Chap003 Fred David Test Bank
Chap003 Fred David Test Bank
Chap003 Fred David Test Bank
Chapter 03
Evaluating a Company's External Environment
3-1
3. Which of the following is not a major question to ask in thinking strategically about
industry and competitive conditions in a given industry?
A. How many companies in the industry have good track records for revenue growth and
profitability?
B. What strategic moves are rivals likely to make next?
C. What are the key factors for future competitive success?
D. Does the outlook for the industry present the company with sufficiently attractive
prospects for profitability?
E. What forces are driving changes in the industry, and what impact will these changes have
on competitive intensity and industry profitability?
3-2
Question 2: What Kinds of Competitive Forces are Industry Members Facing, and How
Strong are They?
8. The nature and strength of the competitive forces that prevail in an industry is generally a
joint product of
A. the pressures induced by the market maneuvering and jockeying for buyer patronage that
goes on among rival sellers in the industry.
B. the threat that firms outside the industry will decide to enter the market.
C. the attempts of companies in other industries to win buyers over to their own substitute
products.
D. competitive pressures stemming from the bargaining power of both suppliers and buyers.
E. All of these.
3-3
9. Which of the following is not one of the five typical sources of competitive pressures?
A. The power and influence of industry driving forces
B. The bargaining power of suppliers and seller-supplier collaboration
C. The threat of new entrants into the market
D. The attempts of companies in other industries to win customers over to their own substitute
products
E. The market maneuvering and jockeying for buyer patronage that goes on among rival
sellers in the industry
11. Typically, the weakest of the five competitive forces in an industry is/are:
A. the threat posed by potential new entrants.
B. the bargaining power and leverage that suppliers are able to exercise.
C. the competitive pressures that stem from the ready availability of attractively-priced
substitute products.
D. the bargaining power and leverage that buyers are able to exercise.
E. None of these is typically weakest.
3-4
12. Using the five-forces model of competition to determine what competition is like in a
given industry involves
A. building the picture of competition in three steps: (1) identifying the specific competitive
pressures associated with each of the five competitive forces; (2) evaluating how strong the
pressures comprising each competitive force are; and (3) determining whether the collective
impact of all five competitive forces is conducive to earning attractive profits.
B. building the picture of competition in two steps: (1) determining which rival has the
biggest competitive advantage and (2) assessing whether the competitive advantages
possessed by various industry members allow most industry members to earn above-average
profits.
C. evaluating whether competition is being intensified or weakened by the industry's driving
forces and key success factors.
D. assessing whether the collective impact of all five forces is weak enough to allow industry
members to go on the offensive or use a defensive strategy to insulate against fierce
competitive pressures.
E. gauging the overall strength of competition based on how many industry rivals are
operating with a competitive advantage and how many are operating at a competitive
disadvantage.
3-5
15. Which one of the following does not cause the rivalry among competing sellers to be
weak?
A. High buyer switching costs
B. Rapid growth in buyer demand
C. Industry conditions that tempt rivals to use price cuts or other competitive weapons to
boost unit sales
D. Low barriers to entry
E. Strongly differentiated products among rival sellers
16. Factors that tend to result in weak rivalry among competing sellers include
A. low buyer switching costs and low barriers to entry.
B. rapid growth in buyer demand, high buyer costs to switch brands, and so many industry
rivals that any one company's actions have little impact on rivals' businesses.
C. weakly differentiated products among rival sellers.
D. rivals that are quite diverse in terms of their strategies, objectives, and countries of origin.
E. conditions where outsiders have recently acquired weak competitors and are trying to turn
them into major contenders.
17. The rivalry among competing sellers tends to be less intense when
A. industry conditions tempt competitors to use price cuts or other competitive weapons to
boost unit sales.
B. buyer demand is weak and many sellers have excess capacity and/or inventory.
C. industry rivals are not particularly aggressive or active in making fresh moves to improve
their market standing and business performance.
