Title: Chapter 3 Management 6721
1Chapter 3 Management 6721
- Analyzing a Companys External Environment
- and
- Macroenvironmental Analysis (MEA)
2(No Transcript)
3MACROENVIRONMENTAL SEGMENTS
- POLITICAL
- Special Interest Groups
- Regulatory
- SOCIAL
- Demographics
- Life-styles
- Values
PTE
- TECHNOLOGICAL
- Pacing
- Key
- Base
- ECONOMIC
- Cyclical
- Structural
4MEA 3 Goals
- Identify and Understand existing and potential
changes in the Macroenvironment - Integrate relevant environmental information into
the organizations decision-making process - Stimulate Strategic Thinking (develop, evaluate,
and select strategic alternatives a strategic
decision
5MACROENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS (MEA)
Competition
Natural Environment
TASK ENV
Public Image
Customers
3
Regulatory (Government / Courts)
Economic Conditions
PTE
Suppliers
Special Interest Groups
Labor Market (Critical Skill) Availability
Technology Criticality Rate of Change
6ENVIRONMENTAL ? ORGANIZATIONAL LINK FRAMEWORK
PERCEIVED TASK ENVIRONMENT
FIRM PERFORMANCE
STRATEGY
STRUCTURE
RESOURCE VALUATION (/-)
7ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT AND UNCERTAINTY
8Common Types of Driving Forces MEA Segments
- Increasing globalization of industry (All
Sectors) - Changes in cost and efficiency (Economic)
- Market shift from standardized to differentiated
products (or vice versa) (Technology) - New regulatory policies and/or government
legislation (Political) - Changing societal concerns, attitudes, and
lifestyles (Social) - Changes in degree of uncertainty and risk (All
Sectors)
9Substitute Products (of firms in other industries)
Rivalry Among Competing Sellers
Suppliers of Key Inputs
Buyers
Potential New Entrants
10The Five Forces Model of Competition (Fig.
3.3)
11Typical Weapons for Competing?
- Vigorous price competition
- More or different performance features
- Better product performance
- Higher quality
- Stronger brand image and appeal
- Wider selection of models and styles
- Bigger/better dealer network
- Low interest rate financing
- Higher levels of advertising
- Stronger product innovation capabilities
- Better customer service
- Stronger capabilities to provide buyers with
custom-made products
12Common Barriers to Entry
- Sizable economies of scale
- Cost and resource disadvantages independent of
size - Brand preferences and customer loyalty
- Capital requirements and/or other specialized
resource requirements - Access to distribution channels
- Regulatory policies
- Tariffs and international trade restrictions
13Competitive Pressures Collaboration Between
Sellers and Suppliers
- Sellers are forging strategic partnership with
select suppliers to - Reduce inventory and logistics costs
- Speed availability of next-generation components
- Enhance quality of parts being supplied
- Squeeze out cost savings for both parties
- Competitive advantage potential may accrue to
sellers doing the best job of managing
supply-chain relationships
14Power of Buyers
- Who are the Buyers?
- Can they force lower prices, higher quality
and service, or play competitors against one
another? - Based on two issues
- 1. Price sensitivity
- purchase is a large portion of costs
- no differentiation
- if they exist in a competitive, low profit
industry - 2. Whether buyers can bargain down prices
- few buyers
- buyers are knowledgeable
- low switching costs
- backward integration is a valid threat
15Managing Buyer-Supplier Relationships
- Partnerships are an increasingly important
competitive element in business-to-business
relationships - Collaboration may result in mutual benefits
regarding - Just-in-time deliveries
- Order processing
- Electronic invoice payments
- On-line sharing of sales at the cash register
- Competitive advantage may accrue to firms that do
the best job of managing seller-buyer partnerships
16Threat of Substitutes
- Product/service which fulfills similar need
- Price cap
- 3 Questions
- Are they available?
- Price-performance relationship?
- Can we switch?
17Strategic Implications of theFive
Competitive Forces
- Competitive environment is ideal from a
profit-making standpoint when - Rivalry is moderate
- Entry barriers are high and no firm is likely to
enter - Good substitutes do not exist
- Suppliers and customers are in a weak bargaining
position
18- RIVALRY is usually the most powerful of the Five
Forces - How actively and aggressively are rivals
employing competitive weapons in jockeying for a
stronger market position and increasing sales? - Is price competition vigorous?
- Active efforts to improve quality?
- Are rivals racing to offer better performance
features? better customer service? - Lots of advertising/sales promotions?
- Active efforts to build a stronger dealer
network? - Active product innovation?
- Active use of other weapons of rivalry?
19Rivalry What drives it?
- Numerous, equally balanced competitors
- Perceptions of high payoff from competitive
actions - Slow growth, excess capacity
- High fixed, storage, obsolescence costs
- High exit barriers
- Diversity of competitors
- Low switching costs
- Lack of differentiation
20Assessing Rival Market Positions
- One technique to reveal different competitive
positions of industry rivals is strategic group
mapping -
- A strategic group is a cluster of firms in an
industry with similar competitive approaches and
market positions
21Strategic Group Mapping
- Firms in same strategic group have two or more
competitive characteristics in common - Have comparable product line breadth
- Sell in same price/quality range
- Emphasize same distribution channels
- Use same product attributes to appeal to similar
types of buyers - Use identical technological approaches
- Offer buyers similar services
- Cover same geographic areas
22National Jewelry Retailers
Cartier Tiffany
Price
Jerrods Marks Morgan
Zales Kay
WalMart K-Mart
Quality
23National Jewelry Retailers
Cartier Tiffany
Nordstroms Sachs
Strategic Groups identify
Price
Burdines Dillards
Jerrods Marks Morgan
Sears JCP
Zales Kay
Target
Pawn Shop Chain-by-the-Foot Carts
WalMart Kmart
Breadth of Product Line
24What Are the Key Factors for Competitive
Success?
- KSFs are those competitive factors most affecting
everyindustry members ability to prosper. They
concern - Specific strategy elements
- Product attributes
- Resources
- Competencies
- Competitive capabilities
- that a company needs to have to be competitively
successful - KSFs are attributes that spell the difference
between - Profit and loss
- Competitive success or failure
25KSFs for Beer Industry
- Utilization of brewing capacity -- to keep
manufacturing costs low - Strong network of wholesale distributors -- to
gain access to retail outlets - Clever advertising -- to induce beer drinkers to
buy a particular brand
26Identifying Key Success Factors (KSFs) - vary by
segment
Automotive Industry