Title: Unit 3 The Enterprise Environment
1Unit 3 The Enterprise Environment
2Market Structures
- Perfect competition
- Or Pure Competition
- Characterized by many customers and many
suppliers of an identical product.
3Characteristics of Perfect Competition
- Many buyers and sellers
- No buyer or seller can control the price
- A homogenous product
- Substitute
- Sufficient knowledge
- Perfect information
- Free entry
- Freedom enter or quit from a market
4- Any example of perfect competition?
5- Imperfect competition
- The characteristics of imperfect competition
6monopoly
- Definition only one firm supplies a product
- Which is given more attention to when markets are
monopolies? - Why do so many companies want to be monopolies?
7True or False
- Monopoly is characterized by a lack of
competition - Monopolies will set a lower price and a higher
level of output than would be set under perfect
competition. - Monopoly prevents innovation.
8Oligopoly
- Definition it is characterized by a few,
dominant suppliers. - A high degree of interdependencies among
suppliers. - Question
- What must suppliers do in order to keep an
identical product at a high price?
9Economic Structures
- Capitalist economy system
- Market economy
- Freedom to own and profit
- Justified profit motive
- Reinforcement by law of private property
- Belief in the worth of the individual.
- Question What are individuals free to do under
capitalism?
10- Marxist economy system
- Command economy
- Equal share and ownership of productive goods
- Profit being evil
- Central planning
- Question How are goods produced and distributed
under Marxist economy?
11- Socialist economy system
- Mixture of the previous two systems
- no economy is pure.
- Questions
- Which two economic systems are in sharp contrast?
- What economic system lays special emphasis on the
value of the individual? - What kind of economic system do you think China
is now under?
12The Entrepreneurial Environment
- What is the entrepreneurial environment?
- What is entrepreneurship?
- What countries do not encourage entrepreneurship?
13- Three factors that encourage entrepreneurship
- The possibility of exercising monopoly power
- Risk taking
- Intrinsic rewards of innovation
14- Questions
- What is the difference between innovation and
invention? - Why are entrepreneurs are forced to keep
searching new ideas and keep innovating? - Why must managers be aware of the various laws
and regulations of the countries that they do
business in?
15The External Environment
16Why
- No organization in a vacuum
- The forces outside could be a double-edge sword
17- External organizational environment
- All elements existing outside and with the
potential to affect the organization.
18- Two layer of external environment
- General environment
- Task environment (specific environment)
19- General environment
- the forces outside organizations boundaries that
can impact it indirectly - Task environment (specific environment)
- The forces closer to the organization that impact
it directly
20External environment
General environment
economic
international
suppliers
Labor market
organization
demographic
legal-political
customers
competitors
Task environment
sociocultural
technological
21The general environment
- It includes
- international
- technological
- sociocultural
- economic
- legal-political
- Population condition
22The General Environment
- General environmental trends and events
- Little ability to predict them
- Even less ability to control them
- Can vary across industries
Demographic
Sociocultural
Political/Legal
Technological
Economic
Global (International)
23International dimension
- Globalization
- Think internationally
24Global Segment
- Increasing global trade
- Currency exchange rates
- Emergence of the Indian and Chinese economies
- Trade agreements among regional blocs (NAFTA, EU,
ASEAN) - Creation of WTO (decreasing tariffs/free trade in
services)
Demographic
Sociocultural
Political/Legal
Technological
Economic
Global (International)
25Managing in a Global Environment
- Challenges
- Coping with the sudden appearance of new
competitors - Acknowledging cultural, political, and economic
differences - Dealing with increased uncertainty, fear, and
anxiety - Adapting to changes in the global environment
26Technological Dimension
- It includes scientific and technological
advancements - Latest advancement of technology
- Computer
- Internet
- video cameras
- digital products
- ATM
- mobile phone
27Technological Segment
- Genetic engineering
- Emergence of Internet technology
- Computer-aided design/computer-aided
manufacturing systems (CAD/CAM) - Research in synthetic and exotic materials
- Pollution/global warming
- Miniaturization of computing technologies
- Wireless technology
Demographic
Sociocultural
Political/Legal
Technological
Economic
Global
28- What impact has technology brought to business
life? - SOHO
- PAPERLESS OFFICE
29Sociocultural dimension
- Demographic characteristics
- Norms
- Customs
- Values
- Geographical distribution
- Population density
- Age
- education levels
30Sociocultural Segment
- More women in the workforce
- Increase in temporary workers
- Greater concern for fitness
- Greater concern for environment
- Postponement of family formation
Demographic
Sociocultural
Political/Legal
Technological
Economic
Global
31Demographic Segment
- Aging population
- Rising affluence
- Changes in ethnic composition
- Geographic distribution of population
- Greater disparities in income levels
Demographic
Sociocultural
Political/Legal
Technological
Economic
Global
32The Cultural Environment
- National Culture
- The values and attitudes shared by individuals
from a specific country that shape their behavior
and their beliefs about what is important. - May have more influence on an organization than
the organization culture.