D. rivals have diverse strategies and objectives and are located in different countries.
E. rival sellers have weakly differentiated products.
3-6
21. Which of the following is not among the factors that affect whether competitive rivalry
among participating firms is strong, moderate, or weak?
A. Whether the products of rival sellers are strongly or weakly differentiated
B. Whether demand for the industry's product is growing rapidly or slowly
C. The degree to which rivals are satisfied with their current market position
D. Whether industry driving forces are strong or weak
E. Whether industry conditions tempt competitors to use price cuts or other competitive
weapons to boost unit sales and whether one or two rivals have particularly powerful
strategies
3-7
23. The competitive force of rival firms' jockeying for better market positions, higher sales
and market shares, and competitive advantage
A. is stronger when firms strive to be low-cost producers than when they use differentiation
and focus strategies.
B. is typically a weaker competitive force than is the threat of entry of new rivals.
C. is largely unaffected by whether industry conditions tempt rivals to use price cuts or other
competitive weapons to boost unit sales.
D. tends to intensify when strong companies outside the industry acquire weak firms in the
industry and launch aggressive, well-funded moves to transform the acquired companies into
strong market contenders.
E. is weaker when more firms have weakly differentiated products, buyer demand is growing
slowly, and buyers have moderate switching costs.
24. In analyzing the strength of competition among rival firms, an important consideration is
A. the potential for buyers to exercise strong bargaining power.
B. the diversity of competitors in terms of visions, strategic intents, objectives, strategies,
resources and countries of origin.
C. the number of firms pursuing differentiation strategies versus the number pursuing low-
cost leadership strategies and focus strategies.
D. the extent to which some rivals have more than two competitively valuable competencies
or capabilities.
E. whether the industry is characterized by a strong learning/experience curve and whether the
industry is composed of many or few strategic groups.
3-8
25. In which one of the following instances is rivalry among competing sellers not more
intense?
A. When certain competitors are dissatisfied with their market position and make moves to
bolster their standing
B. When strong companies outside the industry acquire weak firms in the industry and launch
aggressive moves to transform their newly-acquired competitors into stronger market
contenders
C. When competitors are fairly equal in size and capability
D. When the products of rivals are weakly differentiated, buyer switching costs are low, and
market demand is growing slowly
E. When there are vast numbers of small rivals so the impact of any one company's actions is
spread thinly across all industry members
27. Potential entrants are more likely to be deterred from actually entering an industry when
A. incumbent firms have previously been aggressive in defending their market positions
against entry.
B. incumbent firms are complacent.
C. buyers are not particularly price sensitive and the industry already contains a dozen or
more rivals.
D. the relative cost positions of incumbent firms are about the same, such that no one
incumbent has a meaningful cost advantage.
E. buyer switching costs are moderately low because of strong product differentiation among
incumbent firms.
3-9
28. Competitive pressures associated with the threat of entry are greater when
A. incumbent firms are unable or unwilling to strongly contest the entry of newcomers.
B. newcomers can expect to earn attractive profits and a number of outsiders have the
expertise and resources to hurdle whatever entry barriers exist.
C. entry barriers are relatively low and buyer demand for the product is growing fairly rapidly.
D. existing industry members are looking to expand their market reach by entering product
segments or geographic areas where they currently do not have a presence.
E. All of these conditions heighten the competitive pressures associated with fresh entry into
the industry.
29. Which one of the following does not intensify the competitive pressures associated with
the threat of entry?
A. When incumbent firms are unable or unwilling to launch competitive initiatives to strongly
contest the entry of newcomers
B. When industry members are struggling to earn good profits
C. When entry barriers are relatively low and buyer demand for the product is growing fairly
rapidly
D. When existing industry members are looking to expand their market reach by entering
product segments or geographic areas where they currently do not have a presence
E. When newcomers can expect to earn attractive profits and a number of outsiders have the
expertise and resources to hurdle whatever entry barriers exist
30. Which one of the following increases the competitive pressures associated with the threat
of entry?
