Title: How Competitive Forces Shape Strategy
1How Competitive Forces Shape Strategy
- Learning Objectives
- To understand the importance of environmental
analysis and to become familiar with several
tools to evaluate threats and opportunities
2Evaluating Environmental Threatsand Opportunities
- Origins of the Structure Conduct Performance
Model - Tools to evaluate environmental threats and
opportunities - Industry characteristics analysis
- Stakeholder analysis
- Porters Five Forces Model
- Competitor analysis
- not covered here, but any experience?
3The Structure Conduct Performance Model
Number of competing firms, homogeneity of
products, cost of entry and exit
Industry Structure
Price taking, product differentiation, tacit
collusion, exploit market power
FirmConduct
Firm above, normal, belowSociety social
welfare implications
Performance
4Type of Industry Perfect Competition
Large number of firms, homogeneous products,low
cost of entry and exit
Industry Structure
Price taking
FirmConduct
Firm normalSocial welfare maximized
Performance
Industry Examples?
5Type of Industry Monopolistic Competition
Large number of firms,heterogeneous
products,low cost of entry and exit
Industry Structure
Cost leadership,Product differentiation
FirmConduct
Firm above normalSocial welfare less than
perfect competition
Performance
Industry Examples?
6Type of Industry Oligopoly
Small number of firms,costly entry and exit
Industry Structure
FirmConduct
Many options, including collusion
Firm above normalSocial welfare less than
monopolistic competition
Performance
Industry Examples?
7Type of Industry Monopoly
Only one competing firm,costly entry
Industry Structure
FirmConduct
Uses market power to set prices
Firm above normalSocial welfare less than
oligopoly
Performance
Industry Examples?
8Industry Characteristics Analysis
- Market size
- Market growth rate
- Number and size of rivals
- Scope of rivalry
- Number and size of buyers
- Number and size of suppliers
- Substitute products
- Ease of entry / exit
- Stage of industry evolution
- Distribution channels
- Economies of scale
- Learning curve
- Capacity utilization
- Average industry profitability
- Pace of technological change
What are the characteristics of your industry?
9Stakeholder Analysis
- People or groups who have an interest, claim, or
stake in how well the firm performs - shareholders managers
- employees customers
- suppliers government
- unions community
- general public
- Does your firms strategy address any specific
stakeholders?
10Evaluating Environmental ThreatsPorters Five
Forces Model
What determines the degree of industry
competitionand profitability?
Threat ofentry
Threat of rivalry
Threat ofsuppliers
Threat of buyers
Industry profitability
Threat of substitutes
11Porters Five Forces Model Barriers to Entry
- Economies of scale
- Product differentiation
- Capital requirements
- Cost advantages independent of size
- (Technology, know-how, access to raw
materials, geographic locations, learning curve) - Access to distribution channels
- Government policy
- Switching costs
- Some disagreement among scholars
12Porters Five Forces Model Intensity of Rivalry
- Many competitors
- Similar in size
- Slow rate of industry growth
- Product lacks differentiation
- Capacity added in large increments
- High level of fixed costs
- Exit barriers are high
- Reputation or past history
13Porters Five Forces Model Substitute Products
- Products that appear to be different but satisfy
the same need - Customer switching costs are low
- good examples butter vs. margarine
- calculators vs. slide rules
- tape b/u vs. CD burner
- bad examples Coke vs. Pepsi
- Honda vs. Toyota
14Porters Five Forces Model Bargaining Power of
Buyers/Customers
- Small number of buyers
- Purchase products that are standard or
undifferentiated - Industry products represent a large share of
buyers total cost - Unimportant to final quality of product
- Product does not save the buyer money
- Buyer may integrate backward
15Porters Five Forces Model Bargaining Power of
Suppliers
- Supplier has few competitors
- Supplier offers a unique product
- Substitutes not readily available
- Supplier can integrate forward
- Firm or industry purchases represent small share
of suppliers total sales
16Formulating Strategy Following a 5-Forces Analysis
- According to Porter, once a 5-Forces analysis of
the industry is complete, a strategist is ready
to formulate strategy by - Positioning the company
- Influencing the industry
- Exploiting industry change
- How does these approaches differ?
- When might one be more successful than another?