereira, L., Pinto, M., da Costa, R. L., Dias, A., and Goncalves, R. (2021). The New SWOT for a Sustainable World. Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity, 7(1), 18. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc7010018 Puyt, R. W., Lie, F. B., and Madsen, D. O. (2025). From SOFT Approach to SWOT Analysis, a Historical Reconstruction. Journal of Management History, 31(2), 333 to 373. https://doi.org/10.1108/JMH-05-2023-0047 Puyt, R. W., Lie, F. B., and Wilderom, C. P. M. (2023). The Origins of SWOT Analysis. Long Range Planning, 56(3), 102304. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lrp.2023.102304 #SWOT_analysis #SWOT_for_students #how_to_do_a_SWOT_analysis #strategic_planning #student_success #career_planning #self_assessment #TOWS_matrix #decision_making #study_skills #strengths_weaknesses_opportunities_threats #academic_planning #student_entrepreneurship #strategic_thin

  • Vision, Systems, and Scale: An Economic Case Analysis of BYD and Why Founder-Led Value Creation Does Not Depend on Personal Product Use

    This article asks a simple question that carries a large economic lesson. Does a company founder need to be a heavy personal user of the product to build a great business? Using the Chinese manufacturer BYD as a case, the paper argues that the answer is no. Business success rests on #systems, market reading, and productive capacity, not on the private consumption habits of the person at the top. BYD grew from a small maker of rechargeable batteries in 1995 into the world leader in battery electric vehicle sales by 2025. That climb was not powered by one man's love of cars. It was powered by #battery_technology, manufacturing scale, tight #supply_chain control, and an early bet on #electric_mobility. The study draws on recent research in dynamic capabilities, learning curves, vertical integration, and industrial policy to explain how a founder creates #value_creation by understanding where demand is heading and by building the organization that can serve it. The paper closes with practical lessons for students: value comes from designing durable systems and reading markets correctly, and personal taste is a weak predictor of what the market will reward. The case shows that vision, #scale, and disciplined execution together form a repeatable pattern that students of business and economics can study and apply across many industries, not only in cars. Keywords: BYD, electric vehicles, vertical integration, economies of scale, learning curve, strategic foresight, systems thinking, value creation Introduction There is a popular image of the successful founder. In that image, the founder is the number one fan of the product. The software founder codes every night. The fashion founder wears the brand from head to toe. The car founder loves to drive and cannot wait to get behind the wheel. This picture is charming, and sometimes it is even true. But it is not the reason companies win. When we look closely at how large firms actually create #value_creation, the private habits of the founder fade into the background, and something more structural comes forward. That structural thing is a #system. A system is the set of connected parts that turns inputs into outputs at low cost and high quality, again and again. It includes factories, suppliers, research teams, financing, distribution, and the decision routines that hold all of these together. A founder who understands the market and builds a strong system can succeed even if that founder never becomes a typical customer of the product. The opposite is also true. A founder who adores the product but cannot build a working system will usually lose to a competitor who can. The market does not reward affection. It rewards the ability to deliver what many people want at a price they will pay. BYD, a company from Shenzhen, China, is an unusually clear example of this idea. Its founder, Wang Chuanfu, is a chemist and engineer by training. He built his fortune first in batteries, not in cars, and he is not known as a car enthusiast in the way that some Western auto executives are. He is known instead for spending most of his working time on technology and product development. Yet under his direction, BYD became the largest seller of battery electric vehicles in the world. In 2025, the company delivered more than four and a half million vehicles and passed its main global rival in pure #EV_market sales for the first full year. This did not happen because the founder personally cherished the driving experience. It happened because BYD read the direction of the market early and constructed a manufacturing and #supply_chain machine that few rivals could match. The purpose of this article is to use the BYD story to teach an economic point that students can carry into any industry. The point is that leaders create value when they understand where the market is going and then build the systems that can serve that direction at scale. Personal consumption is not the engine. #strategic_foresight, organizational capability, and cost discipline are the engine. To make this argument concrete, the paper examines four pillars of the BYD case: its origins in battery technology, its use of #economies_of_scale and the #learning_curve, its strategy of #vertical_integration and supply-chain control, and its early alignment with the global shift toward electric mobility and supportive #industrial_policy. The article is written for students, so the language is kept plain, but the structure follows the conventions of a research paper. Section 2 sets out the conceptual framework, connecting the everyday idea of systems to established ideas in economics and management such as dynamic capabilities, learning by doing, transaction costs, and vertical integration. Section 3 explains the case study method and its limits. Section 4 gives the background of BYD from a battery workshop to a global carmaker. Section 5 presents the analysis, organized around the four pillars and the central claim about founders and consumption. Section 6 draws out lessons for students. Section 7 discusses limitations and directions for further study. Section 8 concludes. The main contribution is not new data. The financial and sales figures used here are drawn from public reporting and should be read as snapshots in a fast-moving market. The contribution is an interpretation that ties a memorable, almost provocative claim, that the founder does not need to drive the car, to a set of durable economic principles. If students remember the phrase, they may also remember the principles behind it, and that is the goal. A good slogan is only useful if it opens the door to a real idea. Here the slogan opens the door to the economics of #systems, #scale, and foresight. Conceptual framework 2.1 Systems versus habits The first distinction the paper needs is between personal habits and organizational #systems. A habit is something an individual does. A system is something an organization is built to do. Habits are visible and easy to talk about, which is why journalists and biographers focus on them. Systems are harder to see because they are spread across many people, machines, and contracts. But value is produced by systems. A single skilled cook cannot feed a city. A restaurant chain with recipes, training, purchasing, and logistics can. The founder's role is to design and improve that chain, not to personally cook every meal. This is why the private taste of a founder is a poor guide to business outcomes. Taste tells you what one person likes. A system tells you what an organization can deliver to millions of people at a price they will pay. When these two things point in different directions, the system wins, because the system is what meets the customer. A founder who trusts personal taste over market evidence is betting the company on a sample size of one, and that is a dangerous bet in a world of diverse buyers. It helps to define a system more precisely. In this paper a system means the combination of physical assets, human skills, supplier relationships, financial resources, and decision routines that together let a firm produce and sell its product reliably. The key word is routines. A routine is a repeatable way of doing something, such as how a factory schedules production or how a company decides which new model to build. Routines are what make performance repeatable rather than lucky. When people praise a company's culture or execution, they are usually praising its routines, whether they use that word or not. 2.2 Vision as strategic foresight If personal habits are not the engine, what role does the leader play? The leader supplies direction. In the management literature, this direction is often called #strategic_foresight or corporate foresight, and recent work treats it as a capability that can be built rather than a gift that some people are simply born with. Fergnani (2022) argues that corporate foresight is a genuine frontier for strategy, a firm-level ability to sense change early and act on it. YahiaMarzouk and Jin (2022) show that environmental scanning, the disciplined habit of watching the outside world, is linked to organizational resilience and #competitive_advantage. The lesson is that vision is not vague inspiration. It is the practical skill of seeing where demand is heading before most others do, and then committing resources to that future. Wang Chuanfu displayed this kind of foresight when he moved a battery company into electric cars long before electric cars were fashionable. He was not predicting his own driving preferences. He was reading a market. That is the difference between a hobby and a strategy. A hobby is about what the individual enjoys. A strategy is about what the market will demand and how the firm can be ready to supply it. Foresight, understood this way, is closer to careful analysis than to inspiration, and analysis can be taught. 2.3 Dynamic capabilities and the ability to reconfigure Foresight alone is not enough. A firm must also be able to act on what it sees, which brings in the idea of dynamic capabilities. This concept describes a firm's ability to sense opportunities, seize them, and then reconfigure its resources to fit the new situation. Ellstrom and colleagues (2022) describe these sensing, seizing, and reconfiguring routines in the context of digital transformation, and Steiber and Teece (2026) apply the dynamic capabilities lens directly to Chinese firms, arguing that leadership in an age of disruptive #innovation depends on the speed with which a company can rebuild itself around new technologies. This is a useful way to understand BYD. The firm did not stay a battery maker. It sensed the rise of electric mobility, seized the opportunity by acquiring a car factory, and reconfigured itself around a new manufacturing and research base. The founder's contribution was orchestration, not personal consumption. Dynamic capabilities matter most in industries that change quickly, which is exactly the situation in electric transport. A firm with strong ordinary capabilities can run today's business well. A firm with strong dynamic capabilities can also change what business it is in as the world shifts. BYD had to become a different company several times, from phone batteries to cars, from small cars to a broad model range, from a domestic player to a global exporter. Each shift required reconfiguration, and each was a test of dynamic capability rather than of the founder's taste. 2.4 Scale and the learning curve The third pillar is scale. Two economic mechanisms turn size into an advantage. The first is #economies_of_scale, where fixed costs such as factories and research are spread over more units, lowering the cost of each unit. The second is the #learning_curve, sometimes called learning by doing, where the cost of production falls as cumulative output rises because workers and engineers get better at the task and reduce waste. The battery industry is a textbook case of both. Ziegler and Trancik (2021) document that lithium-ion battery costs fell dramatically over recent decades and trace this decline to a combination of scale and technical improvement. Barwick, Kwon, Li, and Zahur (2025) estimate a specific learning rate for EV batteries, finding that doubling cumulative production experience reduces unit costs by several percentage points, and that learning by doing accounted for a large share of the overall cost decline. Public estimates cited by energy agencies put the fall in battery pack costs at close to ninety percent over the last decade or so. For a company that controls its own battery production, these effects are not abstract. They are the reason a car can be sold at a price that customers accept while the company still makes money. It is worth pausing on why the #learning_curve is so powerful. Its effect is cumulative, which means it rewards firms that reach high volume early and keep producing. Two firms may start with the same technology, but the one that produces more will keep discovering small improvements, in materials, in machine settings, in worker technique, that the smaller firm never gets the chance to find. Over time the cost gap widens rather than closes. This is one reason markets in scale-driven industries tend to concentrate around a few large players. The mathematics of learning quietly favors the big. 2.5 Transaction costs and vertical integration The fourth pillar is #vertical_integration, the strategy of owning many stages of production rather than buying them from outside suppliers. To understand why a firm would choose this, it helps to think about transaction costs, which are the costs of dealing with other companies, including searching for suppliers, negotiating contracts, monitoring quality, and bearing the risk that a supplier fails to deliver. When these costs are high, or when a component is so critical that a supply failure would be catastrophic, it can make sense to bring production inside the firm. Integration can therefore lower transaction costs, protect against supply shocks, and let a firm coordinate design across the whole product. It also carries risks, including heavy capital needs and reduced flexibility if a better outside component appears. Recent case research on BYD reports that the firm's integration is unusually deep, covering batteries, key components, and even some semiconductors, and links this depth to lower unit costs and steadier margins. When the global chip shortage of the early 2020s stopped rival carmakers, BYD's control of its own chip supply helped it keep its lines running. This is #supply_chain strategy working as insurance and as #cost_control at the same time. The decision to integrate is a judgment about trade-offs, not a fashion to be copied blindly. 2.6 Market timing and industrial policy No firm operates in a vacuum. The rise of #electric_mobility was shaped by government #industrial_policy, especially in China. A body of recent research examines how purchase subsidies, tax exemptions, license-plate privileges, and later a dual-credit system pushed the new energy vehicle market forward and then matured it as subsidies were withdrawn. Zheng, Menezes, and Zheng (2022) assess how subsidies raised EV adoption. Gao (2023) traces the changing logic of China's subsidy policy over time. Sheldon, Dua, and Alharbi (2023) weigh the trade-offs of continuing versus scaling back subsidies. Shi and Lin (2023) show how the dual-credit policy came to substitute for direct subsidies while keeping pressure on research intensity. Tian and colleagues (2024) give a broad overview of the industry and its policy path. The founder who reads this policy environment correctly, and builds capacity ahead of the wave, captures the benefit. The founder who ignores it misses the wave even if that founder personally loves the product. Taken together, these ideas form the lens for the case. Vision points the firm in the right direction, dynamic capabilities let it move, scale and the #learning_curve lower its costs, integration protects and coordinates its production, and market timing aligned with policy lets the whole effort ride a rising tide. None of these depends on the founder being a typical consumer. Each depends on judgment, capability, and construction. That is the theme this paper will trace through the evidence. Method This paper uses a single-case study design. The case study is a well-suited method when the goal is to understand how and why a complex outcome happened, rather than to measure how often something occurs across many firms. BYD is chosen because it is an extreme and revealing case. It shows the pattern of #systems over habits in an unusually pure form, since its founder came from chemistry and batteries rather than from the car culture, yet the firm reached the top of the global auto industry. When a pattern appears in an extreme case, it is often easier to see clearly than in an average one, which is part of the educational value here. The evidence base has two layers. The first layer is factual material about BYD drawn from public company reporting, reference sources, and news coverage, used to establish dates, product milestones, sales volumes, and financial figures. The second layer is peer-reviewed and working-paper research, published within roughly the last five years, used to interpret those facts through economic and management theory. The analysis connects the two layers by mapping each pillar of the BYD story onto an established concept, then asking whether the concept explains the observed outcome. Where a concept and the facts agree, the interpretation is strengthened. Where they might disagree, the paper notes the tension rather than hiding it. The method has clear limits. A single case cannot prove a general law. It can show that a pattern is possible and coherent, and it can generate lessons that others may test. Company figures also change quickly in a fast-moving industry, so specific numbers should be read as snapshots rather than fixed truths. There is also a risk of hindsight bias, the tendency to make a past outcome look inevitable once we know how it turned out. Section 7 returns to these limits in more detail. The aim here is educational insight, not statistical proof, and the reader should treat the conclusions as well-supported interpretations rather than as final verdicts. Case background: from batteries to the global lead BYD was founded in February 1995 in Shenzhen by Wang Chuanfu, together with his cousin Lu Xiangyang, as a maker of rechargeable batteries. The name, Build Your Dreams, reflected the founder's humble background. Wang had grown up poor in Anhui Province, lost both parents as a young person, and worked his way through university to study metallurgical physical chemistry with a focus on batteries. He briefly managed a state-linked battery operation before striking out on his own with a modest loan from a relative. His path is a reminder that entrepreneurial success is open to people far from wealth and privilege, provided they master a skill the market needs. The early business was not glamorous. BYD studied batteries made by established Japanese firms, learned to produce nickel-cadmium and later nickel-metal-hydride and lithium-ion cells, and won orders from the booming mobile phone industry, including large handset makers. Through relentless #cost_control and a clever mix of manual labor and automation, BYD became one of China's largest battery producers. This period taught the company a skill that would matter enormously later: how to manufacture electrochemical cells at massive volume and low cost. The battery base was the seed of everything that followed. It is important to see that BYD's later car advantage was rooted in a competence built years earlier for a completely different product. Capabilities can be transferred across industries when the underlying technology is shared, and batteries turned out to be the bridge from phones to cars. In 2002, BYD listed its shares in Hong Kong. Around the same time, Wang made a move that many investors thought was a mistake. He bought a small, struggling state-owned car factory, Qinchuan Automobile, in Xi'an. The purchase gave BYD a scarce automobile production license and a foothold in car making. BYD Auto was established in 2003. The founder's stated intention was not simply to make gasoline cars. It was to bring battery expertise into road transport, positioning the company for a future of electric drive. This is #strategic_foresight in action, a bet placed years before the market matured. At the time the bet looked risky, because electric cars were not yet a serious market and BYD had no car-making experience. In hindsight it looks visionary, but at the moment of decision it required conviction about the direction of technology. The bet drew notable outside support. In 2008, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, through a subsidiary, took a ten percent stake in BYD for about 230 million US dollars. Buffett's partner Charlie Munger famously compared Wang to a mix of Thomas Edison and Jack Welch, praising both his technical problem solving and his ability to get things done. Berkshire held the position for many years and fully exited in 2025, reportedly earning very large returns over the life of the investment. The endorsement did not create BYD's system, but it signaled that serious investors saw the value being built inside the company long before the mass market did. The next decade was about scaling the electric vehicle business and deepening #vertical_integration. A milestone came in 2020 with the launch of the Blade Battery, a lithium iron phosphate design that improved safety and packaging efficiency. The battery passed a demanding nail-penetration test without catching fire, and its long, thin cell format allowed more energy to be packed into the same space. Because BYD designed both the cell and the car, it could co-optimize them, fitting the battery to the vehicle and the vehicle to the battery. BYD also developed integrated powertrain units that combined several systems into one compact package, and it produced its own power semiconductors through a dedicated division, which proved valuable when the global chip shortage hit rivals hard. By the mid-2020s, the results were striking. BYD reported annual revenue of about 777 billion yuan in 2024, roughly 106 billion US dollars, a large increase over the previous year, and higher still in 2025, employing several hundred thousand workers worldwide. In 2025 the company sold more than four and a half million vehicles in total, split almost evenly between fully electric models and plug-in hybrids. Its battery electric vehicle sales of around 2.25 million units grew close to twenty-eight percent and passed its main global rival's total for the first full calendar year. Overseas sales crossed one million units for the first time, rising sharply year over year, as the company expanded into Europe, Latin America, and other regions. Independent industry trackers placed BYD's share of the global #EV_market near the top of the field, on some measures approaching a fifth of all electric vehicles sold worldwide during 2025. This is the arc: a battery workshop became a global carmaker without its founder ever needing to be the archetypal car lover. The founder's decisive contributions were technical mastery, a correct reading of where transport was heading, and the patient construction of a production system. The next section explains, pillar by pillar, why those contributions mattered more than any personal relationship with the product. Analysis 5.1 Why the founder does not need to drive the car The central claim of this paper can now be examined directly. The claim is that a founder can create enormous #value_creation without being a typical consumer of the product, because value is produced by #systems and by correct market reading rather than by personal use. Consider the logic. A typical consumer experiences a product from the outside. They care about how it feels, looks, and performs in daily life. That experience is valuable market information, but it is only one data point, and it is biased by one person's preferences. A founder who relies on personal taste is, in effect, betting the company on a sample size of one, and that person is often unusual, being wealthier and more technically minded than the average buyer. The market, by contrast, is millions of people with varied incomes, needs, and contexts. To serve that market, a firm needs mechanisms that gather demand signals broadly, translate them into designs, and produce those designs affordably. Those mechanisms are the system. Wang Chuanfu's contribution fits this pattern. His edge was never that he adored driving. His edge was that he understood the physics and economics of energy storage, and he saw that as batteries improved and fell in price, electric transport would eventually beat combustion on cost as well as on emissions. He then organized the company to be ready for that moment. He is reported to spend the majority of his working time on technology and product development, which is a statement about where he believed value is created, inside the system, in the labs and factories, not on the open road. This reframes the meaning of #leadership. The leader is an architect of capability, not a lead user. The architect need not live in every house they design. What the architect must do is understand how people will use the building and make sure the structure serves them. In the same way, the founder must understand how the market will use the product and make sure the organization can supply it. The habit of personal consumption is optional. The discipline of market understanding is not. There is a further point that matters for students. Relying on personal taste can actively mislead a founder. Personal taste often reflects the preferences of a wealthy, technically sophisticated person, which may be very different from the mass market. A founder who insists that the product match their own preferences may build something that only people like them will buy. A founder who studies the whole market, including price-sensitive buyers, will build something far larger. BYD's success in lower-priced, high-volume segments is a direct result of serving the market rather than the founder's own taste. In many industries the largest profits come not from the most exciting product but from the product that the greatest number of people can afford, and understanding this requires looking outward at the market rather than inward at oneself. It is fair to ask whether personal use ever helps. It sometimes does. In products driven by taste and identity, such as certain luxury goods, a founder's refined sense of style can be a genuine form of market reading. But even there, the founder is using personal taste as a signal about what a target group of customers will want, not as an end in itself. The moment personal preference stops predicting customer demand, it becomes a liability. The general rule holds: what matters is understanding demand, and personal consumption is only occasionally a good proxy for that understanding. 5.2 Batteries as the foundation of the system Every strong system has a core competence that everything else is built around. For BYD, that core is #battery_technology. This is not a minor detail. In an electric vehicle, the battery is the single most expensive and most important component. It determines range, safety, charging behavior, cost, and even the shape of the car. A company that masters the battery masters the heart of the product. BYD earned this mastery the hard way, over many years of making cells for phones and other devices. That experience gave it deep knowledge of chemistry, quality control, and high-volume production before it ever built a car. When the company turned to vehicles, it did not have to buy its most critical part from an outside supplier at a markup and on someone else's schedule. It could make its own, on its own timeline, tuned to its own designs. The Blade Battery is the clearest expression of this advantage. By using lithium iron phosphate chemistry and a long, thin cell format, BYD improved safety and used space more efficiently, which raised the effective range without relying on scarce and expensive materials such as large amounts of cobalt. Because the company designed both the cell and the car, it could co-optimize them. A firm that buys batteries off the shelf cannot coordinate this tightly, because the battery is designed to fit many customers rather than one specific vehicle. This is a systems benefit that no amount of founder enthusiasm for driving could produce. It comes from owning and understanding the core technology. The economic significance is large. Because batteries drive so much of a vehicle's cost, control over battery cost translates almost directly into control over vehicle price. A company that can lower its battery cost faster than rivals can either undercut them on price, invest more in features at the same price, or protect its margins during price wars. BYD has done all three at different times. The choice of lithium iron phosphate chemistry also matters economically, because it avoids some of the most volatile raw material costs and tends to offer strong safety and long cycle life, which suits mass-market vehicles where cost and durability matter more than squeezing out the maximum possible range. The battery, in short, is not just a part. It is the anchor of the whole competitive position, and it was in place before BYD sold a single electric car in volume. 5.3 Scale and the learning curve as a cost engine The second element of the analysis is #scale. Size in manufacturing is not merely a trophy. It is an active mechanism that lowers costs and widens the gap between a leader and its followers. Two forces are at work. #economies_of_scale spread the fixed costs of factories, tooling, and research across a larger number of units, so each unit carries a smaller share of those costs. The #learning_curve adds a second, cumulative effect: as total output grows, the organization gets better at making the product, reducing scrap, improving yields, and refining processes. Barwick and colleagues (2025) estimate that in the EV battery industry, doubling cumulative production experience reduces unit costs by a meaningful percentage, and that learning by doing accounted for a substantial part of the overall cost decline seen in the sector. Ziegler and Trancik (2021) similarly attribute the long fall in lithium-ion costs to a blend of scale and steady technical progress. For BYD, these are not classroom ideas. They are lived reality. Because the company sells millions of vehicles and produces vast quantities of batteries, it moves down the #learning_curve faster than smaller rivals. Every additional unit teaches the organization something and lowers the next unit's cost. This creates a self-reinforcing loop. Lower costs allow lower prices, lower prices attract more buyers, more buyers mean more volume, and more volume drives costs lower still. A competitor that starts later or stays smaller struggles to catch up because it is always higher on the cost curve, and the leader keeps moving. This loop is why scale is a strategic weapon and not just a consequence of success. It also explains a subtle point about margins that students often miss. A dominant firm can keep costs falling faster than prices fall, which lets it defend its market position through aggressive pricing while still protecting profit. Recent economic analysis of the Chinese EV market describes exactly this kind of dynamic, where technological progress and integration push marginal costs down quickly enough that a leading firm can hold price discipline and margin at the same time, even while facing intense competition. The founder's personal habits play no part in this. It is a property of the system's size and its accumulated experience, and it would operate the same way regardless of what the founder drove to work. There is also a scale effect in research and development. A firm that sells millions of units can spread the cost of a major engineering effort, such as a new battery design or a new powertrain, across all of those units, so the cost per car is small. A firm that sells far fewer units must charge much more per car to cover the same research, or else skip the research entirely. This is why large scale supports faster #innovation as well as lower unit cost. The two advantages, cost and innovation, feed each other, and both grow with volume. 5.4 Vertical integration and supply-chain control The third element is #vertical_integration. Most carmakers assemble vehicles from parts bought across a wide network of suppliers. BYD is different. It makes an unusually large share of its own components, from batteries to many electronic parts and even some of its own power chips. This deep integration is a defining feature of its system. The benefits are several. First is #cost_control. By making parts internally, BYD avoids paying suppliers' profit margins and reduces the transaction costs of negotiating and coordinating with many outside firms. Case research on BYD links its integration to lower unit costs and to steadier financial performance after it deepened the strategy. Second is coordination. When one company designs the battery, the motor, the power electronics, and the vehicle together, it can integrate them more tightly, as seen in BYD's combined powertrain units that merge several systems into one compact assembly. Tight coordination reduces waste and can improve performance in ways that are hard to achieve across separate companies. Third, and dramatically demonstrated during the early 2020s chip shortage, is resilience. When outside chip supplies dried up and forced rivals to halt production, BYD's own semiconductor capability helped it keep building and even expand output. That is #supply_chain strategy functioning as insurance against shocks. Integration is not free of risk, and an honest analysis must say so. It demands large amounts of capital, because the firm must build and run factories for many components rather than letting suppliers carry that burden. It ties the firm to its own technology choices, so if a better outside component appears, the integrated firm may be slow to adopt it. It can also reduce flexibility, since idle in-house factories still cost money whether or not they are fully used. These are real trade-offs, and not every firm should copy the strategy. A small carmaker without the volume to keep its own component plants busy would likely be crushed by these fixed costs. But for a company with the scale to keep its own factories running near capacity and the technical depth to run them well, integration converts fixed investment into a durable #competitive_advantage. The key insight is that integration and scale reinforce each other: only a large firm can afford deep integration, and deep integration helps a large firm stay ahead. Once again, this advantage is a feature of the system's design. It has nothing to do with whether the founder personally enjoys the product and everything to do with how the founder chose to structure production. 5.5 Market timing, trends, and industrial policy The fourth element is market timing. A great system pointed in the wrong direction will fail. BYD's system was pointed in the right direction because its founder read the trend toward #electric_mobility early and because that trend was strongly supported by government policy in its home market. China's push into new energy vehicles was one of the most significant #industrial_policy efforts of the era. The government used purchase subsidies, exemptions from purchase tax, easier access to license plates in crowded cities, and pilot programs to seed demand, then shifted toward a dual-credit system as the market matured and direct subsidies were phased out toward the end of 2022. Research has examined this path from several angles. Zheng, Menezes, and Zheng (2022) find that subsidies raised EV adoption. Gao (2023) analyzes how the policy's underlying logic evolved over time. Sheldon, Dua, and Alharbi (2023) weigh whether to accelerate or slow subsidy support. Shi and Lin (2023) show how the dual-credit mechanism replaced subsidies while sustaining pressure on research intensity. Tian and colleagues (2024) provide a wide overview of the industry and its policy development. BYD was well placed to benefit because it had built capacity ahead of the wave. When policy and consumer demand accelerated the shift to electric transport, BYD already had the batteries, the factories, and the models. It could scale up quickly rather than starting from scratch. This is the practical meaning of vision. The founder did not need to predict the exact year that demand would surge, and he certainly did not need to be a car enthusiast. He needed to see the general direction, batteries improving, costs falling, policy supporting clean transport, and to have the organization ready. Timing plus preparation turned a rising tide into a decisive lead. It is worth stressing that policy support does not by itself explain BYD's outperformance, because the same policies were available to every domestic competitor. Many Chinese firms received subsidies, and some received a great deal, yet only a few became global leaders. What separated BYD was that it combined the favorable environment with a superior internal system, its batteries, its scale, and its integration. Environment set the stage. The system won the role. This distinction is important because it protects the reader from a lazy conclusion. It would be easy but wrong to say that BYD simply won because the government helped it. The more accurate statement is that BYD was best prepared to convert a supportive environment into durable advantage. 5.6 From domestic champion to global exporter A newer chapter in the BYD story is its move abroad, and it reinforces the same lesson. Having built scale at home, BYD began exporting in growing numbers, and in 2025 its overseas sales passed one million units for the first time, rising very sharply from the year before as it entered markets in Europe, Latin America, and beyond. The company even invested in its own vehicle-carrying ships to move cars across oceans, extending its control of the #supply_chain from the factory floor to international shipping. This expansion is not driven by the founder's personal love of travel or driving. It is driven by the logic of scale. A firm that has moved far down the #learning_curve at home has a cost position that can be attractive in foreign markets, especially where local producers have not yet reached the same volume. Exporting also feeds the cost engine further, because more sales mean more cumulative production and therefore still lower costs. At the same time, going abroad brings new challenges: tariffs, local content rules, unfamiliar regulations, different consumer tastes, and political sensitivity about foreign competition. These are tests of dynamic capability, the ability to reconfigure the firm for new conditions, rather than tests of personal consumption. The international chapter shows the same pattern as the domestic one, now on a wider stage. 5.7 Vision as economic value creation Pulling the elements together clarifies the economic meaning of vision. In everyday talk, vision sounds like a personality trait, a spark of genius. In the BYD case, vision is better understood as a specific economic function: the correct anticipation of where demand and technology are heading, followed by the commitment of resources to be ready for that future. This function has measurable value. A firm that anticipates correctly and prepares can capture a market as it grows, ride the #learning_curve ahead of rivals, and defend its position through #cost_control and #vertical_integration. This is why vision, #systems, and #scale belong in the same sentence. Vision chooses the destination. Systems build the vehicle to get there. Scale makes the journey cheaper with every mile. The founder's job is to align all three. Personal consumption of the product is not on the list. The lesson generalizes far beyond cars. In any industry, the leader who understands where the market is going and builds the capability to serve it will tend to beat the leader who simply loves the product. A leader can, of course, both love the product and build the system, and that is a fine combination. But when we ask which of the two is doing the economic work, the answer is clear. It is the understanding and the construction, not the affection. Lessons for students The BYD case offers a set of lessons that students of business and economics can apply in their own careers and studies. These lessons are stated plainly so they are easy to remember and, more importantly, easy to use. First, study #systems, not personalities. It is tempting to explain success by pointing to a charismatic founder and their quirks. The more useful habit is to ask how the organization actually produces value. What is its core competence? How does it lower costs as it grows? How does it protect its supply of critical inputs? These questions reveal the real sources of #competitive_advantage. When you read a company profile, look past the founder's morning routine and find the system underneath. The routine makes a good story. The system explains the results. Second, separate personal taste from market understanding. Your own preferences are one data point. The market is millions. If you build a product only for people exactly like you, you may build something small. If you study the whole market, including buyers with tight budgets or different needs, you can build something large. BYD's strength in affordable, high-volume segments is a direct result of serving the market rather than a founder's personal ideal. This does not mean personal experience is useless, but it means it must always be checked against broad evidence rather than trusted on its own. Third, respect the mathematics of #scale and the #learning_curve. These are among the most reliable forces in business economics. Costs tend to fall in a predictable way as cumulative output rises, and firms that reach scale first often stay ahead. When you evaluate a young company, ask whether it has a credible path to volume, because volume is not just revenue, it is a cost advantage that compounds over time. A firm that cannot reach scale in a scale-driven industry is fighting gravity, and gravity usually wins. Fourth, understand #vertical_integration as a deliberate trade-off rather than a fashion. Owning more of the #supply_chain can lower costs, improve coordination, and protect against shocks, as BYD showed during the chip shortage. But it also demands capital and reduces flexibility. The right level of integration depends on the industry, the firm's scale, and the stability of outside suppliers. The skill is not to integrate everything, but to integrate the parts that are critical, costly, or risky to source outside, while leaving the rest to specialists who can do it better and cheaper. Fifth, learn to read trends and policy together. Markets are shaped by technology curves and by government #industrial_policy. The founder who reads both, and prepares before the wave, captures the gain. This requires the discipline of environmental scanning, watching technology, prices, regulation, and consumer behavior, and then acting on what you see. Strategic foresight is a skill you can practice, not a talent you either have or lack. You can start practicing it now, by following an industry closely and writing down where you think it is heading and why. Sixth, remember that vision means preparation, not prophecy. BYD did not need to predict exact dates. It needed to see the direction and be ready. In your own planning, aim to be prepared for a likely future rather than to guess the future perfectly. Preparation turns uncertainty into opportunity, while a demand for perfect prediction leads only to paralysis. The goal is to be ready when the moment comes, not to know exactly when it will come. Seventh, take failure and risk seriously. BYD's rise looks smooth in a short summary, but its choices were doubted at the time, its markets are fiercely competitive, and its integrated model carries real dangers if volume ever falls. Study the risks a strategy carries, not only its rewards, and be careful of learning lessons only from winners. For every integrated giant that succeeds, there may be others that failed under the weight of their own factories. A balanced view protects you from copying a strategy that does not fit your situation. Eighth, and most broadly, the positive message of this case is empowering. You do not have to be the perfect user of a product to build a great company around it. You have to understand where the market is going and build the systems that can serve it. That is a learnable set of skills, open to people from many backgrounds, including a chemist who started by making batteries for phones and rose from rural poverty to lead a global industry. The path to #value_creation runs through understanding and construction, not through personal fandom. This should encourage any student who has ever worried that they are not the right kind of person to succeed in business. The right kind of person is the one who learns to see the market clearly and to build well. Limitations and future research This study has limits that students should keep in mind, both to judge its claims fairly and to see where further work is needed. The first limit is the single-case design. BYD is one firm in one industry in one country during one period. Its pattern is coherent and instructive, but it cannot prove a universal rule. Other firms in other settings may show different patterns. A founder's personal use of a product might matter more in industries driven by taste and identity, such as luxury goods or certain consumer brands, where the founder's judgment about style is itself a form of market reading. Future research could compare industries to map where the founder-as-consumer model helps and where it does not, turning the single insight of this paper into a broader theory. The second limit is the risk of hindsight. Because we know BYD succeeded, it is easy to tell a clean story in which every decision looks wise. In reality, the company faced doubt, competition, and moments when its bets could have failed. The purchase of a car factory was widely questioned at the time. Studying the failures and near-misses of similar firms would give a more balanced picture and guard against survivorship bias, the mistake of learning only from winners. A study that examined integrated carmakers that struggled or collapsed would sharpen our understanding of when the BYD model works and when it does not. The third limit is the speed of change in the industry. Sales figures, market shares, and financial results in the #EV_market move quickly. The specific numbers in this paper are snapshots and will age. The underlying economic principles, #economies_of_scale, the #learning_curve, #vertical_integration, and #strategic_foresight, are far more stable than any single year's data, which is why the analysis rests on them rather than on the numbers alone. Readers should update the figures when they use this article and focus on the principles for the lasting lessons. The fourth limit concerns policy. BYD's rise is entangled with China's #industrial_policy, and it is hard to fully separate the firm's own capability from the boost it received from a supportive environment. Comparative studies across countries with different policies, or careful econometric work of the kind cited here, are better tools for isolating these effects than a single narrative case. The paper has argued that policy set the stage while the system won the role, but that claim would be stronger if tested with formal methods across many firms. Future research could pursue several directions. One is a cross-firm study within the same industry, comparing integrated and non-integrated carmakers on cost and resilience to test whether integration reliably pays off. Another is a cross-industry study of the founder-consumer relationship, testing when personal use adds value and when it misleads. A third is longitudinal work tracking whether BYD's advantages hold as the market matures, competition intensifies, and its overseas expansion meets new regulatory and cultural conditions. A fourth is a closer look at the environmental and social dimensions of the shift to electric transport, since the value created by a firm should ultimately be judged against its wider effects as well as its profits. Each of these would extend the lessons drawn here and test their limits. Conclusion This article began with a deliberately simple claim: the founder does not need to drive the car. Behind that claim sits a serious point about how economic value is actually created. BYD, a company that started as a battery maker and became the world's leading seller of battery electric vehicles, shows that success is built by #systems, not by the private habits of the person at the top. Its founder, a chemist rather than a car enthusiast, created value by understanding where the market was heading and by constructing an organization that could serve that direction at scale. The pillars of the case reinforce one another. Battery mastery gave BYD command over the most important and costly part of the product. #economies_of_scale and the #learning_curve turned size into a compounding cost advantage that widened over time. #vertical_integration and #supply_chain control lowered costs, tightened coordination, and provided resilience when shocks struck rivals. An early alignment with the shift toward #electric_mobility, supported by #industrial_policy, meant that BYD's readiness met a rising tide of demand. Vision connected all of this by choosing the right destination in advance, while dynamic capabilities let the firm reconfigure itself again and again to reach it, from phone batteries to cars, from small cars to a full range, and from a domestic champion to a global exporter. For students, the message is both realistic and hopeful. Value creation is not reserved for those who happen to love the product. It is available to anyone willing to study the market carefully and to build durable systems that serve it. #leadership, in this view, is the work of an architect who understands how people will use what they build, not the work of a superfan. The habits of the founder are a footnote. The design of the system, the mastery of #scale, the control of the supply chain, and the reading of the market are the story. If a battery workshop in Shenzhen can become a global carmaker by following these principles, then the principles, and not the personality, are what deserve our study, and they are principles that any careful student can learn to use. References Barwick, P. J., Kwon, H.-S., Li, S., and Zahur, N. B. (2025). Drive down the cost: Learning by doing and government policies in the global EV battery industry. NBER Working Paper No. 33378. National Bureau of Economic Research. https://doi.org/10.3386/w33378 Ellstrom, D., Holtstrom, J., Berg, E., and Josefsson, C. (2022). Dynamic capabilities for digital transformation. Journal of Strategy and Management, 15(2), 272-286. https://doi.org/10.1108/JSMA-04-2021-0089 Fergnani, A. (2022). Corporate foresight: A new frontier for strategy and management. Academy of Management Perspectives, 36(2), 820-844. Gao, Z. (2023). The logic of change in China's new energy vehicle fiscal subsidy policy: Analysis based on historical institutionalism. Academic Journal of Management and Social Sciences, 5(1), 99-107. https://doi.org/10.54097/ajmss.v5i1.13957 Sheldon, T. L., Dua, R., and Alharbi, O. A. (2023). Electric vehicle subsidies: Time to accelerate or pump the brakes? Energy Economics, 120, 106641. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eneco.2023.106641 Shi, L., and Lin, B. (2023). The dual-credit policy effectively replaces subsidy from the perspective of R&D intensity. Environmental Impact Assessment Review, 102, 107160. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eiar.2023.107160 Steiber, A., and Teece, D. J. (2026). The dynamic capabilities of Chinese companies: Leadership in an age of disruptive innovation. California Management Review, 68(2), 141-154. https://doi.org/10.1177/00081256251412827 Tian, J., et al. (2024). Overview of Chinese new energy vehicle industry and policy development. Green Energy and Resources, article 100075. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gerr.2024.100075 YahiaMarzouk, Y., and Jin, J. (2022). Impact of environmental scanning on organizational resilience and competitive advantage: A study of Egyptian SMEs. Continuity and Resilience Review, 4(2), 192-223. https://doi.org/10.1108/CRR-10-2021-0037 Zheng, X., Menezes, F., and Zheng, X. (2022). An empirical assessment of the impact of subsidies on EV adoption in China: A difference-in-differences approach. Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice, 162, 121-136. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tra.2022.05.020 Ziegler, M. S., and Trancik, J. E. (2021). Re-examining rates of lithium-ion battery technology improvement and cost decline. Energy and Environmental Science, 14(4), 1635-1651. Ziegler, M. S., Song, J., and Trancik, J. E. (2021). Determinants of lithium-ion battery technology cost decline. Energy and Environmental Science, 14, 6074-6098. #BYD #Wang_Chuanfu #electric_vehicles #EV_industry #business_strategy #economics_for_students #systems_thinking #economies_of_scale #supply_chain_management #vertical_integration #innovation_management #strategic_leadership #case_study #value_creation #electric_mobility