33Economic Dimension
- Macro level
- Taxation
- Government spending
- General demand,
- Interest rates
- Exchange rates
- Micro level
- Merger and acquisition
34Economic Segment
- Interest rates
- Unemployment
- Consumer Price index
- Trends in GDP
- Changes in stock market valuations
Demographic
Sociocultural
Political/Legal
Technological
Economic
Global
35The Economic Environment
- Economic Systems
- Market economy
- An economy in which resources are primarily owned
and controlled by the private sector. - Command economy
- An economy in which all economic decisions are
planned by a central government. - Monetary and Financial Factors
- Currency exchange rates
- Inflation rates
- Diverse tax policies
36Legal-political
- Government do everything just for their goals
including influencing the behaviors of enterprise
through law and politics. - Such as
- consumer protection legislation
- product safety requirements
- import and export restriction
- environment protection agency
- Pressure groups
37- The Legal Environment
- Stability or instability of legal and political
systems - Legal procedures are established and followed
- Fair and honest elections held on a regular basis
- Differences in the laws of various nations
- Effects on business activities
- Effects on delivery of products and services
38- Try to analyze the external environment of GDPU
- As a manager, how the external environment will
influence his work?
39How the Environment Affects Managers
- Environmental Uncertainty
- The extent to which managers have knowledge of
and are able to predict change their
organizations external environment is affected
by - Complexity of the environment the number of
components in an organizations external
environment. - Degree of change in environmental components how
dynamic or stable the external environment is.
40Task environment
41Review
- Try to analyze the external environment of GDPU
- As a manager, how the external environment will
influence his work?
42How the Environment Affects Managers
- Environmental Uncertainty
- The extent to which managers have knowledge of
and are able to predict change their
organizations external environment is affected
by - Complexity of the environment the number of
components in an organizations external
environment. - Degree of change in environmental components how
dynamic or stable the external environment is.
43Task Environment
- It includes those sectors that have a direct
working relationship with the organization. - Forces from suppliers, distributors, customers
,competitors and the labor market. - It refers the choices, actions and outcomes a
given user has for a given task.
44Customers
- Definition Those people and organization who
acquire goods or service from the organization
are customers. - Key words frequent purchase relationship
maintaining future - The receiver
45- Broadly speaking, customers can be divided into
two main groups. - Internal customers
- People who work with you.
- External customers
- People who work outside your business.
46- Internal customers
- Fellow workers
- Supervisors
- Managers
- Trainees
- Cleaners
- Part time staff
47- External customers
- Customers
- Suppliers
- Designers
- Service providers
- Contractors
- Sales representatives
- Delivery personnel
48The determiner
- Terms
- Customer needs and satisfaction
- Customer service
- Customer relationship management
- What are the relations between the organization
and customers?
49Competitors
- Definition
- others Seller of a product or service whose
product or service can be used to fill or satisfy
a consumer need (real or imagined) in a market
where other sellers offer products that will also
fill or satisfy the same need.
50Relation between competitors
- Consequence of high level of competition
- Low price
- Little profit
- Cooperation
51- Who is a competitor in business?
- Business competitors are
- Other organizations offering the same product or
service now. - Other organizations offering similar products or
services now. - Organizations that could offer the same or
similar products or services in the future. - Organizations that could remove the need for
a product or service.
52- Competitor analysis has two primary activities
- 1) obtaining information about important
competitors - 2) using that information to predict competitor
behavior.
