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External Environmental Analysis

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Title: External Environmental Analysis


1
Chapter 2
  • External Environmental Analysis

2
Situation Analysis Where are we now?
  • Two considerations
  • Companys external ormacro-environment (opps
    threats
  • Industry and competitive conditions
  • Companys internal ormicro-environment
    (strengths weaknesses)
  • Competencies, capabilities, resource strengths
    and weaknesses, and competitiveness

3
Fig. 2.1 From Thinking Strategically to
Choosing a Strategy
4
Fig. 2.2 The Components of a Companys
Macro-Environment
Auto Companies?
5
Scanning the External Environment

Analysis of Societal Environment

Economic, Sociocultural, Technological,
Political-Legal Factors
Market

Analysis
Competitor

Community

Analysis
Analysis
Supplier

Analysis
Selection of

Strategic Factors

Governmental

Interest Group

Analysis
Analysis
Opportunities

Threats
6
8 Key Questions Analyzing the Industry and
Competitive Environment
  • What are the industrys strategy-shaping economic
    features? (Examine Economics of the Environment
    Industry)
  • What kinds of competitive forces are industry
    members facing, and how strong is each force?
    (Construct a Porters 5 Forces model)
  • What forces are driving changes in the industry,
    and what impact will these changes have? Where
    should priorities be placed? Occurrence vs.
    Impact (Construct a Priorities Matrix)
  • What market positions do industry rivals occupy?
    (Construct a Strategic Map)
  • What strategic moves are rivals likely to make
    next? (Intell SWOT)
  • What are the key factors for future success?
    Rival comparison (Construct an Industry Matrix)
  • What are the opportunities and threats?
    (Construct an EFAS)
  • Does the outlook for the industry present the
    company with sufficiently attractive prospects
    for profitability? (Decisions Stay in the
    industry or enter the industry-GE Business Screen)

7
Question 1 What Are theIndustrys Dominant
Economic Traits?
Oil Companies?
  • Market size and growth rate
  • Position in life cycle
  • Number of rivals
  • Buyer needs and requirements
  • Production capacity
  • Pace of technological change
  • Prevalence of vertical integration
  • Product innovation
  • Degree of product differentiation
  • Scope of competitive rivalry
  • Economies of scale
  • Experience and learning-curve effects
  • Industry profitability

8
Question 2 What Is Competition Like and
How Strong Are the Competitive Forces?
  • Objectives are to identify
  • Main sources of competitive forces
  • Minimize/control neg. force and Strengthen
    advantage
  • Key analytical tool
  • Five Forces Model of Competition

9
Fig. 2.3 The Five ForcesModel of
Competition
10
Analyzing the Five Competitive Forces How
to Do It
  • Step 1 Identify the specific competitive
    pressures associated with each of the five forces
  • Step 2 Evaluate the strength of each
    competitive force -- fierce, strong, moderate, or
    weak?
  • Step 3 Consider the overall patternof
    competition and collective impact of all five
    forces
  • Step 4 Develop ways to blunt negative forces and
    to take advantage of controlled forces

11
Rivalry Among Competing Sellers
  • Usually the strongest of the five forces
  • Key factor in determining strength of rivalry
  • How aggressively are rivals using various weapons
    of competition to improve their market positions
    and performance?
  • Competitive rivalry is a combativecontest
    involving
  • Offensive actions
  • Defensive countermoves

12
What Are the TypicalWeapons 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

13
What Causes Rivalry to be Stronger?
  • Competitors engage in frequent and aggressive
    launches of new offensives to gain sales and
    market share
  • Slow market growth
  • Number of rivals increases and rivals are of
    equal size and competitive capability
  • Buyer costs to switch brands are low
  • Industry conditions tempt rivals to use price
    cuts or other competitive weapons to boost volume
  • A successful strategic move carries a big payoff
  • Diversity of rivals increases in terms of
    visions, objectives, strategies, resources, and
    countries of origin
  • Strong rivals outside the industry acquire weak
    firms in the industry and use their resources to
    transform the new firms into major market
    contenders

14
Competitive Force of Potential Entry
  • Seriousness of threat depends on
  • Size of pool of entry candidatesand available
    resources
  • Barriers to entry
  • Reaction of existing firms
  • Evaluating the threat of entryinvolves assessing
  • How formidable entry barriers are for each type
    of potential entrant and
  • Attractiveness of growth and profit prospects

15
Common Barriers to Entry
  • Sizable economies of scale
  • Cost and resource disadvantages independent of
    size
  • Brand preferences and customer loyalty
  • Capital requirements and/or otherspecialized
    resource requirements
  • Access to distribution channels
  • Regulatory policies
  • Tariffs and international trade restrictions

16
Competitive Force ofSubstitute Products
Concept
  • Substitutes matter when customers are attracted
    to the products of firms in other industries

