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INDUSTRY ANALYSIS: WHAT DRIVES COMPETITION. Threat of New EntrantsNew Approaches to satisfy customer NeedsPrices are affectedProfits are reduced . 8 BARRIERS WITH NEW PRODUCT ENTRY:. Economies of Scale- Products cost go down while production increasesProduct Differentiation- Uniqueness of
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1. Chapter 15Strategic Elements of Competitive Advantage Heather Blalock
Jennifer Hauge
Kendol Hoagland
Tiago Ruffoni
2. INDUSTRY ANALYSIS: WHAT DRIVES COMPETITION Threat of New Entrants
New Approaches to satisfy customer Needs
Prices are affected
Profits are reduced
3. 8 BARRIERS WITH NEW PRODUCT ENTRY: Economies of Scale- Products cost go down while production increases
Product Differentiation- Uniqueness of product
Capital Requirements- R&D, advertisement, field sales and service, customer credit, working capital
Switching Costs- Caused by changing suppliers and products
4. Distribution Channels- Cost of entry can be costly if channels are full or not available
Government Policy- Major entry barriers, due to government restrictions based on Control
Cost Advantages Independent of Scale Economies- Access to raw materials, low cost labor, desired locations
Competitor Response- Competitors belief of a difficult entry into a market
5. THREAT OF SUBSTITUTE PRODUCTS Limits prices that market leaders charge
High prices can turn customers to your competition
6. BP of Buyers Buyer’s mean Manufactures
Goal is to pay lowest price to obtain product and services that are required
Buyers drive down profits in supply industry by leveraging vendors
Buy large quantities which causes dependence
Buyer power ( Walmart changing lyrics in music)
7. BP OF BUYERS Suppliers leverage allows them to change cost which effect customers profits
Develop own brand name and product
Leverage is gained by largeness and Suppliers are scarce
8. RIVALRY AMONG COMPETITORS Firms actions in an industry to improve positions and have advantage over one another
Price competition, Advertising battles, Product positioning, set themselves apart from competitors
Less profit to establish themselves
9. COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE Competitive advantage is a “position a firm occupies against its competitors”
There are two ways to achieve competitive advantage:
Offer the “same” product at lower cost than competitors (Low-cost strategy)
Offer “better” products or “greater” service than competitors (Differentiation strategy)
Customer perception decides the quality of a firm’s strategy
10. PORTER’S GENERIC STRATEGIES
11. FLAGSHIP MODEL “Long-term competitiveness in global industries is less a matter of rivalry between firms and more a question of competition between business system” (Alan Rugman and Joseph D’Cruz)
12. THE FLAGSHIP MODEL
13. CREATING COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE VIA STRATEGIC INTEND “Few competitive advantages are long lasting. Keeping score of existing advantages is not the same as building new advantages. The essence of strategy lies in creating tomorrow’s competitive advantages faster than competitors mimic the ones you possess today. An organization’s capacity to improve existing skills and learn news ones is the most defensible competitive advantage of all” (Gary Hamel)
14. 4 SUCCESSFUL APPROACH USED BY JAPANESE COMPETITOR Layer of Advantages: A firm’s products have a few advantages to its competitors
Loose Bricks: A firm takes advantage by marketing its products on areas that were overlooked by competitors
Changing Rules: A firm decides to adopt its own marketing strategies instead of imitating the market leader
Collaborating: A firm uses the know-how developed by other companies
15. Global Competition Occurs when a firm takes a global view of competition and sets about maximizing profits worldwide, rather than on country-by-country basis
Brand-name muscle and quality packaging can overwhelm local competition in global markets
Detergents – Colgate, Unilever, Proctor & Gamble
Automobiles
16. ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF GLOBAL COMPETITION Effects have been highly beneficial to consumers
Expands range of products, can lower prices, increase likelihood consumers get what they want
Can potentially take away jobs and profits from domestic suppliers
17. National Advantage
18. Factor Conditions A country’s endowment with resources; may be created or inherited
Basic factors can be replicated and are not sustainable sources of national advantage
Specialized factors are more advanced and provide more sustainable source for advantage
Porter’s 5 categories of factor conditions
Human
Physical
Knowledge
Capital
Infrastructure
19. Demand Conditions Factors that either train firms for world-class competition or that fail to adequately prepare them to compete in global marketplace
Characteristics
Composition of Home Demand – how firms perceive, interpret, and respond to buyer needs
Size and Pattern of Growth of Home Demand – only important if composition of home demand anticipates foreign demand
Rapid Home Market Growth – incentive to invest in and adopt new technologies faster
Means by Which a Nation’s Products and Services are Pushed/Pulled into Foreign Countries
20. RELATED AND SUPPORTING INDUSTRIES Country has an advantage when it is home to globally competitive companies in business sectors that are related and supporting industries
Globally competitive supplier industries provide inputs to downstream industries, which are likely to be globally competitive in terms of price and quality
Results in competitive advantage
Advantage is the result of the contact and coordination with the suppliers; coordinating and sharing value chain activities
21. FIRM STRATEGY, STRUCTURE, AND RIVALRY Domestic rivalry in a single national market is a powerful influence on competitive advantage
Rivalry between Dell, HP, Gateway, Compaq, Apple, etc. forces them to develop new products, improve existing ones, lower costs/prices, develop new technologies, and improve quality and service
Domestic rivals must fight for market share, R&D breakthroughs, employee talent, prestige in home market
Rivalry with foreign firms may lack this intensity
Absence of domestic rivalry can lead to complacency and cause them to be noncompetitive in world markets; the intensity and quality of competitors make the difference
22. Other External Variables Chance
Shape competitive environment
Go beyond control of firms, industries, governments
Alters conditions in the “diamond”
Create major discontinuities in technologies that allow nations/firms to leapfrog over old competitors and become competitors or leaders in the industry
Examples: war, major technological breakthroughs, etc.
