MGT 4150 Ch 3

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1. form a strategic vision where the company needs to head 2. identify promising strategic options for the company 3. select the best business model and strategy for the company

what does a business do after analyzing a company's internal and external environment (3)

if a company has the resources and capabilities to be completely. successful and profitable in that environment

what does an industry's attractiveness depend on

Legal and regulatory conditions

what does the L in PESTEL stand for

Political Factors

what does the P in PESTEL stand for

Sociocultural forces

what does the S in PESTEL stand for

Technological forces

what does the T in PESTEL stand for

Economic conditions (local to worldwide)

what does the first E in PESTEL stand for

Environmental factors (the natural environment

what does the second E in PESTEL stand for

identify the competitive characteristics that delineate strategic approaches in the industry

what is the first step for constructing a strategic group map

identify the different parties involved and specific factors that bring out competitive pressures for each of the forces

what is the first step in using the five-forces model of competition

draw circles around each strategic group, making the circle proportional to the size of the group's share of industry sales revenues

what is the last step for constructing a strategic group map

plot the firms on the two-variable map using pairs of competitive characteristics

what is the second step for constructing a strategic group map

evaluate how strong the pressures from each of the forces are (strong, moderate or weak)

what is the second step in using the five forces model of competition

assign firms occupying the same map location to the same strategic group

what is the third step for constructing a strategic group map

determine whether the five forces are supportive of high industry profitability

what is the third step in using the five forces model of competition

strong; it is difficult to convince the customers that one product is different than the other when the product looks the same and has the same functions

what is the value of rivalry among competitors (strong, moderate or low)

invest aggressively to capture the opportunities it sees and improve its long-term competitive position in the business

what should a competitor do when it decides an industry is attractive

protect its present position, invest cautiously, and/or look for opportunities in other industries

what should a competitor do when it decides an industry is unattractive

assumptions

what the rivals believes about itself and the industry

- what product attributes and service characteristics are crucial for buyers - what resources and competitive capabilities must a firm have to be successful - what guaranteed things will put a firm at a competitive disadvantage

what to ask when identifying key success factors

it presents a firm with a good opportunity for above-average profitability

when is an industry environment fundamentally attractive

a firm's profit prospects in the industry are unappealingly low

when is an industry environment fundamentally unattractive

False: price-sensitive when buyers are low profits or low income

T/F: Buyers are price-sensitive when buyers earn high profits or high income

False; price-sensitive when the product is undifferentiated and the quality is not important

T/F: Buyers are price-sensitive when the product is differentiated and quality is important

True

T/F: Buyers are price-sensitive when the product represents a significant fraction of their purchases

True

T/F: Entry barriers are high when customers with strong brand preferences and/or loyalty to current sellers

False; high barriers when there's lots of intellectual property protection

T/F: Entry barriers are high when there are few patents and other forms of intellectual property protection

False; it's harder to enter when there are restrictive government policies

T/F: Entry barriers are high when there are lenient government policies

False; high barriers to entry when there is high capital requirements

T/F: Entry barriers are high when there are low capital requirements

True

T/F: Entry barriers are high when there are restrictive trade policies

True

T/F: Entry barriers are high when there are strong network effects

True

T/F: Entry barriers are high when there is limited new access to distribution channels and shelf space

False; bargaining increases when industry members don't account for a big fraction of supplier sles

T/F: Supplier bargaining power increases when industry members account for a big fraction of suppliers' sales

True

T/F: Supplier bargaining power increases when industry members don't have the potential to integrate backwards to self-manufacture their own inputs

True; suppliers have more power when it's harder to swtich

T/F: Supplier bargaining power increases when industry members incur high costs when switching to alternative suppliers

False; bargaining increases when products only account for a small fraction of the total costs of the industry's products

T/F: Supplier bargaining power increases when suppliers' products account for more than a small fraction of the total costs of the industry's products

True; they get to determine the price

T/F: Supplier bargaining power increases when suppliers' products/services are in short supply

False; supplier bargaining power increases when products/services are differentiated because they are more unique

T/F: Supplier bargaining power increases when suppliers' products/services are similar to competitors

False; supplier bargaining power increases when the supplier industry is more concentrated an dominated by a few large companies

T/F: Supplier bargaining power increases when the supplier industry is not more concentrated than the industry it sells to and is occupied by many companies

True

T/F: Supplier bargaining power increases when there are no good substitutes for what the suppliers provide

True

T/F: competitive pressures from substitutes are weaker under the opposite conditions

False; variables should be quantitative, continuous, discrete, or defined in terms of distinct classes

T/F: variables for group maps may be qualitative

1. pursuing avenues that protect the firm from as many competitive pressures as possible 2. initiating actions that will shift competitive force in the firm's favor by changing underlying factors driving the forces

effectively matching a firm's business strategy to prevailing competitive conditions has two aspects

force driving industry change

emerging new internet capabilities and applications

force driving industry change

entry or exit of major firms

PESTEL Analysis

focuses on principal components of strategic significance in the macro-environment

value net

focuses on the interactions of industry participants with a particular company

one

how many powerful competitive forces is enough to make the industry unattractive in terms of its potential profit

strategy

how the rival company is competing currently

the combined sales of the firms

in a strategy group map, what does the size of the circle of the firms represent

force driving industry change

increasing globalization

- high economies of scale - significant experience-based cost advantages or learning curves - other cost advantages

incumbents have large cost advantages over potential entrants due to (3)

SOAR framework for competitor analysis

indicators of a rival firm's likely strategy moves and countermoves

value net

introduces a new category of industry participant, complementors

high because changes in technology create an opportunity for new entrants

is the threat of new entrants a high, moderate or low value

- are the driving forces acting to cause demand to increase or decrease - is the collective impact of the driving forces increasing or decreasing competition - will the combined impacts of the driving forces lead to high or lower industry profitability

what to ask when assessing the impact of the driving factors on industry change (3)

- five forces framework - the value net - driving forces - strategic groups - competitor analysis - key success factors

what are the concepts and analytical tools for assessing the company's competitive environment (6)

1. competition from rival sellers 2. competition from potential new entrants 3. competition from producers of substitute products 4. supplier bargaining power 5. customer bargaining power

what are the five competitive forces

- increasing rate of growth in sales of substitutes - substitute producers adding new output capacity - increasing profitability of substitute producers

what are the indicators of substitutes' competitive strength (3)

1. identify the driving forces 2. asses if the driving forces are acting to make the industry more or less attractive 3. determine what strategy changes are needed to prepare for the impact of the driving forces

what are the three steps of driving forces analysis

strategy objectives assumptions resources and capabilities

what does SOAR stand for

force driving industry change

changes in costs and efficiencies

force driving industry change

changing societal concerns, attitudes and lifestyles

True

T/F a competitive pressure created by competing sellers if high exit barriers keep weak firms from exiting the industry

False; competitive pressures increase if the rivals have diverse objectives, strategies and/or countries of origin

T/F a competitive pressure created by competing sellers if the rivals have similar objectives, strategies, and/or countries of origin

False; there is excess inventory, idle production capacity, or products with high fixed costs or high storage costs

T/F a competitive pressure created by competing sellers is having little inventory, idle production capacity, or low fixed and storage costs

False; competitive pressure increases if the strategic and geographic diversity of competitors is increasing

T/F a competitive pressure created by competing sellers is if the strategic and geographic diversity of competitors is decreasing

True

T/F a competitive pressure created by competing sellers is the buyer demand growing slowly or declining

False; competitive pressures increase when it becomes less costly for buyers to switch brands

T/F a competitive pressure created by competing sellers is the increased cost for buyers to switch brands

True

T/F a competitive pressure created by competing sellers is the industry products becoming less strongly differentiated (more similar)

True

T/F a competitive pressure created by competing sellers is the number of competitors with equal size and competitive capability is increasing

false; variables should not be highly correlated

T/F variables selected as map axes should be highly correlated

True

T/F variables should reflect important (sizable) differences among rival approaches

True

T/F: Buyer bargaining power increases when buyer costs of switching to competing products are low

True

T/F: Buyer bargaining power increases when buyer demand is weak in relation to industry supply

False; buyer bargaining increases when they are more informed

T/F: Buyer bargaining power increases when buyers are not informed about the quality, prices and costs of sellers

False; buyers are large and few in relation to industry sellers

T/F: Buyer bargaining power increases when buyers are small and plentiful in number relative to the number of industry sellers

True

T/F: Buyer bargaining power increases when buyers have the ability to postpone purchases

True

T/F: Buyer bargaining power increases when buyers pose a credible threat of integrating backward into the business of sellers

False: buyer bargaining power increases when the industry's products are standardized or undifferentiated

T/F: Buyer bargaining power increases when the industry's products are differentiated

finding a buyer, perhaps a rival, to acquire its business

a competitively weak company in an unattractive industry might see its best option as

force driving industry change

changes in an industry's long-term growth rate

- strong bargaining power - price-sensitive

competitive pressures from buyers increase when they have (2)

strategic group

consists of those industry members with similar competitive approaches and positions in the market

the different competitive position relationships in the industry

drawing maps using different pairs of variables will show

force driving industry change

diffusion of technical know-how across firms and countries

- direct competitors - industry rivals - sellers of substitute products - potential entrants

net value defines a category of competitors to include the focal firms (4)

backward integration

occurs when a firm owns or controls the inputs it uses

complementors

producers of products that enhance the value of the focal firm's products when they are used together

force driving industry change

product and marketing innovation

- is the state of the industry competition stronger than normal? - can industry firms expect to earn decent profits given these forces - are some competitive forces sufficiently powerful to undermine industry profitability

questions to ask to determine if the collective strength of the five forces is good for profitability

force driving industry change

reductions in uncertainty and business risk

force driving industry change

regulatory influences and government policy changes

force driving industry change

shifts in who buys industry products and how the products are used

- product-line breadth - distribution channels - technological approaches - geographic areas - product attributes to buyers - services and technical assistance

strategic groups are comparable in what ways

key success factors

strategy elements, product and service attributes, operational approaches, resources, and competitive capabilities that are necessary for competitive success by any and all firms in an industry

- is the substitute readily available and attractively priced? - are quality, performance and other relevant attributes of the substitute comparable or better? - does the substitute product offer lower switching costs to buyers

substitute products considerations (3):

force driving industry change

technological change and manufacturing process innovation

resources and capabilities

the rival's key strengths and weaknesses

objectives

the rival's strategic and performance goals

1. current competitors are unlikely to retaliate against new entrants 2. entry barriers are low

the threat of entry is a stronger force when (2)


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