Examples
  • Eyeglasses and contact lens vs. laser surgery
  • Sugar vs. artificial sweeteners
  • Newspapers vs. TV vs. Internet

17
How to Tell Whether SubstituteProducts Are
a Strong Force
  • Whether substitutes arereadily available and
    attractively priced
  • Whether buyers view substitutes as being
    comparable or better
  • How much it costs end users to switch to
    substitutes

18
Competitive Pressures From Suppliersand
Supplier-Seller Collaboration
  • Whether supplier-seller relationships represent a
    weak or strongcompetitive force depends on
  • Whether suppliers can exercise sufficient
    bargaining leverage to influence terms of supply
    in their favor
  • Extent and competitive importance of
    collaborative partnerships between one or more
    sellers and their suppliers

19
When Is the Bargaining Powerof Suppliers
Stronger?
  • Industry members incur high costs in switching
    their purchases to alternative suppliers
  • Needed inputs are in short supply
  • Supplier provides a differentiated input that
    enhances the quality of performance ofsellers
    products or is a valuable part ofsellers
    production process
  • There are only a few suppliers of a specific
    input
  • Some suppliers threaten to integrate forward

20
Competitive Pressures Collaboration Between
Sellers and Suppliers
  • Sellers are forging strategic partnershipswith
    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

21
Competitive Pressures From Buyersand
Seller-Buyer Collaboration
  • Whether seller-buyer relationships represent a
    weak or strongcompetitive force depends on
  • Whether buyers have sufficient bargaining
    leverage to influence terms of sale in their
    favor
  • Extent and competitive importance of seller-buyer
    strategic partnerships in the industry

22
Competitive Pressures Collaboration Between
Sellers and Buyers
  • Partnerships are an increasingly important
    competitive element in business-to-business
    relationships
  • Collaboration may result inmutual benefits
    regarding
  • Just-in-time deliveries
  • Order processing
  • Electronic invoice payments
  • Data sharing
  • Competitive advantage potential may accrue to
    sellers doing the best job of managing
    seller-buyer partnerships

23
Strategic Implications of theFive
Competitive Forces
  • Competitive environment is unattractive from the
    standpointof earning good profits when
  • Rivalry is strong
  • Entry barriers are lowand entry is likely
  • Competition from substitutes is
    strong
  • Suppliers and customers have considerable
    bargaining power

24
Coping With theFive Competitive Forces
  • Objective is to craft a strategy
  • To insulate firm fromcompetitive pressures
  • To initiate actions to produce a sustainable
    competitive advantage, placing added pressure on
    rivals
  • Which allows firm to define the business model
    for the industry

25
Question 3 What Impact Will the Drivers
of Change Have on Industry Conditions?
  • Industries change because forces are driving
    industry participants to alter their actions
  • Driving forces are the major underlying
    causes of changing industry and
    competitive conditions

26
Analyzing Driving Forces
  • 1. Identify those forces likely to exert greatest
    influence over next 1 - 3 years
  • Usually no more than 3 - 4 factorsqualify as
    real drivers of change
  • 2. Assess impact
  • Are forces causing demand for productto increase
    or decrease?
  • Are forces acting to make competitionmore or
    less intense?
  • Will forces lead to higher or lowerindustry
    profitability?

27
Common Types of Driving Forces
  • Internet and e-commerce opportunities
  • Increasing globalization of industry
  • Changes in long-term industry growth rate
  • Changes in who buys the product and how they use
    it
  • Product innovation
  • Technological change/process innovation
  • Marketing innovation

28
Common Types of Driving Forces
  • Internet and e-commerce opportunities
  • Increasing globalization of industry
  • Changes in long-term industry growth rate
  • Changes in who buys the product and how they use
    it
  • Product innovation
  • Technological change/process innovation
  • Marketing innovation

29
Common Types of Driving Forces
  • Entry or exit of major firms
  • Diffusion of technical knowledge
  • Changes in cost and efficiency
  • Market shift from standardized to differentiated
    products (or vice versa)
  • Changes in degree of uncertainty and risk
  • Regulatory policies / government legislation
  • Changing societal concerns, attitudes, and
    lifestyles

30
Issues Priority Matrix
31
Question 4 What Are the Market Positions
of Industry Rivals?
  • One technique for revealing the different
    competitive positions of industry rivals is
    strategic group mapping
  • A strategic group consists of those rivals with
    similar competitive approachesin an industry

32
Strategic 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

33
Procedure for Constructing a Strategic Group
Map
  • STEP 1 Identify competitive characteristics
    that differentiate firms in an industry from one
    another
  • STEP 2 Plot firms on a two-variable map using
    pairs of these differentiating characteristics
  • STEP 3 Assign firms that fall in about the same
    strategy space to same strategic group
  • STEP 4 Draw circles around each group, making
    circles proportional to size of groups
    respective share of total industry sales