  • From Factory Power to Technology Power: The Economic Meaning of Made in China 2025 in Electric Vehicles, Batteries, Industrial Technology, and Semiconductors

    This article explains, in plain language, what the industrial strategy known as Made in China 2025 means in economic terms, and why it matters for students who want to understand how modern economies grow and compete. The central argument is simple. For decades, China grew rich mainly by making large volumes of goods at low cost. #Made_in_China_2025, announced in 2015, was an attempt to change that model and move the country up the ladder toward higher-value, more advanced production. Using recent research and current industry data, the article shows that this shift has already produced clear results in some areas, especially #electric_vehicles, #batteries, and several parts of #industrial_technology, while it remains slow and difficult in one especially hard field, #semiconductors. The article places these outcomes inside three ideas that students meet often in economics and development studies: #industrial_policy, global value chains and upgrading, and the middle-income trap. It then discusses the costs and risks of the strategy, including overcapacity, wasted investment, and rising trade friction with other economies. The conclusion is that the story of Made in China 2025 is not a simple tale of success or failure. It is a live example of how a large country tries to turn #factory_power into #technology_power, and of how such an attempt creates both new opportunity and sharper #global_competition. For students, the lesson is that #industrial_upgrading is possible, but it is uneven, expensive, and politically charged. Keywords: Made in China 2025, industrial policy, manufacturing upgrading, electric vehicles, batteries, semiconductors, global value chains, technology competition INTRODUCTION Every student who studies the modern world economy eventually runs into one big question. Can a poor country become a rich, advanced country on purpose, by planning and pushing, rather than by luck alone? China is the most important test case of our time for this question, and Made in China 2025 sits right at the center of it. When people first hear the phrase, they often think it is only about factories or only about politics. It is more useful to see it as an economic bet. The bet is that a country which became famous for cheap #manufacturing can deliberately move toward advanced, high-value production, and can do so faster than the normal pace of market forces alone. This is the move that the title of this article calls the shift from factory power to technology power. To understand why this bet was placed, it helps to remember where China stood in the early 2010s. The country had become, by a wide margin, the largest manufacturing nation on earth. By recent estimates it produced close to 29 percent of the world's total manufacturing output by 2023, far ahead of the United States, which sat near 16 percent. Those numbers describe enormous factory power. Yet Chinese leaders and many Chinese economists were worried, because scale is not the same as strength. A country can make a huge quantity of goods and still capture only a thin slice of the money and know-how in each product. The most profitable parts of many global products, such as design, brand, software, advanced components, and specialized machines, were still controlled by firms in the United States, Europe, Japan, and South Korea. China assembled the world's smartphones but did not make the most advanced chips inside them. It built cars but relied on foreign engines and control systems for the high end. In the language of economics, China was doing a lot of work but sitting in the low-value parts of the #global_value_chains (Gereffi, Bamber, and Fernandez-Stark, 2022). Made in China 2025 was the government's formal answer to this worry. Announced in 2015, it set out a plan to raise the quality and technological level of Chinese industry across roughly ten priority sectors, and to raise the share of key components and materials that China could supply for itself rather than import. The plan borrowed openly from Germany's Industry 4.0 idea and from the broader global interest in #smart_manufacturing, where factories are tied together by data, automation, and advanced equipment (Chen, Meng, Sun, and Wan, 2024). The aim was not simply more output. The aim was to change the kind of output, and to change who owns the valuable technology behind it. It is worth being clear about why this matters far beyond China. When the world's largest manufacturer decides to climb the value ladder, it does not do so in an empty room. It moves into industries that other countries already occupy, and it changes the terms of trade for everyone. A strategy that began as a domestic plan for upgrading has therefore become one of the main forces reshaping global trade, investment, and even security. That is why the topic appears now in economics courses, in business courses, in engineering programs, and in international relations, and why it is worth a student's careful attention rather than a quick headline. This article has three goals. First, it explains in simple terms what the policy is and what economic ideas sit behind it. Second, it looks at the real record so far in four areas that show the policy at its clearest: electric vehicles, batteries, industrial technology, and semiconductors. Third, it draws out the wider meaning for students, including the opportunities that industrial upgrading creates and the tensions and global competition it produces. The article is written for readers who are new to the subject, so it avoids heavy jargon and explains each idea as it appears. The main finding can be stated up front. Made in China 2025 has produced a mixed but revealing record. In some fields the results are striking, especially where the technology, though advanced, could be scaled up quickly and where China had a very large home market to grow inside. In one field, advanced chips, the results are far weaker, because the technology is unusually hard to master and because other countries have used trade rules to slow China down. This split between fast wins and hard frontiers is itself the most important economic lesson of the whole episode, and the rest of the article is built around explaining it. WHAT MADE IN CHINA 2025 IS, AND WHY IT WAS LAUNCHED 2.1 A short description of the policy At its core, Made in China 2025 is an example of #industrial_policy, which economists define as any targeted effort by a government to steer resources toward particular industries that it believes will bring better long-run growth than the market would deliver on its own (Juhasz, Lane, and Rodrik, 2024). Governments have used such policies for centuries, from the tariffs of early industrial Britain and the United States to the famous planning of postwar Japan and South Korea. What sets the modern debate apart is that it is no longer only about whether governments should intervene, but about how, and under what conditions, intervention actually helps. The policy identified a set of priority sectors that the state wanted to strengthen. These included advanced information technology and computer chips, robotics and automated machine tools, aerospace equipment, ocean engineering and high-tech ships, advanced rail equipment, energy-saving and new-energy vehicles, power generation equipment, new materials, biomedicine and high-end medical devices, and modern agricultural machinery. Across these fields the plan set goals for quality, for innovation, and above all for self-sufficiency, meaning the share of a product's key parts that could be made domestically rather than bought abroad. The choice of sectors is itself instructive. These are not the industries of cheap consumer goods. They are the capital-intensive, technology-heavy industries that tend to sit near the top of value chains and that spread skills widely to the rest of the economy. One feature of the policy that students often miss is that it was not run as a single, rigid, top-down command. Much of it worked through experiment. The central government named a number of pilot cities, and local governments in those cities were told to test their own mixes of support, such as tax breaks, public subsidies, easier financing, help with hiring skilled workers, and closer links between firms and universities. The center then watched which local approaches worked and encouraged others to copy them (Chen, Meng, Sun, and Wan, 2024). This blend of central direction and local experiment is an important part of why the policy had different results in different places and different sectors. It is closer to a large, coordinated set of trials than to a rigid five-year command, and understanding that helps make sense of its uneven record. 2.2 How the policy evolved Made in China 2025 did not stay frozen after 2015. As trade tensions with the United States rose from 2018 onward, Chinese officials spoke about the specific brand name less often, partly to reduce foreign alarm, but the underlying goals did not fade. They were carried forward and, in some ways, deepened inside later planning documents, especially the national five-year plan covering 2021 to 2025. That plan placed even heavier stress on technological self-reliance and on strengthening the domestic economy against the risk of being cut off from foreign technology. Sector plans, for instance in smart manufacturing, set targets for domestic firms to meet a large majority of national demand for advanced equipment and a substantial share of demand for industrial software by 2025. The label may have grown quieter, but the ambition grew louder. 2.3 The economic reasoning behind the bet Why would a government spend so much money and political capital on this? The reasoning rests on a few connected ideas that are worth stating plainly. The first idea is that low-cost production has a natural limit. As a country grows richer, wages rise. Workers who once accepted low pay can now demand more, and other, poorer countries begin to undercut the original low-cost producer. If a country cannot move into higher-value work before its wages climb, it can get stuck. Development economists call this danger the #middle_income_trap, the situation where a country becomes too expensive to compete on cheapness but not yet advanced enough to compete on technology (Murphree and Breznitz, 2025). Made in China 2025 can be read as a deliberate effort to jump over this trap by force of policy. The second idea is about global value chains. A modern product is rarely made in one place by one firm. Instead, its design, parts, assembly, software, and marketing are spread across many firms and countries, each capturing part of the total value. Research on China's industry has long noted that the country entered these chains at the bottom, doing assembly and simple parts, and that the real prize is to move upward into design, key components, and control of the chain itself (Gereffi, Lim, and Lee, 2021; Song, Yu, Hao, and Chen, 2021). Made in China 2025 targeted exactly this upward move, which scholars call #economic_upgrading. The third idea is about spillovers. Advanced industries do not only bring profit to the firms inside them. They also spread skills, suppliers, and knowledge to the rest of the economy. A strong domestic electric vehicle industry, for example, pulls up a whole web of local suppliers in materials, electronics, and software, and it trains a generation of engineers whose skills then flow to other firms. Governments that support industrial upgrading usually hope for these wider effects, not just the direct output of the favored firms. The fourth idea, which grew louder over time, is security. After trade tensions with the United States sharpened from 2018 onward, Chinese planners increasingly framed advanced technology not only as a source of profit but as a matter of national resilience. If a country depends on foreign suppliers for the chips, machines, and software at the heart of its economy, then those suppliers, and their governments, hold real power over it. This blending of economics and security is often called #techno_nationalism, and it is now central to how many governments think about technology, not only in China but in the United States, Europe, and beyond. 2.4 A note on evidence and method This article is a narrative review rather than a new statistical study. It draws on recent peer-reviewed research, on published industry data, and on the stated goals of the policy, mostly from the years 2021 to 2026, and it reads them together to build a clear, balanced picture for students. Where researchers disagree, the article says so. Where the numbers come from industry reports that can shift from year to year, it treats them as estimates rather than final truth. The goal is understanding, not prediction. No claim is made that the outcomes described here are permanent, because the technologies and the politics around them are still moving quickly. FROM FACTORY POWER TO TECHNOLOGY POWER: THE CONCEPTUAL FRAME Before turning to the sectors, it is worth setting out the frame the rest of the article uses. Three linked ideas do most of the work: the debate over whether industrial policy works, the process of upgrading within global value chains, and the question of whether upgrading lets a country escape the middle-income trap. Students who hold these three ideas in mind will be able to make sense of every sector that follows. 3.1 Does industrial policy work? For a long time, many economists were skeptical of industrial policy. The worry was that governments cannot pick winners better than markets can, and that once the state starts handing out money to favored firms, waste, corruption, and lobbying follow. That skepticism has softened in recent years. A growing body of careful studies now argues that well-designed #industrial_policy can raise investment and innovation, especially when it is tied to clear conditions, exposed to competition, and willing to cut off failures rather than protect them forever (Juhasz, Lane, and Rodrik, 2024). The new view is not that industrial policy always works, but that its results depend heavily on design and on the sector. This is a more grown-up debate than the old argument of state versus market, and it is exactly the debate that China's experience feeds. China is central to this debate because its version of industrial policy has been unusually large and ambitious. One influential account describes the country's economy as a government-steered market economy, in which the state does not replace the market but constantly directs and shapes it (Naughton, 2021). That same account makes a striking historical point that students should not overlook. China's early, world-shaking growth from the late 1970s into the 2000s was not mainly the product of industrial policy at all. It came from opening up, from market reforms, and from letting private and foreign firms flourish. Large-scale, targeted #industrial_policy of the kind seen in Made in China 2025 came later, mostly after the global financial crisis of 2008. The account also warns that a very large industrial policy carries a real risk of overshooting, of spending far more than needed and creating waste and international pushback. Both the promise and the danger, then, were visible from the start. Recent empirical work adds nuance. Studies of the Made in China 2025 pilot cities find that firms located in those cities did tend to raise their innovation activity, and that the policy worked mainly through practical channels such as tax relief, subsidies, easier financing, and stronger ties between companies and universities (Chen, Meng, Sun, and Wan, 2024). This suggests the policy did move real behavior, at least at the firm level, rather than simply producing paperwork. Yet other studies caution that some selective industrial policies in China have reduced efficiency rather than raised it, which is a reminder that firm-level activity and true economic value are not the same thing. 3.2 Upgrading in global value chains The second idea is the ladder of upgrading. Researchers who study global value chains describe several ways a country can climb. It can get better at doing the same task, which is process upgrading. It can move into making more complex products, which is product upgrading. It can take on new, higher-value functions such as design or branding, which is functional upgrading. And it can carry its capabilities from one industry into another, which is chain upgrading (Gereffi, Lim, and Lee, 2021). Seen through this lens, Made in China 2025 was an attempt to push Chinese firms up all four kinds of upgrading at once, and to do it in the most technology-heavy chains rather than in clothing or toys. The sectors examined below can be scored against this ladder. In electric vehicles and batteries, China achieved product and functional upgrading and even began to reshape the chains themselves. In advanced semiconductors, it has managed only partial process upgrading and remains stuck below the top rungs, held there by both the difficulty of the technology and by #export_controls imposed from outside. The ladder image is useful precisely because it lets us see that a country can be near the top of one chain and near the bottom of another at the very same time. 3.3 Escaping the middle-income trap The third idea ties the first two to the big development question. If a middle-income country can upgrade within global value chains, then it can keep raising incomes even after cheap labor stops being an advantage, and so it can avoid the middle-income trap. Recent research on China's coastal manufacturing regions argues that the country's particular way of joining global chains, with large scale, a mix of foreign and local firms, activity across many industries, a growing home market, and flexible government support, has given it a real chance to keep climbing rather than stall (Murphree and Breznitz, 2025). By 2022 China's income per person had reached about 12,741 US dollars, just below the World Bank's high-income threshold of around 13,205 dollars for that year, which shows how close the country is to crossing an important line, and how much rides on whether upgrading continues. The success or failure of Made in China 2025 is, in this sense, part of one of the largest development experiments in history. With this frame in place, the article now turns to the record, taking each sector in turn from the clearest success to the hardest frontier. ELECTRIC VEHICLES: THE CLEAREST SUCCESS 4.1 What happened If a student wants a single, easy-to-grasp example of #industrial_upgrading working, the Chinese car industry is the place to look. A generation ago, Chinese carmakers were minor players who mostly built older foreign designs under license and could not compete at the top of the market. Today China is the largest car exporter in the world, and it got there largely by leapfrogging into #electric_vehicles rather than trying to beat established rivals at traditional engines. The scale of the change is hard to overstate. By 2023, new registrations of #new_energy_vehicles in China reached about 8.1 million units, a rise of roughly 35 percent over the previous year. In the same year China exported more than four million vehicles of all kinds and became the world's biggest auto exporter, with well over a million of those exports being electric. By some measures the country was producing a clear majority of the world's electric vehicles, led by domestic firms such as #BYD along with others like SAIC and NIO. Foreign brands that had once dominated the Chinese market found themselves chasing local companies that moved faster and priced lower. A notable milestone came when national purchase subsidies for buyers ended after 2022, and yet the market kept growing strongly, a sign that the industry could now stand more on its own two feet. 4.2 Why it worked Several forces came together, and each one is a useful lesson in itself. The first was a very long runway of support. China began backing new energy vehicles well before Made in China 2025, with buyer rebates, tax exemptions, and heavy public spending on charging networks, and it kept adjusting that support for more than a decade (Tian, Wang, and Zhu, 2024). Crucially, the mix of support changed over time. In the early years the state pushed hard on the supply side to build capacity. Later it shifted toward shaping demand, and then toward letting competition thin out weaker firms. This patience, and this willingness to change tools as the industry matured, is exactly the kind of design that recent research links to successful industrial policy. It stands in contrast to the caricature of a government that simply throws money at a favored sector and walks away. The second force was the size and structure of the home market. Building a market for electric vehicles is not only about the cars. It also needs charging stations, a power grid that can handle them, batteries, and buyers willing to try something new. China coordinated these pieces together, and it did so at a scale no other country could match. One detailed study argues that the Chinese success came precisely from lining up demand, supporting industries, and policy in a coordinated way, though it also notes that early growth was concentrated in a small number of cities rather than spread evenly (De Podesta Gomes, Pauls, and ten Brink, 2023). That uneven pattern is a reminder that even a success story has rough edges, and that national headline numbers can hide big differences between regions. The third force was the choice to compete on a newer technology. In traditional engines, foreign firms had a century of accumulated skill that would have been very hard to overtake. In electric vehicles, the playing field was much flatter, because the core of the car had shifted from mechanical engineering toward batteries, electronics, and software, areas where Chinese firms could build strength quickly. This is a classic case of leapfrogging, where a latecomer skips the old technology and competes directly on the new one. Leapfrogging does not work in every industry, but where it is possible it can turn a weakness, the lack of an established old-technology base, into an advantage, because there is nothing to defend and everything to gain. 4.3 The upgrading achieved, and the fierce competition it created In the language of the earlier frame, the Chinese electric vehicle industry shows real functional and chain upgrading, not just cheaper assembly. Chinese firms now design their own vehicles, control much of their own software, and increasingly set the pace of the global market rather than follow it. BYD in particular grew from a battery maker into one of the largest carmakers in the world, carrying its capabilities from one industry into another. This is technology power, not merely factory power, and it is the strongest evidence that the shift the policy aimed at is actually possible. Yet the very success created intense pressure at home and abroad. Inside China, dozens of firms rushed into electric vehicles, and the resulting price war has squeezed profits and driven weaker companies toward failure. Abroad, the flood of low-cost, high-quality Chinese cars alarmed rival governments, especially in Europe, which is China's largest export market for electric vehicles. The result, discussed later in this article, has been a wave of tariffs and investigations. The lesson for students is that winning a global industry does not end the story. It begins a new and harder chapter of managing overcapacity at home and resistance abroad. BATTERIES: THE BACKBONE OF THE GREEN ECONOMY 5.1 A quieter but deeper dominance If electric vehicles are the visible face of China's upgrading, #batteries are the deeper, quieter foundation beneath it, and here China's lead is even larger. Batteries are not only the most expensive part of an electric car. They are also becoming central to storing renewable energy for power grids, which means they sit at the heart of the entire green economy. Whoever controls batteries controls a large share of the future of energy and transport. By 2024, Chinese firms supplied well over 75 percent of the world's #lithium_batteries output. Two companies stood out. #CATL held close to 38 percent of the global market for electric-vehicle batteries, and BYD held roughly 17 percent, so between them two Chinese firms accounted for more than half of the global market. Industry figures for 2025 suggested that a handful of Chinese battery makers together held close to 69 percent of global installations. Separately, the market for large batteries used to store energy for power grids grew very fast, and Chinese firms led there too. These are not the numbers of a low-cost assembler. They are the numbers of a world leader that sets standards and prices. 5.2 How the lead was built The battery story combines several of the forces already seen, plus one more that is especially important for students: control of raw materials. Making a battery well is only part of the challenge. The materials that go into it, such as lithium, cobalt, graphite, and nickel, must be dug up and, above all, refined. Refining is a demanding, capital-heavy, and often polluting process, and it is here that China built a commanding position. By recent estimates the country refines more than 80 percent of the world's lithium, cobalt, and graphite, and Chinese firms spent heavily to secure mining stakes abroad. This means that even batteries made elsewhere often depend on materials processed in China. In value-chain terms, China did not only capture the middle of the chain, the cell making. It reached backward to control the upstream inputs and forward toward the finished products, an unusually complete form of economic upgrading. Students should notice how different this is from the old model, in which China imported the valuable inputs and merely assembled the final good. Technology and timing helped as well. Chinese firms improved their processes by learning from foreign partners, and they leaned into a battery chemistry known as lithium iron phosphate, which is cheaper and safer even if it stores slightly less energy. When key patents on that chemistry expired outside China in 2022, Chinese producers gained an even sharper cost advantage, and their output of that chemistry jumped. CATL, which began as a small company and grew into the world leader, has now started to move beyond simply selling cells toward supplying whole energy systems, battery-swapping networks, and overseas factories, including plants in Europe that have reportedly begun to turn a profit. That shift, from selling a component toward controlling an entire system, is functional upgrading at its most advanced, and it shows a firm trying to stay ahead even as the basic product becomes a commodity. 5.3 What batteries teach The battery case teaches a lesson that pure market thinking can miss. Leadership in an advanced industry is often built not on a single clever product but on control of the whole chain, from raw materials through refining and cell making to the finished system. It also shows the value of patient, coordinated investment in an industry that private firms alone might have found too risky and too slow to build. At the same time, this same dominance in batteries and electric vehicles is now a source of sharp #global_competition and political friction, because other countries do not want to depend on one supplier for something so important. Control that looks like strength from inside China looks like risky dependence from outside it, and that difference in viewpoint drives much of the conflict described later. INDUSTRIAL TECHNOLOGY AND SMART MANUFACTURING 6.1 A broad and uneven field Beyond cars and batteries lies a wider set of goals that are harder to summarize in a single headline, because they cover many industries at once. This is the field of #industrial_technology and #smart_manufacturing, which includes robots and automated machine tools, advanced rail and shipping equipment, power generation and transmission gear, and the industrial software that ties modern factories together. The overall picture here is one of solid, real progress that falls short of complete self-sufficiency. China has become a genuine global leader in several heavy and infrastructure-related industries. It builds much of the world's high-speed rail equipment, leads in advanced marine equipment, and by recent estimates controls more than half of global shipbuilding orders measured by tonnage. It has largely localized the production of power generation, electrical transmission, and rail equipment, meaning it can now supply most of these for itself. It has also become the world's largest user and a growing maker of industrial robots, steadily replacing imported machines on its own factory floors. These are important wins for technology power, even if they attract less attention than electric cars. In other parts of the field the record is more mixed. China set ambitious targets under its smart-manufacturing plans, including having domestic firms meet a large majority of national demand for smart-manufacturing equipment and a large share of demand for industrial software by 2025. Progress toward these targets has been real but incomplete, especially in the most sophisticated industrial software and the highest-precision machine tools, where foreign firms still hold important advantages. The very highest-precision machines, the ones that make other machines to fine tolerances, remain a weak spot. Aerospace is a clear example of the gap. China's home-built passenger jet, developed to compete with the established American and European makers, still relies on foreign engines and control systems for its most advanced parts, which shows how far a large project can advance while still depending on imported core technology. 6.2 Why the results are uneven The reason for this unevenness connects directly to the article's central theme. Not all advanced technologies are equally hard to master, and not all can be scaled up at the same speed. Some industrial technology can be improved through steady investment, large production runs, and learning by doing, much as batteries and electric cars were. Where that is true, China's model of patient support and huge scale works well, and the country has caught up or pulled ahead. But other technologies depend on decades of accumulated, tacit know-how, on extremely precise equipment that only a few firms in the world can make, and on tight webs of specialized suppliers that cannot be recreated quickly with money alone. Where that is true, progress is slower, and no amount of subsidy can buy an instant result. Research on China's manufacturing upgrading finds that deeper participation in global value chains and stronger links to advanced foreign technology tend to lift a country's capabilities, but that the hardest, most knowledge-intensive segments remain the slowest to master (Fu, 2023; Song, Yu, Hao, and Chen, 2021). This distinction, between technologies you can scale into and technologies you must slowly grow into, is the single most useful idea in the whole article, and it is the bridge to the hardest case of all. SEMICONDUCTORS: THE HARD FRONTIER 7.1 Why chips are different No part of Made in China 2025 has drawn more attention, or shown its limits more clearly, than #semiconductors, the tiny computer chips that run almost everything electronic, from phones and cars to weapons and power grids. If any single product deserves the label of the most important and most difficult manufactured item in the world, it is the advanced chip (Miller, 2022). Two things make chips different from cars or batteries. The first is the sheer difficulty of making them. The most advanced chips are produced on machines of almost unbelievable precision, and the ability to design and build both the chips and those machines rests on decades of accumulated skill spread across a small number of firms in the United States, the Netherlands, Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea. This is knowledge that cannot be copied simply by spending money, because much of it lives in the experience of engineers and in tight networks of suppliers rather than in any document that can be bought or stolen. The second thing is that other countries, led by the United States, have deliberately used trade rules to stop China from reaching the top of this field. 7.2 The record so far The results are the weakest of any area covered here, though far from zero, and it helps to separate the field into layers. China set a goal of supplying about 70 percent of its own chip needs. Recent estimates suggest that the country's overall self-sufficiency in chips reached only around 13 percent by 2024, far short of that target. When the measure is narrowed to the most advanced chip-making equipment, the Chinese share is smaller still. Yet the picture improves as we move down from the cutting edge. China has become strong in the design of many chips and in the making of older, mature chips, the kind used in cars, appliances, and industrial gear, which still make up the bulk of the chips the world uses. Independent industry analysis suggests China is likely to meet or beat its Made in China 2025 goals in chip design and in some manufacturing, while falling well short in the most advanced equipment and materials (Shrivastava and Jash, 2025). The gap, in other words, is not spread evenly across the field. It is concentrated at the very top, in the most advanced chips and the machines that make them. 7.3 The role of export controls A large part of the difficulty comes from outside China. From 2022 onward, the United States tightened a series of #export_controls designed to block China's access to the most advanced chips and, even more importantly, to the specialized equipment and software needed to make them. Washington also pressed allied countries that dominate key parts of the supply chain, including the Netherlands and Japan, to join in restricting sales of the most advanced machines to Chinese firms (Shrivastava and Jash, 2025). At the same time the United States invested heavily in its own chip industry through large public spending programs, effectively answering China's industrial policy with an industrial policy of its own. These moves are a textbook case of #economic_statecraft, the use of trade and investment rules as tools of national power. The controls have clearly slowed China's progress at the top of the field. But they have also had a second effect that students should notice, because it shows how policy can produce surprises. By making it clear that China could be cut off at any time, the controls strengthened the argument inside China for even greater self-sufficiency, and Beijing responded with a new wave of support. A major state fund for the chip industry launched a third phase in 2024 with roughly 344 billion yuan, on the order of 48 billion US dollars, aimed at building domestic capability. Chinese firms have pushed to phase foreign parts and software out of their products, and some have shown real advances in making capable chips using only domestic supply chains, even if those chips still trail the global cutting edge. The rise of competitive Chinese work in artificial intelligence, including models trained with domestic hardware, has added urgency to this drive, because advanced chips are the fuel of modern artificial intelligence. The pressure meant to hold China back has, in part, pushed it to try harder to stand on its own. Whether that effort eventually closes the gap or simply produces a costly, second-best domestic industry is one of the most important open questions in the world economy today. 7.4 What semiconductors teach The chip case is the clearest proof that industrial upgrading has limits, and that those limits depend on the nature of the technology. Money, scale, and political will took China to the top in electric vehicles and batteries, because those industries could be scaled into. The same money, scale, and will have not taken China to the top in advanced chips, because that field demands accumulated know-how and specialized equipment that cannot be bought or copied quickly, and because rivals have actively blocked the shortcuts. For students, the contrast between batteries and chips within the very same national strategy is a rare and valuable natural experiment in what industrial policy can and cannot do, and it should be remembered whenever someone claims a simple answer to whether such policy works. DISCUSSION: OPPORTUNITY AND GLOBAL COMPETITION 8.1 Reading the four sectors together Put the four sectors side by side and a pattern appears. In electric vehicles, batteries, and much of heavy industrial technology, China achieved real upgrading and, in some cases, world leadership. In advanced semiconductors and the most sophisticated machines and software, it has advanced but remains dependent on others. The dividing line is not how much money was spent, since large sums went into every area. The dividing line is the nature of the technology and the reaction of other countries. Where an industry could be scaled up with capital, a big home market, and patient support, the model worked. Where an industry rested on deep, hard-to-copy knowledge, and where powerful rivals fought back, the model has so far fallen short. This is a more honest picture than either of the two simple stories often told in the media. One story says China has already won and will dominate all advanced technology. The other says the whole strategy has failed and wasted vast sums. The record supports neither. It shows a strategy that succeeds dramatically in some fields, struggles in others, and carries heavy costs throughout. That mixed result is exactly why the case is so useful for learning, because reality rarely fits a slogan. 8.2 The costs and risks It would be a mistake to describe Made in China 2025 only in terms of its wins, because the costs have been real and are now a serious problem for China itself. The first cost is waste. When a central government signals that it will support an industry, local governments and firms across the country often rush in at once, building far more capacity than the market needs. This has produced #overcapacity in several favored sectors, including cars, batteries, and older chips, where too many factories chase too few buyers, driving prices and profits down. Analysts have argued that China's heavy tilt toward supporting producers, rather than households and consumers, has helped slow overall growth and has left the economy unbalanced, with strong supply but relatively weak domestic demand. Duplicated and inefficient projects have absorbed money that might have delivered more elsewhere, and broad measures of productivity have not risen as fast as the scale of investment might suggest. A very large industrial policy, in short, can overshoot, exactly as some scholars warned it might (Naughton, 2021). The second cost is rising global competition and trade friction. China's very success in electric vehicles and batteries has alarmed other economies, which do not want to lose their own industries or become dependent on a single foreign supplier for something as important as green technology. The response has been a wave of trade barriers. The European Union raised tariffs on Chinese electric cars sharply, to a maximum well above 40 percent, and the United States lifted its tariff on Chinese electric vehicles to as high as 100 percent, along with higher duties on Chinese batteries. In semiconductors, as already described, rivals went further and used export controls to block China directly. The pattern of one country's industrial policy triggering defensive #industrial_policy in others is now shaping the whole world economy, and it is pushing the global system toward partial #decoupling, in which supply chains are split along political lines rather than organized purely by cost. The third cost is the risk of dependence flowing the other way. As China moves to reduce its reliance on foreign technology, it also gains leverage over others. Its control of refined battery materials, for example, gives it real power over the global green transition, and it has at times restricted exports of certain critical materials in response to foreign pressure. This has made #supply_chains a matter of national security for many governments, and it feeds a cycle of suspicion in which each side treats trade as a potential weapon. The economic idea that trade makes everyone better off has not disappeared, but it now competes with the idea that dependence is dangerous, and that tension is unlikely to ease soon. 8.3 How other countries have responded One of the most important effects of Made in China 2025 is that it changed the behavior of other governments. For years, many rich countries had drifted away from active industrial policy, trusting markets to allocate investment. China's push, together with the shock of the pandemic and rising security worries, helped bring industrial policy back into fashion almost everywhere. The United States passed major laws to rebuild its chip industry and to subsidize clean energy at home. The European Union moved to secure its own supplies of critical raw materials and to protect its car industry. Other economies, from Japan and South Korea to India, expanded their own support for strategic sectors. In this sense, China's strategy did not only reshape China. It helped trigger a worldwide return to the idea that governments should actively shape which industries a country builds. Students living through this period are watching a genuine turning point in economic thinking. 8.4 The dual-circulation response China's own answer to these pressures has been to lean harder on its huge internal market while continuing to trade abroad, a strategy sometimes summarized as #dual_circulation. The idea is to make the domestic economy strong and self-reliant enough to keep growing even if foreign markets and foreign technology become less reliable, while still selling into and buying from the wider world where possible. This reflects the same security logic that runs through the later stages of Made in China 2025. For students it is a clear example of how economic policy and geopolitics have become almost impossible to separate. 8.5 What this means for students Why should a student care about all of this, beyond passing an exam? Several reasons stand out. First, the case shows that the structure of the world economy is not fixed. The countries that lead in advanced industries today were not always leaders, and they will not automatically stay ahead. Industrial upgrading is genuinely possible, which means the map of who makes what, and who profits most, can be redrawn within a student's own working lifetime. That is a source of opportunity for latecomers and a source of anxiety for those who currently hold the lead. Second, the case shows that opportunity and competition arrive together. As China moved up the value chain, it created new industries, new jobs, and new firms, but it also intensified #global_competition, put pressure on established producers elsewhere, and provoked defensive measures. Students entering fields such as engineering, business, economics, energy, and public policy will spend their careers inside this tension. Understanding it early is a real advantage. Third, the case teaches humility about easy answers. The same strategy produced a world-beating battery industry and a struggling advanced-chip industry. Anyone who claims that industrial policy always works, or never works, is ignoring the evidence. The honest lesson is that outcomes depend on the specific technology, the design of the policy, the size of the home market, the accumulated knowledge available, and the reactions of other countries. Careful, case-by-case thinking beats slogans, and it is the kind of thinking a good education is meant to build. Fourth, the case has practical career meaning. The industries where China has upgraded fastest, such as electric vehicles, batteries, clean energy, and automation, are precisely the fields expected to grow worldwide for decades. The frictions the strategy has created, in trade, in supply chains, and in technology security, are creating whole new areas of work in policy, compliance, logistics, and diplomacy. A student who understands both the technology and the politics of #industrial_upgrading is preparing for the kinds of jobs that will actually exist. Finally, the case is a live lesson in reading evidence carefully. The numbers in this field change every year, the sources often carry a political slant, and the same fact can be spun as triumph or failure depending on who is telling the story. Learning to separate what is measured from what is claimed, and to hold a balanced view while others rush to extremes, is one of the most valuable skills any student can take from this subject. LIMITATIONS This article has clear limits that readers should keep in mind. It is a narrative review, not a new empirical study, so it inherits the strengths and weaknesses of the sources it relies on. Many of the sharpest figures, especially market shares in batteries and semiconductors, come from industry data that can move quickly and that different analysts measure in different ways, so they should be read as reasonable estimates rather than precise facts. The topic is also politically charged, and sources from different countries sometimes describe the same events in very different tones, which is why this article has leaned on peer-reviewed research where possible and has tried to state disagreements openly. The article also focuses on four sectors and does not cover every part of the policy, such as biomedicine, new materials, or agricultural machinery, where the record may differ. Finally, the situation is still unfolding. New export controls, new technologies, and new economic conditions could shift the picture within a year or two, so the conclusions here describe the state of play at the time of writing rather than a settled verdict. CONCLUSION The story of Made in China 2025 is, at heart, the story of a country trying to convert factory power into technology power on purpose and at enormous scale. The evidence gathered here shows that this attempt has partly succeeded and partly stalled, and that the split between the two is the most important thing to understand. In electric vehicles, China leapfrogged into a newer technology and became the world's largest car exporter. In batteries, it built a near-commanding position that reaches from raw materials all the way to finished energy systems. In much of heavy industrial technology, it moved from copying to leading. These are real achievements of economic upgrading, and they prove that a determined industrial policy, backed by a huge home market and patient investment, can lift a country up the global value chains ladder. In advanced semiconductors, the same effort has run into the hardest wall in modern industry, a combination of technology that cannot be scaled into quickly and rivals who have used export controls to block the shortcuts. Here the limits of the strategy are on full display, and the gap between ambition and result remains wide. Alongside these outcomes sit heavy costs. Overcapacity and wasted investment have weighed on China's own economy, and the country's success has triggered a wave of tariffs, controls, and defensive industrial policy abroad, pushing the world toward sharper global competition and partial decoupling. It has also helped bring industrial policy back to the center of economic thinking around the globe. For students, the deepest lesson is not that China won or lost. It is that #industrial_upgrading is possible but uneven, powerful but costly, and always tangled up with politics. The same policy can produce a global champion in one industry and a struggling follower in another, depending on the nature of the technology and the reactions of others. Learning to see why, and to hold that balanced, evidence-based view while the rest of the world reaches for simple stories, is exactly the kind of thinking that the study of the modern economy is meant to build. HASHTAGS #Made_in_China_2025 #industrial_upgrading #technology_power #factory_power #electric_vehicles #batteries #semiconductors #industrial_policy #global_value_chains #manufacturing #innovation #self_sufficiency #global_competition #economic_upgrading #students REFERENCES Chen, K., Meng, Q., Sun, Y., and Wan, Q. (2024). How does industrial policy experimentation influence innovation performance? A case of Made in China 2025. Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 11(1), Article 40. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-023-02497-x De Podesta Gomes, A., Pauls, R., and ten Brink, T. (2023). Industrial policy and the creation of the electric vehicles market in China: demand structure, sectoral complementarities and policy coordination. Cambridge Journal of Economics, 47(1), 45 to 66. https://doi.org/10.1093/cje/beac056 Fu, Q. (2023). The impact of global value chain embedding on the upgrading of China's manufacturing industry. Frontiers in Energy Research, 11, Article 1256317. https://doi.org/10.3389/fenrg.2023.1256317 Gereffi, G., Bamber, P., and Fernandez-Stark, K. (Eds.). (2022). China's New Development Strategies: Upgrading from Above and from Below in Global Value Chains. Palgrave Macmillan. Gereffi, G., Lim, H. C., and Lee, J. (2021). Trade policies, firm strategies, and adaptive reconfigurations of global value chains. Journal of International Business Policy, 4(4), 506 to 522. Juhasz, R., Lane, N., and Rodrik, D. (2024). The new economics of industrial policy. Annual Review of Economics, 16. Miller, C. (2022). Chip War: The Fight for the World's Most Critical Technology. Scribner. Murphree, M., and Breznitz, D. (2025). China, global value chains, and the middle-income trap. Business and Politics, 28(1), 10 to 28. Naughton, B. (2021). The Rise of China's Industrial Policy, 1978 to 2020. Lynne Rienner Publishers. https://doi.org/10.1515/9786078066605 Shrivastava, M., and Jash, A. (2025). China's semiconductor conundrum: understanding US export controls and their efficacy. Cogent Social Sciences, 11(1), Article 2528450. https://doi.org/10.1080/23311886.2025.2528450 Song, Y., Yu, C., Hao, L., and Chen, X. (2021). Path for China's high-tech industry to participate in the reconstruction of global value chains. Technology in Society, 65, Article 101568. Tian, J., Wang, P., and Zhu, D. (2024). Overview of Chinese new energy vehicle industry and policy development. Green Energy and Resources, 2(2), Article 100075. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gerr.2024.100075 Zhang, T., Yin, Z. H., and Choi, C. H. (2025). Industrial transformation and environmental sustainability: The case of China's Made in China 2025 policy. SAGE Open. https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440251382556

  • Oil, Cartels, and Market Control: An Economic-History Reading of the 1928 Red Line Agreement and Its Relevance to the Modern Energy Transition

    This article revisits the 1928 Red Line Agreement and asks a question that matters for any student of economic history: how were world #oil markets actually organised in the decades before national oil companies and modern energy institutions took charge? The Red Line Agreement was a private contract among a small group of Western oil firms and one investor. It divided a vast portion of the former #Ottoman_Empire into a shared zone in which the partners promised not to compete against one another. Read through the lens of economics, the deal is a textbook example of #collusion: a group of firms agreeing to reduce rivalry so that they could jointly control supply, prices, and the pace of investment. The paper reconstructs the origins of the agreement, sets out its exact terms, and links it to its companion deal of the same year, the #Achnacarry_Agreement, which coordinated world markets. It then applies standard ideas from the economics of #market_power, including #oligopoly, #barriers_to_entry, and the deliberate restriction of output, to explain why the arrangement held for two decades and why it finally collapsed. The later sections trace a clear institutional line from the red line to #OPEC and to today's OPEC-plus coalition, and draw lessons for the #energy_transition and for global trade. The central message is constructive: understanding how yesterday's energy institutions were built makes it far easier to read the choices now facing producers, consumers, and governments. Keywords: Red Line Agreement; oil cartel; market control; economic history; Middle East oil; energy transition; OPEC; resource governance Introduction Many people first meet the history of oil through vivid images: a gusher roaring out of the desert, powerful men meeting quietly in a Scottish castle, and a single red pencil drawing a line across a map of the Middle East. These images are memorable, and they are not wrong, but they can distract from the more useful lesson. Behind the drama lie a few ordinary economic problems that every resource industry must solve. Who is allowed to search for the resource, and where? Who may sell it, and at what price? How quickly should a rich deposit be developed, and who has the right to decide? The 1928 Red Line Agreement is one of the clearest early answers that private firms ever gave to these questions, which is why it repays careful study. The agreement was signed on 31 July 1928 by the partners of the #Turkish_Petroleum_Company, a joint venture soon renamed the Iraq Petroleum Company. The signatories were four groups of companies and one individual investor. They agreed that within a large marked area, none of them would seek oil independently. Any new activity in that zone would be carried out only through their shared company, in fixed proportions. Put in plain economic terms, they signed a broad and long-lasting non-compete agreement covering one of the richest resource regions on earth. This article treats the deal as a subject for #economic_history rather than as a piece of folklore. It has three goals. The first is to describe accurately what the agreement was, how it arose, and how it worked together with its companion deal for world markets. The second is to explain the agreement using the standard toolkit of market economics, so that students can recognise the general pattern and not only the single case. The third is to connect the past to the present, showing how the habits and institutions created in 1928 still shape the way producers behave and the debates now surrounding the shift to cleaner energy. The argument is not that the firms of 1928 were unusually greedy or wicked. They were responding to genuine economic pressures, above all the fear of destructive price wars caused by chronic oversupply. The argument is that the way they solved their problem, by dividing territory and freezing competition, carried lasting costs for the countries whose oil was at stake, and that it set patterns which later producer governments would copy and adapt. Grasping both the internal logic of the deal and its external costs is the point of studying it. The article proceeds as follows. Sections 2 to 4 tell the history: the setting before the deal, the terms of the Red Line Agreement itself, and the parallel #Achnacarry_Agreement. Sections 5 and 6 turn to economic analysis, first explaining why firms build cartels and then examining the specific costs the arrangement imposed on host countries. Sections 7 and 8 trace the breakup of the old order and the rise of producer power through #OPEC. Section 9 draws lessons for the #energy_transition and global trade, Section 10 discusses limits and cautions, and Section 11 concludes. The setting: oil, empire, and the scramble for concessions To understand 1928 we must begin earlier. In the decades before the First World War, oil was changing from a fuel for lamps into the fuel of navies, industry, and eventually motor transport. Governments increasingly saw secure oil supply as a matter of national power, not merely of private profit. This blend of commercial ambition and state strategy is the backdrop to every agreement discussed here, and it explains why oil deals were never purely business matters. The lands of the #Ottoman_Empire were believed to hold enormous reserves, especially in the region that is now Iraq. Control over these reserves became a prize contested by European powers and by the largest oil firms. A crucial early piece was the concession that the Anglo-Persian Oil Company held in neighbouring Persia, which by the eve of the war made it the only significant producer of crude and refined products in the wider region outside Egypt. That firm, later renamed and now known as BP, would sit at the centre of the story for decades. In 1912 the #Turkish_Petroleum_Company was formed to explore Ottoman oil. Its early shareholders included Royal Dutch Shell, a German bank, and a Turkish bank, and the venture had been assembled with the help of the Armenian financier #Calouste_Gulbenkian, who retained a personal interest in it. In 1914 the British government arranged for the Turkish bank's stake to pass to the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, giving Britain a controlling weight in the enterprise. Around the same time the partners accepted an early form of self-restraint, promising not to pursue oil in the Ottoman lands except through the shared company. The habit of cooperating rather than competing in this region therefore predates the famous 1928 deal; the later agreement extended and hardened a principle already present in 1914. The First World War redrew the map entirely. The Ottoman Empire collapsed, and its Arab provinces were divided between Britain and France under League of Nations mandates. The oil rights had to be settled among the victors. At the #San_Remo_Agreement of 1920, Britain and France agreed that the French would take over the former German share of the venture, a stake eventually held through the Compagnie Francaise des Petroles, the ancestor of today's Total. This detail carries a large lesson for economics students. The right to explore for oil in the region was being distributed through treaties and private negotiation, not through open competition. Access itself was the scarce and valuable good, and it was allocated by diplomatic power rather than by any market. The borders themselves were still uncertain, and oil ran through that uncertainty. At the peace conference that settled the new Turkey, the fate of the oil-rich district around Mosul was disputed between Turkey and the new state of Iraq. The matter was referred to the League of Nations, which in the mid 1920s assigned Mosul to Iraq. Only after that ruling could the venture secure a firm concession over Iraqi oil, which it obtained in 1925. Recent historical work stresses that the outcome was not inevitable, and that a different settlement might have divided the region's oil wealth more evenly. The point for students is that the commercial order rested on political decisions that could have gone another way. The United States refused to be shut out. American firms and the American government pressed for a share, using the language of the Open Door, meaning equal commercial access for all nations. Washington held real leverage, because a 1920 American law allowed foreign firms to be denied drilling rights on public land if their home governments excluded Americans abroad. Neither side wanted a complete break. The compromise was to admit American companies into the venture through a body called the #Near_East_Development_Corporation. At first this body contained several American firms, but within about a decade it had narrowed to the two companies that would become Exxon and Mobil. The final push toward a settlement came from the ground itself. In October 1927 the drillers struck a giant gusher at #Baba_Gurgur near Kirkuk in northern Iraq. The well blew wild and confirmed that the region held oil on a scale capable of reshaping the world market. The partners now had to decide, in precise terms, how to share a resource that was plainly immense. The bargaining that followed produced the agreement of the next summer. It is a useful reminder that a single geological fact, a huge new discovery, can force commercial and political actors to fix arrangements they had left vague for years. The Red Line Agreement: what it actually said The 1928 agreement did two things at once. It fixed the ownership shares inside the venture, and it bound the partners to a rule about how they would behave outside it. On ownership, the four main groups each received a 23.75 per cent share of the crude oil the company produced. #Calouste_Gulbenkian retained the remaining 5 per cent, the holding that earned him the lasting nickname Mr Five Per Cent. The four groups were the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, Royal Dutch Shell, the Compagnie Francaise des Petroles, and the American #Near_East_Development_Corporation. As part of the reshuffle, the Anglo-Persian company accepted a reduction in its direct share and received in exchange a 10 per cent overriding royalty on production, a payment off the top before the shares were divided. The company was renamed the #Iraq_Petroleum_Company in 1929. The structure of the venture matters for the economics. The company was mainly an upstream operation. It found and produced crude oil and then delivered that crude to its owners at cost, rather than selling refined products for profit on its own account. Each owner took its share of crude and moved it into its own separate refining and marketing network, where the real profits were made. This design had an important consequence. The shared company was a machine for controlling production, while competition, or the absence of it, happened in the owners' separate downstream businesses. Because the owners were also partners in the shared upstream, they had every reason to avoid stepping on each other elsewhere. The second and more famous element was the #self_denying_clause. The partners agreed that within a defined area, none of them would pursue oil interests on its own account. Any new venture inside that zone had to be undertaken jointly, through the shared company, in the same fixed proportions. In effect, each partner promised not to act as a competitor of the others inside the marked region. This is why the agreement is remembered as the founding charter of a producers' club rather than as a simple ownership contract. The clause converted a group of potential rivals into a single decision-maker over a huge share of the world's future supply. The area was defined by a line drawn on a map. According to the familiar story, the partners were unsure of the exact old boundaries of the Ottoman Empire, so #Calouste_Gulbenkian took a red pencil and drew a line around the territory he had in mind. Careful historical work, in particular the biography by Conlin, shows that this tidy story is partly a later legend, encouraged by Gulbenkian's own son, and that the meaning and legal status of the line were fought over by the partners' lawyers. Some accounts even credit a French representative rather than Gulbenkian with the actual drawing. There was a real disagreement about what the line even was: the French tended to treat it almost as an international boundary with the weight of a treaty, while the British side preferred to see it as a purely commercial understanding. What is not in doubt is the result. The red line enclosed most of the modern Middle East, including Turkey and the Arabian Peninsula, while leaving out Kuwait, which the British wished to keep separate, and Persia, modern Iran, which the Anglo-Persian concession already covered. Inside that enormous space, the partners had bound themselves not to compete. It is worth pausing on the economic meaning of all this. The signatories were not simply fixing a price on one day. They were agreeing to control the structure of an entire regional industry over the long run. By promising to act only together, they removed the danger that one partner would race ahead, open a new field, flood the market, and drive prices down. They also made it far harder for any outsider to break in, because the concession rights across the whole zone were now locked inside a single consortium backed by powerful states. This is the essence of a #cartel arrangement, even though the polite term used at the time was simply the Group Agreement. The companion deal: Achnacarry and the control of world markets The Red Line Agreement did not stand alone. Only weeks later, in September 1928, the heads of three of the largest oil companies met at Achnacarry Castle in the Scottish Highlands. The three men were Henri Deterding of Royal Dutch Shell, Walter Teagle of Standard Oil of New Jersey, and John Cadman of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company. Officially the gathering was a shooting party. In practice the men were trying to solve a shared commercial problem, and the meeting was kept discreet. That problem was overproduction. Through the 1920s new oil was pouring onto the market from the United States, the Soviet Union, Venezuela, and elsewhere. A damaging price war, including a fierce contest in the Indian market between a Standard Oil company and a Shell subsidiary, was eating into profits. The pain was sharpest for high-cost producers, especially inside the United States, whose oil could not compete with a flood of cheaper supply. The companies concluded that unrestrained competition was destroying value for all of them. Their answer was the As-Is Agreement, also known as the #Achnacarry_Agreement. The deal set out a short list of principles designed to end the fight. The central idea was simple. Each company would keep its existing share of each market, its position as it stood, its share "as is," and would not battle to take customers from the others. They agreed to share facilities such as storage tanks and pipelines at cost, to add new capacity only when genuine demand required it, and to hold prices up rather than compete them down. A key mechanism was a basing-point pricing rule sometimes called the #Gulf_plus system. Under it, oil was priced as though it had been shipped from the Gulf of Mexico, whatever its true origin. A buyer sitting close to a cheap Middle Eastern field could still be charged a price based on distant American oil plus the cost of a long imaginary voyage. The rule protected higher-cost producers and prevented the cheapest oil from undercutting the agreed structure. Taken together, the two 1928 deals covered both ends of the industry. The #Red_Line_Agreement controlled who could develop the upstream resource across a huge stretch of the Middle East. The As-Is Agreement controlled how the finished product was shared and priced in world markets. The two reinforced each other. There was little point in restraining upstream competition in one place if downstream price wars could still break out everywhere else, and vice versa. A United States Senate study published in 1952 would later gather these arrangements under a single blunt heading, the international petroleum #cartel. The group of firms at the centre of the system became widely known, from the 1950s onward, as the #Seven_Sisters. That the details of Achnacarry stayed secret for more than two decades tells us something in itself: arrangements of this kind depend on staying out of public and legal view. An economic reading: why firms build cartels We can now step back and read the whole system through economics. The behaviour of the 1928 firms was not mysterious. It followed a logic that economists describe in the study of imperfect competition, and seeing that logic clearly is the single most valuable thing a student can take from this history. 5.1 The problem of sunk costs and too much supply Oil has an awkward cost structure. Finding a field and building the wells, pipelines, and ports is enormously expensive, and once that money is spent it cannot be recovered. Economists call such spending a sunk cost. After the investment is made, the cost of pumping one more barrel from an existing well is often very low. When many firms share this structure and demand softens, each firm has a strong incentive to keep producing and to shave its price, because any price above the small cost of pumping still helps pay back the huge sunk investment. If all firms reason this way at once, prices can fall far below the level needed to reward the original investment. This is the price war that the Achnacarry partners feared. Wildly swinging, sinking #oil_prices are dangerous for firms that have staked fortunes on exploration, and the fear of them is the deepest reason cartels form in this industry. 5.2 What a competitive market would do In a fully competitive market with many small sellers, price tends to settle near the cost of producing the last, most expensive barrel that buyers are willing to pay for. Output is high and prices are low, which is good for consumers. The gap between what buyers would have been willing to pay and what they actually pay is a benefit to consumers that economists call consumer surplus. A group of firms that can restrain supply is able to shift some of that benefit to themselves by pushing the price up. When supply is held back and price rises, buyers who would have bought at the lower price now do without, and the value they would have enjoyed is simply lost to everyone. That lost value is what economists call a deadweight loss, and it is the reason cartels are generally judged to reduce the total wealth of a society even as they enrich the sellers. 5.3 The three hard tasks of any cartel A #cartel is a group of suppliers who agree to act together to raise or steady prices, usually by limiting how much they produce or by dividing the market so that they no longer chase each other's customers. To succeed, a cartel must accomplish three difficult tasks. It must agree on how to split the market or the output. It must prevent new rivals from entering and spoiling the arrangement. And it must detect and punish members who cheat by secretly selling more than their agreed share. The 1928 agreements addressed each task directly. Market division was handled by the red line and by the as-is principle, which together assigned territory and market shares. #barriers_to_entry were handled by the #self_denying_clause and by the size and political backing of the partners, which made it extremely hard for an outsider to win a concession inside the zone. Cheating was discouraged by the joint ownership structure, because production in the shared area flowed through a single company in fixed proportions, leaving little room for a partner to quietly sell extra crude on the side. In the language of industrial economics, the firms had converted a potentially competitive field into a carefully managed #oligopoly and had built the tools required to keep it that way. 5.4 The temptation to cheat Cartels are famously unstable, and the reason lies in incentives. Once the group has raised the price by holding back supply, each individual member sees a private chance to gain even more by quietly producing a little extra and selling it at the high price. The member who cheats captures the reward while the burden of restraint falls on the others. But if every member follows this reasoning, total supply rises and the high price collapses, leaving everyone worse off than if they had all cooperated. This tension, in which individually rational choices lead to a collectively poor outcome, is a version of the situation known as the prisoner's dilemma. The strength of the 1928 system inside the red-lined area was that it reduced this temptation by locking the partners into shared production rather than leaving them to police separate quotas. Its weakness, as we will see, was that it could not control producers outside the zone, and it bred deep resentment among partners who felt trapped whenever a rich opportunity appeared just beyond the line. 5.5 Barriers to entry as the real foundation Of the three tasks, blocking entry was the most important for the durability of the system, and it deserves emphasis because it is often overlooked. Even a well-organised cartel will fail if outsiders can freely enter, undercut the high price, and take the market. The red-line partners enjoyed unusually strong #barriers_to_entry. The concession rights across the zone were legally tied up in one consortium. The capital and technical skill needed to find and move oil at scale were held by very few firms. And behind the companies stood the governments of Britain, France, and the United States, whose diplomatic weight helped keep rivals out. This combination of legal, financial, and political barriers is what allowed the arrangement to shape the region for a generation. Where such barriers are weak, attempts at market control tend to crumble quickly. 5.6 Who pays and who gains In the short run, a successful cartel transfers wealth from buyers to sellers by holding prices above the competitive level, and it destroys some value outright through the deadweight loss described above. In this case the buyers were oil consumers around the world, and the sellers were the Western firms and, to a smaller degree, the host governments through their royalties. There is, however, a subtler and more important effect for our story, one that concerns not the price of oil on a given day but the pace and location of investment over decades. That effect fell heavily on the countries whose oil lay inside the line, and it is the subject of the next section. The cost of control: slowed development and lost value For the host countries of the Middle East, the deepest economic consequence of the 1928 system was not simply that they received modest royalties. It was that the tempo of development was set by outsiders whose interests often pointed toward going slow. Consider the position of a firm that already produced ample oil from fields it controlled elsewhere, for example in the United States or in Persia. If that same firm also held rights inside the red line, it faced a choice. Developing the cheap Iraqi or Arabian fields quickly would add a flood of low-cost oil to a market that was frequently already oversupplied. That new oil would compete with the firm's existing, higher-cost production and could push world prices down, damaging the firm's established business. From the firm's point of view, the rational move was often to hold the rich new fields in reserve and to develop them slowly. Oil left in the ground does not spoil, and a known reserve keeps its value while the owner sells higher-cost oil from elsewhere at a protected price. This is exactly the pattern that historians and economists have observed. The Red Line and As-Is arrangements are widely credited with holding back the development of #Middle_East_oil until after the Second World War. Some of the cheapest oil on the planet was deliberately kept largely in the ground, while more expensive oil elsewhere was produced to defend prices. One further and often ignored result was that reserves in areas then seen as politically safe, such as the United States and Canada, were run down faster than they might otherwise have been, precisely because the cheap Middle Eastern alternative was being kept idle. For the host countries this meant delayed revenue, delayed infrastructure, and delayed #economic_development. The wealth beneath their soil was real, but the timing of its use was decided in London, Paris, and New York rather than in Baghdad. The clearest single illustration is the treatment of the concession area itself. The #Iraq_Petroleum_Company held rights across almost the entire country, yet for years it developed only a small part, leaving vast areas unexplored and unworked. This practice of holding land without developing it became a major political grievance. It later drove the Iraqi government to reclaim the unused territory by law, an act we will return to when tracing the rise of producer power. The general lesson for students is that #market_control is not only about price. It is also about the power to decide when, and whether, a resource is developed at all, and that power can leave enormous real wealth unrealised for a generation. The slow flow of revenue also helped entrench a particular kind of economy in several producing states, one that economists describe with the idea of the rentier state. In such an economy a government draws most of its income not from taxing a broad and productive population but from the rent it collects on a single natural resource controlled from outside. This can weaken the pressure to build diverse industries and accountable institutions, a difficulty related to the wider problem sometimes called the resource curse. The 1928 system did not create these conditions by itself, but by concentrating control and delaying broad development it contributed to a pattern whose effects several countries still work to overcome today, as recent studies of the region's political economy make clear. There is a genuine counterpoint that a fair account must include. Building the pipelines, ports, refineries, and skilled operations needed to move Iraqi oil to distant markets required huge investment and technical expertise that very few firms of the time possessed. The partners did carry out real pioneering work in a difficult and remote environment. Supporters of the companies argued that a single coordinated venture avoided the waste of duplicated pipelines and the chaos of uncontrolled drilling, and that steadier prices benefited everyone, including consumers who were spared the wild swings of a boom-and-bust market. The honest conclusion is that both things were true at the same time. The venture built genuine capacity, and it also used its control to manage the pace of that capacity in its own interest rather than in the host country's. Weighing these two truths against each other, rather than choosing only one, is the work of serious economic history. The system breaks: war, Aramco, and the end of the red line No arrangement of this kind lasts forever, and the 1928 system began to crack under the pressure of a single tempting opportunity that lay just beyond its own boundary. That opportunity was Saudi Arabia. Because the kingdom's main oil-bearing region lay outside the red line, its concession was won not by the red-line partners but by two American companies, Standard Oil of California and Texaco, which were not bound by the agreement. Their partnership became the venture known as #Aramco, and by the 1940s it was clear that Saudi Arabia held some of the largest and cheapest oil reserves ever discovered. Here was a prize of extraordinary value, and it sat entirely outside the club. The two American members of the #Iraq_Petroleum_Company, the firms that would become Exxon and Mobil, badly wanted to buy into the Saudi venture. But the #self_denying_clause blocked them, and at first their partners inside the consortium refused to release them. The Americans then advanced a legal argument that the whole agreement had been dissolved by the Second World War. Their reasoning turned on the fact that the French partner's shares had come under enemy control during the war and that Gulbenkian's position had likewise been compromised while he lived in territory linked to the enemy. A long legal fight followed, chiefly with Gulbenkian and the French company. In 1948 the dispute was settled out of court. The American companies were allowed to join the Saudi venture, and the old restrictive framework was effectively abandoned. The consortium continued to operate its existing Iraqi concessions, but its shareholders were now free to pursue new deals across the region on their own account. It is important to be precise about what this change did and did not mean. The dissolution of the red line did not transfer control to the host countries. It simply loosened the rules among the Western firms and opened the door to a fresh scramble for new concessions, now including the giant Saudi fields. The companies remained dominant. Real change for the producing states came from a different direction and a little later, through the slow and often painful rise of #resource_nationalism. From company cartel to producer power: the rise of OPEC The decades after 1948 saw the balance of power shift from the companies toward the governments that owned the oil in the ground. This shift is the bridge between the world of the #Red_Line_Agreement and the world we live in now, and it shows how the same economic problems reappear with different actors at the table. Producer governments had long felt that the concession system gave them too small a share of the wealth beneath their soil and too little say over how fast it was produced. A turning point came in the middle of the twentieth century when several governments won a fifty-fifty split of profits with the companies, a formula that spread from Venezuela to Saudi Arabia and beyond. Around the same time Iran attempted, at great cost, to nationalise its industry in the early 1950s, an effort that was reversed after a foreign-backed change of government but that showed how explosive the question of ownership had become. The direction of travel was clear even when individual attempts failed. In 1960 five major producers, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela, met in Baghdad and founded the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or #OPEC. The immediate trigger was a decision by the companies to cut the posted price of oil without consulting the governments, which directly reduced government revenue. The founders wanted a common front so that such cuts could not simply be imposed on them. Recent scholarship on the histories of OPEC argues that the organisation was always two things at once. It was a project of national sovereignty by newly independent states asserting control over their own resources, and it was an attempt to gain #market_power over price in the manner of a producers' club. These two identities sat in tension. The ideal of controlling one's own resource, born in the age of decolonisation, met the hard arithmetic of trying to hold a cartel together when members differed greatly in size, population, reserves, and financial need. The parallel with 1928 is striking and instructive. Both the old company cartel and the later producer cartel faced the same core problems: agreeing on shares, keeping outsiders from spoiling the market, and stopping members from cheating on agreed limits. The main difference was who sat at the table. In 1928 it was a handful of private firms with the backing of their governments. After 1960 it was sovereign states, several of which soon reclaimed the very concessions the red-line partners had once held. Iraq removed the unused portions of the #Iraq_Petroleum_Company concession by law in 1961, taking back the vast areas the consortium had held but never developed, and completed the #nationalization of the company in 1972. The tools of #market_control had passed from corporate boardrooms to government ministries, but the underlying economic logic of trying to manage supply had not changed at all. The peak of producer power came in the early 1970s. During the events of 1973 and 1974, the exporting governments took into their own hands the levers over production, prices, and operations that the companies had held for half a century. Prices rose sharply, and the world economy felt the shock. Yet the difficulties of holding a cartel together soon reasserted themselves. High prices drew new supply from outside the group, from the North Sea, Mexico, and Alaska, and they encouraged consumers to use less. By the mid 1980s the strain was severe. Saudi Arabia, which had acted as the swing producer by adjusting its own output to balance the market and defend the price, found itself cutting production again and again while others cheated on their quotas. In 1985 and 1986 the kingdom changed course, raised its output, and let prices fall, punishing the cheaters and reminding everyone how costly it was to carry the burden of restraint alone. Economists studying OPEC across these decades have often concluded that it behaved less like a tightly disciplined monopoly and more like a loose and sometimes clumsy grouping in which one large producer did much of the balancing, a description that fits the ordinary theory of cartels rather well. The pattern repeated once more in our own time. From around 2010 a surge of oil from American shale, produced by new drilling techniques, added a large and flexible new source of supply outside the group. When prices crashed in 2014, OPEC at first chose to keep producing and let the market find its own level, partly in the hope of squeezing out the high-cost newcomers. That gamble did not clear the newcomers from the field as hoped. So in 2016 the leading producers widened the club, joining with Russia and other large exporters to form the coalition now known as OPEC-plus, again seeking to steady the market by coordinating output. Careful empirical studies of this coalition find that its effect on price has often been real but modest, and that cheating and outside supply continue to limit how much control any such group can exercise. That is precisely the lesson the 1928 firms learned when cheap Saudi oil appeared just outside their line. The names and the nationalities change, but the economics of trying to manage a market shared with rivals stays remarkably constant. Lessons for the energy transition and global trade Why should a student living in the age of solar panels and electric cars care about a 1928 oil deal? Because the deep questions raised by the #Red_Line_Agreement are exactly the questions now returning in new forms. Studying the old case sharpens the ability to read the new one, and that is the practical payoff of #economic_history. 9.1 Institutions decide who benefits The first lesson is that markets do not organise themselves out of thin air. They are shaped by rules, contracts, and institutions that decide who may enter, who may sell, and who captures the value. In 1928 those institutions were private agreements dividing territory and freezing competition. Today they include the OPEC-plus coalition, powerful national oil companies, international trade rules, and the fast-growing set of policies built around #decarbonization and climate targets. When we ask who will gain and who will lose from the #energy_transition, we are asking the same kind of question the host countries faced under the red line. The answer will again depend less on geology alone and more on the design of institutions and on who holds the power to shape them. Good #resource_governance, meaning transparent and accountable rules for developing and sharing resource wealth, is the modern version of the fairness question that the concession system handled so poorly. 9.2 New resources and the old temptation The second lesson concerns the materials at the centre of clean energy. Batteries, wind turbines, electric motors, and power grids depend on #critical_minerals such as lithium, cobalt, nickel, copper, and the rare earth elements. Like oil a century ago, these materials are concentrated in a small number of countries, and the processing of them is even more concentrated than the mining. That combination, a strategically vital resource held by few, is exactly the setting in which the temptation to build a #cartel or to wield #market_power arises. The history of oil is a standing warning that wherever a strategic resource is concentrated, someone will try to control access, prices, and the pace of development. Whether the world repeats the errors of the red line, with quiet deals that lock up supply and slow fair development, or instead manages these new resources more openly, is a live and urgent question. Recent reviews of the geopolitics of the transition make the point plainly: the shift to clean energy does not abolish resource politics, it relocates it to new materials and new regions. 9.3 Control has costs and effects beyond price The third lesson is that controlling a market affects far more than the number on a price tag. As the Middle East case showed, control over supply is also control over the timing of investment and over regional #economic_development. In the transition, similar effects are visible whenever decisions are made to slow or speed the building of new capacity, to shield existing industries from competition, or to hold back cheaper supply to protect established interests. There is also a genuinely surprising twist that careful economics has recently highlighted. Because a producer group with #market_power restricts output, it can, as an unintended side effect, reduce the total amount of oil burned and therefore lower carbon emissions compared with a fully competitive market that would pump and sell more. This does not make cartels admirable, and it does not mean market power is a good climate policy. It shows that the effects of #market_control on society are genuinely complicated and deserve careful study rather than easy praise or easy blame. Training students to hold such a nuanced finding in mind, without collapsing it into a slogan, is one of the quiet gifts of economic history. 9.4 Sovereignty, trade, and the shifting balance of power The fourth lesson concerns #global_trade and national sovereignty. The whole arc from the Red Line Agreement to OPEC and OPEC-plus is a story about who holds power over a resource that every economy needs. Power moved from empires and companies toward producer states, and it is now being reshaped again by the shift to new energy sources and by rivalry between large economies. As some regions lose the leverage that oil once gave them, and others gain leverage from minerals, manufacturing, or clean technology, the balance of economic power in world trade will move as well. Students who understand how oil reordered #global_trade across the twentieth century are far better placed to read the reordering now under way, including the risk that dependence on a few suppliers of energy or of #critical_minerals becomes a tool of pressure between nations. 9.5 A note for the classroom For students specifically, the Red Line case is a compact laboratory. Within a single, well-documented episode you can see sunk costs, price wars, #collusion, the three tasks of a cartel, #barriers_to_entry, the cheating problem, the deadweight loss, the difference between controlling price and controlling development, and the way a private commercial order can rest on political foundations. A good exercise is to take any current energy or minerals story from the news and ask the same questions the red-line partners implicitly answered: who controls access, how is competition limited, who is kept out, who pays, and who decides the pace. If you can answer those questions about a modern case, you have learned the most useful part of this history. 9.6 Comparing the two cartel eras side by side It helps to set the company era and the producer era next to each other, because the comparison shows both what changes and what stays the same when power over a resource shifts hands. In the company era, the actors were a few private firms whose main goal was profit and whose main worry was that a price war would destroy the value of their sunk investments. In the producer era, the actors were governments whose goals were mixed, combining revenue, national pride, development, and the assertion of sovereignty over their own soil. A government cannot simply be modelled as a profit-maximising firm, because it must answer to its people, fund budgets that cannot easily be cut, and weigh the long life of the resource against the pressing needs of today. This is one reason producer discipline has often been looser than a simple theory of a profit-seeking cartel would predict. Yet the machinery is strikingly similar across both eras. In each, the members had to agree on shares, whether those shares were the fixed percentages of the consortium or the negotiated quotas of the later coalition. In each, the members had to keep outsiders from spoiling the market, whether the outsider was an independent firm chasing a concession outside the line or a shale producer drilling in a country that never joined the group. And in each, the members had to face the constant temptation to cheat, whether by quietly seeking a private concession or by exceeding an agreed output limit. The economic skeleton beneath the two very different bodies is the same, and recognising that skeleton is what allows a student to move confidently from one period to the next. The comparison also warns against a common mistake, which is to assume that transferring ownership from foreign firms to national governments automatically solves the problems of the concession era. National control did give producing states a far larger share of the wealth and a real voice over production, which was a genuine and important gain. But it did not remove the underlying difficulties of managing a shared market, avoiding waste, and building broad and resilient economies rather than depending on a single export. Those challenges simply took new forms, and much of the recent scholarship on the political economy of oil-exporting states is devoted to exactly this unfinished work. History here offers realism rather than either nostalgia for the companies or uncritical celebration of nationalisation. Discussion and limitations This article has argued that the 1928 #Red_Line_Agreement is best understood as an early and unusually clear case of #market_control, and that its logic, its costs, and its legacy help explain both the twentieth-century oil order and the choices facing the world today. Several cautions are in order, and stating them is part of honest scholarship. First, history is not a simple morality tale. The firms of 1928 were solving a real problem of destructive price competition, and they carried out genuine technical work in a hard environment. Recognising the harm done by slowed development does not require pretending that the alternative, an uncontrolled scramble, would have been costless for anyone. Balanced judgement, which weighs both the building and the holding back, is the aim. Second, the sources on this period are uneven, and some famous stories, such as the exact drawing of the line by a single hand, are partly legend that grew up after the fact. Sound #economic_history depends on separating well-documented facts, such as the share structure, the overriding royalty, and the #self_denying_clause, from the colourful tales that later attached themselves to the story. Where the record is contested, this article has tried to say so rather than smooth it over. Third, the parallels drawn here between the old oil cartel, #OPEC, and the possible future control of #critical_minerals are useful for teaching, but they are not exact. Minerals differ from oil in their geology, in the ways they are used, and in the technologies that might one day replace them. Analogies drawn from history are guides for thinking, not predictions of what must happen. The value of the Red Line case is that it trains the eye to spot a recurring pattern, not that it tells the future in advance. Fourth, this study has concentrated on the economic dimension. The political, legal, environmental, and human dimensions of the story, including the experience of the people who lived above the oil and whose lives were reshaped by decisions taken far away, deserve equally serious study and would enrich any classroom treatment of the topic. A full account would also give more space to the workers, engineers, and local officials whose labour and choices made the industry function. Finally, because this is a synthesis rather than an archival study, it depends on the accuracy of the histories and analyses it draws upon. Readers who wish to go further should consult the primary business histories and the recent scholarship listed in the references and should treat this article as a doorway into the subject rather than the last word on it. Conclusion The 1928 #Red_Line_Agreement earns its place in the study of #economic_history not because of the red pencil or the castle in Scotland, but because it shows so plainly how a market can be organised by concentrated private power rather than by open competition. A small group of firms divided a vast resource zone, promised not to compete within it, and paired that promise with a second deal to steady prices in world markets. Read with ordinary economic tools, the whole system appears as a #cartel that managed supply, held prices above the competitive level, blocked new entrants, and, most consequentially for the host countries, controlled the very timing of development. The system did not last, but its logic did. When power passed from the Western firms to producer governments, those governments built #OPEC and later the OPEC-plus coalition on the same underlying problem the companies had faced: how to manage a shared market among rivals who are each tempted to break ranks. The tools moved from boardrooms to ministries, and the actors changed nationality, yet the questions stayed the same, and the answers were never fully stable, because the temptation to cheat and the pressure of outside supply never disappear. For students now watching the #energy_transition, this is the real reward of the study. The transition will be decided not only by science and by falling costs but by institutions, by who controls access to #critical_minerals, by how producer power is used or checked, and by how the gains and losses are shared across regions and generations. These are the questions the Red Line Agreement raised almost a century ago. Learning how they were answered then, and at what cost, is one of the best possible preparations for reading the energy and #global_trade debates of the coming decades. The positive and lasting lesson is that history, studied honestly, is not a museum piece. It is a working tool for understanding the choices that lie ahead. #Red_Line_Agreement #oil_cartel #market_control #economic_history #Middle_East_oil #Iraq_Petroleum_Company #Seven_Sisters #OPEC #energy_transition #resource_nationalism #Calouste_Gulbenkian #Achnacarry_Agreement #critical_minerals #global_trade #resource_governance References Almutairi, H., Pierru, A., and Smith, J. L. (2023). Oil market stabilization: The performance of OPEC and its allies. The Energy Journal, 44. Al-Muhanna, I. (2022). Oil Leaders: An Insider's Account of Four Decades of Saudi Arabia and OPEC's Global Energy Policy. New York: Columbia University Press. Asker, J., Collard-Wexler, A., De Canniere, C., De Loecker, J., and Knittel, C. R. (2024). Two Wrongs Can Sometimes Make a Right: The Environmental Benefits of Market Power in Oil (NBER Working Paper No. 33115). Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research. Beck, M., and Richter, T. (Eds.). (2021). Oil and the Political Economy in the Middle East: Post-2014 Adjustment Policies of the Arab Gulf and Beyond. Manchester: Manchester University Press. https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526149107 Blondeel, M., Bradshaw, M. J., Bridge, G., and Kuzemko, C. (2021). The geopolitics of energy system transformation: A review. Geography Compass, 15(7), e12580. https://doi.org/10.1111/gec3.12580 Conlin, J. (2019). Mr Five Per Cent: The Many Lives of Calouste Gulbenkian, the World's Richest Man. London: Profile Books. Conlin, J. (2024). Fouled by oil? Oil diplomacy and the Lausanne Conference, 1914 to 1928. The International History Review. https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.2024.2393642 Hogselius, P. (2023). The political history of fossil fuels: Coal, oil, and natural gas in global perspective. In D. Scholten (Ed.), Handbook on the Geopolitics of the Energy Transition. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781800370432 Madureira, N. L. (2026). Sovereignty in the global economic order: Histories of OPEC. Frontiers in Political Science, 7, 1733529. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpos.2025.1733529 Rangel, R. A. D. (2021). Juan Pablo Perez Alfonzo: pensamiento fundador de la OPEP. Humania del Sur, 30, 15 to 30. https://doi.org/10.53766/HumSur/2021.30.01 Scholten, D. (Ed.). (2023). Handbook on the Geopolitics of the Energy Transition. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781800370432