A. When incumbent firms are likely to launch competitive initiatives to strongly contest the
entry of newcomers
B. When buyers have a high degree of loyalty to the brands and product offerings of existing
industry members
C. When buyer demand for the product is growing fairly slowly
D. When few outsiders have the expertise and resources to hurdle whatever entry barriers
exist
E. When newcomers can expect to earn attractive profits
3-10
31. The competitive threat that outsiders will enter a market is weaker when
A. financially strong industry members send strong signals that they will launch strategic
initiatives to combat the entry of newcomers.
B. the industry is characterized by the lack of sizable scale economies and learning/experience
curve effects.
C. the industry's market growth is rapid.
D. there are more than 2 entry barriers.
E. buyers have little loyalty to the brands and product offerings of existing industry members.
32. Competitive pressures stemming from the threat of entry are weaker when
A. there are fewer than 20 potential entry candidates and more than 10 firms already in the
industry.
B. there are more than 3 entry barriers.
C. the industry outlook is risky or uncertain.
D. incumbent firms have little ability to leverage distributors, dealers, and/or retailers to retain
their business.
E. the nature of the industry entails few scale economies.
33. The best test of whether potential entry is a strong or weak competitive force is
A. the strength of buyer loyalty to existing brands.
B. whether the industry's driving forces make it harder or easier for new entrants to be
successful.
C. whether the strategies of industry members are well-matched to the industry's key success
factors.
D. whether there are any vacant spaces on the industry's strategic group map.
E. to ask if the industry's growth and profit prospects are strongly attractive to potential entry
candidates.
34. Which of the following is not a good example of a substitute product that triggers stronger
competitive pressures?
A. A salad as a substitute for French fries
B. Wireless phones as a substitute for wired telephones
C. Coca-Cola as a substitute for Pepsi
D. Snowboards as a substitute for snow skis
E. Video-on-demand services from a cable TV company as a substitute for going to the
movies
3-11
35. The competitive pressures from substitute products tend to be stronger when
A. buyers are relatively comfortable with using substitutes and the costs to buyers of
switching over to the substitutes are low.
B. there are more than 10 sellers of substitute products.
C. the quality and performance of the substitutes is well above what buyers need to meet their
requirements.
D. buyers have high psychic costs in severing existing brand relationships and establishing
new ones.
E. demand for the industry's product is not very price sensitive.
36. Industry rivals tend to experience weak competitive pressures from substitute products
when
A. the available substitute products are weakly differentiated from one another.
B. the buyers of the industry's products are few in number and they have substantial amounts
of leverage with sellers.
C. rival sellers experience strong bargaining power from both suppliers and influential
customers.
D. buyers incur high costs in switching to substitutes and substitutes are higher priced relative
to the performance they deliver.
E. the producers of substitute products are all pursuing strategies to strongly differentiate their
products on the basis of quality and product performance.
3-12
38. The strength of competitive pressures that suppliers can exert on industry members is
mainly a function of
A. whether needed inputs are in short supply or whether ample supplies are readily available
from several different suppliers.
B. whether suppliers self-manufacture what they supply or source their items from other
manufacturers.
C. the industry's position in the growth cycle.
D. whether technological change in the businesses of suppliers is rapid or slow.
E. whether the needs and expectations of buyers of the industry product are changing slowly
or rapidly.
40. In which one of the following instances are the competitive pressures that industry
members experience in their dealings with suppliers not weakened?
A. When industry members pose a credible threat of backward integration into the business of
suppliers
B. When the cost of switching from one supplier to another is low
C. When the buying firms purchase in large quantities and thus are important customers of the
suppliers
D. When the item being supplied is a commodity
E. When the items purchased from suppliers are in short supply
3-13
42. Which one of the following is not a factor that affects the strength of supplier bargaining
power?
