1 / 46

Lecture 6

Lecture 6. Marketing and Competition Jan 24, 2012. Today. HW Presentation Progress in interviewing Issues Personalized Clinic Lecture. Six Forces Diagram to Determine how Competitive a Company is (after Porter). Power, Vigor and Competence of Existing Competitors.

odessa
Download Presentation

Lecture 6

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 6 Marketing and Competition Jan 24, 2012

  2. Today • HW Presentation • Progress in interviewing • Issues • Personalized Clinic • Lecture

  3. Six Forces Diagram to Determine how Competitive a Company is (after Porter) Power, Vigor and Competence of Existing Competitors Power, Vigor and Competence of Suppliers Power, Vigor and Competence of Complementors Your Business Power, Vigor and Competence of Potential Competitors Possibility that what your business is doing can be done in a different way Power, Vigor and Competence of Customers

  4. The intensity of competitive rivalry (known) • number of competitors • rate of industry growth • intermittent industry overcapacity • diversity of competitors • informational complexity and asymmetry • brand equity • fixed cost allocation per value added • level of advertising expense

  5. The threat of new entrants • the existence of barriers to entry • Have a hub • IP • Gov license • Limited market • R&D costs • Economies of scale • Factory • Knowing market • Barriers to exit • Economics of product development • Brand equity • Customer “stickiness” switching costs • capital requirements • access to distribution • absolute cost advantages • learning curve advantages • expected retaliation • government policies

  6. Discussion • Is it a good thing to have competition in your market? • Existing • New entries?

  7. The bargaining power of suppliers • supplier switching costs relative to firm switching costs • degree of differentiation of inputs • presence of substitute inputs • supplier concentration to firm concentration ratio • threat of forward integration by suppliers relative to the threat of backward integration by firms • cost of inputs relative to selling price of the product • importance of volume to supplier • Examples?

  8. The bargaining power of customers • ratio of buyer concentration to seller concentration • bargaining leverage • buyer volume • Buyer switching costs relative to firm switching costs • buyer information availability • ability to backward integrate • availability of existing substitute products • buyer price sensitivity • price of total purchase • Examples?

  9. The bargaining power of complementors • Relative strengths • Customer perception • Future R&D • Switching costs • Trust • ability to sideways integrate • Anti-trust • Competition for margin • Examples?

  10. Six Forces Diagram to Determine how Competitive a Company is (after Porter) Power, Vigor and Competence of Existing Competitors Power, Vigor and Competence of Suppliers Power, Vigor and Competence of Complementors Your Business Power, Vigor and Competence of Potential Competitors Possibility that what your business is doing can be done in a different way Power, Vigor and Competence of Customers

  11. Six Forces Diagram to Determine how Competitive a Company is (with 10X disruptive force) Power, Vigor and Competence of Existing Competitors Power, Vigor and Competence of Suppliers Power, Vigor and Competence of Complementors Your Business Power, Vigor and Competence of Potential Competitors Power, Vigor and Competence of Customers Possibility that what your business is doing can be done in a different way. Disruptively! Or can you be the disrupter?

  12. The threat of substitute products • buyer propensity to substitute • relative price performance of substitutes • buyer switching costs • perceived level of product differentiation

  13. Differentiating yourself from the competition Comp C Comp B Features, etc. Comp A You Price, etc. Are you adding features that don’t add value?

  14. SWOT Analysis Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats by James Manktelow, editor of Mind Tools and an experienced business strategist. Strengths (with respect to competitors): What advantages do you have? What do you do well? What relevant resources do you have access to? What do other people see as your strengths? Be sure to distinguish a strength in the market, from a necessity. Look from the customers perspective!

  15. Weaknesses: What could you improve? What do you do badly? What should you avoid?

  16. Opportunities: • Where are the best opportunities? • What are the interesting trends? • Changes in technology • Changes in markets • Changes in government policy • Globalization opportunities • Changes in social patterns • Demographics • Partnerships

  17. Threats: What obstacles do you face? What is your competition doing? Are the required specifications for your products or services changing? Is changing technology threatening your position? Do you have bad debt or cash-flow problems? Could any of your weaknesses seriously threaten your business? You can also apply SWOT analysis to your competitors. This may produce some interesting insights You can apply SWOT analysis to yourself and your career prospects

  18. Interesting. . . But what do you do with the SWOT analysis?

  19. Example: A start-up small consultancy business • Strengths: • Can respond very quickly as we have no red tape, no need for higher management approval, etc. • Can provide really good customer care, as current small work load means we can focus on customers. • Our lead consultant has strong reputation • We can change direction quickly if need be • We have little overhead, so can offer good value to customers • Weaknesses: • Our company has no market presence or reputation • We have a small staff with a shallow skills base in many areas • We are vulnerable to vital staff being sick, leaving, etc. • Our cash flow will be unreliable in the early stages

  20. Example: A start-up small consultancy business • Weaknesses: • Our company has no market presence or reputation • We have a small staff with a shallow skills base • We are vulnerable to vital staff being sick, leaving, etc. • Our cash flow will be unreliable in the early stages

  21. Example: A start-up small consultancy business • Opportunities: • Our business sector is expanding, with many future opportunities for success • Our locality wants to encourage local businesses with work where possible • Our competitors may be slow to adopt new technologies

  22. Example: A start-up small consultancy business • Threats: • Will developments in technology change this market beyond our ability to adapt? • A small change in focus of a large competitor might wipe out any market position we achieve

  23. Example: A start-up small consultancy business Conclusions: Specialize in rapid response, good value services to local businesses. Promotion in selected local publications, to get the greatest possible market presence for a set advertising budget. Must keep up-to-date with changes in technology

  24. Key points: SWOT analysis is a framework for analyzing your strengths and weaknesses, and the opportunities and threats you face. This will help you to focus on your strengths, minimize weaknesses, and take the greatest possible advantage of opportunities available.