  • The Business Value of Predictable Storytelling: How Familiar Film Structure Reduces Commercial Risk for Producers, Investors, and Distributors

    The film business is often described as one of the riskiest industries in the world. A single project can cost hundreds of millions of dollars, take years to complete, and still fail on its opening weekend for reasons that no one fully understood before release. This article examines one practical tool that the industry uses to control that danger: familiar and #predictable_storytelling. Drawing on recent research in cultural economics, media management, and consumer behaviour, the paper argues that a recognizable #film_structure functions as a form of risk management. When a film follows a well known dramatic path, it becomes easier to develop, easier to finance, easier to sell, and easier for audiences to understand and choose. The paper explains why this happens by connecting four ideas: the treatment of films as experience goods, the theory of #optimal_distinctiveness, the concept of #narrative_transportation, and the economics of sequels and franchises. It then shows how structure lowers perceived risk for producers, investors, distributors, and marketers at each stage of the value chain, and it identifies the mechanisms, signalling, expectation setting, comprehension fluency, and word of mouth, that make this possible. The central message for film business students is positive rather than limiting. Structure and creativity are not enemies. Structure gives an audience the confidence to buy a ticket, while creativity gives them the surprise that makes the experience worth talking about. Films that combine a stable frame with fresh content tend to satisfy both the commercial need for predictability and the artistic need for originality. The article closes with practical lessons for students who plan to pitch, finance, produce, or distribute films, and it identifies gaps that future research should address, especially in the streaming era. Keywords: predictable storytelling; film structure; audience risk; cultural economics; optimal distinctiveness; narrative transportation; film financing; box office; creative industries; media management 1. Introduction Few businesses carry as much visible uncertainty as commercial filmmaking. A movie is expensive to make, it is sold to millions of strangers at the same moment, and its success depends on taste, timing, competition, and word of mouth that cannot be measured in advance. The screenwriter William Goldman summed up the mood of the industry with a famous three word phrase: nobody knows anything. He meant that no one can reliably predict which films will succeed and which will fail before the public actually decides. Decades of research in the economics of the movies has confirmed that the industry lives with extreme and stubborn #uncertainty (De Vany, 2004; McKenzie, 2023). Yet studios have survived and even grown for more than a century. They have done so partly by learning how to turn wild uncertainty into a risk that can be measured, priced, and managed (Pokorny, Miskell, and Sedgwick, 2019). This distinction between uncertainty and risk is worth pausing on, because it sits at the centre of the argument. Uncertainty describes a situation where the range of outcomes and their odds are unknown. Risk describes a situation where the outcomes can at least be grouped into rough categories with rough probabilities. A business cannot plan around pure uncertainty, but it can plan around risk. Much of the craft of running a studio is the work of converting the first into the second. One of the oldest and most reliable of these conversion tools has nothing to do with technology or spreadsheets. It is the shape of the story itself. A recognizable #dramatic_structure, the kind that audiences have absorbed since childhood through fairy tales, television, and film, gives everyone in the business a shared reference point. It tells the writer how to build the script, it tells the investor what kind of product they are backing, it tells the marketing team how to cut the trailer, and it tells the viewer what sort of experience to expect. The structure is not the whole film, but it is the frame that everything else hangs on, and a frame that everyone can recognize is a frame that everyone can trust. This article makes a simple but important claim. From an economic point of view, a familiar #story_structure reduces #audience_risk, and in doing so it reduces risk for producers, investors, and distributors as well. When a film follows a recognizable path, it becomes easier to market, easier to pitch, and easier to understand. The argument does not treat structure as a formula that kills art. Instead it treats structure as a piece of shared knowledge that lowers the cost of communication and coordination in a business where both are unusually hard. The paper is written for film business students, so it keeps the language plain while still following the shape of an academic article. Section 2 describes why the film business is so risky and why films behave like experience goods. Section 3 sets out the theoretical framework, connecting narrative theory, optimal distinctiveness, narrative transportation, and consumption capital. Section 4 shows how structure reduces risk for each group in the value chain. Section 5 explains the underlying mechanisms. Section 6 reviews the economic evidence from sequels and franchises. Section 7 develops the positive lesson that #creativity and structure work together. Section 8 asks whether structure still matters in the streaming era. Section 9 offers practical implications, and Section 10 discusses limitations and future research before the conclusion. 2. The Film as a High Risk Business 2.1 Extreme uncertainty and the shape of demand The economics of the motion picture industry has one repeated finding that shapes everything else. Box office outcomes are extremely unequal and extremely hard to forecast. A small number of films earn most of the money, while most films earn little or lose money outright. Revenue does not cluster tidily around an average. It spreads out with a long and heavy tail, where a few giant hits sit far above the crowd (De Vany, 2004). This pattern has a hard consequence for planning. The average outcome is a poor guide to any single project, because the average is pulled upward by rare successes that no one can guarantee. A studio that budgets as if every film will earn the industry average will go broke, because most films do not. For a producer or a studio, this creates a serious timing problem as well. The budget must be committed long before the audience gives its verdict. Sets are built, actors are paid, and marketing money is spent, all before the first ticket is sold. The people making these decisions cannot rely on past averages, because each film is, in an important sense, a new product with its own fate. Richard Caves described the creative industries as markets defined by what he called the nobody knows property, meaning that demand for a new creative good is deeply uncertain because buyers cannot judge the product until they have consumed it (Caves, 2000). The film industry is the clearest example of this property in action, and it is precisely why the industry is so hungry for anything that narrows the range of possible outcomes. Because outcomes are so uneven, the value of reducing variance is easy to overlook but very large. Making results more predictable can be as valuable as raising the average, because it protects the firm against ruin and makes financing possible in the first place (Pokorny et al., 2019). A lender or a co financier is not only asking how high the upside might go. They are asking how bad the downside could be and how likely that downside is. A project whose outcomes are tightly grouped, even at a modest level, is easier to fund than a project whose outcomes swing between a huge hit and a total loss. This is the economic heart of the argument in this paper. A tool that makes results a little more predictable has real business value, even if it does not raise the ceiling on the biggest possible hit. 2.2 Films as experience goods and the problem of information asymmetry A second feature of films explains why the audience is also exposed to risk, not just the producer. A film is an experience good. Its quality cannot be known until it has been consumed. You cannot fully judge a movie by looking at its poster, its cast list, or even its trailer. You only know whether you enjoyed it after you have watched it (Vogel, 2020). This is different from buying a bottle of water or a familiar brand of soap, where the buyer already knows what they will get and can compare it to a clear standard. This gap between what the seller knows and what the buyer can verify is a classic case of information asymmetry. The buyer faces #audience_risk in a very direct way. They must pay for a ticket, give up an evening, and possibly arrange transport, a meal, and childcare, all before they can confirm that the product is worth it. If the film disappoints, that money and time are gone and cannot be refunded. A sensible viewer, facing this uncertainty, will look for signals that reduce the chance of a bad choice. Familiar genre cues, known stars, recognizable brands, and a story shape they can follow all serve as such signals. They do not guarantee quality, but they lower the odds of a total waste. Advertising exists in part to close this information gap. A recent meta analysis of advertising in the entertainment industry found that advertising helps mainly because it lowers the buyer's uncertainty about a product whose quality is hard to judge in advance, for example by showing scenes in trailers and by leaning heavily on storytelling that stirs emotion and conversation (Schoendeling and colleagues, 2023). Structure supports this work directly. A trailer can only promise a clear experience if the film itself has a clear shape to promise. A film with no recognizable structure gives the marketing team nothing solid to sell. In this sense, predictable storytelling and marketing are partners. The trailer sells the promise, and the structure keeps the promise once the viewer is in the seat. 2.3 Why the two risks are linked The producer's risk and the audience's risk are two sides of the same coin, and seeing the link is essential to the whole argument. If the audience cannot judge a film in advance, they will hesitate, and hesitation reduces demand. If demand is uncertain, the producer cannot forecast revenue, and financing becomes harder and more expensive. Anything that reduces the audience's uncertainty therefore flows back up the chain and reduces the producer's uncertainty as well. This is why a tool aimed at the viewer, such as a clear and familiar #film_structure, ends up protecting the whole business. It lowers audience risk first, and by lowering audience risk it lowers commercial risk for everyone who invested in the film. The rest of this paper traces exactly how that transfer works, and why structure is such an efficient way to make it happen. 3. Theoretical Framework To explain how structure reduces risk, the paper draws on four bodies of theory. Each addresses a different part of the puzzle. Narrative theory explains what structure actually means. Optimal distinctiveness explains why familiarity and novelty must be balanced rather than traded off. Narrative transportation explains how a well built story turns a viewer into a satisfied and vocal customer. Consumption capital explains why audiences reward the very familiarity that also reduces risk. Together these theories show that structure is not only a defensive tool for cautious executives but also a source of genuine audience value. 3.1 What structure means: from Aristotle to the beat sheet The idea that stories have a shape is very old. Aristotle argued in the Poetics that a good plot has a beginning, a middle, and an end, and that its events should follow one another by cause and probability rather than by accident. This ancient idea became the basis of the modern #three_act_structure, which divides a film into setup, confrontation, and resolution. The screenwriter Syd Field popularized this model for film, describing how the first act establishes the character and the world, the second act raises obstacles that build toward a crisis, and the third act resolves the central dramatic question (Field, 2005). Field also noticed that these turning points tend to fall at similar positions across many successful films, which is part of why the pattern feels natural to audiences who have seen it hundreds of times. Other writers refined the same basic frame. Joseph Campbell described a recurring pattern in myths, often called the hero's journey or the monomyth, in which a character leaves the ordinary world, crosses a threshold, faces trials and allies, endures an ordeal, and returns changed (Campbell, 2008). Blake Snyder turned structure into a practical checklist with his beat sheet, a list of story moments that many mainstream films hit at roughly similar points, from the opening image to the final image that mirrors it (Snyder, 2005). These models differ in their details and their vocabulary, but they share a core insight. Popular storytelling tends to follow a limited number of recognizable paths, and both writers and audiences carry these paths in their heads without needing to be taught them formally. For the purposes of this article, structure means this shared set of expectations about how a story will unfold. It is a kind of common language. When a film uses it, the audience can follow the story with less effort, sense where it is heading, and feel the emotional payoff when the promised question is finally answered. That reduced effort and confident expectation is exactly what lowers perceived risk for the viewer. It is important to stress that structure is not the same as plot. Two films can share the same underlying #dramatic_structure while telling completely different stories with different characters, settings, and meanings. The structure is the skeleton. The flesh is where the film becomes itself. 3.2 Optimal distinctiveness: the balance of familiar and new If familiarity were all that mattered, every film would be an exact copy of the last hit, and audiences would grow bored and stop paying. Research on #optimal_distinctiveness explains why this does not happen. The theory holds that successful products must be different enough to feel worth the buyer's attention, yet familiar enough to be understood and trusted (Zhao and Glynn, 2022). Too much sameness makes a product invisible in a crowded market. Too much strangeness makes it risky and hard to grasp, so buyers avoid it. The sweet spot sits in between, and finding it is one of the central skills of the creative industries. Empirical work on cultural products supports this balance. Studies have found that films which combine familiarity with novelty tend to perform better, sometimes showing an inverted U shaped relationship in which moderate novelty earns the highest returns while extreme novelty is punished by the market. The same balance appears across creative markets, from popular music to industrial design, where audiences reward the mix of the recognizable and the surprising rather than either extreme on its own. The pattern is robust enough that it can be treated as a working rule for anyone trying to design a commercially viable creative good. This theory reframes the whole debate about creativity and structure. Structure supplies the familiar half of the equation. It is the stable frame that makes a film legible at a glance. Creativity supplies the distinctive half. It is the fresh character, setting, twist, or theme that makes the film worth choosing over the alternatives. The commercial goal is not to pick one side and defeat the other. It is to hold both at once. A film that is all structure and no invention is safe but dull, and it will lose the audience to something more interesting. A film that is all invention and no structure is exciting to a small group but confusing and risky to the many, and it will struggle to earn back its cost. The most durable commercial films live in the middle, and they get there on purpose. 3.3 Narrative transportation: how structure turns viewers into advocates A third theory explains what happens inside the viewer when a story works. #Narrative_transportation is the experience of becoming absorbed in a story, losing awareness of your surroundings, connecting with the characters, and caring about what happens next. A recent systematic review of the field describes transportation as the state in which people become so engaged with a story that they bond with its characters and imagine what will come next, a state that produces strong positive outcomes such as favourable attitudes and a willingness to act (Thomas and Grigsby, 2024). A broader review of the psychology of stories reaches similar conclusions about how narratives shape attitudes and beliefs when audiences are transported into them (Green and Appel, 2024). This matters commercially for two reasons. First, transported viewers enjoy the film more, so they leave as more satisfied customers who feel they got their money's worth. Second, transported viewers talk. Positive word of mouth is one of the most important drivers of film success, because it reduces uncertainty for the next wave of potential viewers who have not yet decided (Thomas and Grigsby, 2024). Here is the crucial link back to structure. A clear #film_structure makes transportation easier to achieve. When a viewer can follow the story without confusion, they have spare attention to invest in the characters and the stakes. When the plot is jumbled or the promised payoff never arrives, transportation breaks, attention scatters, satisfaction falls, and word of mouth turns negative. Structure, then, is not only a risk reducer at the point of purchase. It is also an engine of the positive word of mouth that reduces risk for everyone who comes after the first viewers. 3.4 Consumption capital: why audiences reward familiarity The last piece of the framework explains why audiences actively like familiar material rather than merely tolerating it out of caution. Consumption capital theory holds that for many cultural goods, the more a person already knows about the material, the more they enjoy new experiences of it. The idea has been applied directly to motion picture franchises, where prior knowledge of the world, the characters, and the running jokes increases enjoyment of the next installment (Opitz and Hofmann, 2016). A fan who has followed a series arrives with a stock of knowledge that makes each new film richer, funnier, and easier to enjoy than it would be for a newcomer. This gives familiarity a demand side value on top of its risk reducing value. Audiences are not simply settling for the safe option because they are afraid. They are often choosing the option that their accumulated knowledge lets them enjoy more deeply. Sequels, genre films, and structured stories all tap into this stock of consumption capital. This is one reason the shift toward familiar material is not purely a defensive move by nervous studios. It also reflects what a large part of the audience genuinely prefers, which is why familiar products can be both lower risk for the producer and higher value for the viewer at the same time. The two goals, safety for the business and satisfaction for the customer, point in the same direction more often than the sell out critique assumes. 4. How Structure Reduces Risk Across the Value Chain The four theories above explain the general mechanism. This section applies them to the four main groups who bear risk in the film business: producers and the development process, investors and financiers, distributors and exhibitors, and marketers. In each case, a familiar #film_structure lowers a specific kind of uncertainty, and the savings add up across the whole chain. 4.1 Producers and the development process The first place structure saves money is in development, long before a camera rolls. Scripts are cheap to reject and expensive to fix late. A recognizable #dramatic_structure gives development executives a shared standard for reading and comparing scripts. When a reader knows the beats of the #three_act_structure, they can quickly tell whether a script has a clear setup, a rising middle, and a satisfying resolution, and they can point to exactly where and why it fails. This shared vocabulary lowers the cost of feedback and speeds up decisions, because everyone in the room is measuring the story against the same map. Structure also reduces the risk of an expensive story problem surviving into production. If a film is shot with a broken third act, fixing it in the edit or through reshoots is costly, slow, and sometimes impossible. A story built on a tested structure is more likely to hold together once filmed, because the writer and director are following a path that has already proven it can carry an audience from start to finish. This does not remove the need for talent, and it does not guarantee a good film. What it does is lower the chance of a catastrophic structural failure that only becomes visible after most of the money has already been spent. Finally, structure makes a project easier to pitch inside the company. A producer must sell the idea to their own bosses before selling it to the public, and internal approval is often the hardest gate to pass. A story that can be described in familiar terms, a heist with a fresh setting, a coming of age tale with an unusual narrator, an underdog sports story in a sport no one has filmed before, is easier for decision makers to picture and approve. The clearer the shape, the lower the internal friction, and the faster the project moves from idea to green light. Ideas that cannot be summarized clearly tend to die in the room, not because they are bad, but because no one can be sure what they are. 4.2 Investors and financiers Money is the point at which risk becomes most concrete and most personal. Film finance often comes from a mix of studios, co financiers, pre sales to foreign distributors, tax incentives, and private investors, and every one of these parties wants to understand what they are backing and how likely it is to return their capital. A film built on a familiar structure is easier to underwrite because it can be compared to a class of similar films with known performance ranges. Comparability is the quiet foundation of film finance. This comparability is central to how the industry manages risk. When a project resembles a recognizable type, financiers can look at how that type has performed and build a rough expectation of both the downside and the upside. A completely novel project offers no such comparison, so it carries a higher risk premium and is harder to fund on reasonable terms. Research on film portfolios shows that studios deliberately manage uncertainty by leaning on recognizable, repeatable products, especially sequels, which behave as a distinctive risk management strategy within the wider release slate rather than as isolated creative choices (Pokorny et al., 2019). The familiar shape is part of what makes a film belong to a comparable, financeable class in the first place. The evidence on #franchises makes the point even more sharply. As a franchise adds installments, average creative quality and average returns tend to decline, but the variance of those returns also falls, which means revenue and return on investment become more predictable (Filson and Havlicek, 2018). For an investor, predictability has direct and measurable value. A slightly lower but far more certain return can be more attractive than a higher but wildly uncertain one, especially for parties who cannot afford a total loss and who must answer to their own stakeholders. This is why the survey literature repeatedly notes that sequels and franchises offer lower risk, a rare and prized quality in an industry defined by uncertainty (McKenzie, 2023; Hennig-Thurau, Ravid, and Sorenson, 2021). The industry did not drift toward franchises by accident. It moved toward the part of the business where the numbers can be forecast. 4.3 Distributors and exhibitors Distributors and cinema owners face their own version of the problem. They must decide how many screens to give a film, how long to keep it in those screens, and how to schedule it against competing releases. These decisions depend on forecasting demand, which is hard when a film is unfamiliar and easy when it is not. A film with a clear genre and a recognizable #film_structure is easier to place because its likely audience and its likely pattern of demand can both be estimated with more confidence. The distributor is, in effect, buying a forecast, and a familiar film comes with a better forecast attached. Structure also helps the exhibitor communicate with the public quickly. A cinema relies on fast, clear signals to attract walk in and last minute audiences who have not planned their choice in advance. A film that can be summed up in a familiar phrase is easier to promote on the marquee, in listings, and in a staff recommendation at the counter. The clearer the story type, the smaller the risk that the exhibitor commits valuable screens to a film that no one can quickly understand or describe to a friend. In a business where a screen sitting half empty is money lost forever, the ability to fill seats predictably is worth a great deal. In the digital era, this logic extends to platform placement. Streaming services must decide which titles to feature on the home screen and in the recommendation rows that most subscribers scroll through. Research on how audiences choose on demand programmes shows that genre and the way choices are presented, the so called choice architecture, strongly shape what people watch, sometimes more powerfully than they do on traditional scheduled television (Thurman, Klatt, Raj, and Taneja, 2024). A film with a clear genre identity and a familiar shape is easier for a platform to categorize, recommend, and match to the right viewers, which lowers the platform's risk of promoting a title that fails to find its audience despite the money spent to acquire it. 4.4 Marketers Marketing is where structure and risk reduction become most visible to the public. The marketing team must compress a two hour film into a two minute trailer, a poster, and a single line hook that can be repeated by word of mouth. This is only possible if the film has a clear shape to compress. A recognizable structure gives the marketers a promise they can make with confidence: this is the kind of story you already know how to enjoy, with a fresh twist that makes it worth your time and money. Because advertising in entertainment works largely by reducing the buyer's uncertainty about an experience good (Schoendeling and colleagues, 2023), the clarity that structure provides makes the marketing far more efficient. Every unit of advertising communicates more when the underlying product is easy to describe. A film that resists a simple description forces the marketing team to spend more just to explain what the film is, and it raises the risk that audiences will misunderstand the promise and feel cheated when the film turns out to be something other than what the trailer implied. That gap between promise and delivery is one of the most damaging outcomes in the business, because it converts marketing money into negative word of mouth. Predictable storytelling therefore lowers the cost of creating demand and reduces the chance of this costly mismatch. 5. Mechanisms: Why Predictability Lowers Perceived Risk The previous section showed where structure reduces risk. This section explains the underlying reasons why it works. Four mechanisms do most of the work: signalling, expectation setting, comprehension fluency, and word of mouth. They operate together, and each reinforces the others. 5.1 Signalling Because a film is an experience good, buyers rely on signals to judge quality before purchase. A familiar structure is itself a signal. It tells the viewer that the film belongs to a known category and will likely deliver the satisfactions of that category. A heist film promises a plan, a team, a complication, and a payoff. A romance promises a meeting, an obstacle, and a resolution. A horror film promises escalating dread and a confrontation with the threat. When the structure matches the promise, the signal is credible, and credible signals reduce the buyer's perceived risk. The whole system depends on films generally honouring the structural promises their genre makes, which is a large part of why the industry keeps returning to reliable shapes rather than reinventing the form with every release. 