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Who cares?. Overemphasis on internal characteristicsProduct obsolescenceMissed opportunities for new product developmentSears' internal operating manualNeglect of external analysisAssumptions about external environment may become outdated . S V Horner 2009. Creating environmental awareness at organizational level.
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1. Analyzing the external environment of the firm S V Horner 2009
2. Who cares? Overemphasis on internal characteristics
Product obsolescence
Missed opportunities for new product development
Sears’ internal operating manual
Neglect of external analysis
Assumptions about external environment may become outdated S V Horner 2009
3. Creating environmental awareness at organizational level Scanning
Monitoring
Competitive intelligence
Forecasting S V Horner 2009
4. Scanning Surveillance of environment
Anticipate future changes and detect changes under way
Recognize patterns before competitors
Act before changes occur (proactive) rather than responding afterwards (reactive)
General top of the mind awareness of societal behaviors and business practices S V Horner 2009
5. Monitoring Tracking movement or changes in specific trends, sequences of events, or streams of activities
Watching specific formal and informal indicators of future events
Index of economic indicators
Shipments by FedEx, UPS, DHL
NAPM index S V Horner 2009
6. Competitive intelligence Define and understand industry and identify rivals’ strengths and weaknesses
Anticipate competitors’ moves and decrease own response time S V Horner 2009
7. Competitive intelligence Sources of competitive intelligence
Business press
Competitor pricing
Competitors’ management backgrounds
Open to seemingly unrelated bits of information that form patterns (Fuld & Co.’s client p. 46)
Awareness of technological changes that threaten status quo (e.g., Encyclopaedia Brittanica)
Avoid unethical and illegal behavior S V Horner 2009
8. Environmental forecasting “plausible projections about direction, scope, speed, and intensity of environmental change” (p. 42)
Scenario analysis: human judgment combined with quantitative analysis S V Horner 2009
9. SWOT analysis Framework for identifying key elements of strategic context
External elements
Environmental opportunities for value creation
Environmental threats to competitive position
Internal elements
Firm strengths: conditions in which firm excels
Firm weaknesses: characteristics which firm may lack in comparison to competitors S V Horner 2009
10. The general environment External factors have profound influence on firm outcomes and entire industries
Affects different industries differently
Six segments of general environment: demographic, sociocultural, political/legal/, technological, economic, global S V Horner 2009
11. Demographic segment Numerical measurement of characteristics of a population
Literally: description of people
Age, income, ethnic composition, geographic distribution, etc. S V Horner 2009
12. Sociocultural segment Values, beliefs, attitudes of a society
Distinct from, but related to, demographics
Examples of values, beliefs, attitudes
Concern over greenhouse gases
Health consciousness (fitness, diets, etc.)
S V Horner 2009
13. Political/legal segment Political processes, elections, legislation, regulation, adjudication
Competition among individuals and groups for “voice” in public policy S V Horner 2009
14. Technological segment Growth in knowledge leading to new products and services and improvements in production and distribution
Examples of technologies: genetic engineering, information technology, CAD/CAM, artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, mass production, assembly line production S V Horner 2009
15. Economic segment General economic conditions facing a firm and its industry
General economic indicators
Key economic indicators
Stock market indices
Other formal and informal indicators
Describe effects on firm strategic direction S V Horner 2009
16. Global segment Relevant (and changing) new global markets
International political events (e.g., changes in power, fall of Soviet rule, newly industrializing countries, terrorism)
Cultural and institutional characteristics of global markets
International organizations promote global economic integration (e.g., WTO, Transatlantic Business Dialogue) S V Horner 2009
17. Relationships among segments Segments are not totally distinct
Segments are interrelated and mutually influencing S V Horner 2009
18. Competitive environment More direct influence on industry competition and firm profitability than general environment
Consists of factors relevant to firm’s strategy – customers, suppliers, and competitors (both existing and potential) S V Horner 2009
19. Porter’s five forces model of industry competition S V Horner 2009
20. Threat of new entrants Expands industry capacity and increases competition for market share
May include start ups as well as existing firms expanding into new business
Phillip Morris’ purchase of Miller Brewing
Influenced by barriers to entry and anticipated reactions from existing competitors S V Horner 2009
21. Threat of new entrants High barriers to entry reduce threat
1) Economies of scale
2) Brand identity and product differentiation
3) Capital requirements
4) Switching costs
5) Access to distribution channels
6) Cost disadvantages independent of size
7) Government policy S V Horner 2009
22. Threat of new entrants Expected retaliation of existing competitors
Deterrent to new entrants
Opportunity for entrepreneurs in underserved niches S V Horner 2009
23. Bargaining power of buyers Bargaining power of buyers of industry output
Motivated to negotiate for lower prices, quality, service, etc.
