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External Analysis: The Identification of Opportunities and Threats

The document provides an overview of analyzing external opportunities and threats through frameworks like the competitive forces model, strategic groups, and industry lifecycle analysis. It defines key concepts like industry, sector, market segments, and discusses how to assess the competitive environment using Porter's five forces of competition - the threat of new entrants, power of suppliers and buyers, substitute products, and rivalry among existing competitors. Macroenvironmental factors like economic, technological, demographic and regulatory changes that impact industries are also outlined.

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Israt Jahan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
80 views33 pages

External Analysis: The Identification of Opportunities and Threats

The document provides an overview of analyzing external opportunities and threats through frameworks like the competitive forces model, strategic groups, and industry lifecycle analysis. It defines key concepts like industry, sector, market segments, and discusses how to assess the competitive environment using Porter's five forces of competition - the threat of new entrants, power of suppliers and buyers, substitute products, and rivalry among existing competitors. Macroenvironmental factors like economic, technological, demographic and regulatory changes that impact industries are also outlined.

Uploaded by

Israt Jahan
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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EXTERNAL ANALYSIS: THE IDENTIFICATION OF

OPPORTUNITIES AND THREATS

CHAPTER 2
LEARNING OBJECTIVES

• Understanding Opportunities and Threats

• Competitive Forces Model

• Strategic Group

• Industry Life Cycle Analysis

• PESTLE

2
DEFINING AN INDUSTRY
• Industry: Group of companies offering products or services that
are close substitutes for each other

• Sector: Group of closely related industries

• Market segments - Distinct groups of customers within a


market that can be differentiated on the basis of their:
– Individual attributes
– Specific demands

3
THE COMPUTER SECTOR: INDUSTRIES AND
SEGMENTS

4
5
MARKET SEGMENTS

• Established: Coca-Cola, Pepsi

• Health conscious: Fruit Juices, Sports Drinks

• Premium: Tonic-Water, Canned Smoothies and


Specialty Coffees

2-6
COMPETITIVE FORCES

Source: Based on How Competitive Forces Shape Strategy, by Michael E. Porter, Harvard Business Review, March/April 1979. 7
RISK OF ENTRY BY POTENTIAL
COMPETITORS
Potential competitors

• Companies that are currently not


competing in the industry but have
the potential to do so

8
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
• Economies of Scale
– Reductions in unit costs attributed to a larger output
• Brand Loyalty
– Preference of consumers for the products of
established companies
• Absolute cost advantage
• Enjoyed by incumbents in an industry and that new
entrants cannot expect to match

9
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
• Switching costs
• Costs that consumers must bear to switch from the
products offered by one established company to the
products offered by a new entrant
• Government regulations/deregulations
• Falling entry barriers due to government regulation
results in significant new entry, increase in the intensity
of industry competition, and lower industry profit rates

10
RIVALRY AMONG ESTABLISHED COMPANIES

• Competitive struggle between companies within an industry to gain


market share from each other
– Intense rivalry among established companies constitutes a strong threat
to profitability
• among established companies within an industry

11
FACTORS THAT IMPACT THE INTENSITY
OF RIVALRY
1. Industry competitive structure
• number and size distribution of companies in it
• Fragmented/Oligopoly/Monopoly

2. Industry Demand
• Booming vs. Declining

3. Cost conditions
• fixed costs vs. profitability

4. Exit barriers
• High exit barriers - Companies become locked into an unprofitable industry
where overall demand is static or declining

12
EXIT BARRIERS

▪ Economic Dependence
▪ High Fixed Costs
▪ Investments
▪ Emotional Factors
▪ Bankruptcy Regulations

13
BARGAINING POWER OF BUYERS
Powerful buyers are a threat for companies
▪ When buyers have multiple options to buy from
▪ When buyers purchase in large quantities
▪ Supplier industry is dependent on them for a major portion of sales
▪ With low switching costs and ability to purchase an input from
several companies at once, buyers can pit companies against each
other
▪ Threat of entering the industry and producing the product