53- The goal of competitor analysis is to understand
- with which competitors to compete,
- competitors' strategies and planned actions,
- how competitors might react to a firm's
actions, - how to influence competitor behavior to the
firm's own advantage.
54- Can you give some examples of competitors?
55- Competitor analysis has several important roles
in strategic planning - To help management understand their competitive
advantages/disadvantages relative to competitors - To generate understanding of competitors past,
present (and most importantly) future strategies - To provide an informed basis to develop
strategies to achieve competitive advantage in
the future - To help forecast the returns that may be made
from future investments (e.g. how will
competitors respond to a new product or pricing
strategy?
56- What questions should be asked when undertaking
competitor analysis? The following is a useful
list to bear in mind - Who are our competitors?
- What threats do they pose?
- What are the objectives of our competitors?
- What strategies are our competitors pursuing and
how successful are these strategies? - What are the strengths and weaknesses of our
competitors? - How are our competitors likely to respond to any
changes to the way we do business?
57Suppliers
- Definition those providing the organization with
inputs - Managers need to secure reliable input sources
- Managers often prefer to have many, similar
suppliers of each item. - What are the relations between suppliers and the
organization?
58- Suppliers provide organization with inputs
- Suppliers provide raw materials, components, and
even labor. - Working with suppliers can be hard due to
shortages, unions, and lack of substitutes. - Suppliers with scarce items can raise the price
and are in a good bargaining position.
59Labor market
- Definition
- Two factors
- Continuous education and training
- Labor dislocation
60- Distributors organizations that help others to
sell goods. - Compaq Computer first used special computer
stores to sell their computers but later sold
through discount stores to reduce costs. - Some distributors like Wal-Mart have strong
bargaining power. - They can threaten not to carry your product.
61- Theoftware it includes Shareware and software
licensed for use inside campus
62About Task Environment
- Managers can change task environment.
- Try to analyze the task environment of GDPU.
63Terms
- Perfect competition monopoly oligopoly
inflation rate foreign exchange rate consumer
purchasing power unemployment rate interest
rate not-for-profit organization merger
acquisition customer service going bankrupt
continuous investment labor market.
64Managing the Organization Environment
- Managers must measure the complexity of the
environment and rate of environmental change. - Environmental complexity deals with the number
and possible impact of different forces in the
environment. - Managers must pay more attention to forces with
larger impact. - Usually, the larger the organization, the greater
the number of forces managers must oversee. - The more forces, the more complex the mangers
job becomes.
65- Environmental change
- refers to the degree to which forms in the
task and general environments change over time. - Change rates are hard to predict.
- The outcomes of changes are even harder to
identify. - Managers thus cannot be sure that actions taken
today will be appropriate in the future given new
changes.
66Reducing Environmental Impact
- Managers can counter environmental threats by
reducing the number of forces. - Many firms have sought to reduce the number of
suppliers it deals with which reduces
uncertainty. - All levels of managers should work to minimize
the potential impact of environmental forces. - Examples include reduction of waste by first line
managers, determining competitors moves by
middle managers, or the creation of a new
strategy by top managers.
67Boundary Spanning
- Managers must gain access to information needed
to forecast future issues. - Boundary spanning is the practice of relating to
people outside the organization.
68Boundary Spanning Roles
Managers in boundary spanning roles
feedback information to other managers
69Scanning and Monitoring
- Environmental scanning is an important boundary
spanning activity. - Includes reading trade journals, attending trade
shows, and the like. - Gatekeeping the boundary spanner decides what
information to allow into organization and what
to keep out. - Must be careful not to let bias decide what comes
in. - Interorganizational Relations firms need
alliances globally to best utilize resources. - Managers can become agents of change and impact
the environment.
70Change as a 2-way Process
Change in Environment affects
Environment
Organization
Managerial actions impact
71The Organization as an Open System
Output Stage
Conversion Stage
Input Stage
Sales of outputs Firm can then buy inputs
72Systems between org. n env.
Environment
System
Transformation
Outputs
Inputs
Raw materials Human resources Capital Technology
Information
Products services Financial results Information
Human results
Employees work activities Management
activities Technology and operations methods
Environment