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GE Matrix

The McKinsey/GE Matrix is a product portfolio analysis tool that analyzes the relative attractiveness of a company's products by plotting them on a grid based on business strengths and industry attractiveness. Unlike the BCG Box, the McKinsey/GE Matrix uses market attractiveness instead of growth to evaluate industries and competitive strength instead of market share to evaluate product positions. Factors that determine market attractiveness include market size, growth, profitability, and competition, while factors for competitive strength include assets, brand, market share, costs, innovation, and resources.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
527 views

GE Matrix

The McKinsey/GE Matrix is a product portfolio analysis tool that analyzes the relative attractiveness of a company's products by plotting them on a grid based on business strengths and industry attractiveness. Unlike the BCG Box, the McKinsey/GE Matrix uses market attractiveness instead of growth to evaluate industries and competitive strength instead of market share to evaluate product positions. Factors that determine market attractiveness include market size, growth, profitability, and competition, while factors for competitive strength include assets, brand, market share, costs, innovation, and resources.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The McKinsey / General Electric Matrix

General Electric Matrix (GE)


a product portfolio analysis 3 x 3 matrix. It uses business strengths and industry attractiveness as it criteria to
analyse the relative attractiveness of its portfolio of products which are plotted on the grid.

The McKinsey/GE Matrix overcomes a number of the disadvantages of the BCG Box. Firstly, market
attractiveness replaces market growth as the dimension of industry attractiveness, and includes a broader range
of factors other than just the market growth rate. Secondly, competitive strengthreplaces market share as the
dimension by which the competitive position of each SBU is assessed.

The diagram below illustrates some of the possible elements that determine market attractiveness and competitive
strength by applying the McKinsey/GE Matrix to the UK retailing market:

1
Factors that Affect Market Attractiveness

Whilst any assessment of market attractiveness is necessarily subjective, there are several factors which can help
determine attractiveness. These are listed below:

- Market Size
- Market growth
- Market profitability
- Pricing trends
- Competitive intensity / rivalry
- Overall risk of returns in the industry
- Opportunity to differentiate products and services
- Segmentation
- Distribution structure (e.g. retail, direct, wholesale

Factors that Affect Competitive Strength

Factors to consider include:

- Strength of assets and competencies


- Relative brand strength
- Market share
- Customer loyalty
- Relative cost position (cost structure compared with competitors)
- Distribution strength
- Record of technological or other innovation
- Access to financial and other investment resources

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