5.2 Expectation setting Structure sets expectations, and met expectations produce satisfaction. Satisfaction is not only about surprise, as beginners sometimes assume. It is also about the fulfilment of a promise. Audiences take real pleasure in seeing a story reach the resolution its setup promised, in much the same way that listeners enjoy a melody that resolves to its home note. When a film follows a recognizable path, the viewer forms accurate expectations and then feels rewarded when those expectations are honoured, ideally with a twist that adds spice without breaking the frame entirely. A film that sets expectations it cannot meet, or that refuses to set any expectations at all, raises the viewer's risk of disappointment and therefore their reluctance to buy in the first place. Expectation is not the enemy of enjoyment. Managed well, it is the source of it. 5.3 Comprehension fluency Human attention is limited, and a film asks for a great deal of it. A story that is easy to follow frees the viewer's attention to invest in emotion, character, and theme rather than spending it on simply working out what is happening. This is comprehension fluency, and it links directly to #narrative_transportation. When structure carries the plot smoothly, viewers can be transported, and transported viewers enjoy the film more and remember it better (Thomas and Grigsby, 2024; Green and Appel, 2024). When structure fails and the audience must labour to figure out the basic events, transportation breaks and enjoyment falls, no matter how clever the film may be underneath. This is the deepest answer to the fear that predictable storytelling dulls the experience. By handling the logistics of the plot efficiently, structure clears the mental space that makes the richer, deeper engagement possible in the first place. 5.4 Word of mouth The final mechanism operates after release and often decides a film's fate. Positive word of mouth reduces uncertainty for later viewers and is one of the strongest predictors of a film's overall performance (Thomas and Grigsby, 2024). A satisfying structure produces the clear, shareable experience that fuels good word of mouth. Viewers can explain what they loved because the story had a clear shape they can recount to a friend in a sentence or two. A confusing film, even a brilliant one, is harder to recommend because it is harder to describe, and a recommendation that cannot be summarized rarely travels. In this way, structure does not only reduce risk at the moment of purchase for the first buyers. It seeds the recommendations that reduce risk for the entire run of the film, turning satisfied early viewers into unpaid marketers. 6. Evidence From Sequels, Franchises, and Formulas The clearest real world test of the argument is the rise of sequels and #franchises. If familiar structure and familiar material reduce risk, we would expect the industry to shift toward them over time, and we would expect the financial data to show lower variance for such films. Both predictions hold, and the pattern is one of the most consistent findings in the modern economics of the movies. 6.1 The shift toward familiar material Over the last few decades, major studios have moved a growing share of their resources into sequels, franchises, and shared universes built to support many films. Analysis of Hollywood's output shows that sequels have become an increasingly important source of industry profit since around the year 2000, and that this shift represents a deliberate approach to managing uncertainty rather than a simple failure of imagination (Pokorny et al., 2019). The survey literature on the economics of the movies treats the most obvious explanation for this shift as the perceived reduction in uncertainty when a project is built on a parent film that already succeeded with audiences (McKenzie, 2023). A successful first film is, in effect, a large and expensive piece of market research that the sequel gets to use for free. Globalization has reinforced the trend. Large franchise films, especially action and superhero titles, travel across cultures more easily because their structure and spectacle rely less on local language and reference than dialogue driven dramas do. This makes their worldwide demand somewhat easier to forecast, which further lowers risk for the studios and their investors and helps explain why so much production money has flowed toward globally legible franchises (McKenzie, 2023). A film that plays in dozens of markets spreads its risk across all of them, so a weak result in one region can be offset by a strong result elsewhere. 6.2 What the numbers say about risk The financial evidence is consistent with the theory. Long standing findings, going back to early cultural economics research and confirmed by later work, show that sequels and franchises tend to be lower risk and higher return than the typical original film, which is exactly the combination that is normally almost impossible to find in this industry (Hennig-Thurau et al., 2021). Detailed study of global franchises adds important nuance. As a franchise extends, budgets rise while average revenue, return on investment, and critical reception tend to fall, yet the predictability of revenue and return on investment improves at the same time (Filson and Havlicek, 2018). In plain terms, later installments are often not as good or as profitable on average, but they are far more of a sure thing, and that certainty is a large part of what the business is actually buying when it commissions them. Not every familiar strategy works equally well, and this is a point students should hold onto. Research on remakes has found that they do not reliably increase revenue or reduce risk in the way sequels do, which suggests that the risk reducing power of familiarity depends heavily on how it is used (McKenzie, 2023). A remake asks the audience to accept a new version of something they may already own emotionally, and comparisons to the original can work against it. A sequel, by contrast, offers genuinely new events inside a world the audience already trusts, so it satisfies the appetite for both the familiar and the new at once. This distinction matters, because it shows that familiarity is not a magic switch that guarantees safety. It works when it respects both the structure the audience expects and the fresh content they still want. 6.3 The limits and costs of the strategy The same evidence warns against overusing familiar material. Because average returns and reviews tend to decline as franchises extend, a studio that leans too hard on repetition risks audience fatigue and a slow erosion of the brand it depends on (Filson and Havlicek, 2018). Predictability bought at the cost of freshness eventually stops paying, because the #optimal_distinctiveness balance tips too far toward sameness and the product becomes invisible again, this time through boredom rather than confusion (Zhao and Glynn, 2022). Audiences can sense when a franchise is repeating itself without conviction, and their enthusiasm cools. The lesson is not that familiar structure is always good. It is that structure lowers risk most effectively when it is paired with real invention, which is the point the next section develops in full. 7. The Creativity and Structure Partnership The most important lesson for film business students is that structure and #creativity are not opponents. They are partners that solve different halves of the same commercial problem. Structure answers the question, why should the audience trust that this film will be worth their time and money. Creativity answers the question, why should they choose this film over all the other trustworthy options. A commercially strong film needs a convincing answer to both, and the two answers do not compete for the same space. They occupy different parts of the film. 7.1 Structure gives confidence, creativity gives surprise Return to the theory of #optimal_distinctiveness. Products succeed when they are familiar enough to be understood and different enough to be worth choosing (Zhao and Glynn, 2022). In film terms, the familiar #film_structure supplies the confidence. The audience can see the shape of the experience and knows roughly what they are buying, which lowers their perceived risk to a level where they are willing to commit. The creative content supplies the surprise. A fresh world, a distinctive character, a bold theme, or an unexpected turn within the familiar frame gives the audience a reason to pick this film and, later, a reason to talk about it to others. Neither element works alone, and this is the heart of the matter. A film that is all surprise and no structure confuses the audience, breaks narrative transportation, and generates exactly the uncertainty that suppresses demand and frightens financiers. A film that is all structure and no surprise is safe but forgettable, and it slowly drains a franchise of the value that made it worth continuing. The films that combine both, a stable frame carrying genuinely fresh content, tend to satisfy the commercial need for predictability and the artistic need for originality at the same time. This is not a compromise in which each side gives something up. It is a combination in which each side does what it does best. 7.2 Structure as a platform for creativity There is a further point that students often miss. Structure does not merely coexist with creativity. It actively enables it. When the basic mechanics of the story are handled by a proven structure, the writer and director are freed to spend their creative energy on the elements that make the film distinctive, such as character, voice, tone, theme, and world. Comprehension fluency, the ease that a clear structure provides, is exactly what clears space for the deeper engagement and narrative transportation that audiences remember and recommend (Thomas and Grigsby, 2024). Far from limiting art, a strong frame is often what lets the art land at all. Many celebrated and commercially successful films demonstrate this partnership plainly. They use a recognizable dramatic structure that any viewer can follow without effort, and they pour their originality into style, idea, and feeling. The audience gets the comfort of a familiar journey and the thrill of a fresh destination in the same ticket. This is the practical meaning of the claim that structure and creativity work together. Structure is the reliable vehicle that gets the audience safely through the story. Creativity is the reason to take the trip in the first place. A vehicle with no destination is dull, and a destination with no vehicle never gets reached. 7.3 Reframing the debate for students Students sometimes worry that following structure means selling out, and that true artists ignore the rules entirely. The evidence supports a more mature view. The rules of structure are simply the accumulated knowledge of what helps audiences follow and enjoy a story, gathered across thousands of years of storytelling. Learning them is not surrender. It is fluency. Once a filmmaker is fluent in structure, they can bend or break it on purpose, for a specific effect, rather than by accident, in the same way that a skilled musician can play freely with rhythm only after mastering it. The most admired experimental films are usually made by people who understand conventional structure deeply and are departing from it deliberately, which is very different from failing to achieve it. The commercial and the creative goals converge at this point. The most reliable way to serve both is to master the familiar frame of storytelling and then fill it with something new. This is a hopeful message rather than a limiting one. It means that a film can be a sound business proposition and a genuine work of art at the same time, and that the skills required for one are not the enemy of the other. For a student deciding how to spend their years of training, that convergence is worth taking seriously. 8. Does Structure Still Matter in the Streaming Era? The rise of #streaming has changed how films are financed, distributed, and consumed, so it is fair to ask whether the argument of this paper still holds in the new landscape. The short answer is that structure still matters, and in some ways matters more, but the pressures around it have shifted in ways students should understand. 8.1 A more divided market Research on the digital era describes filmed entertainment as an increasingly divided business, split between huge tentpole films and small niche titles, with less room in the middle than there once was (Hennig-Thurau et al., 2021). At the top end, the biggest films double down on familiar franchises and clear structure because the sums at stake are enormous and the tolerance for risk is very low. When a single film costs as much as a small city's annual budget, no one wants to gamble on a story shape the audience has never seen. At the niche end, smaller films can afford to take more structural chances precisely because their budgets, and therefore their downside risk, are smaller. The middle, where moderately budgeted original films once lived comfortably, has become harder to sustain. In this divided landscape, familiar structure has become even more important for the expensive films that carry the most risk. 8.2 New tools, same logic Streaming platforms also bring powerful new tools for managing uncertainty. They collect detailed data on what viewers watch, when they stop, what they rewatch, and what they choose next. Studios and platforms increasingly use analytics to shape decisions about which content to produce and which to promote (Behrens and colleagues, 2021). Some platforms operate with a different institutional logic from traditional studios, weighing subscriber engagement and retention rather than ticket sales alone, which changes what counts as success (Hadida, Lampel, Walls, and Joshi, 2021). Machine learning models now attempt to forecast a film's performance before release in order to guide investment and reduce financial risk (Al Fahoum and Ghobon, 2023). These tools do not replace structure. They rely on it. A recommendation system can only match a film to the right viewers if the film has a clear genre and shape to match against a viewer's history. Research on on demand viewing shows that genre and the way options are presented strongly influence what people choose to watch (Thurman et al., 2024). A film with a muddled identity is hard to categorize, hard to recommend, and easy to lose in a library of thousands of titles competing for the same attention. If anything, the flood of choice on streaming raises the value of a clear, familiar structure, because it helps a film register as an understandable option in the two or three seconds a viewer spends deciding whether to click, rather than becoming one more confusing thumbnail scrolled past. 8.3 Serialized structure and long form storytelling Streaming has also encouraged serialized storytelling, in which a story unfolds across many episodes and seasons designed to keep viewers subscribing. This is not a rejection of structure. It is a different application of the same principles at a larger scale. Serialized shows use cliffhangers, season arcs, mid season turning points, and recurring beats to set expectations and then reward them over time. The underlying logic is identical to the single film case. Clear structure sets expectations, met expectations produce satisfaction, and satisfaction drives the continued engagement and word of mouth that the platform depends on for its subscription revenue. The container has changed from a two hour film to a multi season series, and the metrics have changed from ticket sales to viewing hours and retention, but the value of #predictable_storytelling has not changed at all. If anything, a business model built on keeping subscribers month after month depends on reliable structure even more than a business model built on selling one ticket at a time. 9. Practical Implications for Film Business Students The argument of this paper has direct consequences for students who plan to work in development, finance, distribution, or marketing. The following implications translate the theory into practice, and each one is meant to be usable in a real meeting or a real pitch. First, learn structure as a business tool, not only as a craft. Understanding the #three_act_structure, the beat sheet, and the hero's journey is not just for writers. It is essential for anyone who reads scripts, evaluates projects, or forecasts demand. A shared structural vocabulary lets you compare projects fairly, spot problems early while they are still cheap to fix, and communicate clearly with everyone from the writer to the investor. Fluency in structure lowers the cost of every conversation in the value chain, and lower conversation costs are a real competitive advantage. Second, treat familiar structure as a way to reduce #audience_risk, and therefore commercial risk. When you pitch or evaluate a project, ask how easily the audience can understand what kind of experience they are being offered. If the answer is unclear, the film will be harder to market, harder to finance, and harder to place, regardless of its artistic merit. Clarity of structure is a financeable asset that can be described in a funding document, and vagueness is a hidden cost that shows up later as expensive confusion. Third, insist on the balance described by #optimal_distinctiveness. A project that is all familiar structure with no fresh content will struggle to stand out and will fatigue the audience over time. A project that is all invention with no clear structure will confuse audiences and repel financiers who cannot compare it to anything. The strongest projects hold both. When you assess a film, look for the stable frame and the fresh element together, and be honestly wary of anything that has only one of the two, however impressive that one element may be. Fourth, remember that structure feeds marketing and word of mouth. A film with a clear shape can be sold in a trailer and a single line, and it can be described and recommended by satisfied viewers to their friends. Since advertising in entertainment works mainly by reducing the buyer's uncertainty (Schoendeling and colleagues, 2023), a clear structure makes every marketing dollar more efficient and reduces the risk of a damaging gap between what was promised and what was delivered. Ask of any project, can a happy viewer explain this film to a friend in one sentence, and if the honest answer is no, treat that as a warning. Fifth, use data and structure together, not one instead of the other. In the streaming era, analytics and machine learning can sharpen forecasts and guide decisions (Behrens and colleagues, 2021; Al Fahoum and Ghobon, 2023), but these tools depend on films having clear identities to analyze and recommend (Thurman et al., 2024). The future belongs to professionals who can combine an understanding of storytelling with an understanding of data, because each makes the other more useful. A data analyst who understands story can ask better questions, and a storyteller who understands data can defend their instincts with evidence. Sixth, respect the audience's stock of consumption capital. Audiences often prefer familiar worlds and genres because their existing knowledge lets them enjoy those experiences more fully (Opitz and Hofmann, 2016). Familiar structure is not only a defensive choice by cautious studios. It is also a direct response to genuine audience preference. Design and sell films with that preference in mind, while still offering the novelty that keeps the experience feeling alive rather than stale. Serving the audience's desire for the familiar is not cynical. It is a form of respect for what they actually want. 10. Limitations and Future Research This article synthesizes existing theory and evidence rather than presenting new data, so several limitations should be stated plainly. First, much of the strongest economic evidence on risk and sequels comes from the theatrical era, and the streaming business is still young and changing quickly. The measures of success on streaming, such as engagement and retention, are often private and hard for independent researchers to study, so conclusions about structure and risk on these platforms remain provisional and open to revision as more data becomes available (Hadida et al., 2021). Second, the concept of structure is broad, and this paper treats it mainly as the familiar dramatic structure of mainstream narrative film. Different genres, national cinemas, and formats use different structural conventions, and the risk reducing power of structure may vary across these settings in ways this paper does not capture. Comparative and cross cultural research on how #optimal_distinctiveness operates in different markets would sharpen the argument and show where its limits lie. Third, the relationship between familiarity and success is not a straight line. The evidence suggests an inverted U shape in which moderate novelty performs best, but the exact position of that sweet spot likely differs by genre, budget, and audience segment. Future work could measure this balance more precisely for film, building on the methods that have already been applied to other cultural products such as music and design. Fourth, the paper focuses on how structure reduces risk, but risk reduction is not the only goal of filmmaking, and treating it as such would be a mistake. Some of the most valuable films in cultural terms deliberately break structure, and some of the biggest financial surprises come from films that ignored the rules and won anyway. Future research should study when breaking structure pays off and when it destroys value, so that students learn not only the value of the rules but also the conditions under which breaking them is a bet worth making. Finally, more work is needed on the interaction between structure and the new prediction tools. As machine learning models grow more capable, an important open question is whether they will reinforce familiar structure by rewarding what has already worked before, or whether they will identify new and non obvious paths to success that human intuition has missed (Al Fahoum and Ghobon, 2023; McKenzie, 2023). The answer will shape not only how films are financed but also what kinds of stories get made at all, which makes it a question worth studying carefully rather than assuming. 11. Conclusion The film business lives with a level of uncertainty that few other industries face. Products are expensive, tastes are unpredictable, and quality cannot be judged until after purchase. In this environment, anything that makes outcomes a little more predictable carries real value, because predictability protects firms from ruin and makes financing possible in the first place. Familiar #film_structure is one of the oldest and most effective of these tools, and it has survived a century of technological change precisely because it keeps working. The core argument of this paper is that a recognizable #story_structure reduces #audience_risk, and by reducing audience risk it reduces commercial risk for producers, investors, and distributors. Structure works as a shared language that lowers the cost of development, as a basis of comparison that makes projects financeable, as an identity that makes films easy to distribute and recommend, and as a promise that makes marketing efficient. It also works inside the viewer, enabling the comprehension fluency and #narrative_transportation that produce satisfaction and the positive word of mouth on which every film depends. The economic history of sequels and #franchises confirms the pattern. Familiar material tends to deliver more predictable returns, which is precisely the quality the industry prizes most in a world of extreme uncertainty. Yet the deepest lesson is not that filmmakers should always play it safe. It is that structure and #creativity are partners, not rivals. Structure gives audiences the confidence to say yes, and creativity gives them the surprise that makes the experience worth remembering and sharing. The theory of #optimal_distinctiveness captures this balance directly: success lies in being familiar enough to be trusted and different enough to be chosen. For film business students, the practical message is genuinely encouraging. You do not have to choose between commerce and art, and the belief that you must is one of the most common and most costly mistakes in the field. The most reliable way to serve both is to master the familiar frame of #predictable_storytelling and then fill it with something genuinely new. #predictable_storytelling #film_structure #audience_risk #film_business #cultural_economics #box_office #three_act_structure #optimal_distinctiveness #narrative_transportation #film_financing #creative_industries #media_management #franchises #risk_management #screenwriting_economics References Al Fahoum, A., and Ghobon, T. A. (2023). Accurate machine learning predictions of sci-fi film performance. Journal of New Media, 5(1), 1-22. https://doi.org/10.32604/jnm.2023.037583 Behrens, R., Foutz, N. Z., Franklin, M., Funk, J., Gutierrez-Navratil, F., Hofmann, J., and Leibfried, U. (2021). Leveraging analytics to produce compelling and profitable film content. Journal of Cultural Economics, 45(2), 171-211. Campbell, J. (2008). The hero with a thousand faces (3rd ed.). New World Library. Caves, R. E. (2000). Creative industries: Contracts between art and commerce. Harvard University Press. De Vany, A. (2004). Hollywood economics: How extreme uncertainty shapes the film industry. Routledge. Field, S. (2005). Screenplay: The foundations of screenwriting (Rev. ed.). Delacorte Press. Filson, D., and Havlicek, J. H. (2018). The performance of global film franchises: Installment effects and extension decisions. Journal of Cultural Economics, 42(3), 447-467. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10824-018-9316-6 Green, M. C., and Appel, M. (2024). Narrative transportation: How stories shape how we see ourselves and the world. Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, 70. Hadida, A. L., Lampel, J., Walls, W. D., and Joshi, A. (2021). Hollywood studio filmmaking in the age of Netflix: A tale of two institutional logics. Journal of Cultural Economics, 45(2), 213-238. Hennig-Thurau, T., Ravid, S. A., and Sorenson, O. (2021). The economics of filmed entertainment in the digital era. Journal of Cultural Economics, 45(2), 157-170. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10824-021-09407-6 McKenzie, J. (2023). The economics of movies (revisited): A survey of recent literature. Journal of Economic Surveys, 37(2). https://doi.org/10.1111/joes.12498 Opitz, C., and Hofmann, K. H. (2016). The more you know the more you enjoy? Applying consumption capital theory to motion picture franchises. Journal of Media Economics, 29(4), 181-195. https://doi.org/10.1080/08997764.2016.1244676 Pokorny, M., Miskell, P., and Sedgwick, J. (2019). Managing uncertainty in creative industries: Film sequels and Hollywood's profitability, 1988-2015. Competition and Change, 23(1), 23-46. https://doi.org/10.1177/1024529418797302 Schoendeling, A., and colleagues (2023). Marvelous advertising returns? A meta-analysis of advertising elasticities in the entertainment industry. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11747-022-00916-0 Snyder, B. (2005). Save the cat! The last book on screenwriting you will ever need. Michael Wiese Productions. Thomas, V. L., and Grigsby, J. L. (2024). Narrative transportation: A systematic literature review and future research agenda. Psychology and Marketing, 41(8), 1805-1819. https://doi.org/10.1002/mar.22011 Thurman, N., Klatt, A., Raj, H., and Taneja, H. (2024). Predicting streaming audiences for a channel's on-demand TV shows: Discerning the influences of choice architecture, consumer agency, and content attributes. Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies. https://doi.org/10.1177/13548565231174590 Vogel, H. L. (2020). Entertainment industry economics: A guide for financial analysis (10th ed.). Cambridge University Press. Zhao, E. Y., and Glynn, M. A. (2022). Optimal distinctiveness: On being the same and different. Organization Theory, 3(1).