14
BARGAINING POWER OF SUPPLIERS

Suppliers’ ability to raise input prices or


industry costs through various means
▪ Product has no substitutes and is vital to the buyer
▪ Not dependent on one particular industry for their sales
▪ Companies would incur high switching costs if they moved to a
different supplier
▪ Threat of entering customers’ industry
▪ Knowledge that companies cannot enter the suppliers’ industry

15
16
SUBSTITUTE PRODUCTS AND
COMPLEMENTORS

• Substitute products - Those of different businesses that satisfy


similar customer needs
– Limit the price that companies in an industry can charge for their product
• Complementors - Companies that sell products that add value to the
other products
– Strong complementors - Provide a increased opportunity for creating
value
– Weak complementors - Slow industry growth and limit profitability

17
STRATEGIC GROUPS WITHIN INDUSTRIES

• Companies in an industry differ in the way they strategically


position products in the market
• Product positioning is determined by the:
– Product quality, distribution channels and market segments served
– Technological leadership and customer service
– Pricing and advertising policy
– Promotions offered

Example: Rolls Royce, Aston Martin, Bentley fall under the same
strategic group.

18
STRATEGIC GROUPS IN THE COMMERCIAL
AEROSPACE INDUSTRY

19
IMPLICATIONS OF STRATEGIC
GROUPS

• Since all companies in a strategic group pursue a similar strategy:


– Customers view them as direct substitutes for each other
– Immediate threat to a company are rivals within its own strategic group
• Different strategic groups have different relationships to each of the
competitive forces

20
STAGES IN THE INDUSTRY LIFE CYCLE

21
EMBRYONIC INDUSTRY
• Development stage
• Growth is slow owing to:
– Buyer’s unfamiliarity with the product and poor distribution
channels
– High prices due to companies’ inability to reap significant scale
economies
• Barriers to entry are based on access to technological
expertise rather than economies of scale or brand loyalty
• Rivalry is based on
– Creating awareness, setting distribution and designing the
perfect product

22
GROWTH INDUSTRY

• First-time demand expands rapidly due to new customers in the


market
• Prices fall since:
– Scale economies have been attained
– Distribution channels have developed
• Threat from potential competitors is highest at this stage
– Rivalry is low - Companies are able to expand their revenues
without taking market share away from other companies

23
INDUSTRY SHAKEOUT

• Demand approaches saturation levels


– There are fewer potential first-time buyers

• Rivalry between companies intensifies


• Price war results in bankruptcy of inefficient companies and
deters new entry
• Some companies leave-hence shakeout

24
MATURE INDUSTRIES

• Market is totally saturated, demand is limited to replacement demand,


and growth is low or zero
• Barriers to entry increase and threat of entry from potential
competitors decreases
• Industries consolidate and become oligopolies
• Companies try to avoid price wars

25
DECLINING INDUSTRIES

• Growth becomes negative due to:


– Technological substitution
– Social changes
– Demographics
– International competition
• Rivalry among established companies increases
• Falling demand results in excess capacity

26
THE ROLE OF THE MACRO-ENVIRONMENT

27
MACROECONOMIC
FORCES

Growth rate of
Interest rates
the economy

Currency Inflation or
exchange rates deflation rates

28
GLOBAL FORCES

• Globalization
• Global forces
– Domestic markets
– Foreign enterprises
– Emerging markets

29
TECHNOLOGICAL FORCES
• Technological forces - Technological change can:
– Make products obsolete
– Create a host of new product possibilities
– Impact the height of the barrier to entry and reshape industry structure

30
DEMOGRAPHIC FORCES
• Demographic forces - Outcomes of changes in the characteristics of a
population
• E.g. Rise in elderly population due to increased life expectancy

31
SOCIAL FORCES
• Social forces - Way in which
changing social morals and values
affect an industry
– More working women

32
POLITICAL FORCES

• Political and legal forces - Outcomes of changes in laws and


regulations

33

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