Week 4 Mkc2210 Competitor Analysis
Week 4 Mkc2210 Competitor Analysis
Week 4 Mkc2210 Competitor Analysis
The purpose is to identify best practices that can be adopted or adapted to improve
your own performance.
Identify industry leaders who are obvious firms to compare your own activities
against
Example: Universities might identify through the means of best research reputations
or best at attracting students to their courses
Organisations might benchmark specific activities e.g. procurements and purchasing
Questions to ask:
What is they do differently from others?
What makes the difference to their operations?
Why are they winners?
STEP 2 -Identifying what aspects of business to benchmark
There are three main sources of competitor information for benchmarking: published
sources, data sharing and interviews
Publish sources
Data sharing
Company reports
Technical trade reports
Industry studies and surveys commissioned by governments
or industry associations
Conferences
Formal contracts or informal
Industry employees and managers of competing firms meet
Direct interviews
Compare and contrast the processes of the identified best in class with the firms
own processes, to identify actions that need to be taken as a consequence, and the
setting up of processes to measure and monitor improvement
Make conclusions if the processes are good/not or needs improvement/ new process
This will help to identify strengths and weaknesses to discuss the main processes
involved in competitor analysis
Lehmann and Winer suggests there are four main stages in competitor analysis
1. Assessing competitors current and future objectives
Understanding the goals and objectives of competitors can give guidance to strategy
development on three levels see figure 8.3
goals also give guide the intensity of competitor activity or rivalry
a companys goals can indicate the type of trade-offs it is likely to make when faced
with adversity
where the intention is profitable coexistence it is often better to compete in areas that
deemed of secondary interest to major companies rather than to compete directly
Detailed analysis of competitors products and services, particularly through the eyes
of customers can be used to highlight competitor weaknesses
Understanding distribution strengths and weaknesses can unfold opportunities
The finances and resources can identify what competitors are going to pursue
Competitor resource profiles can be built in much the same way as a firm conducts an
analysis of its own assets and capabilities.
2. Ability to produce
In manufacturing industries this will include production capacity and utilisation, while
in service industries capacity to deliver the service will be critical
Firms with slack capacity have more opportunities to respond to demand
The connections to have skilled employees on call to produce?
3. Ability to market
4. Ability to finance
5. Ability to manage
What will provoke the greatest and most effective retaliation by the competitor?
Publicity material
Propaganda
Leakages
Intermediaries
Surveillance
Dirty tricks
Double agents
2. The data must be presented in a manner that the recipient can understand and assimilate.
Be simple and concise to convey relevant information when giving to executives. While,
middle and junior managers may require detailed information.
2. Operating practices of the firms in the industry, including product mix, service provided,
barriers to entry and geographical scope
ANALYSIS OF VALUE-ADDED CHAIN
COMPETITIVE FORCES
There are five competitive forces
1. Rivalry among existing firms
The nature and scope of the competition may vary according to maturity of the
industry
Helps determine industry performance and direct and intense form of competition
The power that suppliers may be able to exert on the producers in an industry.
E.g. the high costs of labour exert major pressures on the commercial airline industry
Companies may pursue vertical integration strategies to reduce the bargaining power
of suppliers. And sometimes collaborative relationships are useful to respond to the
needs of both partners
2. Analysis of the value chain distribution channels that link together the various
organisation within the value-added system from suppliers to end users
1. Define the competitive arena for the generic, specific and variant product markets
2. Identify key competitors
3. Evaluate key competitors
4. Anticipate actions by competitors
5. Identify and evaluate potential competitors
Market entry by a new competitor is likely under one or more of these conditions: