Chapter Two The Business Environment
Chapter Two The Business Environment
Chapter Two The Business Environment
Examine unique
Examine resources, capabilities &
opportunities & competencies –
threats
sustainable
competitive advantage
2
The external environment
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External Analysis –steps
Step 1: Environmental scanning – gather
relevant information. It allows managers
to stay up to date and reduce uncertainty
Step 2:Interpret environmental factors –
determine whether the factors are
opportunities or threats. Identify the most
important opportunities and threats
Step 3: Take actions to capitalize
opportunities and minimize threats
External Analysis ...
OPPORTUNITIES:
An opportunity is a major favorable situation in
a firm’s environment.
Identification of
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Why external analysis?
External analysis allows firms to:
◦ Discover threats and opportunities
◦ Make informed decisions as best as possible
◦ Better understand the nature of competition in
an industry
◦ See if above normal profits are likely in an
industry
Key External Forces
External forces can be divided into five
broad categories:
1. Macroeconomic forces
2. Social, cultural, demographic, and natural
environmental forces
3. Political, governmental, and legal forces
4. Technological forces
5. Competitive forces
Relationships Between Key External
Forces and an Organization
1. Economic Forces
Some key economic variables:
Availability of credit
Level of disposable income
Interest rates
Inflation rates
Unemployment trends
Consumption patterns
Import/Export factors
Demand shifts
Price fluctuations
Fiscal policies
Economic forces
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Political, Governmental, and
Legal Forces
Political action can bring about substantial
impact on three governmental functions
that influence the external environment of
firms:
Supplier function: government decision
regarding the accessibility of private
businesses to government-owned natural
resources and products will profoundly
affect the viability of the strategies of the
firms.
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Political, Governmental, and
Legal Forces
Customer function: government demand for
products and services can create, sustain,
enhance, or eliminate many market
opportunities.
In some cases, the firm can overcome a weakness in order to prepare itself
to pursue a compelling opportunity.
To develop strategies that take into account the SWOT profile, a matrix of
these factors can be constructed.
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The SWOT Matrix cont’d …
S-O strategies pursue opportunities that are a
good fit to the company's strengths.
W-O strategies overcome weaknesses to pursue
opportunities.
S-T strategies identify ways that the firm can use
its strengths to reduce its vulnerability to external
threats.
W-T strategies establish a defensive plan to
prevent the firm's weaknesses from making it
highly susceptible to external threats.
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5. Competitive Forces
An important part of an external audit is
identifying rival firms and determining
their strengths, weaknesses, capabilities,
opportunities, threats, objectives, and
strategies
These process can be executed through a
proper analysis of the
operating/immediate environment.
The Immediate Environment
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Analysis of the Industry
An industry is a group of firms
producing products that are close
substitutes
Firms that influence one another
Includes a rich mix of competitive forces
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Analysis of the industry cont’d.
Analysis of the industry environment:
◦ focuses on the factors & conditions
influencing the firm’s profitability in the
industry.
◦ Compared to the general environment, the
industry environment has a more direct
effect on the firm’s strategic
competitiveness & capability of earning
above-average returns
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Industry Analysis …
Industry analysis refers to the analysis
of:
◦ Industry trends as a whole
◦ Competition within the industry
◦ Technologies employed
◦ What it takes to succeed – the key success factors
◦ Comparing the firm, its products, its systems, its
technology etc., with other firms in the industry.
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Nature and Degree Of Competition
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Nature cont’d …
How Competitive Forces Shape Strategy?
◦ The essence of strategy formulation is coping with
competition. Competition exists in the fight for market
share.
◦ Therefore, competition in an industry is rooted in its
underlying economics, and competitive forces.
◦ In light of this, customers, suppliers, potential entrants,
and substitute products are all competitors that may be
more or less prominent or active depending on the
industry type.
◦ Thus, the collective strength of these forces determines
the ultimate profit potential of an industry.
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Nature cont’d …
The weaker the forces collectively the greater the
opportunity for superior performance in the industry
would be.
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Nature cont’d …
Knowledge of these underlying sources of
competitive pressure provides the groundwork for a
strategic plan of action to:
◦ Highlight the critical strengths and weaknesses of
the company
◦ Animate the positioning of the company in its
industry
◦ Clarify the areas where strategic changes may
yield the greatest payoff
◦ Highlight the industry trends as either
opportunities or threats
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Threat of Entry
There are seven major sources of barriers
to entry:
1. Economies of scale
2. Product differentiation
3. Capital requirements
4. Cost disadvantages
5. Access to distribution channels
6. Government policy
7. Expected retaliations 33
Threat of Entry cont’d …
Economies of scale:
Deter entry by forcing the aspirant either to
come in on large scale or accept a cost
disadvantage.
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Threat of Entry cont’d …
Product differentiation:
Brand identification creates a barrier by
forcing entrants to spend heavily to overcome
customer loyalty.