Bargaining power of buyer groups a function of:
Market situation
Relative importance of purchases from the industry compared to its overall business S V Horner 2009
24. Bargaining power of buyers: factors Buyers are concentrated, or each one purchases a significant percentage of total industry sales.
The products that the buyers purchase represent a significant percentage of the buyers’ costs.
The products that the buyers purchase are standard or undifferentiated.
Buyers face few switching costs and can freely change suppliers. S V Horner 2009
25. Bargaining power of buyers: factors Buyers earn low profits, creating pressure for them to reduce their purchasing costs.
Buyers have the ability to engage in backward integration by becoming their own suppliers.
The industry’s product is relatively unimportant to the quality of the buyers’ products or services.
Buyers have complete information. S V Horner 2009
26. Bargaining power of suppliers Bargaining power of suppliers of industry inputs to charge higher prices, reduce quality of purchased goods/services
Factors influencing bargaining of suppliers mirror those of the bargaining power of buyers S V Horner 2009
27. Bargaining power of suppliers : factors The supplying industry is dominated by one or a few companies.
There are no substitute products, weakening industry players in relation to their suppliers.
The buying industry is not a major customer of the suppliers S V Horner 2009
28. Bargaining power of suppliers : factors The suppliers pose a credible threat of forward integration by “becoming their own customers.”
The suppliers’ products are differentiated or have built-in switching costs, thereby reducing the buyers’ ability to play one supplier against another.
S V Horner 2009
29. Intensity of rivalry among existing competitors Jockeying for position among producers of industry output
Tactics:
Price competition
Advertising battles
Product introductions
Customer service levels or warranties
S V Horner 2009
30. Intensity of rivalry: structural factors 1) Numerous or equally balanced competitors
2) High fixed or storage costs
3) Slow industry growth
4) Lack of differentiation or low switching costs
5) Capacity increases in large increments (“clumpy”)
6) Diversity of competitors
7) High strategic stakes
8) High exit barriers S V Horner 2009
31. Threat of substitute products and services Substitutes perform similar or same functions as existing industry products but have different characteristics
Sugar producers face threats from producers of high fructose corn syrup
Fiberglass producers face threats from producers of cellulose, rock wool, and styrofoam S V Horner 2009
32. Threat of substitute products and services Distinct from economics definition which defines competing products
In strategic thinking, Coke and Pepsi are competing products; Coke and Snapple are substitutes S V Horner 2009
33. Limitations of five forces model Industry often difficult to identify.
Does not account for the role of strategic alliances/partnerships
Some firms, most notably large ones, can often take steps to modify the industry structure
Assumes industry factors, not firm resources, comprise the primary determinants of firm profit.
Firms compete in many industries and markets and must be concerned with multiple industry structures. S V Horner 2009
34. Strategic groups Two assumptions:
No two firms are totally identical
No two firms are totally different
Firms more similar to each other than to rest of industry may be identified as a strategic group S V Horner 2009
35. Strategic groups Dimensions of similarity
Breadth of product line
Geographic scope
Price/quality
Degree of vertical integration
Type of distribution (e.g., dealer network, mass merchandisers, private label)
Variety of strategic combinations in an industry S V Horner 2009
36. Strategic groups as a tool of industry analysis Identifies barriers to mobility protecting one group from competition from another
Barriers to mobility
Factors deterring entry of firms from one group into another (e.g., Wal-Mart and Nordstrom’s)
Examples: technology, brand image, dealer network S V Horner 2009
37. Strategic groups as a tool of industry analysis Identifies groups whose competitive position may be marginal or tenuous (e.g., JCP and Sears stuck in the middle between Wal-Mart and Nieman Marcus)
Helps chart future direction of firm’s strategies S V Horner 2009
38. Strategic groups as a tool of industry analysis Helps managers think through implications of each industry trend for strategic group as a whole
e.g., variable effect of interest rates on strategic groups in automobile manufacturing (e.g., Porsche vs. Kia) S V Horner 2009
39. Summary Environmental analysis a necessary component of strategic planning
Environmental awareness occurs through scanning, monitoring, competitive intelligence, environmental forecasting
Two major components of environment
General environment
Competitive environment S V Horner 2009
40. Summary General environmental segments: demographic, sociocultural, political/legal, technological, economic, global
Competitive environment:
Five competitive forces (Porter’s five forces)
Threat of new entrants, bargaining power of buyers, bargaining power of suppliers, threat of substitutes, intensity of rivalry
Strategic groups S V Horner 2009