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Author(s)

David Besanko

In 1996 the St. Louis-based manufacturer Zoltek launched a massive expansion of capacity to produce commercial-grade carbon fiber, a composite material used to produce a wide variety of end products ranging from sporting goods to windmill blades. Zoltek's goal was to become the dominant firm in a market whose growth was expected to be spectacular starting in the late 1990s. This case describes Zoltek's major strategic moves in the mid-1990s and can be used to explore the economic logic of a major capacity commitment. The case provides a possible example of the Stackelberg leadership model from oligopoly theory.

Date Published: 01/01/2003
Discipline: Economics;Strategy
Key Concepts: Economics, Competitive Strategy
Citations: Besanko, David. Zoltek. 5-204-254 (KEL007).