A. Whether needed inputs are in ample supply and are readily available from several different
suppliers
B. Whether industry members are a strong threat to integrate backward into the business of
suppliers and self-manufacture their own requirements
C. Whether industry members are struggling to make good profits because of slow-growing
market demand
D. Whether the costs of industry members to switch their purchases to alternative suppliers
are high or low
E. Whether the item being supplied is a commodity or is highly differentiated from supplier to
supplier
43. Which one of the following is not a factor in causing supplier bargaining power to be
relatively strong?
A. The inputs needed from suppliers are in short supply.
B. Suppliers are a strong threat to integrate forward into the business of industry members.
C. The input being supplied is a commodity.
D. The input being supplied significantly enhances the quality or performance of the products
of industry members.
E. There are only a few suppliers of the input.
3-14
44. When one or more industry members have unusually effective and mutually advantageous
partnerships with their suppliers,
A. it is rare for such partnerships to have much competitive impact on those industry members
not having such partnerships.
B. one unfortunate outcome is that it tends to give the supply partners much enhanced
bargaining power in their dealings with these industry members.
C. there is a strong likelihood such partnerships will put increased competitive pressure on
those industry members who lack productive collaborative relationships with their suppliers.
D. there is a high likelihood of such partnerships reducing competitive pressures on all
industry members, provided technological change in the suppliers' business is rapid and the
item being supplied is a commodity.
E. the usual result is to reduce competitive pressures on all industry members, provided the
costs of the items furnished by supply chain partners amount to 50% or more of total cost.
45. Which one of the following is not a reason why industry members are often motivated to
enter into collaborative partnerships with key suppliers?
A. To reduce the costs of switching suppliers
B. To speed the availability of next-generation components
C. To enhance the quality of parts and components being supplied and reduce defect rates
D. To squeeze out important cost savings for both themselves and their suppliers
E. To reduce inventory and logistics costs
3-15
47. Whether buyer bargaining power poses a strong or weak source of competitive pressure
on industry members depends in part on
A. whether most buyers possess roughly equal or varying degrees of bargaining power and
leverage.
B. how many buyers are engaged in collaborative partnerships with sellers.
C. whether entry barriers are high or low and the size of the pool of likely entry candidates.
D. whether the overall quality of the items being furnished by industry members is rising or
falling.
E. whether demand-supply conditions represent a buyer's market or a seller's market.
48. Which of the following is not a factor that causes buyer bargaining power to be stronger?
A. Some buyers are a threat to integrate backward into the business of sellers and become an
important competitor.
B. The industry is composed of a few large sellers and the customer group consists of
numerous buyers that purchase in fairly small quantities.
C. Buyers have considerable discretion over whether and when they purchase the product.
D. Buyers purchase the item frequently and are well-informed about sellers' products, prices,
and costs.
E. The costs incurred by buyers in switching to competing brands or to substitute products are
relatively low.
49. Which of the following factors does not affect whether buyer bargaining power and seller-
buyer collaboration are an important source of competitive pressure in an industry?
A. Whether winning the business of certain customers, offer a seller important market
exposure or prestige
B. The extent and importance of collaborative partnerships and alliances between particular
sellers and buyers
C. Whether buyers pose a major threat to integrate backward into the product market of
sellers
D. Whether sellers' products are weakly differentiated, making it easy and inexpensive for
buyers to switch to competing brands
E. Whether buyers have a strong preference for products of superior quality or just average
quality
3-16
50. Which of the following factors is not a relevant consideration in determining the strength
of buyer bargaining power?
A. Whether winning the business of prestigious customers gives a seller important market
exposure and heightens its brand name
B. Whether the seller is a manufacturer.
C. Whether buyers pose a major threat to integrate backward into the product market of
sellers
D. Whether sellers' products are weakly differentiated, making it easy for buyers to switch to
competing brands
E. Whether collaborative partnerships and alliances between particular sellers and buyers put
rivals lacking such collaborative relationships at a competitive disadvantage
51. Collaborative relationships between particular sellers and buyers in an industry can
represent a source of strong competitive pressure when
A. virtually all buyers have strong brand attachments and are highly brand loyal.
B. demand for the product is growing rapidly.
C. sales are made to buyer groups with either strong bargaining power or high sensitivity.
D. sellers are racing to add the latest and greatest performance features so as to attract the
patronage of important or prestigious buyers.
