External Analysis:: The Identification of Opportunities and Threats
External Analysis:: The Identification of Opportunities and Threats
External Analysis:: The Identification of Opportunities and Threats
Two
External
Analysis:
The
Identification of
Opportunities
and Threats
External Analysis
The purpose of external analysis is to identify
the strategic opportunities and threats in the
organization’s operating environment that
will affect how it pursues its mission.
External Analysis requires an assessment of:
Industry environment in which company operates
• Competitive structure of industry
• Competitive position of the company
• Competitiveness and position of major rivals
The country or national environments
in which company competes
The wider socioeconomic or macroenvironment
that may affect the company and its industry
• Social • Legal • Technological
• Government • International
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External Analysis:
Opportunities and Threats
Analyzing the dynamics of the industry in which
an organization competes to help identify:
Opportunities Threats
Conditions in the Conditions in the
environment that a environment that
company can take endanger the integrity
advantage of to and profitability of
become more the company’s
profitable business
Source: Adapted and reprinted by permission of Harvard Business Review. From “How Competitive Forces Shape Strategy,” by
Michael E. Porter, Harvard Business Review, March/April 1979 © by the President and Fellows of Harvard College. All rights reserved.
Industry Shakeout:
Rivalry Intensifies
with growth in
excess capacity
Industry
Structure
revolutionized
by innovation
Periods of long
term stability
Periods of long
term stability
Changes in the
forces in the macro-
environment can
directly impact:
• The Five Forces
• Relative Strengths
• Industry
Attractiveness