Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Chapter 4
ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS
1
Content
1. Internal Environmental Analysis
◦ Strength-Weakness Analysis
2. Value Chain Analysis
3. External Environmental Analysis
◦ General (PESTEL/STEPEL)
◦ Opportunity- Threats Analysis
2
Outcomes From External & Internal Environmental
Analyses
Examine unique
Examine resources, capabilities &
opportunities & competencies –
threats
sustainable
competitive advantage
3
The Internal Environment
4
Internal Analysis of the Organization
As shown in the previous diagram an analysis of
the internal environment enables an organization
determine what it can do - that is, the actions
permitted by its unique resources, capabilities
and core competencies.
The proper matching of what a firm can do with
what it might do allows the development of
strategic intent, the pursuit of strategic mission
and formulation of strategies.
5
cont’d …
Strengths:
Strength is a resource, skill, or other advantage
relative to competitors and the needs of the
markets a firm serves or expects to serve.
Itis a distinctive competence that gives the firm a
comparative advantage in the market place.
Strengths may exist with regard to financial
resources, image, market leadership,
buyer/supplier relations etc.
6
cont’d …
Weaknesses:
7
Competitive Advantage
When a firm sustains profits that exceed the
average for its industry, the firm is said to possess
a competitive advantage over its rivals. The goal
of much of business strategy is to achieve a
sustainable competitive advantage.
8
cont’d …
Michael Porter identified two basic types of
competitive advantage:
Cost advantage
Differentiation advantage
A competitive advantage exists when the firm is
able to deliver the same benefits as competitors
but at a lower cost (cost advantage), or deliver
benefits that exceed those of competing products
(differentiation advantage). Thus, a competitive
advantage enables the firm to create superior
value for its customers and superior profits for
itself.
9
Resources
Resources are the firm-specific assets useful for
creating a cost or differentiation advantage and
that few competitors can acquire easily.
The following are some examples of such
resources:
Patents and trademarks
Proprietary know-how
Installed customer base
Reputation of the firm
Brand equity
10
Capabilities
Capabilities refer to the firm's ability to utilize its
resources effectively. An example of a capability is
the ability to bring a product to market faster than
competitors.
11
Core Competencies
The firm's resources and capabilities together
form its core competencies. These competencies
enable innovation, efficiency, quality, and
customer responsiveness, all of which can be
leveraged to create a cost advantage or a
differentiation advantage i.e. core competencies
serve as sources of competitive advantage.
12
Cont’d …
13
Cont’d …
14
cont’d …
For building core competencies two conceptual
tools or frameworks might be available as firms
search for competitive advantage:
Value chain analysis, which is a framework for
determining which value creating competencies
should be maintained, upgraded, & developed and
which should be outsourced.
Determining which of the firm’s resources &
capabilities are core competencies using the four
criteria: valuable, rare, inimitable, non-
substitutable
15
The Process of Internal Analysis
The process of internal analysis of an organization involves
four basic steps:
1. Developing a profile of financial, physical,
organizational, human & technological resources
2. Determining the key success requirement of the
product/market segments in which the organization
competes or might compete
3. Comparing the resource profile to the key success
requirements to determine the strengths & weaknesses
4. Comparing the strengths & weaknesses of the
organization with those of its major competitor’s
16
The Functional Approach for Internal
Analysis
The simplest way to begin an analysis of a
corporation’s value chain is by carefully
examining its traditional functional areas for
potential strengths and weaknesses.
Functional resources include not only the
financial, physical, and human assets in each area,
but also the ability of the people in each area to
formulate and implement the necessary functional
objectives, strategies, and policies.
17
cont’d …
The resources include the knowledge of
analytical concepts and procedural techniques
common to each area as well as the ability of the
people in each area to use them effectively.
18
Value Creation
Value consists of the performance characteristics
and attributes provided by companies in the form
of goods or services for which customers are
willing to pay.
19
cont’d …
Categories of value:
Value is low price
Value is what is wanted
Value is the quality received for the price paid
20
cont’d …
The Generic Building Blocks of Competitive
Advantage
Superior efficiency - the quantity of inputs that it
takes to produce a given output
Superior quality - customer-perceived value in
the attributes of products/services, reliability etc.
Superior innovation - anything new or novel,
uniqueness
Superior customer responsiveness - identifying &
satisfying the needs of customers, customization
21
4.2. Value Chain Analysis
The value chain was described and popularized by
Michael Porter in his 1985 in Competitive
Advantage: Creating and Sustaining Superior
Performance.
A value chain is a systematic way of viewing the
series of activities a firm performs to provide a
product to its customers.
It allows the firm to understand the parts of its
operations that create value & those that do not.