E. buyers are very quality conscious.
52. In which of the following circumstances are competitive pressures associated with the
bargaining power of buyers not relatively strong?
A. When buyer demand is growing rapidly
B. When buyers are relatively well informed about sellers' products, prices, and costs
C. When buyers pose a major threat to integrate backward into the product market of sellers
D. When sellers' products are weakly differentiated, making it easy for buyers to switch to
competing brands
E. When buyers have considerable discretion over whether and when they purchase the
product
3-17
53. Competitive pressures stemming from buyer bargaining power tend to be weaker when
A. the number of buyers is small, such that each customer's business tends to be particularly
important to a seller.
B. buyer demand is growing slowly or maybe even declining.
C. the costs incurred by buyers in switching to competing brands or to substitute products are
relatively high.
D. buyers purchase the item frequently and are well-informed about sellers' products, prices,
and costs.
E. the buyer group consists a few large buyers and the seller group consists of numerous small
firms.
54. Which of the following conditions acts to weaken buyer bargaining power?
A. When buyers are unlikely to integrate backward into the business of sellers
B. When buyers purchase the item frequently and are well-informed about sellers' products,
prices, and costs
C. When the costs incurred by buyers in switching to competing brands or to substitute
products are relatively low
D. When the products of rival sellers are weakly differentiated and buyers have considerable
discretion over whether and when they purchase the product
E. When buyers are few in number and/or often purchase in large quantities
55. Buyers are in position to exert strong bargaining power in dealing with sellers when
A. their costs to switch to competing brands or to substitute products are relatively high.
B. a particular seller's product delivers quality or performance that is very important to the
buyer and is not matched by other brands.
C. they buy the product infrequently or in small quantities and are not particularly well-
informed about sellers' products, prices, and costs.
D. buyer demand is growing rapidly.
E. the number of buyers is small or when a customer is particularly important to a seller.
3-18
56. Which of the following factors is not a relevant consideration in judging whether buyer
bargaining power is relatively strong or relatively weak?
A. Whether certain customers offer sellers important market exposure or prestige
B. Whether customers are relatively well informed about sellers' products, prices, and costs
C. Whether buyer needs and expectations are changing rapidly or slowly
D. Whether sellers' products are highly differentiated, making it troublesome or costly for
buyers to switch to competing brands or to substitute products
E. Whether sellers pose little threat of forward integration into the product market of their
customers and whether buyers pose a major threat to integrate backward into the product
market of sellers
57. A competitive environment where there is weak to moderate rivalry among sellers, high
entry barriers, weak competition from substitute products, and little bargaining leverage on
the part of both suppliers and customers
A. lacks powerful driving forces.
B. gives each industry competitor the best potential for building sustainable competitive
advantage over rival firms.
C. makes it hard for industry members to compete successfully unless they can strongly
differentiate their products.
D. is conducive to industry members earning attractive profits.
E. requires that industry members have low costs in order to be competitively successful.
58. A competitive environment where there is strong rivalry among sellers, low entry barriers,
strong competition from substitute products, and considerable bargaining leverage on the part
of both suppliers and customers
A. is competitively unattractive from the standpoint of earning good profits.
B. offers little ability to build a sustainable competitive advantage.
C. is highly conducive to achieving strong product differentiation and high customer loyalty
to the company's brand.
D. offers moderate to good prospects for making a reasonable profit and building a
sustainable competitive advantage.
E. requires that industry members have a strongly differentiated product offering in order to
be profitable.
3-19
59. As a rule, the stronger the collective impact of competitive pressures associated with the
five competitive forces,
A. the stronger are the industry's driving forces.
B. the lower the combined profitability of industry members.
C. the fewer companies that can achieve a competitive advantage via anything other than
being the industry's low-cost leader.