  • Story Architecture as Business Strategy: Reassessing Freytag's Dramatic Model as an Economic Planning Tool in Film Production

    This article argues that story structure is not only an artistic concern but also a practical instrument of business planning in the film industry. Using Gustav Freytag's five-part dramatic model as the main reference point, the paper examines how a clear #story_architecture helps producers, investors, and distributors understand a project quickly, estimate its costs, find its audience, and sell it in the market. The study is a conceptual and integrative review. It brings together recent research from #screenwriting studies, media economics, marketing, and data science to show that a well-shaped #dramatic_structure lowers uncertainty at several stages of #film_production. When a script follows a recognisable shape, decision makers can read it faster, compare it with past successes, and make more confident financial choices. The paper also connects Freytag's model to work on #narrative_transportation, which explains why structured stories persuade audiences and buyers more effectively than loose ones. The central message is positive and simple. Good #storytelling and sound #business_planning are not opposites. A strong structure can serve both the creative goal of moving an audience and the commercial goal of managing money and risk. The article closes with a practical framework that students and early-career professionals can use to link each stage of a story to a specific business function, and it identifies clear directions for future study. Keywords: story architecture; Freytag's pyramid; dramatic structure; film production economics; pitching; greenlighting; audience targeting; film marketing; streaming platforms; narrative transportation 1. Introduction Films are expensive to make, and most of them lose money. Before a single scene is shot, a project must survive a long chain of decisions. Someone has to believe in the idea, someone has to pay for it, and someone has to sell it to viewers. Each person in that chain has very little time to judge whether a story is worth their money. This is where the shape of a story becomes an economic matter, not only an artistic one. A script that is easy to follow can move through this chain faster and with fewer misunderstandings. A script that is confusing tends to stall, no matter how original its ideas may be. The idea that stories have a shape is very old. In the nineteenth century, the German playwright and novelist Gustav Freytag studied the plays of ancient Greece and of William Shakespeare and described a common pattern that many strong dramas seemed to share (Freytag, 1863). He drew this pattern as a pyramid with five parts: #exposition, #rising_action, #climax, #falling_action, and #resolution. This model is now taught in classrooms all over the world and is usually called Freytag's pyramid. It is often treated as a lesson about craft, a way to help writers build tension and give an audience a satisfying experience. This paper takes a different angle. It asks what happens when we treat #Freytags_pyramid not only as a craft tool but also as a #business_planning tool. The claim is straightforward. A clear #story_architecture makes a film project easier to understand, easier to price, easier to aim at the right audience, and easier to market. In other words, the same structure that helps a writer hold an audience also helps a producer hold the attention of an investor, and helps a marketing team explain the film to the public. Structure reduces the effort needed to grasp what a project is, and reduced effort has real financial value in an industry where attention is scarce and mistakes are costly. This connection matters because the economics of film are unforgiving. Studios and platforms receive far more scripts than they can ever produce, and the process of choosing which ones to make, known as #greenlighting, involves large sums of money and high uncertainty (Lehrer and Xie, 2022). Independent producers and film funds pool money from many sources and must convince each source that the risk is worth taking. Streaming services commission enormous slates of content and rely heavily on data about what viewers actually watch. In every one of these settings, the people making decisions need to understand a story quickly and to compare it with other options. A recognisable structure gives them a shared language for doing this. The purpose of this article is to make that link visible and to explain it in plain terms for students who may become writers, producers, marketers, or analysts. The paper does not argue that structure guarantees success. Many well-structured films fail, and some unusual films that break the rules succeed. The argument is more modest and, for that reason, more useful. On average, and across many decisions, a clear #dramatic_structure lowers the cost of understanding a project. Lower understanding cost means faster decisions, better estimates, and clearer communication among people who rarely have time to read a full script. The article proceeds as follows. Section 2 sets out the idea of story architecture and why structure carries information. Section 3 explains Freytag's model and how it has been adapted over time. Section 4 describes the review approach used here. Sections 5 to 10 examine six business functions in turn: #pitching, #budgeting, #audience_targeting, #marketing, greenlighting and investment, and #streaming_platforms. Section 11 draws these threads together into a single framework that maps story stages onto business tasks. Section 12 offers practical guidance for students. Section 13 discusses limitations and future research, and Section 14 concludes. 2. Story Architecture and Why Structure Carries Information The phrase #story_architecture treats a narrative the way an engineer treats a building. A building has a purpose, a shape, load-bearing parts, and a flow that guides people through it. A story also has a purpose, a shape, key turning points that carry weight, and a flow that guides an audience through feeling and thought. When we speak of architecture rather than plot, we shift attention from the surface details of what happens to the deeper pattern that holds the whole thing together. Why does structure matter so much in economic terms? The simplest answer is that structure reduces uncertainty for the person receiving the story. A structured message is easier to predict, easier to remember, and easier to summarise. In fields far from film, researchers have shown that presenting information as a story rather than as a list of facts changes how people process it. A story invites what scholars call #narrative_transportation, the feeling of being carried into a narrative world so completely that the audience lowers its resistance and becomes more open to the ideas inside (Green and Appel, 2024; Thomas and Grigsby, 2024). This effect has been studied most closely in advertising and consumer research, where structured brand stories consistently outperform plain claims in shaping attitudes and intentions (Houghton, 2021; Glaser and Reisinger, 2022). The same principle applies inside the film business, not only to the finished film but also to the documents and conversations that surround it. When a producer pitches a project, the pitch itself is a small story. When a marketing team cuts a trailer, the trailer is a compressed version of the film's arc. When an analyst summarises a script for a committee, the summary follows a shape. In each case, a clearer underlying structure produces a clearer message, and a clearer message travels through the organisation with less loss. There is also a memory argument. People remember structured information better than unstructured information. A story with a clear beginning, a build, a peak, and a settling is easier to recall than a series of loosely connected events. This matters because film decisions are rarely made by one person in one sitting. A script read on Monday may be discussed on Friday, and only the parts that stuck in memory will shape the discussion. A strong shape helps the important parts survive the gap between reading and deciding. It is worth being honest about the limits of this idea. Structure is not the same as quality, and a rigid formula can produce dull work. Critics of screenwriting education have warned that teaching structure as a fixed set of rules can push new writers toward safe, predictable scripts that imitate past hits without adding anything new (Gulino, 2023). This is a fair warning. The argument of this paper is not that structure replaces originality. It is that a clear structure is the frame within which originality becomes legible to others. An original idea that no one can follow will struggle to attract money, while an original idea placed inside a recognisable shape can be both fresh and fundable. Structure, in this sense, is a carrier. It does not create value on its own, but it lets value be seen. Recent computational work supports the view that structure can be described precisely and even measured. Studies that use machine analysis of scripts and films have shown that measurable features of a story relate to its later performance, and researchers have built formal design spaces that map narrative shapes such as Freytag's pyramid onto other forms of communication, including data presentation (Yang et al., 2022). The fact that a nineteenth-century dramatic model can be turned into a formal template for modern data stories tells us something important. Freytag did not describe a passing fashion. He described a pattern of attention that seems to hold across very different kinds of communication, which is exactly why it is useful as a shared language in business. 3. Freytag's Model and Its Evolution Freytag built his model on older foundations. Aristotle, in the Poetics, had described drama as having a beginning, a middle, and an end, and had stressed the importance of a single unified action with a turning point. The Roman poet Horace later argued that a play should have five acts. Freytag combined these ideas and gave them a memorable visual form (Freytag, 1863). He imagined the emotional intensity of a drama rising to a peak and then falling, and he drew this rise and fall as a triangle or pyramid. The five parts of the model are simple to state. The #exposition introduces the world, the main characters, and the situation before the trouble starts. The #rising_action begins when something disturbs the balance and sets a chain of events in motion, with tension and complications growing as the protagonist pursues a goal and meets obstacles. The #climax is the highest point of tension, the moment of greatest change, where the direction of the story turns. The #falling_action shows the consequences of the climax as events move toward their outcome. The #resolution, sometimes called the denouement, ties up the remaining threads and returns the world to a new stable state. Later readers have adapted the model in several ways. Some describe it with seven parts, adding an inciting incident and a final moment of release. Modern storytellers, especially in film and television, often condense it to a familiar three-act shape or expand it into more detailed beat sheets, but the underlying logic is the same: set up, build, turn, and resolve (Davies, Russo and Tieber, 2023). Contemporary narratives sometimes cut the resolution short, ending on a cliffhanger or an open question, which is common in series designed to keep viewers subscribing. Even these choices make sense only against the background of the classic shape, because a cliffhanger works precisely by withholding the resolution the audience has been trained to expect. It is useful to note that Freytag was describing tragedy in particular, where the fall after the climax is central. Many modern commercial films are not tragedies, so the falling action is often short and the climax sits close to the end. This does not break the model. It simply shows that the pyramid is a flexible guide rather than a fixed measuring stick. What survives across genres and eras is the pattern of a controlled build in tension toward a decisive turning point, followed by some form of release. That pattern is the part that matters for business, because it is the part that makes a story easy to grasp and easy to compare with others. The wider field of #script_development has moved beyond treating any single model as the only correct one. Scholars now study how scripts actually change through rounds of notes and feedback, how development executives shape stories, and how different national industries approach structure in different ways (Batty and Taylor, 2021). This research reminds us that structure in practice is a social process, not a private act. A script is reshaped by many hands before it reaches the screen, and each of those hands is easier to satisfy when the story has a clear spine. Freytag's model, understood loosely, provides that spine. It gives everyone involved a common map, which is one reason it has lasted so long despite regular predictions that it is outdated. Two further points about the model deserve mention. First, the model is about the audience's experience of tension and change, not about the running time of scenes. A scene can be long and quiet and still belong to the rising action if it increases pressure. This is why structure is not the same as pacing, though the two are related. Second, the model works because it matches something about human attention. People are drawn to change and to the resolution of uncertainty. A story that sets up a question and then answers it holds attention better than one that drifts. Freytag captured this in a diagram, but the diagram points to a fact about audiences that filmmakers and marketers exploit every day. 4. Approach This paper is a conceptual and integrative review rather than an empirical study with new data. Its goal is to connect ideas from separate fields that rarely speak to one another: classical dramatic theory, contemporary #screenwriting research, media economics, marketing science, and applied data analysis of film performance. The value of an integrative review lies in synthesis. By reading these bodies of work together, the paper builds an argument that none of them makes fully on its own, namely that #dramatic_structure functions as a business tool across the film value chain. Sources were selected on three criteria. First, relevance to either story structure or the economics of film and audiences. Second, recency, with a strong preference for work published within roughly the last five years, so that the discussion of #streaming_platforms and data-driven decision making reflects the current market. Third, credibility, favouring peer-reviewed journals, scholarly handbooks, and recognised working papers. Older foundational sources are cited only where they are unavoidable, most obviously Freytag's original text, which remains the primary reference for the model itself. The analysis then proceeds function by function. For each business task in the film value chain, the paper asks a single question: how does a clear #story_architecture change the cost, speed, or accuracy of that task? This keeps the argument concrete and testable. Where possible, claims are linked to research on how films are financed, chosen, predicted, and sold. The framework in Section 11 is offered as a synthesis that others can test with data in future work, and the limitations in Section 13 are stated plainly so that readers do not over-read the strength of the claims. 5. Structure as a Communication Tool in Pitching A pitch is the first economic test a story faces. Before anyone commits money, a writer or producer must explain the project to someone with the power to say yes. This usually happens in a short meeting, a brief document, or a one-line summary. The pitch is where #story_architecture first turns into money, because a listener who understands the shape of the story can imagine the finished film and judge whether it is worth pursuing. The core problem in #pitching is time. Executives, financiers, and commissioners hear and read many projects and can give each only a few minutes. Under this pressure, they rely on shortcuts. One powerful shortcut is the recognisable shape. When a pitch signals a clear setup, a clear source of rising tension, and a clear turning point, the listener can slot the project into a mental category and move quickly to the questions that matter: who is it for, what will it cost, and how is it different. A pitch that lacks this shape forces the listener to do extra work to reconstruct the story, and busy people often respond to extra work by saying no. This is why the film industry has developed compressed forms of structure such as the #logline and the #high_concept premise. A logline is a single sentence that captures the protagonist, the goal, the main obstacle, and the stakes. It is, in effect, Freytag's pyramid squeezed into one line: it names the exposition, points to the rising action, and hints at the climax. A high-concept idea is one whose central hook can be grasped instantly and whose dramatic engine is obvious from a short description. Both forms exist because the market rewards stories that can be understood at speed. Neither is a substitute for a full script, but both act as trustworthy signals that a full structure lies underneath. Research on persuasion helps explain why a structured pitch works better than a list of features. When a pitch is delivered as a small story, with a character who wants something and faces a problem, it can produce a mild form of #narrative_transportation in the listener, drawing them into the imagined film and lowering their resistance to it (Green and Appel, 2024). Studies of storytelling in marketing show that this narrative framing increases engagement and positive attitudes compared with plain informational messages (Houghton, 2021; Deb et al., 2025). A producer who pitches a film as a story rather than as a bundle of elements is using the same mechanism that the film itself will later use on audiences. There is a second, quieter benefit. A clear structure makes a project easier to pass along. The person who hears the pitch is rarely the only decision maker. They must often repeat the idea to colleagues, a finance committee, or a superior. A story with a strong shape survives this retelling because its parts are easy to remember and reassemble. A story without a shape degrades with each retelling, arriving at the final decision maker as a vague and unconvincing summary. In an industry where decisions are collective, the ability of a pitch to travel intact is a real economic advantage, and structure is what protects it in transit. For students, the practical lesson is direct. Learning to describe a project in structural terms is not a betrayal of creativity. It is a survival skill in a market that runs on fast judgment. The writer who can name the setup, the engine of rising tension, and the turning point of their own story, in a single clear breath, holds an advantage over the equally talented writer who can only say that the script is good. The first speaks the language of the room. The second asks the room to do work it does not have time to do. 6. Structure, Budgeting, and Scheduling Once a project moves forward, it must be costed. Here #story_architecture stops being abstract and starts shaping spreadsheets. A film's budget is built by breaking the script into its parts and pricing each one: locations, cast, crew days, effects, and so on. The clearer the structure, the more reliably this breakdown can be done, and the more accurate the early estimates become. The link between structure and #budgeting runs through the physical demands of each story stage. The #climax of a film is usually its most demanding sequence, both dramatically and financially, because it is where the largest change happens and often where the biggest set pieces sit. A well-structured script places its heaviest demands where the story needs them most, which helps a producer decide where the money should go. When the peak of the story and the peak of the spending line up, the budget is working in service of the drama. When they do not, money is being spent in places the audience will not feel, which is a warning sign for any financier. A clear structure also supports scheduling. Film shoots are almost never filmed in story order. Scenes are grouped by location, by cast availability, and by equipment needs. To plan this, the production team must understand how each scene contributes to the whole so that nothing essential is lost when scenes are rearranged and, sometimes, cut for cost. A script with a strong spine is easier to trim without collapse, because it is clear which scenes carry the structural load and which are decoration. A script without a clear spine is dangerous to cut, since removing the wrong scene can quietly break the story, and the damage may not appear until the edit, when it is expensive to fix. Structure further helps with the trade-offs that dominate real productions. Budgets are almost always tighter than wishes. Producers constantly weigh what to keep and what to lose. When the story's architecture is understood, these choices can be made with the drama in mind: protect the setup that the audience needs, protect the turning point that gives the film its meaning, and economise on the parts that can carry less weight. This is not only artistic discipline. It is #risk_management, because a film that saves money by weakening its climax may save a little in production and lose far more at release. There is also a signalling effect for investors. A budget that maps cleanly onto a clear structure is easier to trust. A financier reviewing a project can see that the spending follows the story rather than drifting, and this coherence reduces the sense of #investment risk. Work on #film_finance describes how producers and financiers try to manage the deep uncertainty of the business through careful structuring of both money and rights (Cuntz et al., 2023). A story whose costs are legibly tied to its structure fits naturally into this culture of careful structuring, because it lets everyone see how creative choices and financial choices line up. Finally, structure helps at the point where budget meets forecast. Early estimates of a film's likely #box_office or viewership feed directly into how much can be spent. Research on box office prediction uses features of a project, sometimes including elements of the script and genre, to estimate likely returns (Chen et al., 2023; Al Fahoum and Ghobon, 2023). These models work better when the inputs are clear and comparable, and a well-structured project provides cleaner inputs. A film whose shape is easy to classify can be compared with similar past films, and those comparisons anchor the budget in evidence rather than hope. In this way, structure quietly improves the quality of the financial reasoning that surrounds a project long before it reaches the screen. 7. Structure and Audience Targeting No film is made for everyone. Even the largest releases are built with a core audience in mind, and the rest of the marketing plan radiates outward from that core. #Audience_targeting is the work of deciding who the film is for and how to reach them, and it depends heavily on being able to say what the film is. A clear #story_architecture makes this possible, because a story with a recognisable shape can be matched to audiences who are known to enjoy that shape. The first link is through #genre. Genre is, in part, a promise about structure. When an audience chooses a thriller, a romance, or a horror film, they are choosing a familiar pattern of setup, build, and payoff, even if they could not describe it in those words. A clear structure signals genre clearly, and clear genre signals allow marketers to find the audience that already loves that pattern. A film whose structure is muddled sends mixed genre signals, which confuses targeting and forces the marketing team to guess who the film is for. Guessing is expensive, because media is bought in advance and mistakes are hard to reverse once a campaign is running. The second link is through emotion. The #emotional_arc of a film, the pattern of feelings it produces across its running time, is closely tied to its structure. Rising action builds anticipation and worry, the climax delivers release or shock, and the resolution offers comfort or reflection. Different audiences seek different emotional journeys, and a clear structure makes the film's emotional promise legible. This matters because audience research increasingly focuses on emotional response as a predictor of interest. Studies of trailers, for example, have found that the emotional intensity a trailer produces relates to later commercial performance, which means the emotional shape of a story is a targeting variable, not only an artistic one. The third link is through comparison. Marketers and analysts constantly describe new films by reference to old ones, using past titles as shorthand for a shape and an audience. This shorthand only works if the new film has a clear enough structure to be compared. A film that can be placed beside two or three known titles inherits a ready-made picture of its likely audience, which speeds up planning and lowers cost. A film that resists comparison, because its shape is unclear, must be introduced to the market from scratch, which is slower and riskier. Clear structure, in this sense, is what makes a film findable in the mental map that industry professionals use to navigate the market. The rise of data has strengthened rather than weakened this logic. Streaming services and studios now hold detailed records of what viewers watch, and they use these records to understand taste at a fine level of detail (van Es, 2023; Wayne, 2022). Data-driven decision making in the film industry increasingly uses patterns in past viewing to predict interest in new content (Leem et al., 2023). These systems still need a clear description of the new project to work, because a prediction is only as good as the features fed into it. A well-structured story provides clean, comparable features, letting the data connect the new film to the audiences most likely to want it. Far from making structure obsolete, the data age has made a legible structure more valuable, because legible structure is what lets human judgment and machine analysis speak to each other. For students entering marketing or analytics roles, the takeaway is that structure and data are partners. The instinct to see storytelling and spreadsheets as opposites is mistaken. The spreadsheet needs the story to have a shape it can read, and the story reaches its audience faster when the data can place it. Learning to describe a film's structure in clear, comparable terms is therefore a core skill for anyone who wants to connect a film to its viewers. 8. Structure and Marketing Marketing is where a film meets the public, and it is one of the largest costs in the whole enterprise. A major release often spends a sum on marketing that rivals its production budget. Because so much money rides on the campaign, anything that makes marketing clearer and more efficient has large financial value. A strong #story_architecture is one of the most powerful of these clarifying forces, because almost every marketing asset is a compressed retelling of the film's structure. Consider the trailer. A trailer is a short film in its own right, usually two minutes long, and it follows a shape borrowed directly from the feature. It sets up the world, builds tension, hints at the climax, and stops before the resolution to leave the audience wanting more. A film with a clear structure yields a clear trailer, because the material for each stage is already there and easy to find. A film with a weak structure produces a confusing trailer, because the editor has no strong shape to compress. The quality of the trailer depends on the quality of the underlying architecture, and the trailer is often the single most important piece of #marketing a film will produce. The same is true of the poster, the tagline, and the synopsis. Each of these takes the whole film and reduces it to a fragment, and each works best when the fragment points to a clear whole. A tagline is a promise about the story's central tension. A poster is a single image that should imply the film's world and mood. A synopsis is a paragraph that must convey setup, conflict, and stakes without spoiling the ending. All of these tasks are easier when the story has a strong shape to draw from, because compression requires something solid to compress. Research on storytelling in marketing gives a deeper reason why structured messages sell better. Structured narratives produce #narrative_transportation, drawing audiences into the story world and making them more receptive and more likely to act (Thomas and Grigsby, 2024; Green and Appel, 2024). A trailer that tells a small, complete story in two minutes uses this effect to create desire for the full film. A trailer that only shows disconnected images may impress the eye but fails to transport the viewer, and so fails to convert attention into a ticket or a click. The persuasive power of the campaign, then, rests partly on the structural power of the story it is drawn from. Structure also improves the coordination of a campaign across channels. Modern film marketing runs across many platforms at once, from social media to physical spaces, and the message must stay consistent as it moves. Studies of #box_office and social media show that different channels and events interact in complex ways to influence results (Liao and Huang, 2021; Bogaert, Ballings and Van den Poel, 2021). A clear structure acts as an anchor that keeps the message consistent across all these channels, because every asset is built from the same underlying shape. Without such an anchor, campaigns tend to drift, and the film ends up presenting several different faces to the public, which confuses potential viewers and wastes money. There is a final point about timing. Marketing is not only about content but also about release strategy, and structure feeds into that too. The emotional promise of a film, which is set by its structure, helps determine when it should be released and against what competition. A film built for comfort and warmth may suit one season, while a film built for tension and shock may suit another. Understanding the story's shape helps the marketing team place the film in the calendar where its emotional promise will find the most receptive mood in the audience. In this way, structure reaches all the way from the first page of the script to the choice of release date, tying the creative core of the film to one of the most consequential business decisions of all. 9. Structure, Greenlighting, and Investment Risk The decision to make a film is one of the riskiest in business. It commits large sums to a product whose success cannot be known in advance and whose value depends on the unpredictable response of the public. This decision, #greenlighting, sits at the centre of film economics, and it is where a clear #story_architecture delivers perhaps its greatest value, because the whole point of structure is to reduce uncertainty for the person deciding. The scale of the problem is the starting point. Studios and platforms receive far more projects than they can produce and must choose among them with limited information (Lehrer and Xie, 2022). Each choice ties up money for years and cannot easily be undone. In this setting, decision makers look for anything that reduces the risk of a costly mistake. A clear structure is one such thing. A project with a recognisable shape can be assessed more confidently, because the decision maker can see how it will build, where it will peak, and how it will pay off. A project with an unclear shape hides its risks, and hidden risks are exactly what careful investors try to avoid. Structure also enables comparison, and comparison is the heart of risk assessment. Financiers rarely judge a project in isolation. They judge it against the performance of similar projects in the past. A film with a clear structure can be placed alongside comparable past films, and those comparisons give a rough but valuable sense of likely #return_on_investment. Research on predicting film success relies on exactly this logic, using measurable features of projects to estimate outcomes (Chen et al., 2023; Al Fahoum and Ghobon, 2023). A well-structured project offers cleaner features for these comparisons and predictions, which makes it easier to finance, because it can be reasoned about rather than merely hoped over. The way films are financed makes this even more important. Film projects are often funded by combining money from several sources, each of which must be convinced separately, and much of modern film finance is built around carefully structured deals and the value of underlying rights (Cuntz et al., 2023). Every source in this web is easier to satisfy when the project has a clear spine, because a clear spine reduces the effort each investor must spend to understand what they are backing. The film industry has long developed private-sector tools to manage its unusual risks, and a legible story fits into these tools naturally, since it lets financial structure and dramatic structure reinforce each other. It is important to place this claim carefully. Structure reduces uncertainty about what a project is. It does not remove uncertainty about how audiences will respond. A perfectly structured film can still fail if the idea does not connect, and the film business is full of well-built projects that lost money. The value of structure is not that it predicts success but that it lowers the noise around the decision, letting investors reason more clearly about the risks they can see. In an industry where executive risk preferences and investment discipline strongly shape outcomes, clearer reasoning is itself worth money, because it improves the quality of the many decisions that lead up to a release. Structure also matters after a film is made, in the way it is judged and, sometimes, changed. Test screenings and rounds of editing often reshape a film's structure in response to audience reaction, and the ability to identify and adjust structural weak points is a practical form of #risk_management late in the process. A film whose architecture is clear can be diagnosed and repaired when something is not working, because the parts and their functions are visible. A film whose architecture is muddled is hard to fix, because no one can be sure which part is failing. The clarity that helps at greenlighting, then, keeps paying off throughout the life of the project, right up to the moment it reaches the public. For students who hope to work on the financing side of the industry, the lesson is that story sense and financial sense are not separate talents. The ability to read a story's structure is, in part, the ability to read its risk. An analyst who can see where a script is weak can also see where the investment is weak, and that combined vision is exactly what the greenlighting process needs. 10. Structure in the Age of Streaming Platforms The rise of #streaming_platforms has changed the film business more than any other recent force, and it has changed the value of structure in ways worth examining directly. Streaming services commission content at an enormous scale, hold detailed data on viewing behaviour, and compete fiercely for the limited attention and subscription money of audiences (van Es, 2023; Wayne, 2022). In this environment, a clear #story_architecture serves both old purposes and new ones. The oldest purpose survives intact. Platforms, like studios before them, must choose which projects to fund from a huge pool, and they must do so quickly and at scale. A clear structure still makes a project easier to assess, easier to compare with past hits on the same platform, and easier to slot into a content strategy. The sheer volume of commissioning on major platforms, if anything, increases the value of legibility, because decisions must be made faster and more often than in the old studio model. A project that can be understood at a glance moves through this high-volume pipeline more smoothly than one that must be puzzled over. A newer purpose arises from data. Platforms track exactly how viewers behave, including whether they finish a film or series and where they stop watching (van Es, 2023). This data gives structure a direct commercial meaning. The points in a story where viewers drop off are often structural weak points, moments where the tension sags or the shape becomes unclear. Because platforms can see this behaviour in detail, structure is no longer a matter of taste alone but a measurable driver of the completion and retention that platforms care about. Data-driven decision making in the industry increasingly uses such patterns to guide choices about content (Leem et al., 2023), and the shape of a story is one of the things this data indirectly measures. Streaming has also changed the resolution stage of Freytag's model in an interesting way. Series designed to keep viewers subscribing often withhold or delay resolution, ending episodes and seasons on unresolved tension to drive continued viewing. This is a business use of structure that would have surprised Freytag, yet it depends entirely on his logic. The cliffhanger works because audiences have learned to expect resolution, so withholding it creates a pull toward the next episode. Here the manipulation of a single structural stage is turned directly into a retention tool, which shows how deeply structure is now woven into platform economics. Competition among platforms raises the stakes further. As more services compete for the same subscribers, content costs rise and platforms must work harder to keep viewers engaged and to reduce cancellations. In this contest, the ability to produce content that holds attention from start to finish becomes a competitive advantage, and holding attention is, in large part, a structural achievement. A platform that can commission well-structured content, and that can use its data to identify and fix structural weakness, is better placed to retain subscribers than one that cannot. Structure, in other words, has become part of the strategic contest between platforms, not merely a concern of individual writers. Yet the same data age brings a caution that students should keep in mind. When platforms lean too heavily on past patterns, they risk pushing content toward safe, familiar shapes that resemble previous successes, which can crowd out the unusual work that sometimes defines a platform and attracts new audiences. This is the streaming version of the old worry about formula. The answer is the same as before. Structure should be treated as a frame that makes new ideas legible, not as a cage that forbids them. Platforms that use structure to understand and support fresh work will fare better over time than those that use it only to copy the past, because audiences eventually tire of repetition even when the shape is technically sound. 11. An Integrated Framework: Storytelling as Business Planning The preceding sections examined six business functions one at a time. This section draws them together into a single framework, so that the connection between #story_architecture and #business_planning can be seen as a whole rather than as a set of separate observations. The core idea of the framework is that each stage of Freytag's model does business work as well as dramatic work. The two roles are not in conflict. The very features that make a stage effective for an audience also make it useful for the people who plan, fund, and sell the film. Set out plainly, the mapping runs as follows. The exposition does dramatic work by establishing the world and characters. Its business work is definition. It is the stage that answers the questions a pitch, a synopsis, and a targeting decision all depend on: what is this, where does it happen, and who is it about. A strong exposition gives the whole project a clear identity, and identity is what lets a film be described, compared, and aimed. The rising action does dramatic work by building tension. Its business work is engagement. It is the stage that trailers, taglines, and campaigns draw on to create desire, because it is where the story's promise of conflict and stakes lives. A strong rising action gives the marketing team its material and gives the audience a reason to keep watching, which on a platform means a reason not to stop. The climax does dramatic work by delivering the peak of change. Its business work is value concentration. It is usually where the largest spending sits and where the film's central promise is either kept or broken. Aligning the story's peak with the budget's peak is one of the clearest examples of structure serving finance, because it puts the money where the audience will feel it. The falling action does dramatic work by showing consequences. Its business work is coherence. It is the stage that makes the film feel complete and earned rather than abrupt, which protects the audience's satisfaction and, through word of mouth, the film's later performance. A rushed or incoherent aftermath can undo the value created at the climax. The resolution does dramatic work by settling the story. Its business work is legacy and, on platforms, retention. A satisfying resolution builds the goodwill that supports reviews, recommendations, and future projects, while a deliberately withheld resolution can drive continued subscription. This is the stage where the business use of structure has changed most in the streaming era, but the change only makes sense against the classic expectation of closure. Seen this way, the framework turns Freytag's pyramid into a planning grid. A producer or student can walk through the five stages and, at each one, ask both a creative question and a business question. Does the exposition establish a clear identity, and can I describe that identity in one line for a pitch? Does the rising action build genuine tension, and does it give my campaign strong material? Does the climax deliver the film's promise, and does my budget put resources where that promise is kept? Does the falling action earn the ending, and will audiences leave satisfied enough to recommend the film? Does the resolution close the story well, or, for a series, does it leave the right pull toward more? Asking both questions at every stage is what it means, in practice, to treat storytelling as business planning. The deeper point of the framework is that these two sets of questions have the same answers. A choice that strengthens the story usually strengthens the business case, and a choice that weakens the story usually weakens it. This alignment is the positive message at the heart of this paper. Writers sometimes fear that thinking about money will corrupt their work, and executives sometimes fear that respecting the story will cost them money. The framework suggests both fears are overstated. When structure is strong, good #storytelling and good #business_planning point in the same direction, because both depend on a story that an audience, and everyone who serves that audience, can clearly understand. This does not mean the two goals never diverge. There are cases where a commercial choice harms a story or where an artistic choice raises cost without adding value that audiences will feel. The framework does not erase these tensions. What it offers is a way to see how often the tensions are smaller than they appear, and how a clear structure is the common ground on which creative and commercial reasoning can meet. For an industry that spends much of its energy on the argument between art and commerce, that common ground is valuable in itself. 12. Practical Implications for Students For students preparing to enter the film and media industries, the argument of this paper carries several concrete lessons that apply regardless of which role they eventually take. The first lesson is that structural literacy is a shared professional language. Whether a student becomes a writer, a producer, a marketer, or an analyst, they will need to describe, compare, and judge stories quickly. Learning to see and name the parts of a story's architecture is therefore a foundational skill, not a specialist one. A student who can explain the setup, the engine of rising tension, and the turning point of any film they watch is building the exact vocabulary that professional rooms run on. The second lesson is that creativity and commerce are not enemies to be chosen between. Many students enter the field with a strong pull toward one side and a suspicion of the other. This paper suggests that the suspicion is largely unnecessary. The same clear structure that serves the audience also serves the budget, the campaign, and the investor. Students who learn to hold both concerns at once, rather than treating them as rivals, will be more useful and more employable than those who master only one. The third lesson is that data has raised, not lowered, the value of story sense. It is tempting for students entering an industry full of analytics to think that human judgment about story no longer matters. The opposite is true. Data systems need clear, comparable descriptions of stories to work, and those descriptions come from structural understanding. The most valuable analysts are those who can connect what the numbers show to what the story is doing, and that connection requires exactly the structural literacy this paper describes. The fourth lesson is a warning as well as an encouragement. Structure is a frame, not a formula. Students should resist the temptation to treat any model, including Freytag's, as a set of rigid rules that guarantees success. The value of structure lies in making ideas legible and comparable, not in replacing invention. The goal is to use structure to present fresh work clearly, so that originality can be seen and funded, rather than to file the originality away in pursuit of a safe shape. Taken together, these lessons point to a single habit worth cultivating early. When watching any film or reading any script, a student should ask two questions at once: how does this story work as a story, and how would this story work as a business proposition. Practising both questions together, over many films, builds the double vision that the modern industry rewards, and it turns the classroom study of a nineteenth-century pyramid into a living professional tool. 13. Limitations and Future Research This paper is a conceptual synthesis, and its claims should be read with that in mind. It does not present new empirical data, and it does not test the strength of the link between structure and business outcomes directly. Instead, it draws that link by combining findings from separate fields. This approach is useful for building an argument and for guiding future study, but it cannot by itself prove that clearer structure causes better business results. The relationship it describes is plausible and supported by related research, yet it remains to be measured in its own right. A first limitation concerns the definition of structure itself. Story architecture is easier to describe than to measure precisely, and different traditions divide stories in different ways. While computational work has begun to make structure measurable (Yang et al., 2022), there is not yet a single agreed method for scoring how clear a story's structure is. Future research could develop such measures and then test whether higher structural clarity really does predict faster financing, cheaper marketing, or better retention on platforms. A second limitation concerns culture and context. Most of the research drawn on here comes from large, mainly Western, commercial industries, and the model itself is European in origin. Different film cultures use structure differently, and audiences in different markets may respond to different shapes. The argument that structure carries economic value is likely to hold broadly, but the specific shapes that work, and the strength of the effect, may vary across regions. Comparative studies across national industries would sharpen the argument considerably. A third limitation concerns the risk of formula. This paper has repeatedly warned that structure should not harden into rigid rules, but it has not measured how often that hardening actually happens or how much it costs the industry in lost originality. As data-driven commissioning grows, the danger of over-reliance on familiar shapes may grow with it. Research that tracks whether platforms and studios are converging on a narrow set of structures, and whether audiences respond by disengaging, would be valuable both academically and practically. Finally, the framework in Section 11 is offered as a synthesis to be tested, not as a validated instrument. Future work could apply it to real projects and follow those projects through financing, production, and release to see whether the stage-by-stage mapping of dramatic function onto business function holds up in practice. Such work would move the argument from a plausible conceptual claim to a tested empirical one, which is the natural next step for the ideas set out here. 14. Conclusion This paper set out to show that #story_architecture is a matter of business as well as art, and that Freytag's old dramatic model can be read as a modern #business_planning tool. The argument rested on a simple mechanism. A clear structure lowers the cost of understanding a project, and in an industry where attention is scarce and decisions are expensive, lower understanding cost has real economic value. From #pitching to #budgeting, from #audience_targeting to #marketing, from #greenlighting to life on #streaming_platforms, a legible structure helps the many people in the film value chain grasp a project quickly, compare it with others, and act on it with more confidence. Across these functions, the same pattern appeared. The features that make a story work for an audience also make it work for the people who plan, fund, and sell it. A strong exposition gives the project a clear identity to pitch and target. A strong rising action gives the campaign its material and the audience its reason to keep watching. A well-placed climax aligns the story's peak with the budget's peak. A coherent falling action and a satisfying resolution protect the goodwill that supports reviews, recommendations, and future work. Even the streaming-era habit of withholding resolution to drive retention depends on the classic structure it appears to break. The message is deliberately positive. Good #storytelling and sound business thinking are not opposites forced together by commercial pressure. When structure is strong, they point in the same direction, because both depend on a story that people can clearly understand. This is why the study of a nineteenth-century pyramid still repays attention from students who want to work in a data-rich, platform-driven industry. Freytag was describing a pattern of human attention, and human attention remains the scarce resource that the entire film business is built to capture. For students, the practical conclusion is to refuse the false choice between art and commerce and instead to build the double vision that lets them see both at once. Learning to read a story's structure is, at the same time, learning to read its business case. That combined skill, more than any single formula, is what the modern film industry rewards, and it is well within reach of anyone willing to watch films with both questions in mind: how does this work as a story, and how does this work as a plan. #story_architecture #Freytags_pyramid #dramatic_structure #film_production #business_planning #screenwriting #pitching #greenlighting #audience_targeting #film_marketing #streaming_platforms #narrative_transportation #film_finance #box_office #storytelling_as_strategy References Al Fahoum, A., and Ghobon, T. A. (2023). Accurate machine learning predictions of sci-fi film performance. Journal of New Media, 5(1), 1-22. Batty, C., and Taylor, S. (Eds.). (2021). The Palgrave Handbook of Script Development. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. Bogaert, M., Ballings, M., and Van den Poel, D. (2021). Box office sales and social media: A cross-platform comparison of predictive ability and mechanisms. Decision Support Systems, 147, 113517. Chen, S., Ni, S., Zhang, Z., and Zhang, Z. (2023). The study for the influencing factors of the box office and prediction based on machine learning models. In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, and Communication (ICAIRC 2022), Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering, Vol. 1063. Singapore: Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-4554-2_1 Cuntz, A., et al. (2023). IP Assets and Film Finance: A Primer on Standard Practices in the U.S. WIPO Economic Research Working Paper No. 74. Geneva: World Intellectual Property Organization. Davies, R., Russo, P., and Tieber, C. (Eds.). (2023). The Palgrave Handbook of Screenwriting Studies. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. Deb, M., et al. (2025). Storytelling ads, narrative transportation, retrospective reflexivity, and attitude towards brands: Role of independent versus interdependence self-construal. Psychology and Marketing. https://doi.org/10.1002/mar.22204 Freytag, G. (1863). Die Technik des Dramas. Leipzig: S. Hirzel. Glaser, M., and Reisinger, H. (2022). Don't lose your product in story translation: How product-story link in narrative advertisements increases persuasion. Journal of Advertising, 51(2), 188-205. Green, M. C., and Appel, M. (2024). Narrative transportation: How stories shape how we see ourselves and the world. Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, 70, 1-82. https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.aesp.2024.03.002 Gulino, P. J. (2023). Screenwriting pedagogy in the United States: In search of the missing pieces. In R. Davies, P. Russo, and C. Tieber (Eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Screenwriting Studies (pp. 709-724). Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. Houghton, D. M. (2021). Story elements, narrative transportation, and schema incongruity: A framework for enhancing brand storytelling effectiveness. Journal of Strategic Marketing, 1-16. Leem, S., Oh, J., So, D., et al. (2023). Towards data-driven decision-making in the Korean film industry: An XAI model for box office analysis using dimension reduction, clustering, and classification. Entropy, 25(4), 571. https://doi.org/10.3390/e25040571 Lehrer, S. F., and Xie, T. (2022). The bigger picture: Combining econometrics with analytics improves forecasts of movie success. Management Science, 68(1), 189-210. https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2020.3911 Liao, L., and Huang, T. (2021). The effect of different social media marketing channels and events on movie box office: An elaboration likelihood model perspective. Information and Management, 58(7), 103481. Thomas, V. L., and Grigsby, J. L. (2024). Narrative transportation: A systematic literature review and future research agenda. Psychology and Marketing. https://doi.org/10.1002/mar.22011 van Es, K. (2023). Netflix and big data: The strategic ambivalence of an entertainment company. Television and New Media, 24(6). https://doi.org/10.1177/15274764221125745 Wayne, M. L. (2022). Netflix audience data, streaming industry discourse, and the emerging realities of popular television. Media, Culture and Society, 44(5-6). https://doi.org/10.1177/01634437211022723 Yang, L., Xu, X., Lan, X., Liu, Z., Guo, S., Shi, Y., Qu, H., and Cao, N. (2022). A design space for applying the Freytag's pyramid structure to data stories. IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, 28(1), 922-932.

  • From Industrial Capability to Market Power: How BYD Converted Manufacturing Strength, Cost Control, and Battery Technology into Global Competitiveness in the Electric Vehicle Economy