Product differentiation is perhaps the most
important barrier in soft drinks, cosmetics,
and investment banking.
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Threat of Entry cont’d …
Capital requirements:
The need to invest large financial resources
in order to compete, creates a barrier to entry.
Capital is necessary not only for fixed
facilities but also for customer credit,
inventories, and absorbing start-up loses.
The huge capital requirements in certain
fields, such as computer manufacturing and
mineral extraction, limit other entrants.
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Threat of Entry cont’d …
Cost disadvantages independent of scale:
Well-established companies may have cost
advantages not available to potential rivals, no
matter what their size and economies of scale.
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Threat of Entry cont’d …
Government policy:
The government can limit or even foreclose entry
to industries with such controls as license
requirements and limits on access to raw materials.
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Threat of Entry cont’d …
Expected Retaliation
Existing firms might respond in
different ways when new comers enter
in to the market.
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Powerful Suppliers
Suppliers can exert bargaining power
on participants in an industry by
◦ raising prices of inputs or
◦ reducing the quality of purchased
goods and services affecting the
profitability of the industry.
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Powerful Suppliers cont’d …
Supplier power increases when:
◦ Suppliers are large and few in number
◦ Suitable substitute products are not available
◦ Individual buyers are not large customers of suppliers and
there are many buyers
◦ Suppliers’ goods are critical to buyers’ marketplace
success
◦ Suppliers’ products create high switching costs
◦ Suppliers pose a threat to integrate forward into buyers’
industry
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Powerful Buyers
Customers can force down prices, demand higher
quality or more service, and play competitors off
against each other – all at the expense of industry
profits.
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Powerful Buyers cont’d …
Buyer power increases when:
Buyers are large and few in number
Buyers purchase a large portion of an industry’s total
output
Buyers’ purchases are a significant portion of a
supplier’s annual revenues
Buyers can switch to another product without incurring
high switching costs
Buyers pose threat to integrate backward into the
sellers’ industry
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Threat of Substitute Products
The threat of substitute products
increases when:
◦ Buyers face few switching costs
◦ The substitute product’s price is lower
◦ Substitute product’s quality and
performance are equal to or greater than
the existing product
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Rivalry Among Competing Firms
Industry rivalry increases when:
There are numerous or equally balanced
competitors
Industry growth slows or declines
There are high fixed costs or high storage costs
There is a lack of differentiation opportunities or
low switching costs
When the strategic stakes are high
When high exit barriers prevent competitors from
leaving the industry 46
Interpreting Industry Analysis
Intense rivalry
Low profit
among competitors potential
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Interpreting Industry Analysis cont’d …
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Strategic Groups
Definition
A group of firms in an industry following
the same or a similar strategy along the
same strategic dimensions.
Internal competition between strategic
group firms is greater than between firms
outside that strategic group
There is more heterogeneity in the
performance of firms within strategic
groups
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Strategic Groups cont’d …
Strategic dimensions
◦ Extent of technological leadership
◦ Product quality
◦ Pricing policies
◦ Distribution channels
◦ Customer service
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Competitor Analysis
Competitor analysis focuses on each company
against which a firm directly competes.
Analysis of competitors is focused on predicting the
dynamics of competitors' actions, responses &
intentions
Competing firms are keenly interested in
understanding each other’s objectives, strategies,
assumptions and capabilities.
Furthermore, intense rivalry creates a strong need to
understand competitors.
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Competitor Analysis cont’d …
In a competitor analysis, the firm seeks to understand:
What drives the competitor, as shown by its future
objectives.
What the competitor is doing and can do, as revealed
by its current strategy.
What the competitor believes about its own firm and
the industry, as shown by its assumptions.
What the competitor’s capabilities are, as shown by
its strengths and weaknesses.
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Competitor analysis components
Chapter 4 ‐ Industry& Comp Analysis 53
Competitor Analysis cont’d …
Competitor intelligence is used to get data
and information about competing firms.
It can be used to better understand and anticipate
competitor’s objectives, strategies, assumptions and
capabilities.
It helps the firm to prepare an anticipate response
profile for each competitor.
Thus, the result of an effective competitor analysis
helps a firm to understand, interpret and predict its
competitors’ actions and responses.
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Competitor Array
One common and useful technique is constructing a
competitor array. The steps include:
1. Define your industry - scope and nature of the
industry
2. Determine who your competitors are
3. Determine who your customers are and what
benefits they expect
4. Determine what the key success factors are in your
industry
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Competitor Array cont’d …
5. Rank the key success factors by giving each one a
weight - The sum of all the weightings must add
up to one.
6. Rate each competitor on each of the key success
factors
7. Multiply each cell in the matrix by the factor
weighting.
8. Sum columns for a weighted assessment of the
overall strength of each competitor relative to
each other
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End of Chapter
Two