34
Mapping Strategic Groups in the U.S. Restaurant
Chain Industry
Price
35
Example Strategic Group Mapof Selected
Retail Chains
36
Interpreting Strategic Group Maps
  • Driving forces and competitive pressures often
    favor some strategic groups and hurt others
  • Profit potential of different strategic groups
    varies due to strengths and weaknesses in each
    groups market position
  • The closer strategic groups are on map, the
    stronger the competitive rivalry among member
    firms tends to be

37
Question 5 What Strategic Moves Are Rivals
Likely to Make?
  • A firms best strategic moves are affected by
  • Current strategies of competitors
  • Future actions of competitors
  • Profiling key rivals involves gathering
    competitive intelligence about
  • Current strategies
  • Most recent actions and public announcements
  • Resource strengths and weaknesses
  • Efforts being made to improve their situation
  • Thinking and leadership styles of top executives

38
Competitor Analysis
  • Sizing up strategies and competitive strengths
    and weaknesses of rivals involves assessing
  • Which rival has the best strategy? Which rivals
    appear to have weak strategies?
  • Which firms are poised to gainmarket share, and
    which onesseen destined to lose ground?
  • Which rivals are likely to rank among the
    industry leaders five years from now? Do any
    rivals have strategies and the resources to
    overtake the current industry leader?

39
Considerations Involved inPredicting Moves
of Rivals
  • Which rivals need to increase their unit sales
    and market share? What strategies are rivals
    most likely to pursue?
  • Which rivals have a strong incentive, along with
    resources, to make major strategic changes?
  • Which rivals are good candidates to be acquired?
    Which rivals have the resources to acquire
    others?
  • Which rivals are likely to enter new geographic
    markets?
  • Which rivals are likely to expand their product
    offerings and enter new product segments?

40
Question 6 What Are the Key Factors for
Competitive Success?
  • Competitive factors most affecting every industry
    members ability to prosper
  • Specific strategy elements
  • Product attributes
  • Resources
  • Competencies
  • Competitive capabilities
  • KSFs spell the difference between
  • Profit and loss
  • Competitive success or failure

41
Identifying IndustryKey Success Factors
Major Oil Companies??
  • Pinpointing KSFs involves determining
  • On what basis do customers choose between
    competing brands of sellers?
  • What resources and competitive capabilities does
    a seller need to have to be competitively
    successful?
  • What does it take for sellers to achieve a
    sustainable competitive advantage?
  • KSFs consist of the 3 - 5 major determinants of
    financial and competitive success

42
(No Transcript)
43
Example KSFs for Beer Industry
  • Full 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

44
Example KSFs for Apparel Manufacturing
Industry
  • Appealing designs and color combinations -- to
    create buyer appeal
  • Low-cost manufacturing efficiency -- to keep
    selling prices competitive

45
Industry Matrix
Company A Rating
Company A Weighted Score
Company B Rating
Company B Weighted Score
Key Success Factors
Weight
1
2
3
4
5
6
Total
1.00
46
External Factor Analysis Summary (EFAS)
Maytag as Example
ExternalStrategic Factors
Rating
Weighted Score
Weight
Comments
Opportunities Economic integration of European
Community Demographics favor quality
appliances Economic development of
Asia Opening of Eastern Europe Trend to
Super Stores Threats Increasing government
regulations Strong U.S. competition Whirlpool
and Electrolux strong globally New product
advances Japanese appliance companies Total
Scores
.20 .10 .05 .05 .10 .10 .10 .15 .05 .10
4 5 1 2 2 4 4 3 1 2
.80 .50 .05 .10 .20 .40 .40 .45 .05
.20
Acquisition of Hoover Maytag quality Low
Maytag presence Will take time Maytag weak in
this channel Well positioned Well
positioned Hoover weak globally Questionable Only
Asian presence is Australia
1
2
3
4
5
1.00
3.15
47
Question 7 Does the IndustryPresent an
Attractive Opportunity?
Objective
  • Develop conclusions about whether theindustry
    and competitive environment is attractive or
    unattractive for earning good profits

Principle
A firm uniquely well-suited in an otherwise
unattractive industry can, under certain
circumstances, still earn unusually good profits
48
Factors to Consider inAssessing Industry
Attractiveness
  • Industrys market size and growth potential
  • Whether competitive forces are conducive to
    rising/falling industry profitability
  • Whether industry profitability will be favorably
    or unfavorably impacted by driving forces
  • Degree of risk and uncertainty in industrys
    future
  • Severity of problems facing industry
  • Firms competitive position in industry vis-à-vis
    rivals
  • Firms potential to capitalize on vulnerabilities
    of weaker rivals
  • Whether firm has sufficient resources to defend
    against unattractive industry factors

49
Core ConceptAssessing Industry Attractiveness
The degree to which an industry is attractive or
unattractive is not the same for all industry
participants and all potential entrants. The
opportunities an industry presents depends partly
on a companys ability to capture them.
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