Chapter 9 Dealing with the Competition Dr. S. Borna MBA 671.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
External Environment in the Asia Pacific Region
Advertisements

2 External Analysis: The Identification of Industry Opportunities and Threats.
Copyright ©2003 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved. Slide 2-1 The Competitive Environment: Assessing Industry Attractiveness.
Industry Analysis - Porter's Five Forces
External Analysis: The Identification of Opportunities and Threats
External Analysis: The Identification of Opportunities and Threats
A Framework for Industry Analysis
Industry & Competitive Analysis
COMPETITIVE STRATEGY - Dolly Dhamodiwala.
Porter’s Five Forces Michael Porter
Porter’s Five Forces Model of Competition
Objectives Learn how to understand competitors as well as customers via competitor analysis. Learn the fundamentals of competitive marketing strategies.
NBS Strategic Management Division 2004/5 1 SM352 Strategy External Analysis 3 Near Environment.
External Analysis BUSI 7130/7136 Dr. Shook. What’s an Environment? What’s an Environment? Analyzing the Industry Analyzing the Industry v Five Forces.
Competition. Direct Competitors - Firms likely to gain or lose a substantial share of customers from each other over time because they serve the same.
2 Chapter 2: External Analysis: The Identification of Industry Opportunities and Threats BA 469 Spring Term, 2005 Professor Dowling.
2 External Analysis: The Identification of Industry Opportunities and Threats.
Strategic Management: Concepts and Cases
©2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Conducting an Industry Analysis. Seven Questions for Industry Analysis 1. What are the industry dominant economic traits? 2. What competitive forces are.
Strategies for Dealing with Competition Dr rushdy wady.
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT. The Dynamics of Strategic Planning Strategy Strategy –large-scale action plan that sets the direction for an organization Strategic.
External Analysis: The Identification of Industry Opportunities and Threats Chapter 2.
By: Kavita, Chris, and Jake PORTER’S GENERIC STRATEGIES AND FIVE FORCES.
Chapter 2: The External Environment: Opportunities, Threats, Industry Competition and Competitor Analysis Overview: The firm’s external environment.
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 0 in Chapter 8 Chapter 8 Dealing with the Competition PowerPoint.
Strategic Planning Chapters 8: Competition. The Marketing Plan Marketing Strategy Product Promotion Distribution Price Marketing Mix Business Mission.
The Competitive Environment. This session will explore:  The Methodology of an Industry Analysis  Strategic Groups and Market Segments  The Industry.
The Strategy Environment Session 2 Business Strategy.
Objectives Understand how a company identifies its primary competitors and ascertains their strategies. Review how companies design competitive intelligence.
COM333 – IS3 IS and Competition. A number of techniques exists that support the analysis and assessment of Organisations’ competitive position from an.
Business Strategy and Policy
© 2012 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner.
Copyright © 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning All rights reserved. Power Point Presentation by Dr. Leslie A. Korb Georgian Court University.
Strategic Management Coke & Pepsi: Industry Analysis and Firm Performance.
Marketing Revision– Unit 4
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Evaluating a Company’s External Environment.
The Entrepreneurial Process: Model of Competitive Forces Patterns of Entrepreneurship Analytical Tools.
Chapter 8 STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT © Prentice Hall,
Forces Driving Industry Competition. Structural Determinants of the Intensity of Competition Competition in an industry continually works to drive down.
Porter’s five forces Corporate strategy Philip Allan Publishers © 2016.
THE EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT Chapter 2. The Organization Owners & Directors Managers Employees The Task Environment Gov’t agencies Competitors Unions Suppliers.
A Summary of Porter’s Main Points in His Article Created by Samantha Wong, Northeastern University 2009.
MM: Chapter 9 Dealing with the Competition Warin Chotekorakul.
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT II Porter’s five forces module.
The Porter Framework McIntire Investment Institute Presented by Michael Rosete.
©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
INTERNAL INDUSTRY RIVALRY
Porter’s Five Forces Model
Chapter 8 STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT © Prentice Hall,
The External Environment
Creating Competitive Advantage
The Entrepreneurial Process: Model of Competitive Forces
EXTERNAL (TASK) ENVIRONMENTAL SCANNING 1
Porter's Five Forces A MODEL FOR INDUSTRY ANALYSIS
The external environment
Chapter 8 Dealing with the Competition Marketing Managment
Induce your competitors not to invest in those products, markets and services where you expect to invest the most … that is the fundamental rule of strategy.
External Analysis: The Identification of Opportunities and Threats
Strategic Management B O S.
The external environment
Chapter 8 Dealing with the Competition Marketing Managment
Chapter 6 Dealing with the Competition by
STRATEGIC ANALYIS OF BUSINESS
Michael Porter Competitive Strategy
Chapter 8 STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT © Prentice Hall,
5: Competitive Advantage
POWER OF SUPPLIERS IS HIGH WHEN:
Competitive Analysis Most widely used technique for analysing competitors was developed by Michael Porter He believed that when formulating strategy the.
What affects our business from the outside?
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 9 Dealing with the Competition Dr. S. Borna MBA 671

There is nothing more exhilarating than to be shot at without result. Winston Churchill Induce your competitors not to invest in those products, markets and services where you expect to invest the most … that is the fundamental rule of strategy. Bruce Henderson, Founder of BCG

1. Identify relevant Industry and specify strategic groups Industry and competitor analysis process 1. Identify relevant Industry and specify strategic groups 2. Industry structure analysis

3. Examine bases of Competition 4. Individual competitor analysis

Industry attractiveness or unattractiveness and a What is the benefit (s) of industry and competitor analysis? Industry attractiveness or unattractiveness and a firm’s competitive position within an industry have profound impact on strategy formulation.

What do we mean by the term “industry”? “Soft drink” industry

A Definition of Industry Firms that produce similar products (product substitution)

1. Generic competition 2. Form competition 3. Industry competition Four Levels of Competition Based on the Degree of Substitutability 1. Generic competition 2. Form competition 3. Industry competition 4. Brand competition

Socializing Exercising Eating . What desire do I What do I want want to satisfy? What do I want to eat? Generic competition Desire Competition Socializing Exercising Eating . Potato chips Candy soft drink .

What type of candy? Hershey Nestle Mars . Which brand do I want? Form competition Brand competition Chocolate bars Licorice Sugar drops . Hershey Nestle Mars .

A strategic group consists of firms pursuing similar Identification of Strategic Groups A strategic group consists of firms pursuing similar strategies, i.e., employing a similar mix of strategy elements.

How to classify firms? H ? quality L D I ? Markets served

Strategic Groups in the Major Appliance Industry High Low Quality Vertical Integration Group A Narrow line Lower mfg. cost Very high service High price Group C Moderate line Medium mfg. cost Medium service Medium price Group B Full line Low mfg. cost Good service Medium price Group D Broad line Medium mfg. cost Low service Low price

Bases for classification: (Strategic groups) 1. Markets served: BMW Mercedes-Benz etc. 2. Products: full line, limited line etc. Coke and Pepsi, 7 up 3. Distribution channels Goodrich vs. Dunlop (own retailers vs indp’t R.)

Identification of Potential Competitors 1. Firms expanding their geographical markets examples: Wal-mart, Meijer

Example, IBM entering the PC market Firms expanding their Product line Example, IBM entering the PC market S P W R Firms integrating Forward And backward A supermarket manufacturing its own private labels

Firms seeking merger or buyout Hicks and Hass Acquiring Dr. Pepper, Seven-up, and A&W

Michael Porter’s Model INDUSTRYSTRUCTURE ANALYSIS Michael Porter’s Model

Five Forces Determining Segment Structural Attractiveness Potential Entrants (Threat of Mobility) Suppliers (Supplier power) Industry Competitors (Segment rivalry) Buyers (Buyer power) Substitutes (Threats of substitutes)

Experience effect (economies of Capital requirements Potential Competitors And Industry attractiveness Experience effect (economies of scale and experience effect) Capital requirements Product differentiation Distribution channels (Retailer reluctance, Mature products etc.) Switching costs (ex. new software for new computers)

Present Competitors Investment intensity Product differentiation Switching Costs Industry growth Industry structure Exit barriers

Investment Intensity By investment intensity, we mean the amount of fixed and working capital required to produce a dollar sales.

Monopolistic competition Pure competition (in pure competition there A Note on Industry Structure Monopoly Oligopoly Monopolistic competition Pure competition (in pure competition there is no competition!)

Less differentiated an industry less attractive is that industry! Switching costs, or the costs of changing suppliers- inhibit competition.

Threat of Substitute Products Actual or potential substitute product ELECTRICITY BUTTER GLASS GAS MARGARINE PLASTIC

Bargaining Strength of Suppliers Supplier product is a large SUPPLIER CONCENTRATION NO. OF suppliers Supplier product is a large part of buyer’s value added SWITCHING COSTS

Suppliers Cont. SUBSTITUTE RAW MATERIALS (soft drink:sugar cans etc) THREAT OF FORWARD INTEGRATION

Threat of backward integration Product importance Buyer profitability Bargaining Power of Buyers Buyers Concentration Threat of backward integration Product importance Buyer profitability Substitutes Switching costs (e.g. food, beer, soft-drink & metal cans)

Analyzing Competitors Objectives Competitor Actions Strategies Strengths & Weaknesses Reaction Patterns

Individual Competitor Analysis Competitor Characteristics Competitor Objectives Competitor Strategy Competitor Success Today Competitor Strength and weakness Competitor Future Behavior

Competitor Characteristics Information related to: Size of Sales Profitability Market Share Growth Relation of SBU to the parent Company, etc.

Competitor Objectives Market Growth Objectives Price Objectives Product Technology Objectives Human Resource Objectives etc.

Competitor’s Strategy Review of past and present strategies Company’s current marketing mix strategy (BIC as an example: strategy of low cost, mass produced and disposable products)

Competitor’s Strengths and Weaknesses Marketing: Product Quality Brand Names Distribution Promotion skills Salesforce cont.

Innovation: R&D Technologies New Product Capabilities Management: Quality of top management Loyalty-turnover Quality of Middle- management

How to Develop a Response Policy?

The laid-back competitors The selective competitors Estimating the Competitors’ Reaction Patterns The laid-back competitors The selective competitors The tiger competitors The Stochastic competitors

Designing the Competitive Intelligence System 1. Setting up the system What type of information? What is the best source of information? Who will manage the system?

2. Collect Information Sales force Channel members Trade association etc.

Other sources of Information 1. Company Financial: 10-k, annual reports Moody’s, State Filing Published articles 2. Company Background Standard & Poor’s F & S Indexes Newspaper Index

College alumni association 3. Management Personnel Who’s who Local Newspapers College alumni association 4. Foreign Information Consulates Embassies International Trade Commission

3. Evaluate and analyze the information check validity and reliability of the information

4. Dissemination and Response

Review Identifying Competitors Evaluating Competitors Competitive Intelligence Systems Competitive Strategies (not discussed) Customer vs. Competitor Orientation