Environmental Scanning
Environmental Scanning
BUSINESS
ENVIRONMENT
ANALYSIS
Environmental Scanning
Before an organization can begin strategy
formulation, it must scan the external
environment to identify possible
opportunities and threats and its internal
environment for strengths and
weaknesses.
Environmental scanning
the monitoring, evaluation, and
dissemination of information relevant to the
organizational development of strategy
Identifying External
Environmental Variables
In undertaking environmental scanning, strategic
managers must first be aware of the many
variables within a corporation’s natural, societal,
and task environments
Natural environment
includes physical resources, wildlife and climate that
are an inherent part of existence on Earth
form an ecological system of interrelated life
Changes in the natural environment usually affect a
business corporation first through its impact on the
societal environment in terms of resource availability
and costs and then upon the task environment in
terms of the growth or decline of particular industries.
Identifying External
Environmental Variables
Societal environment
mankind’s social system that includes
general forces that do not directly touch on
the short-run activities of the organization,
but that can influence its long-term
decisions
economic, technological, political-legal and
sociocultural
Identifying External
Environmental Variables
Task environment
those elements or groups that directly affect a
corporation and, in turn, are affected by it
government, local communities, suppliers,
competitors, customers, creditors, unions,
special interest groups/trade associations
A corporation’s task environment is typically
the industry within which the firm operates.
Industry analysis (popularized by Michael
Porter) refers to an in-depth examination of key
factors within a corporation’s task
environment.
Scanning the Societal Environment:
STEEP Analysis
STEEP Analysis
monitoring trends in the societal and
natural environments
sociocultural, technological, economic,
ecological and political-legal forces
Some Important Variables in the Societal
Environment
Economies of scale
Product differentiation
Capital requirements
Switching costs
Access to distribution
channels
Cost disadvantages
independent of size
Government policies
Rivalry among Existing
Firms
In most industries, corporations are
mutually dependent.
A competitive move by one firm can be
expected to have a noticeable effect on
its competitors and thus may cause
retaliation.
Rivalry among Existing
Firms
According to Porter, intense rivalry is related to the
presence of several factors, including:
Number of competitors: When competitors are
few and roughly equal in size, they watch each other
carefully to make sure that they match any move by
another firm with an equal countermove.
Rate of industry growth: Any slowing in
passenger traffic tends to set off price wars in the
airline industry because the only path to growth is to
take sales away from a competitor.
Product or service characteristics: A product
can be very unique, with many qualities
differentiating it from others of its kind or it may be a
Rivalry among Existing
Firms…
Amount of fixed costs: Because airlines must fly
their planes on a schedule, regardless of the number
of paying passengers for any one flight, they offer
cheap standby fares whenever a plane has empty
seats.
Capacity: If the only way a manufacturer can
increase capacity is in a large increment by building a
new plant, it will run that new plant at full capacity to
keep its unit costs as low as possible—thus producing
so much that the selling price falls throughout the
industry.
Height of exit barriers: Exit barriers keep a
company from leaving an industry.
Threat of Substitute
Products or Services
Substitute product
a product that appears to be different but
can satisfy the same need as another
product
The identification of possible substitute
products means searching for products
that can perform the same function,
even though they have a different
appearance.
The Bargaining Power of
Buyers
Bargaining power of buyers
ability of buyers to force prices down,
bargain for higher quality and play
competitors against each other
A buyer or a group of buyers is powerful if
some of the following factors hold true:
Large purchases, backward integration,
alternative suppliers, low cost to change
suppliers, product represents a high
percentage of buyer’s cost, buyer earns low
profits, product is unimportant to buyer
The Bargaining Power of
Suppliers
Suppliers can affect an industry through their
ability to raise prices or reduce the quality of
purchased goods and services.