Government
Influences determinants by buying products/services, making policies, and regulating commerce
Can improve or lessen competitive advantage, but can’t create it
23. CURRENT ISSUES IN CA: Hypercompetition- in a dynamic competitive environment, no action or advantage can be sustained in the long run.
Microsoft & Gillette
D’Aveni Model-competition in four areas:
Cost/quality timing
Know-how
Entry barriers
Deep pockets Cost/Quality- 7 dynamic interactions: continually changing the value marketplace by changing their position.
Price wars
Quality/price positioning
Timing/Know-How
Firms with first mover advantage (first to market) have a timing advantage. SONY- first pocket transistor radio, consumer VCR, and CD player, PlayStation.
Threat of imitation
Know-how- technological advantage. Can create a new product/market.
Entry Barriers
Aggressive competitors erode these traditional barriers. DELL- uses direct sales approach instead of the traditional distribution channels.
The best entry strategy according to D’Aveni is to maintain the initiative- don’t spend time and money on defending your market position against new entrants.
8 interactions:
Build a geographic stronghold.
Target product markets strongholds of competitors in other countries. HONDA- started in Japan, began to target outside the country with motorcycles and automobiles.
Competitors make short term counter-responses to the new entrant. May start price wars, or introduce new products
Competitor realizes that they must respond with new strategies to make new hurdles
New entrants react to the hurdles- US put import quotas on Japanese cars, so they built plants in the US
Long term counter-responses either offensively or defensively
Competition is exported back to the entrants home country- Japan was threatened to open their import market to allow US cars in (GM-developed Saturn)
Final standoff of competitors in the arena. Cost/Quality- 7 dynamic interactions: continually changing the value marketplace by changing their position.
Price wars
Quality/price positioning
Timing/Know-How
Firms with first mover advantage (first to market) have a timing advantage. SONY- first pocket transistor radio, consumer VCR, and CD player, PlayStation.
Threat of imitation
Know-how- technological advantage. Can create a new product/market.
Entry Barriers
Aggressive competitors erode these traditional barriers. DELL- uses direct sales approach instead of the traditional distribution channels.
The best entry strategy according to D’Aveni is to maintain the initiative- don’t spend time and money on defending your market position against new entrants.
8 interactions:
Build a geographic stronghold.
Target product markets strongholds of competitors in other countries. HONDA- started in Japan, began to target outside the country with motorcycles and automobiles.
Competitors make short term counter-responses to the new entrant. May start price wars, or introduce new products
Competitor realizes that they must respond with new strategies to make new hurdles
New entrants react to the hurdles- US put import quotas on Japanese cars, so they built plants in the US
Long term counter-responses either offensively or defensively
Competition is exported back to the entrants home country- Japan was threatened to open their import market to allow US cars in (GM-developed Saturn)
Final standoff of competitors in the arena.
24. INNOVATION The best defense is a good offense.
Innovation begins with abandonment of the old and obsolete.
D’Aventi urges that the flexible, unpredictable player may have an advantage over the inflexible, committed opponent.
Porter’s take
Core competencies
Hypercompetition
D’Aventi does not think that the 5 forces model is in stride with today’s markets.
Porter:
Core Competencies:
The idea of core competencies is to have a series of things a firm does in a way that it is hard to replicate. Rivals have to match ALL of these, or they have nothing.
Hypercompetition:
Doesn’t believe that firms are moving into hypercompetitive markets.
There are more customer segments than ever before, more options in technology and channels.
MORE opportunity for different positions against rivals. D’Aventi does not think that the 5 forces model is in stride with today’s markets.
Porter:
Core Competencies:
The idea of core competencies is to have a series of things a firm does in a way that it is hard to replicate. Rivals have to match ALL of these, or they have nothing.
Hypercompetition:
Doesn’t believe that firms are moving into hypercompetitive markets.
There are more customer segments than ever before, more options in technology and channels.
MORE opportunity for different positions against rivals.