In the long run, what is more expensive than innovating?
Select one correct answer from the list:
A.
Not controlling your costs
B.
Issuing stockholder dividends that are too large
C.
Not innovating
D.
Marketing too many brands
The Answer Is:
C
This question includes an explanation.
Explanation:
Identical to Q85 (repeated in original), GInI’s CInP Handbook emphasizes that " not innovating " incurs greater long-term costs than innovating—lost opportunities, declining market position, and eventual irrelevance outweigh innovation’s upfront investment. Firms that stagnate face existential risks, as GInI illustrates with examples like Blockbuster versus Netflix. " Not controlling costs " (A) risks profitability but isn’t strategic. " Large dividends " (B) is tactical, not existential. " Too many brands " (D) is a misstep, not a fatal flaw. Option C aligns with GInI’s stance, matching the original answer, reinforcing innovation as a necessity, not an option—a GInI principle validated by competitive dynamics.