    This article studies how the Chinese carmaker BYD turned deep #industrial_capability into durable #market_power in the global electric vehicle economy. It argues that BYD's rise cannot be explained by any single factor, such as cheap labour or government support alone, but by the way the company linked four connected strengths: #manufacturing_strength, #cost_control, in-house #battery_technology, and the scale of China's #domestic_market. Drawing on recent peer reviewed research and reported industry data, the paper traces BYD's path from a battery maker founded in 1995 to the world's largest seller of pure #electric_vehicles in 2025, when it sold roughly 2.26 million battery electric cars and passed Tesla on a full year basis for the first time. The analysis places BYD inside the wider story of China's #advanced_manufacturing and its #new_energy_vehicles sector, which has become a central arena of #global_industrial_competition. The article shows that BYD's #vertical_integration, its Blade Battery, and its aggressive but disciplined pricing allowed it to build a cost position that rivals have struggled to match. It also examines the tensions this creates, including trade tariffs, worries about overcapacity, and questions about whether such advantages can be copied. The paper is written for students of economics, business, and development, and it offers a structured framework for understanding how production capability becomes competitive power. The findings suggest that in capital intensive, technology driven industries, control over the supply chain and the ability to scale production quickly can matter as much as brand, design, or marketing. Keywords: BYD; electric vehicles; vertical integration; cost leadership; battery technology; industrial policy; China; global competitiveness; new energy vehicles; advanced manufacturing 1. Introduction For most of the twentieth century, the global car industry was led by firms in the United States, Western Europe, Japan, and later South Korea. Chinese carmakers were seen as followers that made cheaper copies of foreign designs and depended on joint ventures with established brands. That picture has now changed in a way few observers predicted even a decade ago. In 2025, BYD sold about 2.26 million battery #electric_vehicles, a rise of nearly 28 percent over the previous year, while its American rival Tesla delivered about 1.64 million and recorded a second straight annual decline. On a full calendar year basis, this made BYD the world's top seller of pure electric cars for the first time. When plug in hybrids are counted as well, BYD delivered around 4.27 million vehicles in 2024 and roughly 4.6 million in 2025, placing it among the largest carmakers of any kind in the world. This shift raises a clear question for students of economics and business. How did a company that Tesla's founder once dismissed as no real threat become the leader of the industry it helped define? The answer offered in this article is that BYD built #market_power out of #industrial_capability. In simple terms, it learned to make more of the car in house, at lower cost, and at greater scale than most of its competitors, and then used that production advantage to win customers through price, availability, and steady improvement. The core claim can be stated plainly. #Manufacturing_strength, #cost_control, #battery_technology, and access to a very large #domestic_market are not separate advantages that happen to sit side by side. They reinforce one another. Strong manufacturing lowers cost. Lower cost supports lower prices. Lower prices lift sales volume. Higher volume spreads fixed costs across more units and funds more research, which improves technology and lowers cost again. This loop, once it starts turning, is hard for a latecomer rival to break into. BYD did not invent this idea, but it applied it to the electric car with unusual discipline. The article also sets BYD inside a larger picture. The company is one part of a national push in which China has become the center of gravity for #new_energy_vehicles and much of #advanced_manufacturing. In 2024, China sold close to 12.9 million new energy vehicles, which was more than 40 percent of all new cars sold in the country, and it accounted for a large majority of global sales in the segment. China also became the world's largest vehicle exporter. This success has produced admiration, imitation, and alarm, with the European Union, the United States, and Canada all raising tariffs on Chinese made cars in 2024. BYD sits at the heart of these debates, which makes it a useful case for understanding how #global_industrial_competition now works. The rest of the article is organised as follows. Section 2 reviews the ideas used to interpret the case, including latecomer catch up, cost leadership, economies of scale, and vertical integration. Section 3 explains the method and sources. Section 4 covers BYD's history. Sections 5 to 8 examine the four pillars in turn: manufacturing and vertical integration, battery technology, cost and pricing, and domestic scale. Section 9 draws the pillars together to explain the move from capability to power. Section 10 places BYD inside China's manufacturing rise and the resulting trade tensions. Section 11 discusses risks and limits. Section 12 offers implications, and Section 13 concludes. 2. Conceptual framework and literature review To make sense of BYD, it helps to combine several familiar ideas from economics and strategy rather than lean on only one. The first idea is latecomer catch up. Firms and countries that enter an industry late usually start behind the leaders in technology, brand, and scale. Yet history shows that latecomers sometimes not only catch up but leapfrog, moving ahead of incumbents by adopting a new technology faster than firms that are tied to the old one. Recent research on the electric car argues that China did exactly this. Altenburg, Corrocher, and Malerba (2022) show that China leapfrogged in some parts of #electromobility, such as electric buses and lithium batteries, and rapidly caught up in passenger cars, and that ambitious green transformation policy helped drive this catch up and build #competitive_advantage. The key point is that the shift from the combustion engine to the battery reset the race. Established makers had decades of skill in engines and gearboxes that suddenly mattered less, while newcomers who were good at batteries and electronics found an open door. The second idea concerns the firm itself, not just the policy around it. Whitfield and Wuttke (2026) study BYD and the battery maker CATL at the firm level and argue that government support was necessary but not enough. What set the winners apart was #technological_catch_up driven by their own sustained effort. Both firms drew on capability built earlier in China's consumer electronics battery sector, then added automotive knowledge through partnerships and by hiring experienced people. This matters because it pushes back on the simple story that China's success is only the result of subsidies. Capability had to be created inside the firm, and that took time and money. The third idea is cost leadership, a classic competitive strategy. A cost leader aims to be the lowest cost producer in its market so that it can either undercut rivals on price or earn higher margins at the same price. The important nuance in BYD's case is where the cost advantage comes from. Recent structural analysis of the Chinese market finds that BYD's ability to keep prices low while protecting margins rested on real reductions in production cost, especially in batteries, rather than on market abuse or hidden support (Hao and colleagues, 2026). In other words, the firm competed by making things cheaper, not by squeezing customers. The fourth idea is #economies_of_scale, which means that the average cost of each unit tends to fall as output rises, because large fixed costs such as factories, tooling, and research are spread over more units. A very large home market lets a firm reach high volume quickly, which gives it a scale advantage before it even goes abroad. China's #domestic_market has been the largest single car market in the world for years, and it has been the largest market for #new_energy_vehicles by a wide margin. Studies of the Chinese sector describe how the home market, supported by policy, allowed local firms to grow to a size that made them serious global players (Tian, Wang, and Zhu, 2024). The fifth idea is #vertical_integration, which means bringing more steps of the supply chain inside one company rather than buying them from outside suppliers. Integration can lower cost, protect against shortages, and speed up decisions, though it also ties up capital and can reduce flexibility. In the analysis of BYD's business model, integration appears again and again as a central choice (Indiran et al., 2023). The company's decision to make its own batteries, chips, and other parts is not a detail. It is close to the heart of the story. Finally, the article draws on the study of business model innovation, which looks at how firms create and capture value in new ways. Reviews of this field stress that lasting advantage often comes from how the pieces of a model fit together rather than from any single clever product (Huang and Ichikohji, 2023). BYD is a good example, because its strength lies in the connection between its parts, not in one hero feature. Taken together, these ideas give a framework. A latecomer can win if it (a) enters at a moment of technological change that resets the race, (b) builds real capability inside the firm rather than relying only on outside help, (c) uses that capability to lead on cost, (d) grows fast in a large protected home market to gain scale, and (e) integrates its supply chain so that cost, speed, and security all improve at once. The sections that follow use this framework to read the BYD case. 3. Method and data This article is a qualitative case study. Case studies are well suited to questions that ask how and why a particular outcome happened, especially when the outcome is complex and shaped by many linked causes. The aim is not to prove a single number with a statistical test but to build a clear, evidence based explanation of a process. The evidence comes from three kinds of sources. The first is recent peer reviewed research on China's #new_energy_vehicles sector, on BYD as a firm, and on battery technology. These works, published within the last five years, provide the concepts and many of the factual claims used here. The second kind is reported industry and market data, including sales figures released by BYD and its competitors and independent market research on global market share. These figures are used to describe scale and trends. The third kind is policy and trade information, used mainly in the section on #global_industrial_competition. Two limits should be stated openly. First, some financial details about internal costs are estimates, because companies do not publish a full breakdown of what each part costs to make. Where cost figures appear, they are presented as reported estimates, not exact accounts. Second, the electric car industry is moving very fast, and specific numbers change from quarter to quarter. The argument of the article rests on the pattern of the case, which is more stable than any single data point. 4. From battery maker to carmaker: the roots of capability BYD's story does not begin with cars. It begins with batteries, and this starting point explains a great deal about what the company became. BYD was founded in 1995 by Wang Chuanfu, a chemist and metallurgist, as a maker of rechargeable batteries for mobile phones and other electronics. In its early years it competed with Japanese battery giants by using a clever, labour friendly production method that lowered the cost of building battery lines without giving up quality. This early period taught the company two lessons that would matter later. The first was how to make batteries at low cost and large scale. The second was that a determined newcomer could take on much larger and richer incumbents by rethinking how a product is made rather than just copying it. The company entered the car business in 2003 by acquiring a struggling state owned automaker. At the time the move looked strange, because BYD had no experience in vehicles, and its own share price fell on the news. The logic, though, was clear in hindsight. If the future of the car was electric, then a battery company was starting from a strong position, because the battery is the most expensive and most important part of an electric vehicle. BYD was, in effect, trying to enter the car industry from the part that would soon matter most. A well known moment of outside validation came in 2008, when the investment company Berkshire Hathaway, led by Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger, took a stake in BYD. The investment brought money, but more importantly it brought attention and credibility to a firm that was still little known outside China. For many years after, BYD remained a mid sized carmaker whose electric ambitions ran ahead of its sales. Progress was slow, and the company sometimes waited for stronger government support before launching new models. During this long build up phase, however, it kept investing in the capabilities, the people, and the factories that would later pay off. It is worth pausing on why the long slow period mattered. During those years BYD did many things that did not immediately show up in sales but that built the foundation for later success. It trained engineers, filed patents, ran battery lines, made electric buses and taxis for city fleets, and learned the hard practical details of turning a battery into a reliable car. Much of this early demand came from public buyers, such as city governments that bought electric buses and taxis, which gave the company steady orders while the private market was still small. This kind of learning by doing cannot be bought quickly. It accumulates slowly through years of production, and it is one reason a rival cannot simply decide to match BYD overnight. The company was, in effect, paying tuition in the form of patient investment, and the return came later when the market finally turned toward electric cars. The turning point came in the early 2020s. BYD launched a new #battery_technology, refreshed its model range, and made a decisive strategic choice in 2022 to stop making purely combustion engine cars and focus entirely on electric and plug in hybrid vehicles. This was a bold move, because most large carmakers kept a foot in both camps, hedging their bets. BYD committed fully to the new technology, which sharpened its focus and signalled confidence in the direction of the market. Sales then grew explosively. The company that had spent years as a follower moved to the front of the field within a few years. Research on BYD and CATL describes this as a case of latecomers escaping a lower position in the global production network through steady technological effort, not luck (Whitfield and Wuttke, 2026). The roots of the 2020s success were planted in the 1990s and 2000s. What looked like sudden victory was the result of a long and patient accumulation of #industrial_capability. 5. Manufacturing strength and vertical integration The first pillar of BYD's #market_power is the way it makes things. Where many carmakers act mainly as designers and assemblers that buy most parts from a network of suppliers, BYD chose to make an unusually large share of the car itself. This is the strategy of #vertical_integration, and it is central to the whole case. Consider the modern electric car. Its most costly systems are the battery pack, the electric motors, the power electronics that control the flow of current, and the chips that run everything from the drivetrain to the screens. BYD produces its own batteries through its subsidiary FinDreams. It makes its own electric motors. Through its semiconductor arm it produces its own power chips, including the insulated gate bipolar transistors that manage power in electric drivetrains, a part that became scarce and expensive for other carmakers during global chip shortages. The company has even extended integration beyond the factory, operating its own fleet of car carrying ships to move vehicles to export markets rather than depending on outside shipping firms whose rates and schedules it cannot control. This control reaches upstream into raw materials as well. Batteries need lithium, and lithium prices have swung wildly in recent years. BYD has invested in lithium supply and in refining capacity so that it depends less on outside processors and can steady its own input costs. By owning steps from the mine and the refinery through cell production and pack assembly to the finished car and even the ship that carries it, BYD keeps a very large part of the value chain inside the company. Why does this help? Three benefits stand out. The first is cost. Every time a part passes from one company to another, the seller adds a profit margin. When a firm makes the part itself, it can capture that margin instead of paying it. A recent report by an independent research group concluded that BYD's in house production drove higher margins even while it charged lower prices, and it named BYD as one of the clearest examples of #vertical_integration in the whole industry, in contrast to Western automakers that spent decades outsourcing their supply chains and now find it costly to reverse course. The second benefit is security. During the shortages that followed the pandemic, carmakers that bought their chips and batteries from outside suppliers were forced to cut production because they could not get parts. A firm that makes its own parts is far less exposed to such shocks. This is not only about avoiding crisis. It also means BYD can expand output quickly when demand rises, because it is not waiting in line behind other customers for a supplier's limited capacity. The third benefit is speed and coordination. When the teams that design the battery, the motor, the chip, and the car all work inside the same company, information moves faster and changes are easier to make. A design idea can go from concept to prototype to production without the delays and disputes that come from negotiating with separate outside firms. In a fast moving market where the ability to launch new models quickly is a real advantage, this coordination matters. Integration is not free, and it carries risks that Section 11 will discuss. Building all this capacity requires enormous capital, and it can leave a firm exposed if demand falls, because the fixed costs remain. Yet the analysis of the industry increasingly agrees that BYD's structural strengths, including #vertical_integration, larger scale, and lower overheads, are a key source of its cost edge rather than a mere accounting trick. #Manufacturing_strength, built up over years, is the ground on which everything else stands. 6. Battery technology as a core competence The second pillar is #battery_technology, and here BYD's origin as a battery company gives it a natural home advantage. The battery is the single most expensive part of an electric car and the one that most shapes its cost, safety, range, and price. A carmaker that leads in batteries holds a strong hand. BYD's signature product in this area is the Blade Battery, publicly launched in 2020 and made by its FinDreams battery unit. To understand why it matters, it helps to know a little about battery chemistry and design. Many electric cars use batteries based on nickel, cobalt, and manganese, a chemistry that stores a lot of energy for its weight but is expensive and relies on cobalt, a material that is costly and comes with supply and ethical concerns. BYD instead focused on #lithium_iron_phosphate, often written as LFP. This chemistry stores less energy for its weight, but it is cheaper, more stable, longer lasting, and uses no cobalt. The problem with LFP was its lower energy density, which historically meant shorter range. BYD's answer was not a new chemistry but a new design. In a traditional pack, small cells are grouped into modules, and modules are then placed into the pack, with structural material and wasted space at each level. The Blade Battery uses long, thin cells shaped like blades that are placed directly into the pack, a #cell_to_pack approach that removes the module layer. This design uses the space inside the pack far more efficiently, reportedly improving space use by about half, which lets an LFP pack deliver competitive range despite the lower density of the chemistry. A detailed review of the Blade Battery finds that its design improves thermal management and safety while lowering material use, positioning it as a practical answer to the cost, safety, and lifespan problems that have slowed electric car adoption (Megalingam, Hariram, and Sudhakar, 2026). Safety is a major selling point. The Blade Battery became famous for passing a severe nail penetration test, in which a metal nail is driven through a charged cell to force a short circuit. Many battery types overheat dangerously in this test, but the Blade design stayed cool, which BYD used to argue that its batteries were unusually safe. Safety is not only a marketing message. It reduces the risk and cost of fires and recalls, and it builds consumer trust in a technology that is still new to many buyers. The strategic value of the Blade Battery lies in how it fits the rest of the model. Because it is cheaper to make, it lowers the cost of the whole car, which supports BYD's pricing strategy. Because BYD makes it in house, the cost savings and the supply security stay with the company. Because it is safe and durable, it supports the brand. And because BYD controls the technology, it can keep improving it and can even sell batteries to other firms, turning a cost center into a source of revenue. The company has continued to develop the design, and later versions aim at longer range and faster charging. This is what it means for a technology to be a core competence rather than just a component. It is not bought off a shelf. It is a capability the firm owns, improves, and builds its strategy around. As the CKGSB analysis of BYD's approach records, the founder's stated philosophy is that technology should be used to reduce cost and improve quality, and the Blade Battery is the clearest expression of that philosophy in practice. 7. Cost control and pricing power The third pillar is #cost_control turned into pricing power. Manufacturing strength and battery technology matter to the market only when they show up as prices that customers can see and rivals struggle to match. This is where BYD's advantages meet the buyer. The mechanism is straightforward. Because BYD makes its own batteries, chips, and other parts, and because it does so at large scale, its cost to build a car is lower than that of many competitors. Reported estimates place BYD's battery cell cost at around sixty dollars per kilowatt hour, roughly a fifth to a third below the cost faced by many rivals, and structural analysis of the market concludes that this cost efficiency, rather than any market abuse, was what let BYD cut prices while still protecting its profit margins (Hao and colleagues, 2026). This is an important finding, because it means the company was not simply buying market share by selling at a loss. It was competing from a genuinely lower cost base. With that lower cost base, BYD has been able to run an aggressive but sustainable pricing strategy. From 2023 onward it repeatedly cut prices and launched cheaper versions of popular models, in some cases reducing prices by ten to twenty percent. These moves helped spark what many observers called a #price_war in the Chinese market, with rivals forced to respond. The point that students should notice is the direction of causation. BYD could afford to cut prices because its costs were low. Firms without that cost advantage found the same price cuts far more painful, and some could not follow at all. Pricing power in BYD's case is therefore not the classic textbook idea of a monopolist raising prices. It is close to the opposite. It is the power to set low prices that competitors cannot profitably match, and to hold those prices long enough to win volume and drive weaker rivals out or into consolidation. In a young, crowded industry with many hopeful entrants, this kind of pressure reshapes the whole field. As competition intensified across China's #new_energy_vehicles sector, analysts increasingly spoke of a coming shakeout, in which the market would consolidate around a smaller number of large, low cost survivors. BYD's cost position made it one of the firms most likely to be on the winning side of that process. There is a further subtle point about margins and reinvestment. A firm that keeps healthy margins even while pricing low generates cash. That cash can fund more research, more factories, and more expansion, which in turn lowers cost further. This is the reinforcing loop described in the introduction. #Cost_control is not only a defensive tool that protects the firm from price competition. It is also an engine that funds the growth of capability. When a company can be both the cheapest and among the more profitable at once, it holds a position that is very difficult for rivals to attack. 8. Domestic market scale as a launchpad The fourth pillar is the scale of the #domestic_market. Even the best factory and the best battery cannot deliver full advantage without volume, and volume is where China's size becomes decisive. China has been the world's largest car market for well over a decade, and it has been by far the largest market for #new_energy_vehicles. The growth has been remarkable. The share of new energy vehicles in new car sales in China rose from around six percent in 2020 to more than forty percent by 2024, when the country sold close to 12.9 million such vehicles. China accounted for roughly two thirds of global sales in the segment. For a Chinese carmaker, this means the home market alone is larger than the entire electric car market of any other single country. A firm can reach very high production volume without selling a single car abroad. This scale matters for several reasons that connect back to the earlier pillars. First, it delivers #economies_of_scale. High volume spreads the huge fixed costs of factories, tooling, and research across many units, lowering the average cost of each car and reinforcing the cost advantage discussed above. Second, it provides a fast, low risk testing ground. A carmaker can launch many models, learn quickly which ones customers want, and refine its products in a familiar market before facing the added complexity of foreign rules, tastes, and dealers. Third, it supports a rich local supply chain. Because so much of the world's battery and component production is now concentrated in China, a Chinese carmaker sits inside a dense web of suppliers, skilled workers, and specialised firms that lowers cost and speeds innovation. Studies of the sector describe how China built this complete industrial chain, from raw materials and components through to finished vehicles and services, with vertical integration and close cooperation among firms (Tian, Wang, and Zhu, 2024). Government policy shaped this market in important ways. Over more than a decade, China used purchase subsidies, tax breaks, spending on charging infrastructure, and rules that pushed carmakers to produce a certain share of new energy vehicles. Research shows that these policies were not uniform across the country. Local governments competed and cooperated, and the mix of measures varied by region, with infrastructure support common everywhere and different regions leaning toward regulation, implementation, or promotion (Fan, Wen, and Qin, 2024). Later work traces how policy shifted over time from directly subsidising chosen firms and technologies toward broader, market enabling support, and how the coordination of these policy networks affected market outcomes (Wang, Yin, Hu, and Yu, 2025). The important lesson is that policy created and protected a very large market in which local firms could grow to global scale, but as the firm level research stresses, policy alone did not make any single firm a winner. The market was the arena. Capability decided the result. For BYD, the home market was a launchpad in the literal sense. It allowed the company to reach the scale that lowered its costs, prove its products, and build its capabilities, all before it turned outward. When BYD then began exporting in earnest, it did so as an already large, low cost, technologically capable firm, not as a small hopeful newcomer. This sequence, grow big at home first, then expand abroad, is a recurring pattern in the rise of successful firms from large economies, and it is central to understanding how #domestic_market scale becomes global competitiveness. 9. From industrial capability to market power: the synthesis The four pillars are best understood not as a list but as a system. This section draws them together to answer the article's central question directly. How does #industrial_capability become #market_power? Start with the reinforcing loop. #Vertical_integration and #manufacturing_strength lower the cost of building each car. Lower cost allows low prices while protecting margins, which is #cost_control turned into pricing power. Low prices, together with a very large #domestic_market, drive high sales volume. High volume delivers #economies_of_scale, which lowers average cost further and generates cash. That cash funds research that improves #battery_technology and factory methods, which lowers cost again and improves the product. Each turn of the loop strengthens the next. This is why the advantage compounds over time and becomes hard for rivals to overcome. A competitor trying to break in must match not one advantage but the whole connected system at once, and it must do so while BYD keeps moving. Now consider why the individual pieces are hard to copy. A rival could try to match the Blade Battery, but BYD holds the patents and years of learning, and it keeps improving the design. A rival could try to integrate its supply chain, but as the independent analysis noted, Western firms that spent decades outsourcing face high costs to reverse that choice, and building battery, chip, and motor plants from scratch takes years and vast capital. A rival could try to match BYD's scale, but scale in car making comes from years of high volume sales, which a newcomer does not have. A rival could try to match the prices, but without the underlying cost base those prices mean losses. Each pillar defends the others. The system as a whole is far more defensible than any single part. This is the deeper meaning of the phrase turning capability into power. Capability is the ability to make things well, cheaply, and at scale. Power, in a market sense, is the ability to shape outcomes, to set prices that others must react to, to win customers, and to influence which competitors survive. BYD converted the first into the second by building a production system whose cost, speed, technology, and scale advantages all pointed in the same direction and reinforced one another. The research on the firm supports this reading. The dynamics of competition in the Chinese market show a firm whose profitability rested on real cost reductions outpacing price declines, which is exactly what a self reinforcing capability system would produce (Hao and colleagues, 2026). The firm level catch up literature shows a company that built genuine technological capability over time rather than relying on outside support alone (Whitfield and Wuttke, 2026). And the business model research reminds us that the advantage lies in how the parts fit together, not in any single feature (Indiran et al., 2023; Huang and Ichikohji, 2023). It is worth naming what BYD is not. It is not primarily a story of a superior brand or of marketing genius, though the brand has grown. It is not primarily a story of a single breakthrough invention, though the Blade Battery is important. It is a story about production. BYD is, at its core, an exceptionally capable manufacturer that chose the right moment, the right technology, and the right structure, and then executed patiently for years. For students, this is a useful corrective to the common belief that success in modern industry comes mainly from design, software, or branding. In capital intensive, physical industries, the ability to make things remains a source of deep and lasting power. 10. BYD within China's advanced manufacturing rise and global industrial competition BYD did not rise in isolation. It is one of the most visible parts of a broad national shift in which China moved up the value chain from low cost assembly toward #advanced_manufacturing, and in which the #new_energy_vehicles sector became a showcase for that ambition. Understanding this wider context is essential, because it explains both the scale of BYD's success and the friction it now faces abroad. China's approach combined several elements over more than a decade: sustained investment, industrial policy aimed at key technologies, a huge domestic market, and fierce internal competition among many firms and local governments. The result was a concentration of the global battery and electric car supply chain inside China on a scale without recent parallel. Chinese firms came to hold a majority of the world's power battery production, and China became the world's largest vehicle exporter, shipping over four million vehicles in 2023, with electric cars a fast growing share. In 2024, more than a million electric vehicles were among the country's exports. This transformed the global competitive map. The center of the electric car industry moved east, and firms in Europe, the United States, Japan, and South Korea found themselves reacting to Chinese leaders rather than setting the pace. This success produced a strong response abroad, and BYD is directly affected. In 2024, several major economies raised tariffs on Chinese made electric cars. The United States increased its tariff sharply, to as high as one hundred percent. Canada followed with a similar level. The European Union, after a long investigation into subsidies, imposed additional tariffs that varied by company, with a lower rate for BYD than for some other Chinese firms, reflecting differences in how much state support each was judged to have received. These measures were justified by their advocates as a response to what they described as unfair subsidies and to the risk that #overcapacity in China would flood foreign markets with cheap cars and damage local industry. The debate over the true cause of China's cost advantage is central to #global_industrial_competition and deserves careful treatment, because reasonable observers disagree. One view, common among policymakers who support tariffs, holds that heavy state subsidies and industrial policy distorted the market and gave Chinese firms an unfair edge, and that overcapacity built with cheap finance now threatens producers elsewhere. A second view, supported by some independent research, holds that while subsidies mattered, the more important sources of the cost edge are structural, namely #vertical_integration, larger production scale, and lower overhead costs, which would give Chinese firms an advantage even without state support. A prominent 2026 report by an independent research group took this second position, identifying BYD as a clear example of the structural, integration based advantage. The firm level academic research broadly agrees that both policy and firm effort mattered and that neither alone is a complete explanation (Whitfield and Wuttke, 2026; Altenburg, Corrocher, and Malerba, 2022). Students should hold both parts of this picture together rather than choose a simple side. Policy built and protected the market. Firms built the capability. The outcome came from their interaction. The concept of overcapacity is important and contested. When a country builds far more production capacity than its home market can absorb, the surplus must be exported, which puts pressure on foreign producers and on prices worldwide. Analysts have estimated a large gap between China's car production capacity and its domestic demand, which creates strong pressure to export. Wealthier markets such as the European Union are attractive outlets because their customers can pay more, which is why access to those markets has become a point of tension. For BYD, this means that its future growth abroad depends not only on its cost and product advantages but also on trade policy and politics that lie outside its control. The company has responded by planning and building factories in other regions, which can reduce tariff exposure and win local goodwill by creating local jobs. This move from exporting cars to producing them abroad, a strategy of localization, is likely to shape the next phase of #global_industrial_competition in the sector. The strategy of building factories abroad deserves closer attention, because it is likely to define the next stage of the contest. Exporting finished cars from China is efficient when tariffs are low, but it becomes costly once large duties are added at the border. Producing cars inside the destination region avoids those duties, shortens delivery times, and creates local jobs that can soften political resistance. BYD has moved in this direction, announcing and building assembly plants in several regions outside China, including sites intended to serve European and other markets. This shift changes the nature of the competition. Instead of Chinese exports simply arriving in foreign markets, Chinese firms increasingly aim to manufacture within them, which brings their production capability directly into the home ground of established rivals. For host countries, this raises difficult trade offs. Local factories bring investment and employment, yet they also deepen the presence of a powerful foreign competitor in a strategic industry. How governments balance these concerns will shape the sector for years to come. The broader lesson is that industrial success at this scale is never purely commercial. When one country comes to dominate a strategic industry, the response from others becomes political as well as economic. Tariffs, subsidies at home, local content rules, and trade investigations all become part of the competitive landscape. BYD's rise is therefore not only a business case. It is a live example of how twenty first century industrial competition mixes company strategy, national policy, and international relations. 11. Risks, limits, and open questions A balanced analysis must examine the risks and the limits of BYD's model, and there are several. Success does not guarantee that the future will look like the past, and the same choices that built the advantage carry their own dangers. The first risk is the cost of #vertical_integration in a downturn. Owning the whole value chain means carrying very large fixed costs. When demand is strong and factories run full, this lowers unit cost and looks brilliant. If demand falls, however, the fixed costs remain while revenue drops, which can turn the advantage into a heavy burden. A firm that buys parts from outside can cut its orders quickly in a slump. A firm that makes its own parts cannot shed those costs as easily. In a market where growth may slow and where a shakeout is widely expected, this exposure is real. The second risk is the price war itself. Aggressive pricing wins volume and pressures rivals, but it can also compress margins across the whole industry, including for the firm that started it. Reports noted pressure on BYD's own profits during periods of intense discounting, and Chinese authorities expressed concern about the effects of extreme price competition. A strategy that depends on staying the lowest cost producer works only as long as the cost advantage holds. If rivals close the gap, the low prices become losses. The third risk is trade and geopolitics, discussed in the previous section. Tariffs, local content rules, and political resistance in wealthy markets can blunt BYD's cost advantage abroad, because a large tariff can wipe out a cost edge built up through years of careful engineering. Building local factories reduces this risk but adds cost and complexity and takes time. BYD's global ambition runs directly into a world that is becoming more protective of its own industries. The fourth risk is technological. BYD's advantage rests heavily on today's battery technology, especially LFP and the Blade design. Battery science is moving quickly. New chemistries, including sodium based batteries and solid state designs, could shift the ground again. BYD is investing in these areas, but so are its rivals, and a latecomer that leapfrogged the incumbents can itself be leapfrogged by the next wave. The very dynamic that opened the door for BYD could one day open it for someone else. The fifth issue is the question of how much of the model can be copied or transferred, which matters for students trying to draw general lessons. Part of BYD's advantage is specific to China, namely the huge home market and the dense local supply chain. A firm in a smaller country cannot simply reproduce that context. Part of the advantage, however, is about choices any firm could in principle make, such as integrating the supply chain, investing early in a key technology, and pursuing cost leadership through better production methods. Separating the transferable lessons from the context specific ones is one of the most valuable exercises this case offers. Finally, there are open questions about sustainability in the fullest sense, including the environmental impact of large scale battery production, the sourcing of raw materials, and the eventual recycling of batteries. The review of the Blade Battery notes both its environmental advantages, such as avoiding cobalt, and the wider need to manage the life cycle of batteries responsibly (Megalingam, Hariram, and Sudhakar, 2026). These questions will shape the industry's long term legitimacy and are an important area for further study. 12. Discussion and implications What can students of economics, business, and development take from the BYD case? Several implications stand out, and they reach beyond the car industry. The first implication is that in physical, capital intensive industries, the ability to make things well remains a deep source of power. Much recent commentary on business success focuses on brands, platforms, and software. The BYD case is a reminder that production capability, the unglamorous work of factories, supply chains, and process engineering, can be decisive. For countries and firms thinking about where to compete, this suggests that #manufacturing_strength is not an outdated concern but a live source of #competitive_advantage. The second implication concerns timing and technological change. BYD's rise shows the power of entering at a moment when a technological shift resets the competitive field. The move from the combustion engine to the battery devalued some of the incumbents' hardest won skills and rewarded a different set of capabilities. Firms and nations that spot such shifts early, and that build the new capabilities before the shift is complete, can leap ahead. Those that cling to the old technology, even a very successful one, risk being overtaken. The third implication is about the relationship between the state and the firm. The BYD case does not support the simple claim that the state did everything, nor the claim that the firm did everything alone. Policy built and protected a large market and pushed the whole sector forward. Within that market, firms competed fiercely, and the winners were those that built real capability. The productive way to think about #industrial_policy, this case suggests, is as shaping the arena rather than picking the winner. This is a more useful and more accurate frame than the tired argument over whether industrial policy is simply good or bad. The fourth implication concerns #cost_leadership as a strategy. BYD shows that the strongest form of cost leadership is built on genuine production efficiency, not on cutting corners or exploiting a temporary subsidy. A cost advantage rooted in better methods, in-house technology, and scale is durable, because it does not disappear when a subsidy ends and it cannot easily be matched by rivals with higher costs. Students planning careers in business or policy should learn to ask where a cost advantage really comes from, because the source determines how long it will last. The fifth implication is about the political nature of large scale industrial success. When a firm and a country come to dominate a strategic global industry, the response becomes political, expressed through tariffs, trade rules, and subsidies elsewhere. Any analysis of #global_industrial_competition that ignores this dimension will be incomplete. Firms that succeed at this scale must plan for a business environment shaped as much by governments as by customers, which is why strategies such as localization and building factories abroad have become central. Finally, the case invites careful thinking about balance and risk. BYD's greatest strengths, its integration and its aggressive pricing, are also the sources of its greatest risks. This is common in strategy. The choices that create an advantage often create a matching vulnerability. Learning to see both sides of a strategic choice at once, rather than admiring only the upside, is one of the core skills the case can teach. 13. Conclusion BYD's transformation from a battery maker founded in 1995 into the world's leading seller of electric cars is one of the most important business and economic stories of the current era. This article has argued that the transformation is best understood as the conversion of #industrial_capability into #market_power. Four connected pillars made this possible. #Manufacturing_strength and #vertical_integration lowered cost and secured supply. In-house #battery_technology, above all the Blade Battery, provided a cheaper, safer, and steadily improving core component. Disciplined #cost_control turned low costs into pricing power that rivals struggled to match. And the vast scale of China's #domestic_market provided the volume that delivered #economies_of_scale and funded further investment. These pillars form a reinforcing system in which each strength supports the others, which is why the resulting advantage is deep and hard to copy. The article has also placed BYD inside the larger rise of China's #advanced_manufacturing and its #new_energy_vehicles sector, which has moved to the center of #global_industrial_competition. That position has brought both extraordinary growth and serious friction, including tariffs in major markets and a live debate over how much of China's cost advantage comes from subsidies and how much from real structural strengths. The balanced reading offered here, supported by recent peer reviewed research, is that policy shaped the arena while firm level capability decided the outcome, and that both matter. The case is not free of risk. Heavy integration is costly in a downturn, price wars compress margins, trade barriers threaten foreign growth, and the next wave of battery technology could shift the ground again. These risks make the future genuinely uncertain, which is exactly why the case remains worth studying rather than treating as a settled triumph. For students, the central lesson is durable and general. In industries that turn on making physical things at scale, the capacity to produce well, cheaply, and quickly is not a mere input to competitiveness. It can be the foundation of global competitiveness itself. BYD built that foundation over decades, chose the right moment to build on it, and turned it into power in the market. Understanding how it did so offers a clear and practical model for thinking about industrial competition in the twenty first century. #BYD #electric_vehicles #vertical_integration #cost_leadership #Blade_Battery #battery_technology #advanced_manufacturing #China #new_energy_vehicles #global_industrial_competition #industrial_capability #market_power #economies_of_scale #EV_economy #competitive_advantage References Altenburg, T., Corrocher, N., and Malerba, F. (2022). China's leapfrogging in electromobility: A story of green transformation driving catch-up and competitive advantage. Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 183, 121914. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.techfore.2022.121914 Fan, B., Wen, Z., and Qin, Q. (2024). Competition and cooperation mechanism of new energy vehicle policies in China's key regions. Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 11(1), 1640. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-04167-y Hao, Y., and colleagues (2026). The dynamics of competition in the Chinese electric vehicle market: Insights from BYD's market evolution. International Journal of Industrial Organization. Huang, W., and Ichikohji, T. (2023). A review and analysis of the business model innovation literature. Heliyon, 9(7), e17895. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e17895 Indiran, L., Lei, J., Baskaran, S., Yaacob, T. Z., Abdul Kohar, U. H., and Amat Senin, A. (2023). Disruptive innovation: A case study of BYD's Business Model Canvas. International Journal of Academic Research in Business and Social Sciences, 13(9), 791-804. https://doi.org/10.46886/IJARBSS/v13-i9/8306 Megalingam, A., Hariram, N. P., and Sudhakar, K. (2026). BYD blade battery for sustainable mobility: Review of technical, economic, and environmental aspects. Green Technologies and Sustainability. Tian, J., Wang, P., and Zhu, D. (2024). Overview of Chinese new energy vehicle industry and policy development. Green Energy and Resources, 2(2), 100075. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gerr.2024.100075 Wang, C., Yin, Y., Hu, H., and Yu, Y. (2025). Evaluating China's new energy vehicle policy networks: A social network analysis of policy coordination and market impact. Sustainability, 17(3), 994. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17030994 Whitfield, L., and Wuttke, T. (2026). China's technological catch-up and leapfrogging in electric vehicles: A firm-level study of BYD and CATL. Progress in Economic Geography, 4(1), 100054. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.peg.2025.100054

  • Deals, Markets, and Value Creation: An Economic Reading of Dealmaking Principles and Their Lessons for Business Students