Supplier or supplier group is powerful if some
of the following factors apply:
Industry is dominated by a few companies
Unique product or service
Substitutes are not readily available
Ability to forward integrate
A purchasing industry buys only a small portion
of the supplier group’s goods and services and
is thus unimportant to the supplier
Relative Power of Other Stakeholders
Resources
an organization’s assets and are thus the
basic building blocks of the organization
tangible, intangible
Capabilities
refer to a corporation’s ability to exploit its
resources
consist of business processes and routines
that manage the interaction among
resources to turn inputs into outputs
A Resource-Based Approach
to Organizational Analysis…
Core competency
a collection of competencies that cross
divisional boundaries, is wide-spread
throughout the corporation and is something
the corporation does exceedingly well
When core competencies are superior to
those of the competition, they are called
distinctive competencies.
Distinctive competency
core competencies that are superior to those
of the competition
VRIO Framework of Analysis
Barney, in his VRIO framework of analysis,
proposes four questions to evaluate a firm’s
competencies:
1. Value: Does it provide customer value and
competitive advantage?
2. Rareness: Do no other competitors possess it?
3. Imitability: Is it costly for others to imitate?
4. Organization: Is the firm organized to exploit
the resource?
If the answer to each of these questions is yes for a
particular competency, it is considered to be a
strength and thus a distinctive competence.
Using Resources to Gain Competitive
Advantage
Downstream
Center of gravity
the part of the chain that is most important
to the company and the point where its
core competencies lie
Corporate Value Chain
Analysis
Primary activities Support activities
Strategic
Conglome
Business
rate
Units
Basic Organizational
Structures
Basic
organizatio
nal
structures
Corporate Culture:
The Company Way
Corporate culture
the collection of beliefs, expectations and
values learned and shared by a
corporation’s members and transmitted
from one generation of employees to
another.
Functions of Corporate
Culture
1. Conveys a sense of identity for
employees
2. Generates employee commitment
3. Adds to the stability of the organization
as a social system
4. Serves as a frame of reference for
employees to understand
organizational activities and as a guide
for behavior
Corporate Culture:
The Company Way
Cultural intensity
the degree to which members of a unit
accept the norms, values and other
cultural content associated with the unit
shows the culture’s depth
Cultural integration
the extent to which units throughout the
organization share a common culture
culture’s breadth
Strategic Marketing Issues
Market position
refers to the selection of specific areas for
marketing concentration and can be expressed
in terms of market, product and geographic
locations
Market position deals with the question,
“Who are our customers?”
Marketing mix
the particular combination of key variables
under a corporation’s control that can be used to
affect demand and to gain competitive
advantage
Brand and Corporate
Reputation
Brand
a name given to a company’s product
which identifies that item in the mind of the
consumer
Corporate brand
a type of brand in which the company’s
name serves as the brand
Brand and Corporate
Reputation
Corporate reputation
a widely held perception of a company by
the general public
Consists of two attributes:
Stakeholders’ perceptions of quality
of stakeholders
Strategic Financial Issues
Financial leverage
ratio of total debt to total assets
describes how debt is used to increase earnings
available to common shareholders
Capital budgeting
the analyzing and ranking of possible investments
in fixed assets in terms of additional outlays and
receipts that will result from each investment
Hurdle point (some accepted criteria for
example, years to pay back investment, rate of
return or time to break-even point) for the
purpose of strategic decision making.
Strategic Research and Development
Issues
R&D intensity
spending on R&D as a percentage of sales
revenue
principal means of gaining market share in
global competition
Technology transfer
the process of taking new technology from
the laboratory to the marketplace
R&D Mix
Basic R&D
focuses on theoretical problems
Product R&D
concentrates on marketing and is concerned
with product or product packaging
improvements
Engineering R&D
concerned with engineering, concentrating on
quality control and the development of design
specifications and improved production
equipment
Impact of Technological Discontinuity on
Strategy
Technology discontinuity
when a new technology cannot be used
solving
Restructuring work
Human diversity
the mix in the workplace of people from
different races, cultures and backgrounds
provides a competitive advantage
Strategic Information
Systems/Technology Issues
Information systems/technology
contributions to performance:
Automation of back office processes
Development of a competitive
advantage
Strategic Information
Systems/Technology Issues