22
cont’d …
Itis a template that firms use to understand their
cost position & identify multiple means of
implementation for a chosen business-level
strategy
The value chain categorizes the generic value-
adding activities of an organization
The "primary activities" Represent the sequence
of bringing materials into the business, converting
them into final products, making it available to the
customers and proving after sale support to the
consumer.
They include: inbound logistics, production,
outbound logistics, sales and marketing, and after
sales service
23
cont’d …
The "support activities" include: firm
infrastructure management, HRM, R&D, and
procurement.
The most important thing is that the cost & value
drivers should be identified for each value
activity
Thus, the ultimate goal is to maximize value
creation while minimizing costs.
24
cont’d …
Each of an organization’s product lines has its
own distinctive value chain. Because most
organizations make several different products or
services, an internal analysis of the firm involves
analyzing a series of different value chains.
The systematic examination of individual value
activities can lead to a better understanding of an
organization’s strengths and weaknesses.
25
2.The External Environment
26
External Environmental Analysis
27
cont’d …
OPPORTUNITIES:
An opportunity is a major favorable situation in a
firm’s environment.
Identification of:
30
The General Environment
Analysis of the general environment is focused on
its future impacts on firm’s performance.
In this respect, the awareness & understanding of
an increasingly turbulent, complex & global
general environment is critical.
The general environment influences the firm’s
strategic options & the decisions made in light of
this.
31
Cont’d…
A scan of the external general environment in
which the firm operates can be expressed in terms
of the following factors:
Political; Economic; Social; Technological
The acronym PEST (or sometimes rearranged as
"STEP") is used to describe a framework for the
analysis of these external general environmental
factors.
Firms also add one more E to the PEST analysis
and conduct PESTE analysis to address the
growing interest on Ecological factors.
32
Economic Factors:
Economic assessment must address:
The overall economic forecast and the likely
funding stream that will be available.
The international and national forces that can
affect the economic well being of the
organization should be analyzed.
33
cont’d …
Some key economic variables:
Availability of credit
Level of disposable income
Interest rates
Inflation rates
Unemployment trends
Consumption patterns
Stock market trends
Import/Export factors
Demand shifts
Price fluctuations
Fiscal policies
Tax rates
34
Political Factors:
Political factors define the legal and regulatory
parameters of organizations’ operation.
There are laws that could restrict the potential
profits of businesses: fair trade decisions, anti-
trust laws, tax programs, minimum wage
legislation, pollution & pricing policies, etc.
Other political actions aimed at protecting
employees, customers, the general public, and
the environment.
35
cont’d …
There are also political actions that are designed
to benefit and protect organizations: patent laws,
government subsidies, and product research
grants.
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
stockpiles of agricultural products will profoundly
affect the viability of the strategies of the firms.
36
cont’d …
Customer function: government demand for
products and services can create, sustain,
enhance, or eliminate many market opportunities.
Competitive function: the government can
operate as an almost unbeatable competitor in the
market place.
Thus, knowing of government’s strategies can
help a firm avoid unfavorable confrontation
with the government as a competitor.
37
cont’d …
Some key Political (Gov’tal & legal) variables
Tax laws
Environmental protection laws
Level of government subsidies
Antitrust legislation
Terrorist activities
Import/Export regulations
Fiscal & monetary policies
Size of Government budget
Local, state & national elections
38
Social Factors:
These factors include the beliefs, values,
attitudes, opinions, and life style of persons
depending up on cultural, demographic,
religious, and ethnic conditioning.
39
cont’d …
Some key socio-cultural variables:
Changing work values
Ethical standards
Growth rate of population
Life expectancies
Rate of family formation
Consumer activism
Geographic shifts in population
Attitudes towards business
Average level of education
Attitudes towards leisure time
40
Technological Factors:
Organizations must strive to understand the existing
scientific or technological advances:
To avoid obsolescence and promote innovation, the
organization must be conscious of technological
changes that could affect its operation
It should understand that new technologies might
require new operation systems and bring about
sudden and dramatic effect on an organization’s
environment.
41
cont’d …
Intelligible technological adaptations can suggest
possibilities for new products, improvements in
existing products, or in manufacturing and
marketing techniques
42
Ecological Factors
Reading Assignment
Refer books and discuss the Ecological/
environment factors with your colleagues.
43
The SWOT Matrix
A firm should not necessarily pursue the more
lucrative opportunities.
Rather, it may have a better chance at developing
a competitive advantage by identifying a fit
between the firm's strengths and upcoming
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. The SWOT matrix is shown below:
44
cont’d …
Strengths Weaknesses
Opportunities
S-O W-O
strategies strategies
46