    Popular business memoirs often present dealmaking as a personal gift, a blend of instinct, nerve, and showmanship. This article takes one of the most widely read of these books, The Art of the Deal, and reads its practical advice through an economic lens for a student audience. The aim is not to praise or criticise the author, but to translate everyday dealmaking language into the concepts that economics and finance already use to explain how transactions work. Five ideas run through the analysis: #confidence, #leverage, #location, #assets, and #reputation. Each is treated as an economic variable rather than a character trait. Confidence is linked to expectation formation and to the well documented dangers of #overconfidence in corporate decisions. Leverage is separated into two meanings, bargaining power at the table and financial leverage in the capital structure, because the book uses the word for both. Location is examined through the economics of place and property pricing. Assets are divided into tangible and intangible forms, with attention to how brand value and goodwill enter firm valuation. Reputation is framed as a solution to #information_asymmetry through #signaling and #trust. The article argues that a #deal which only looks impressive is not the same as a deal that creates #sustainable_value. Drawing on recent research in mergers and acquisitions, negotiation, real estate pricing, behavioural finance, and reputation, it explains why many transactions destroy value and what students can learn from that pattern. The central lesson is that durable #value_creation depends on real synergies, honest information, and fair distribution across all sides of a transaction, not on presentation alone. Keywords: dealmaking; value creation; negotiation; leverage; reputation; mergers and acquisitions; business education Introduction Few phrases have entered ordinary business speech as easily as the idea of the deal. People talk about closing a deal, walking away from a deal, or getting a good deal, and everyone seems to understand what is meant. Yet the word hides a great deal of economic structure. A deal is a voluntary agreement in which two or more parties exchange something they value less for something they value more, and it only happens when each side expects to be better off afterwards. That simple condition, mutual expected gain, is the foundation of every market transaction, from a street purchase to a billion dollar acquisition. The Art of the Deal, first published in 1987 and written by Donald Trump with the journalist Tony Schwartz, became one of the best known business memoirs of its era. It is not an academic text, and it does not claim to be. It is a mixture of personal stories, self promotion, and short pieces of advice such as think big, protect the downside, know your market, use your leverage, enhance your location, get the word out, and deliver the goods. For a student, the book is interesting less for what it says about one businessman and more for what its advice reveals about how deals are created, promoted, and valued in real #markets. Read carefully, the memoir is a catalogue of intuitions that formal economics has spent decades measuring and testing. This article performs that reading. It is written for business students, so it keeps the language plain, but it is organised like a research paper so that readers can see how a topic is framed, supported by evidence, and discussed. The purpose is to take five recurring themes from popular dealmaking advice, namely confidence, leverage, location, assets, and reputation, and to explain each one using the tools of economics, finance, and negotiation research. Along the way, the article keeps returning to a single question that matters more than any tactic: does the deal create real value, or does it only appear to? The distinction is not academic hair splitting. Decades of research on #mergers_and_acquisitions show that a large share of corporate deals fail to deliver the gains that were promised when they were announced (Cumming, Jindal, Kumar, and Pandey, 2023). Many look impressive on the day of the signing and disappoint for years afterwards. Understanding why is one of the most useful things a business student can carry into a career. The positive message that runs through this article is therefore direct. A successful deal should not only look good in a press release. It should create real, lasting value for every party that signs it, and the parties most likely to build such deals are the ones who understand the economics beneath the theatre. There is a further reason to study dealmaking now. Economies have shifted from being dominated by physical plant and machinery toward being dominated by ideas, brands, data, and relationships. In such an economy, value is harder to see and easier to overstate, which raises the stakes of every deal. When most of what changes hands is intangible, the honesty of the information exchanged and the reputation of the parties become the difference between a transaction that builds wealth and one that merely moves it around. The economic reading offered here is meant to give students a durable way of thinking that will outlast any single set of market conditions. The article proceeds as follows. Section 2 describes the interpretive approach. Section 3 sets out the core economic ideas of deals, markets, and value, including how prices form and why competition disciplines dealmaking. Sections 4 to 8 examine confidence, leverage, location, assets, and reputation in turn. Section 9 draws the threads together around sustainable value creation and works through a simple illustrative example. Section 10 discusses fairness and ethics in dealmaking. Section 11 sets out when deals create and when they destroy value. Section 12 offers practical implications for students. Section 13 notes limitations and directions for further study, and Section 14 concludes. Approach This is a conceptual and interpretive article rather than an empirical one. It does not test a hypothesis with new data. Instead, it uses a widely read practitioner text as an anchor and reads its claims against the scholarly literature. This method is common in business education, where a familiar case or popular source is used to introduce students to formal theory in a way that feels concrete and memorable. Two rules guided the writing. First, the memoir is treated as a source of hypotheses about behaviour, not as evidence. When the book asserts that confidence wins deals, the claim is examined against research on #overconfidence rather than accepted at face value. The economic conclusions in this article do not depend on whether any story in the book is accurate, because the support comes from the cited studies, not from the memoir. Second, the evidence relied upon is drawn mainly from peer reviewed work published within roughly the last five years, so that the picture reflects current understanding rather than older assumptions. Where a foundational idea is older, such as the concept of a best alternative to a negotiated agreement, the theory of market signaling, or the analysis of gains from trade, it is described in plain terms and connected to recent studies that build on it. The five themes were chosen because they appear repeatedly in popular dealmaking advice and because each maps cleanly onto an established economic concept. Confidence maps onto expectation formation and behavioural bias. Leverage maps onto both #bargaining_power and #capital_structure. Location maps onto spatial economics and property pricing. Assets map onto the valuation of tangible and #intangible_assets. Reputation maps onto signaling and trust under information asymmetry. Together they cover most of what a deal is made of, and each has a mature research literature that a student can read further. A short note on scope is needed. The article deliberately stays at the level of principles that transfer across settings. It does not give legal, tax, or investment advice, and the concepts it describes behave differently across industries and countries. The goal is to build economic intuition, not to provide a manual. Deals, markets, and value: the core ideas 3.1 What a deal really is At its simplest, a market is a setting, physical or virtual, where buyers and sellers meet and prices form. A #deal is a single completed transaction inside that market. Economics explains why deals happen at all through the idea of gains from trade. If a seller values an asset at one hundred and a buyer values the same asset at one hundred and forty, there is a gap of forty that can be shared between them. Any price between one hundred and one hundred and forty leaves both parties better off than not trading. That range of mutually acceptable prices is what negotiation researchers call the zone of possible agreement, and the size of the gap is the total value the deal can create. This framing already contains two separate activities that the rest of the article will keep apart. The first is #value_creation, which means making the pie bigger, finding arrangements that increase the total gain available to be shared. The second is value claiming, which means deciding how the pie is divided, that is, where in the range the final price lands. Skilled dealmakers do both, and confusing the two is one of the most common mistakes students make (Thompson, 2025). A person can be excellent at claiming value, at pushing the price toward their side of the range, and still preside over deals that create very little value in total. The showiest negotiators are often pure claimers, and their reputation for winning can hide a long record of shrinking pies. 3.2 Price, information, and transaction costs Prices do more than settle who pays what. In a working market they carry information. A rising price tells producers to make more and buyers to economise, coordinating the actions of strangers who never meet. But real markets are not frictionless. Information is unevenly spread, and reaching agreement takes time, effort, and money. These frictions are called #transaction_costs, and they explain much of what dealmakers actually do. Lawyers, brokers, advisers, and #due_diligence teams exist to reduce the cost and risk of exchange. A large part of the craft the memoir describes, the research, the relationship building, the careful structuring, is really the work of lowering transaction costs and closing information gaps so that a deal can happen at all and hold together afterwards. Uneven information deserves special attention because it shapes every later theme. When one side knows more than the other about the quality of what is being traded, the better informed party can exploit the gap. This is the problem of #information_asymmetry, and markets have developed a range of institutions to manage it, from warranties and audits to brands and reputations. Much of what looks like personality in a successful dealmaker is, on closer inspection, a set of devices for signalling quality and building trust so that the other side is willing to transact. Where these devices are weak, good deals fail to happen at all, because buyers cannot tell honest sellers from dishonest ones and protect themselves by offering less to everyone. 3.3 Competition and price discovery A deal never happens in isolation. Behind every buyer stands the possibility of another seller, and behind every seller the possibility of another buyer. This background of #competition is what makes prices meaningful. When many parties can transact, the process of offers and counteroffers pushes the price toward a level that reflects what the asset is really worth to the market. Economists call this #price_discovery. A skilled dealmaker understands that their bargaining position is set less by their own cleverness than by how many alternatives exist on each side. Competition also creates a famous trap for buyers, the #winners_curse. When several bidders compete for an asset whose true value is uncertain, the winner is often the one who was most optimistic, which means the winner may have overestimated the value and overpaid. The very act of winning a contested auction is evidence that everyone else valued the asset less. This is not a rare curiosity. It sits behind many disappointing acquisitions, where the eventual buyer prevailed precisely because it was willing to pay more than any rival, and later discovered why the rivals held back. The lesson is uncomfortable but important: winning a bidding contest is not the same as making a good deal. 3.4 Value that lasts The final core idea is the difference between apparent value and lasting value. A deal can look brilliant at signing and prove poor over time, or it can look modest and quietly compound into something large. In corporate finance, the honest test of a deal is whether it raises the long run value of the businesses involved, not whether the announcement lifted the share price for a week. Research on mergers and acquisitions repeatedly finds that short term market reactions are an imperfect guide to the value a deal eventually delivers, and that many transactions celebrated at the time went on to underperform their peers for years (Cumming et al., 2023). Keeping the long view in mind is the discipline that separates durable dealmakers from lucky ones, and it is the thread that connects every section that follows. Confidence and the economics of expectation 4.1 Confidence as a resource Popular dealmaking advice treats #confidence as fuel. The memoir is full of it: think big, act as though the deal is already done, project certainty even when the situation is uncertain. There is a real economic core to this. Deals are agreements about the future, and the future is unknown. To sign, each party must form expectations about what will happen, and those expectations are shaped by how each side reads the other. A confident counterpart can shift the other side's beliefs about how likely the deal is to succeed and about how ready they are to walk away. In negotiation terms, confidence affects perceptions of bargaining power, and perception, when it changes behaviour, becomes real. Confidence also lowers the cost of action. People who expect to succeed are more willing to start, to make ambitious offers, and to hold firm when an obstacle appears. In this sense a measured self belief genuinely improves outcomes, because many valuable deals are never attempted by people who talk themselves out of the room before they enter it. The willingness to make the first move, to name a number, and to keep going after a setback has real economic value, and it is often what separates those who build something from those who only plan to. Entrepreneurship in particular depends on a degree of optimism, since founders must act before the evidence is complete. 4.2 When confidence becomes overconfidence The trouble is that confidence has a shadow, and the evidence on it is striking. In corporate finance, #overconfidence is one of the most studied managerial biases, and its effects on deals are largely negative. Overconfident executives tend to overestimate their own ability to run acquired businesses and to underestimate risk. As a result they make more acquisitions, pay more for them, and pursue more diversifying deals that are unlikely to fit, and their transactions tend to earn lower returns for shareholders (Ismail and Mavis, 2022). The bias is not limited to chief executives. Studies of company boards find that overconfident boards approve value destroying deals, are more likely to pay in cash when that is unwise, and repeat acquisitions on the mistaken belief that early success was skill rather than luck (Brahma, Boateng, and Ahmad, 2023). This pattern has a name in behavioural research, self attribution bias, the tendency to credit good outcomes to one's own talent and bad outcomes to circumstance. It is exactly the mindset that a triumphant dealmaking memoir can encourage. A manager who has closed one successful deal may conclude that they possess a general gift, and then charge into a second and third deal with too little caution. Evidence from several markets links this manager level overconfidence to weaker firm value after acquisitions (Can and Dizdarlar, 2022). The problem is compounded by the fact that overconfidence and its close relative, the winner's curse, reinforce each other, since the most optimistic bidder is both the most likely to win and the most likely to have misjudged the prize. 4.3 The student takeaway on confidence For students the lesson is not to abandon confidence but to separate its useful form from its dangerous form. Useful confidence is the willingness to enter, to ask, and to persist. Dangerous confidence is the belief that one's own judgement needs no checking. The practical safeguard is process. Overconfident decisions are curbed by governance, by independent review, by insisting on evidence, and by structures that force a decision maker to state in advance what would prove them wrong. Research on board composition suggests that broader, more diverse decision groups can moderate the worst excesses of individual overconfidence, though they do not remove it entirely (Brahma, Nwafor, and Boateng, 2021). A simple habit helps: before committing, write down the assumptions the deal depends on and the specific signals that would show those assumptions are failing. Confidence is a resource, and like any resource it must be managed rather than worshipped. Leverage: two meanings, one word 5.1 Leverage at the table The memoir insists that the best leverage is having something the other side wants, or better still, needs. This is the plain language version of a central idea in negotiation research. Your power at the table depends heavily on your best alternative to a negotiated agreement, often shortened to #BATNA. If you can walk away to a good alternative, you can hold out for a better price; if you have no alternative, you are exposed. Improving your alternatives before you ever sit down is one of the most reliable ways to strengthen your position, which is why experienced dealmakers cultivate options and avoid appearing desperate. The party that most needs the deal usually gets the worse terms. Leverage of this kind is really about the credible threat to say no, and it is built as much from information as from raw strength. If the other side does not know your alternatives, you can shape their beliefs about them, and if you do not know theirs, you are negotiating in the dark. This is why skilled negotiators guard information about their own limits while patiently learning the other side's interests and constraints. Recent work stresses that raw power does not automatically translate into better outcomes. More power can help a party claim a larger share, but it can also make that party careless, reduce their listening, and shrink the total value created because they stop searching for creative arrangements that would have enlarged the pie (Thompson, 2025). The most effective use of #leverage is disciplined, not domineering, and the negotiator who crushes a weaker counterpart today may find that counterpart unwilling to deal tomorrow. 5.2 Leverage in the balance sheet The same word carries a second, financial meaning, and the memoir uses it there too. Financial leverage means using borrowed money, or #debt_financing, to increase the size of a position. In property and in corporate deals alike, borrowing lets a buyer control a large asset with a smaller amount of their own money. When the asset rises in value, the return on the buyer's own capital is magnified, and this multiplication of returns is the attraction of leverage. It is real, and it is why so much dealmaking is built on debt. But leverage is symmetric. It magnifies losses exactly as it magnifies gains, and it adds the fixed obligation to service debt regardless of how the business performs. A firm's mix of debt and equity, its capital structure, therefore sits at the centre of how risky a deal is. In takeovers, the way a deal is financed and structured shapes both its risk and its likely success. Research on acquisition strategy shows that even the quiet accumulation of a stake before a bid, a toehold, changes the economics of the eventual deal and the bargaining that surrounds it, sometimes improving outcomes for the acquirer in ways that louder tactics do not (Dai, Gryglewicz, and Smit, 2021). Financing is not a technical afterthought; it is part of the deal's design, and it often determines whether a good idea survives contact with reality. 5.3 Patience and the option to wait A quieter form of leverage is patience. The ability to wait, to keep a position open, and to walk away is itself valuable, because it preserves the option to act only when the terms are right. In finance this is captured by the idea that flexibility has worth: keeping choices open is not indecision but a form of insurance against an uncertain future. A dealmaker who is not forced to transact holds an advantage over one who must close by a deadline. This connects back to bargaining power, since the party who can credibly wait can also credibly refuse. Much of what looks like nerve in a confident negotiator is really the calm that comes from having preserved alternatives and from not needing this particular deal. 5.4 The danger of confusing the two A recurring error, in memoirs and in practice, is to treat financial leverage as if it were pure strength. High borrowing feels powerful when markets rise. It becomes a trap when conditions turn, when interest rates climb, or when a deal takes longer to pay off than expected. The link back to confidence is direct: overconfident decision makers tend to prefer more leverage and more aggressive financing, which compounds their exposure when their optimistic forecasts fail (Brahma et al., 2023). Uncertainty in the wider environment can also kill even well structured deals before they close, which is why the timing and financing of transactions must account for #risk that has nothing to do with the parties themselves, including political and policy shocks that no negotiator controls (Dang, Henry, Thai, Vo, and Mazur, 2022). Leverage of both kinds is a tool that rewards judgement and punishes bravado. Location and the economics of place 6.1 Why location carries value The memoir returns again and again to location, and to the related idea that a skilled operator can enhance a location rather than simply accept it. This instinct matches one of the oldest results in economics. The value of a property is not just the bricks and land; it is the bundle of things the location gives access to, such as transport, amenities, safety, prestige, and proximity to demand. Economists measure this with what is called #hedonic_pricing, a method that breaks a property's price into the implicit prices of its separate characteristics. Studies using this approach consistently show that locational attributes, such as distance to a central business district, access to stations, and nearness to parks and good schools, explain a large part of why otherwise similar buildings sell for very different prices (Muto, Sugasawa, and Suzuki, 2023). For a dealmaker, this is why #location is described as an asset in its own right. A well located property earns a premium because buyers are paying for everything the location provides, not just the structure. The premium is not arbitrary. It reflects real advantages that flow to whoever owns or occupies the site, and those advantages can be measured, compared, and forecast rather than merely felt. 6.2 Agglomeration and network effects Location matters for a deeper reason than convenience. Economic activity clusters. Firms in the same industry gather in the same cities and districts because being close to one another lowers costs and raises productivity, an effect economists call #agglomeration. Talent, suppliers, customers, and ideas concentrate, and each new arrival makes the place more attractive to the next. This is closely related to #network_effects, where the value of being somewhere, or of joining something, rises with the number of others who are already there. A location at the centre of such a cluster carries value that a physically identical site elsewhere cannot match, because it plugs the owner into a dense web of relationships and opportunities. This explains why a shrewd operator invests in becoming part of, or helping to create, a thriving cluster. The value being captured is not only the plot of land but the position within a network. It also explains why such value can be fragile: if the cluster moves or fades, the premium moves with it, and a site that once commanded a fortune can become ordinary. 6.3 Enhancing a location The more interesting claim in the memoir is that value can be added to a location. Economically, this means changing the bundle of characteristics that the location offers. Improving access, upgrading surroundings, attracting complementary businesses, or simply changing how a place is perceived can raise the implicit prices that the market attaches to it. This is value creation in spatial form. The dealmaker who buys an underused site, improves its access and image, and thereby lifts its value is not performing a trick. They are altering the real characteristics that pricing models capture, and the market rewards the change. There is also a perception element that connects location to reputation. Part of a location's value is the confidence that buyers and tenants have in its future. A visible, credible investment can shift expectations about where a neighbourhood is heading, which then feeds back into prices. Here the reputation of the developer matters, because the market's willingness to believe the promised improvement will arrive depends on the developer's track record of delivering. A credible name can make a prophecy of rising value self fulfilling. 6.4 The limits of the location story Location is powerful but not infinite. Spatial advantages can fade if the surrounding conditions change, and a premium paid today assumes that the advantages will persist. Overpaying for a fashionable location is a classic way to turn a good asset into a poor deal, and it is a specific case of the winner's curse: the buyer most excited about a location's future is the one most likely to win it and most likely to have overpaid. The economic discipline is to value the location on the durable characteristics it provides, discounted for the risk that those characteristics change, rather than on the excitement of the moment. Even the best located #assets obey the rule that price paid, not quality alone, determines whether a deal creates value for the buyer. Assets: the tangible and the intangible 7.1 What is actually being bought Every deal is, in the end, a transfer of #assets, but the word covers two very different things. Tangible assets are physical and measurable: land, buildings, equipment, inventory, cash. They are relatively easy to value because they can be seen, counted, and compared. Intangible assets have no physical form: brands, patents, customer relationships, skilled teams, contracts, and the general goodwill a business has built. They are harder to value precisely, yet in modern economies they often account for most of a company's worth. This shift matters for dealmaking. When the memoir talks about the quality of an asset, it usually means both what a property physically is and what it represents. A hotel is concrete and steel, but it is also a name, a standard of service, and a set of expectations in the minds of guests. The second part, the intangible part, is frequently where the real value and the real risk sit, and it is the part most easily overlooked in a valuation that counts only what can be touched. 7.2 The rise of intangible value The balance between tangible and intangible value has moved decisively toward the intangible over recent decades. For many leading firms, the market is paying mainly for brands, intellectual property, and relationships rather than for physical plant. Research on #brand_equity finds a strong positive link between the value of a brand and the performance of the firm that owns it, with well managed brands supporting higher sales, easier access to finance, and greater resilience in difficult periods (Bhaskaran, Sujit, and Waheed, 2023). Advertising and marketing, often dismissed as mere promotion, are in this light investments that build a durable intangible asset, though their effect on firm performance depends heavily on how consistently they are managed over time and on the age and character of the firm (Semenov and Randrianasolo, 2022). For dealmakers this has two consequences. First, valuing a target correctly now requires judging things that do not appear cleanly on a balance sheet, which raises the importance of careful due diligence and of understanding what actually drives customer loyalty and earnings. Second, the #intangible_assets in a business are the parts most easily damaged by a clumsy deal. A brand built over decades can be weakened in months by an owner who does not understand what made it valuable, or by cost cutting that quietly erodes the quality customers were paying for. Intangible value is powerful precisely because it is hard to copy, but that same quality makes it hard to repair once broken. 7.3 Goodwill, human capital, and the parts that walk out the door Two intangible assets deserve special mention because deals so often mishandle them. The first is #goodwill, the accounting term for the premium a buyer pays above the identifiable net assets of a business, on the theory that the whole is worth more than the sum of its parts. Goodwill is a promise recorded as a number, and when the promise proves hollow it must later be written down, an admission that the buyer overpaid. Large goodwill write downs are among the clearest public signals that a celebrated deal destroyed value. The second is #human_capital, the knowledge, skill, and relationships held by the people in a business. Unlike a building, human capital can resign. When a firm is bought for its talent and culture, the value can evaporate if the people who created it leave after the deal. This is why thoughtful acquirers spend as much effort retaining and motivating people as they do on the financial terms. An asset that can walk out the door must be valued and handled with special care. 7.4 Assets, synergy, and the promise of the deal In corporate transactions the justification for paying a premium is usually #synergy, the claim that the combined businesses will be worth more than the two apart. Synergy can be real, through shared costs, wider distribution, or complementary capabilities, but it is also the most abused word in dealmaking. Because synergy is a promise about the future, it is easy to overstate and hard to verify, which is exactly why overconfident acquirers so often overpay for it (Ismail and Mavis, 2022). The honest question about any asset heavy deal is not how impressive the combined entity sounds, but whether the specific, nameable sources of extra value are large enough to justify the price, and whether the buyer has the ability to actually deliver them. When they cannot, the premium paid becomes value transferred from the buyer to the seller, and the buyer's shareholders quietly lose. Diversifying deals, which combine unrelated businesses, are especially prone to this failure, because the promised synergies are often the weakest and the acquirer's ability to manage the new business is the least proven (Ismail and Mavis, 2022). Reputation, trust, and signaling 8.1 Reputation as an economic asset The memoir places enormous weight on getting the word out and on the value of a name. Economics agrees, and explains why. In a world of information asymmetry, where the other side cannot fully verify quality before agreeing, #reputation acts as a promise backed by the fear of loss. A party with a valuable reputation has a reason to behave well, because misbehaviour would destroy something worth more than any single deal. Knowing this, counterparts are willing to transact on better terms with a reputable party. Reputation, in other words, is a mechanism that turns repeated interaction into present trust, and it does economic work that no contract can fully replace. This is why reputation shows up directly in financial outcomes. Firms with strong reputations enjoy easier and cheaper access to capital, because lenders and investors treat the reputation as a credible signal of quality and lower risk (Borzino, Fatas, and Peterle, 2023). A good name reduces the cost of proving oneself in every future transaction, which is a real and compounding advantage. Over a long career the savings are enormous, because a trusted party is invited into deals that others never see and is believed when others must prove themselves from scratch. 8.2 Signaling and the problem of cheap talk The deeper idea beneath reputation is #signaling. Anyone can claim to be trustworthy or high quality; claims are cheap and therefore carry little information. A signal only works if it is costly or difficult to fake, so that low quality parties cannot easily imitate it. Investing heavily in a brand, honouring commitments even when it is expensive, being transparent when hiding information would be easier, and building a visible track record are all costly signals. They persuade precisely because they would not be worth sending by someone who did not have quality to back them up. This is why substance, over time, beats mere talk: the market learns to discount cheap words and to reward expensive proof. Recent experimental work shows how transparency and reputation interact to build #trust. When parties can observe past behaviour and when information is openly shared, cooperation rises and exchanges happen that would otherwise fail (Borzino et al., 2023). This reframes a great deal of dealmaking behaviour. The willingness to share information, to open the books, to make and keep public commitments, and to deliver what was promised are all ways of sending credible signals that reduce the other side's uncertainty and make agreement possible. Even skilled #promotion, when it is backed by real delivery, functions as a signal: it tells the market that the promoter is confident enough to stake their name in public. 8.3 Repeated games and the discipline of the future Why does reputation restrain behaviour that a one time deal would not? The answer lies in the idea of #repeated_games. When parties expect to interact again, the shadow of the future disciplines the present. Cheating on today's deal wins a small gain but forfeits the stream of profitable dealings that cooperation would have produced. This is the economic engine behind trust: it is not that reputable people are simply more virtuous, but that they face incentives that make honesty pay. The most valuable business relationships are those expected to continue, because both sides know that behaving well today protects tomorrow. Understanding this helps a student see why a reputation for fairness is an asset rather than a soft indulgence. 8.4 The fragility of reputation Reputation has a hard edge that memoirs of triumph tend to underplay. It is slow to build and fast to lose. Because it depends on belief, a single visible breach can wipe out years of accumulated trust, and the loss then raises the cost of every future deal. The economic value of reputation, its ability to lower the cost of capital and to win better terms, is strongest exactly when it is intact and weakens sharply after a damaging event. For the student, the practical implication is that #credibility should be treated as a capital asset that is expensive to rebuild, not as a resource to be spent for a short term win. The dealmaker who sacrifices trust to claim a little extra value in one transaction may be destroying the very thing that made the next hundred transactions cheaper. From impressive deals to sustainable value creation 9.1 The central distinction The five themes converge on a single distinction that gives this article its purpose. There is a difference between a deal that looks impressive and a deal that creates #sustainable_value, and confusing the two is the root of most dealmaking failure. An impressive deal is one that photographs well. It is large, it is announced with #confidence, it uses bold leverage, it sits in a prestigious location, it bundles glamorous assets, and it carries a famous name. All of these features are about appearance and about claiming value, that is, about capturing attention and a favourable division of a fixed pie. None of them guarantees that the pie was made bigger. A value creating deal is different. It rests on real gains from trade, on genuine synergy that the buyer can actually deliver, on honest information that narrows the gap between what each side knows, and on a division of the gains that leaves every party better off and therefore willing to deal again. It is judged over years, not days. The evidence from mergers and acquisitions research is blunt on this point: a large share of corporate deals fail to deliver the value promised at announcement, and short term applause is a weak predictor of long term success (Cumming et al., 2023). 9.2 A simple worked example Consider a buyer weighing the purchase of a well known regional business for one hundred and twenty, when the business as it currently runs is worth one hundred. The extra twenty is justified only if the buyer can create at least twenty of new value, for example through cost savings or expanded reach. Suppose the buyer, encouraged by a run of past successes, forecasts thirty of synergy. If that forecast is honest and achievable, the deal creates value and both sides can share it. But if the thirty is really optimism dressed as analysis, and the true synergy is ten, then the buyer has paid one hundred and twenty for something worth one hundred and ten. The seller captures the difference, and the buyer's owners lose ten, even though the announcement described a bold and exciting combination. Now add competition. If two eager buyers bid against each other, the price may be driven to one hundred and thirty five, above what either can justify. The winner is simply the more optimistic of the two, and the winner's curse turns a contested prize into a loss. This small example contains almost the whole argument of the article. The features that make the deal impressive, its size, the confidence of the bidder, the prestige of the target, are exactly the features that can push the price past the point where value is created. 9.3 Why impressive deals so often disappoint The themes explain the pattern. #Overconfidence leads buyers to overestimate synergy and overpay (Ismail and Mavis, 2022; Brahma et al., 2023). Misused leverage magnifies the damage when optimistic forecasts fail and adds fixed costs that a struggling deal cannot bear (Dang et al., 2022). Location premiums are paid for advantages that may not last. Intangible assets, including brand and #human_capital, are mishandled by owners who do not understand what made them valuable. And reputation is spent rather than preserved. Each failure is a case of appearance being mistaken for substance, of value claiming being mistaken for #value_creation. The positive version of the same argument is the constructive heart of this article. The dealmaker most likely to build lasting value is not the loudest one. It is the one who improves their alternatives before negotiating, who tests their own confidence against evidence, who structures financing to survive bad outcomes as well as to profit from good ones, who values locations and assets on durable characteristics rather than fashion, who sends honest signals and guards their reputation, and who cares whether the other side also wins. A deal built this way may attract less attention on the day it closes, but it is far more likely to still look like a good deal a decade later. Fairness and ethics in dealmaking It might seem that fairness is a soft concern with no place in a hard eyed economic analysis. The opposite is true. #Fairness has direct economic consequences, and ignoring it is often a costly mistake. The first reason is repetition. Because most valuable business is conducted in ongoing relationships, a party that squeezes an unfair advantage today may win the battle and lose the war, as the counterpart withdraws future cooperation and warns others. A reputation for dealing fairly attracts partners and lowers the cost of every negotiation, while a reputation for sharp practice raises everyone's guard and shrinks the set of deals available. In the language of the previous section, fairness is a signal, and it pays. The second reason is stability. Deals that leave one side feeling cheated are more likely to be renegotiated, resisted, or abandoned, and enforcement is expensive. An agreement that both sides regard as fair tends to hold, which lowers transaction costs over its whole life. A deal is not truly closed when it is signed; it is closed when it is honoured, and perceived fairness is what keeps parties honouring it. The third reason is systemic. Markets depend on a general expectation of honest dealing. When information is manipulated and promises are routinely broken, trust falls, and with it the willingness to transact at all. Research on transparency and cooperation shows that openness supports the exchange that everyone benefits from, while opacity and deception erode it (Borzino et al., 2023). A dealmaker who exploits every gap in information may prosper for a time, but they are drawing down a shared resource that makes their own future deals possible. None of this requires treating fairness as charity. It requires seeing that in a world of repeated interaction, incomplete contracts, and reputations that carry across deals, fair dealing and self interest point in the same direction more often than a purely tactical view suggests. The strongest dealmakers are not those who win every point, but those with whom others most want to do business again. Discussion: when deals create and when they destroy value Bringing the evidence together produces a compact picture of the conditions under which deals succeed or fail. Deals tend to create value when the sources of gain are specific and verifiable, when information is shared honestly so that neither side is trading blind, when the price paid leaves room for the buyer to profit after delivering the promised improvements, and when the parties expect to deal with each other again and therefore have a reason to behave well. Under these conditions the transaction enlarges the total pie and distributes it in a way that sustains the relationship. This is the environment in which trust, reputation, and honest signaling do their most useful work, lowering transaction costs and letting exchanges happen that would otherwise collapse under uncertainty (Borzino et al., 2023). Deals tend to destroy value when the promised gains are vague and mainly rhetorical, when one side exploits an information gap in a way that poisons future dealings, when overconfidence drives the buyer to overpay for uncertain synergy, and when leverage is stacked so high that any disappointment threatens the whole structure. The behavioural finance literature makes clear that these failures are not rare accidents but predictable outcomes of well documented biases (Ismail and Mavis, 2022; Brahma et al., 2023). The market's own long run verdict, visible in the underperformance of many celebrated acquisitions and in the goodwill written off afterwards, confirms the pattern (Cumming et al., 2023). A subtle point deserves emphasis. The same feature can help or hurt depending on how it is used. Confidence can open a door or blind a buyer. Leverage can multiply a return or a loss. A famous name can lower the cost of capital or become a liability if it is abused. Location can command a fair premium or an excessive one. What determines the outcome is not the presence of these features but the discipline with which they are handled. That is why the analysis keeps returning to process, to evidence, and to the honest question of whether real value has been created rather than merely displayed. It is also worth separating the personal story from the general principle. A single individual may report a string of successes, but survivorship and self attribution make such stories poor evidence about what works on average (Brahma et al., 2023). The economics does not depend on any one person's biography. It depends on the structural forces, gains from trade, information, incentives, and risk, that operate in every market regardless of who is at the table. This is a liberating thought for students, because it means good dealmaking can be learned rather than inherited. Implications for business students Several practical lessons follow for students who will one day negotiate, invest, or manage deals of their own. First, learn to separate creating value from claiming value. Before worrying about how to divide a pie, ask how large the pie can be made. The most creative dealmakers find arrangements that add value for everyone, then divide the result fairly enough to keep the relationship alive (Thompson, 2025). Treating every #negotiation as a #zero_sum fight is both ethically poorer and, over a career, financially worse, because it drives away the partners who would have made the next deal possible. Second, respect the difference between confidence and overconfidence. Enter the room, make the ask, and persist, but build habits that check your own optimism. Write down what would prove your forecast wrong, invite disagreement, and treat past success as information rather than proof of genius. The evidence that overconfidence destroys value is among the most consistent in corporate finance (Ismail and Mavis, 2022). Third, understand both meanings of leverage and never confuse them. Improve your alternatives so that you can credibly walk away, and design financing that survives bad outcomes, not only financing that shines in good ones. Remember that borrowing multiplies losses as surely as gains, and that the ability to wait is itself a source of power. Fourth, value assets and location on durable characteristics, not on fashion or feeling. Use structured tools where you can, give particular care to intangibles such as brand, goodwill, and the people whose knowledge cannot be locked in a vault, and never let the excitement of a contest push you past the price at which the deal still makes sense (Bhaskaran et al., 2023). Fifth, treat reputation as long term capital. Send honest, costly signals, deliver what you promise, and refuse to trade #credibility for a small short term gain. A strong name lowers the cost of every future deal, and it is far cheaper to keep than to rebuild (Borzino et al., 2023). Sixth, take fairness seriously as strategy, not sentiment. In a world of repeated dealings and portable reputations, being someone others want to deal with again is one of the most valuable assets a person can own. Seventh, keep the long view. Judge a #deal by whether it still looks wise years later, not by the applause it receives on the day it closes. The research record is a standing reminder that short term excitement and long term value are not the same thing (Cumming et al., 2023). Taken together, these lessons turn a popular memoir into a serious teaching tool. The stories entertain, but the underlying economics is what students should carry forward. Read this way, dealmaking is not a mysterious talent possessed by a few. It is a set of understandable skills, grounded in how markets, information, and incentives actually work, that can be studied, practised, and improved. Limitations and future research This article has clear limits. It is interpretive rather than empirical, so its conclusions rest on the strength of the literature it draws upon rather than on new tests. Using a single popular memoir as an anchor is a teaching device, and readers should not treat the book as evidence for any claim; the evidence comes from the cited studies, not from the memoir. The five themes, though wide ranging, do not exhaust everything a deal involves, and important topics such as legal structure, taxation, culture, regulation, and macroeconomic conditions receive only brief mention. Several directions would extend the work. Empirical studies could test directly how the presentation of a deal, its impressiveness, relates to its long run value, separating theatre from substance. Research could examine how the balance between value creation and value claiming shifts across industries and across cultures, since the norms of negotiation differ widely around the world. The interaction between reputation and financing terms deserves closer measurement, as does the way intangible assets are valued and protected during acquisitions and the rate at which human capital departs after a change of ownership. The winner's curse in modern auction driven deals, from spectrum sales to competitive corporate bids, remains a rich area for study. Finally, education research could ask whether teaching students to read popular business texts through an economic lens actually improves the quality of the deals they later make. Each of these would move the discussion from interpretation toward evidence. Conclusion Popular advice presents the deal as a performance, driven by nerve, showmanship, and a famous name. This article has argued that the durable core of good dealmaking is economic, not theatrical. Confidence matters, but only when it is disciplined by evidence. Leverage matters, in both its bargaining and its financial forms, but it multiplies losses as readily as gains. Location and assets carry real value, yet only at a price that leaves room to profit and only when their durable characteristics are understood. Reputation is perhaps the most valuable asset of all, because it lowers the cost of every future transaction, and it is easily destroyed. Fairness, far from being a soft concern, is a hard edged source of advantage in a world of repeated dealings. Running through all of these themes is one distinction that students should keep above the rest. A deal that only looks impressive is not the same as a deal that creates #sustainable_value. The first captures attention and a favourable slice of a fixed pie. The second enlarges the pie and shares it so that every party is willing to deal again. The weight of recent research suggests that the second kind is rarer, harder, and far more rewarding over time. The most useful thing a business student can learn from any dealmaking story is therefore not a set of tricks for winning at the table, but the habit of asking, quietly and honestly, whether the deal in front of them will create real value for all sides once the applause has faded. References Bhaskaran, R. K., Sujit, K. S., and Waheed, K. A. (2023). Linkage between brand value and firm performance: An empirical examination using fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis. SAGE Open, 13(3). https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440231192135 Borzino, N., Fatas, E., and Peterle, E. (2023). In transparency we trust: An experimental study of reputation, transparency, and signaling. Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics, 106, 102061. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socec.2023.102061 Brahma, S., Boateng, A., and Ahmad, S. (2023). Board overconfidence and M and A performance: Evidence from the UK. Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting, 60(4), 1363 to 1391. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11156-023-01133-8 Brahma, S., Nwafor, C., and Boateng, A. (2021). Board gender diversity and firm performance: The UK evidence. International Journal of Finance and Economics, 26(4), 5704 to 5719. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijfe.2089 Can, R., and Dizdarlar, H. I. (2022). The effect of managers overconfidence who have made mergers and acquisitions on firm value. Sosyoekonomi, 30(54), 101 to 119. Cumming, D., Jindal, V., Kumar, S., and Pandey, N. (2023). Mergers and acquisitions research in finance and accounting: Past, present, and future. European Financial Management, 29(5), 1464 to 1504. https://doi.org/10.1111/eufm.12417 Dai, Y., Gryglewicz, S., and Smit, H. T. J. (2021). Less popular but more effective toeholds in corporate takeovers. Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 56(1), 283 to 312. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022109019001029 Dang, M., Henry, D., Thai, H. A., Vo, X. V., and Mazur, M. (2022). Does policy uncertainty predict the death of mergers and acquisitions deals? Finance Research Letters, 46, 102489. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.frl.2021.102489 Ismail, A., and Mavis, C. P. (2022). A new method for measuring CEO overconfidence: Evidence from acquisitions. International Review of Financial Analysis, 79, 101964. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.irfa.2021.101964 Muto, S., Sugasawa, S., and Suzuki, M. (2023). Hedonic real estate price estimation with the spatiotemporal geostatistical model. Journal of Spatial Econometrics, 4, 10. https://doi.org/10.1007/s43071-023-00039-w Semenov, A. V., and Randrianasolo, A. (2022). Advertising intensity and firm performance: The influences of firm age and cultural communication styles. International Marketing Review, 40(2), 265 to 289. Thompson, L. (2025). Creating and claiming value at the negotiation table: The forgotten role of scenario planning. California Management Review. Hashtags #deals #markets #value_creation #the_art_of_the_deal #dealmaking #negotiation #economics_for_students #mergers_and_acquisitions #bargaining_power #reputation_management #sustainable_value #business_education #corporate_finance #win_win_deals #value_vs_price

Latest Book Releases:

WELCOME TO THE INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS LIBRARY

bottom of page