D. the larger the number of competitive advantage opportunities for industry members.
E. the greater the number of industry key success factors.
60. Factors that cause the rivalry among competing sellers to be weak include
A. low buyer switching costs and rival sellers that are relatively equal is size and capability.
B. rapid growth in buyer demand and high buyer switching costs.
C. few industry rivals that any one company's actions can easily be anticipated and countered
by its rivals.
D. low barriers to entry and weakly differentiated products among rival sellers.
E. slow growth in buyer demand and strongly differentiated products.
61. The intensity of rivalry among competing sellers does not depend on whether
A. the industry has more than two strong driving forces and whether the industry has more
than 2 strategic groups.
B. competitors are diverse in terms of visions, strategic intents, objectives, strategies,
resources and countries of origin.
C. strong companies outside the industry have acquired weak firms in the industry and are
launching aggressive moves to transform the acquired companies into strong market
contenders.
D. one or two rivals have particularly powerful and successful strategies.
E. industry conditions tempt industry members to use price cuts or other competitive weapons
to boost unit sales.
3-20
62. In which of the following instances are industry members not subject to stronger
competitive pressures from substitute products?
A. The costs to buyers of switching over to the substitutes are low.
B. Buyers are dubious about using substitutes.
C. The quality and performance of the substitutes is well matched to what buyers need to meet
their requirements.
D. Buyer brand loyalty is weak.
E. Substitutes are readily available at competitive prices.
63. Just how strong the competitive pressures are from substitute products depends on
A. whether the available substitutes are strongly or weakly differentiated and whether buyers
make purchases frequently or infrequently.
B. whether attractively priced substitutes are readily available and the ease with which buyers
can switch to substitutes.
C. whether the available substitutes are products or services.
D. whether the producers of substitutes have ample budgets for new product R&D.
E. the speed with which buyer needs and expectations are changing.
Question 3: What Forces Are Driving Industry Change and What Impacts Will They
Have?
3-21
3-22
68. Which of the following is not generally a "driving force" capable of producing
fundamental changes in industry and competitive conditions?
A. Changes in the long-term industry growth rate
B. Increasing globalization of the industry
C. Product innovation and technological change
D. Ups and downs in the economy and in interest rates
E. New government regulations or significant changes in government policy toward the
industry
69. Which of the following are most unlikely to qualify as driving forces?
A. Changes in the long-term industry growth rate, the entry or exit of major firms, and
changes in cost and efficiency
B. Increasing globalization of the industry and product innovation
C. New Internet technology applications, new government regulations, and significant
changes in government policy toward the industry
D. Mounting competition from substitutes and increasing efforts to collaborate with suppliers
via strategic alliances
E. Marketing innovations and changes in who buys the industry's product and how they use it
70. Which of the following do not qualify as potential driving forces capable of inducing
fundamental changes in industry and competitive conditions?
A. Changes in who buys the product and how they use it and changes in the long-term
industry growth rate
B. Entry or exit of major firms, product innovation, and marketing innovation
C. Increases in the economic power and bargaining leverage of customers and suppliers,
growing supplier-seller collaboration, and growing buyer-seller collaboration
D. Growing buyer preferences for differentiated products instead of mostly standardized or
identical products
E. Changes in economies of scale and experience curve effects brought on by changes in
manufacturing technology and new Internet capabilities
3-23
72. Which one of the following is not a common type of driving force?
A. Reductions in uncertainty and business risk
B. Changing societal concerns, attitudes, and lifestyles
C. Diffusion of technical know-how across more companies and more countries
D. Increasing efforts on the part of industry members to collaborate closely with their
suppliers
E. Technological change and manufacturing process innovation
3-24
3-25
77. Which one of the following is not an integral part of driving forces analysis?
A. Identifying the specific factors causing fundamental changes in industry conditions and/or
the industry's competitive structure
B. Determining whether the driving forces are acting to cause one or more industry rivals to
shift to a different strategic group
C. