7. Macroenvironment – PESTEL (2)
Political Economic
• Government stability • Business cycles
• Taxation policy • GNP trends
• Foreign trade • Interest rates
regulations • Money supply
• Social welfare
• Inflation
policies
• Unemployment
• Disposable income
8. Macroenvironment – PESTEL (3)
Sociocultural Technological
• Population • Government spending on
demographics research
• Income distribution • Government and industry
• Social mobility focus on technological
• Lifestyle changes effort
• Attitudes to work and • New discoveries /
leisure developments
• Consumerism • Speed of technology
• Levels of education transfer
• Rates of obsolescence
9. Macroenvironment – PESTEL (4)
Environmental Legal
• Environmental • Competition law
protection laws • Employment law
• Waste disposal • Health and safety
• Energy consumption • Product safety
10. Key Drivers of Change
• Market Globalisation
• Cost Globalisation
• Globalisation of Government Policies
• Globalisation of Competition
12. Porter’s Diamond
• Determines the competitive advantage of
nations.
• Four main determinants of national
advantage:
1. Factor Conditions
2. Demand Conditions
3. Related and Supporting industries
4. Firm Strategy, Structure and Rivalry
14. Scenarios
• Detailed and plausible views of future
development of environment, based on groupings
of key environmental influences and drivers
of change about which there is a high level of
uncertainty
• Different views of possible futures
• Long term view of strategy
15. Industries and Sectors
Industry – a group of firms producing the same
Industry – a group of firms producing the same
principal product, e.g. mobile phones
principal product, e.g. mobile phones
Sector – a group of organisations providing the
Sector – a group of organisations providing the
same kinds of services, e.g. healthcare
same kinds of services, e.g. healthcare
Competitive forces in the industry:
– Determine attractiveness of industry
– Affect the way individual companies compete
– Influence decisions on product/market strategy
16. Changing Boundaries of Industry
• Convergence
– Previously separate industries begin to overlap in
activities, technologies, products and customers
– Supply-led, e.g.
• bundling and unbundling of sectors in public services
– Various ministries – Communication and IT
– Demand-led, e.g.
• Substitution of one product by another (TVs and PCs)
• Customers want bundling of complementary products
– Package Holiday
• Creates new market segments
18. Five Forces Analysis (1)
The threat of entry ...
Is dependent on barriers to entry such as:
• Economies of scale
• Capital requirements of entry
• Access to supply or distribution channels
• Customer or supplier loyalty
• Expected retaliation
• Legislation or government action
• Differentiation
19. Five Forces Analysis (2)
Threat of substitutes
Reduction in demand for products as customers
switch to alternatives:
• Product for product substitution
– e.g. email for post
• Substitution of need
– e.g. reliable and cheap appliances reduce need for
maintenance services
• Generic substitution
– competition for household income, e.g. cars versus holidays
– doing without
20. Five Forces Analysis (3)
Buyer power is likely to be high where
there is / are:
• a concentration of buyers
• many small operators in the supplying industry
• alternative sources of supply
• low switching costs
• components/materials that are a high percentage
of cost to the buyer leading to “shopping around”
• a threat of backward integration
21. Five Forces Analysis (4)
Supplier power is likely to be high where
there is / are:
• a concentration of suppliers
• customers that are fragmented and bargaining
power low
• high switching costs
• powerful supplier brand
• possible integration forward by the supplier
22. Five Forces Analysis (5)
Competitive Rivalry is likely to be high
when:
• competitors are in balance
• there is slow market growth (product life cycle)
• there are high fixed costs in an industry
• there are high exit barriers
• markets are undifferentiated
Competitive rivals are organisations with similar products
Competitive rivals are organisations with similar products
and services aimed at the same customer group = direct
and services aimed at the same customer group = direct
competitors
competitors
23. Key Aspects of 5-Forces Analysis
• Use at level of strategic business units
(SBU)
• Define the industry/market/sector
• Don’t just list the forces: derive implications
for industry/organisation
• Establish interconnections between the five
forces
24. Limitations
• The model was designed for analyzing individual
business strategies. It does not cope with
synergies and interdependencies within the
portfolio of large corporations.
• From a more theoretical perspective, the model
does not address the possibility that an industry
could be attractive because certain companies are
in it.
• Some people claim that environments which are
characterized by rapid, systemic and radical
change require more flexible, dynamic or emergent
approaches to strategy formulation.
• Sometimes it may be possible to create completely
new markets instead of selecting from existing
ones.
27. Dynamics of Competition (1)
• Process of competition over time
• Erosion of competitive advantage
– Changes in five forces
– Competitors overcoming adverse forces
• Multipoint moves and counter moves
• Speed of Cycles of competitive response
– Slow: long periods of established pattern of
competition
– Fast: hypercompetition, constant disequilibrium
and change
28. Dynamics of Competition (2)
• Implications of speed of competitive cycle:
– Slow-moving - build and sustain competitive
advantages which are difficult to imitate
– Fast-moving - advantage is temporary, disrupt
status quo, sequence of short-lived moves
31. Strategic Groups
• Strategic groups are organisations within an
industry with similar strategic characteristics,
following similar strategies or competing on
similar bases.
33. Uses of Strategic Group Analysis
• To understand who are the most direct competitors
of an organisation
• To establish the different bases of competitive
rivalry within and between the strategic groups
• To assess if an organisation could move from one
group to another
– Depends on barriers to entry
• To identify opportunities and threats
– Changes in the macro-environment may create strategic
space
34. Market Segments
A market segment is a group of customers who
A market segment is a group of customers who
have similar needs that are different from
have similar needs that are different from
customer needs in other parts of the market
customer needs in other parts of the market
• The strategic customer
– The person(s) to whom strategy is primarily addressed
because they have the most influence
• What customers value – critical success factors
– Those product features particularly valued by a group of
customers and where the organisation must excel to
outperform competition
38. Strategic Gaps
• Strategic Gaps are opportunities in business
environment not being fully exploited by the competition:
• Opportunities in:
1. Substitute industries
2. Other strategic groups or strategic spaces
3. The chain of buyers
4. Complementary products and services
5. New market segment
6. Markets developing over time
(Kim & Mauborgne 1999)
39. SWOT
• A SWOT analysis summarises the key
issues from the business environment and
the strategic capability of an organisation
that are most likely to impact on strategy
development.
40. Environment – Key Points (1)
• PESTEL identifies key drivers of change
• Scenarios analyse future implications of
uncertain environmental forces
• 5 forces framework identifies sources of
competition in an industry
• Competition is dynamic
41. Environment – Key Points (2)
• Within an industry there are strategic
groups competing on similar bases
• Market segments help to understand
differences between customers
• Critical success factors are those
features particularly valued by customers
• Environmental analysis identifies
opportunities and threats
Notes de l'éditeur
Very difficult to edit this picture. Idea would be to animate the slide (see slide show), first to show the basic ovals, then bring in the annotation. These lecture notes serve as revision sheets for students so it’s good to include some of the detail.
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Kevan – I am missing some key points in the text. It is absolutely critical that students define the industry they are analysing. And that they rate the forces and derive the implications of that for the industry/organisation. Also emphasise that this is industry analysis, not analysing the individual organisation.
Editable version
This is a very narrow definition of critical success factors. The critical success factors for an oil company are, for example, ability to negotiate with governments, access to large amounts of capital etc. Nothing to do with customers.