  25. In all of the E/ME 102 businesses there is competition.You will attack! Why is it difficult?

  26. In all of the E/ME 102 businesses there is competition.You will attack! Why is it difficult? “de l'audace, encore de l'audace, et toujours de l'audace” -Napoleon

  27. In all of the E/ME 102 businesses there is competition.You will attack! Why is it difficult? “de l'audace, encore de l'audace, et toujours de l'audace” -Napoleon Not a good idea -Pickar

  28. Bill Davidow (Intel, Mohr Davidow) • “Marketing High Technology- an insiders view”, William H. Davidow 1985 • If you attack a well-established competitor, you must plan on spending ~70% of the sales of the competitive leader has spent in building his business. Why is this so?

  29. Cost of Attacking a Competitor • Investment required to • Establish market presence • Establish distribution channels • Develop a product line • Plants • Equipment • Inventory • Working Capital • What about internet businesses?

  30. Entrepreneurial bias (truth hurts!) Caltech bias Underestimate what it takes to achieve position (Discount Davidow thesis) Competition has already solved problems that perhaps you don’t know existed The competition may not even be a player at present but is plotting in labs even as you are. (Particularly true in high-visibility areas such as social networking, green energy, homeland defense) Consider the broader problem- why is it easy to underestimate the competition?

  31. Your knowledge is incomplete i.e., You don’t know what you don’t know. Consider the broader problem- why is it easy to underestimate the competition?

  32. The Reality: What does the entrenched competition have? Assume a “good” company or companies • By definition they have market share • Brand • Management • A product that generally satisfies the market. • Knowledge of the Customer • Sales Force • Distribution

  33. The Reality: What does the entrenched competition have? Assume a “good” company or companies • Technology relationships • Technology Strengths • Industry knowledge of trends • Industry groups • Supplier relationships • Distribution relationships • $$$$$ for response

  34. Attacking an entrenched competitor working on an “old” technology Capability of “Old” Technology Number of researchers working to advance “old” technology

  35. Attacking an entrenched competitor working on an “old” technology Capability of “Old” Technology You Number of researchers working to advance “old” technology

  36. Common pitfalls We are 20% better so we will win! The competition is not important because It doesn’t exist We are disruptive We are not attacking them head on

  37. Common pitfalls We are dis-intermediating them- rendering them irrelevant • E-Commerce- the example of E-Toys, Webvan, Pets.com, etc., etc. • B2Bs- the example of WholesaleExchange Amazon vs Barnes and Noble

  38. What are some of their weaknesses? • Large company • Bureaucracy • Slow decision making in meetings • Structure • Silos • Career avoidance of failure • Annual funding cycle • Complacency • Maybe don’t work so hard • others • Small company • Harder to respond to an attack to the side of their business • Overcommittment • Others

  39. Additional Reasons related to missing disruptive technologies • Wrong Value Network • Context of corporation’s business leads to missing competition arising from outside • Organizational Structure • Companies organized by a products substructure fail when fundamental architecture changes • Core Competencies • Firms fail when a technological change destroyed the value of competencies previously cultivated and succeeded when new technologies enhanced them

  40. Additional Reasons related to missing disruptive technologies • Technology S-curves • Firms fail when they miss inflection points along their main product thrust and specifically when they miss technologies advancing in related fields • Wishful thinking

  41. Blinders • Arrogance • Tunnel vision • Well-defined positions • The problem with success

  42. Thoughts on countering competition • Look for weaknesses • Dissatisfied customers e.g., quality or service • Unaddressed pain • Cracks in supply chain • Geographic hole • Address with Total Customer Satisfaction • Address with Total product- addresses all the pain • Don’t attack an entrenched position frontally! Think twice about competing on cost • Find a (neglected?) niche • Have proprietary technology that “changes the game” • i.e., 10X improvement

  43. More thoughts • Have understanding of the market on your team • Hire from your customer or best competitor • Have leadership that either has a track record or learns fast. • Think strategically • How will the big guys respond? • How would you counter that response? • Focus on a few key customers • Keep under the radar screen? • Speed! Fail quickly and correct

  44. Opportunity for Entrepreneurial company • Look for need not being served now by big company • Look for a 10X cost reduction to service these companies • After you have established yourself, move up market and attack big company with a much cheaper, solution for their customers. • Think main frames to minis to micro

  45. Kent Kresa’s game theory checkerboard Put each of your competitors on a “checkerboard”. From what you know of them (SWOT analysis). What move would they make if you were to enter the market with your product? How could you counter that move a priori or afterwards? What other moves could they make to counter you?

More Related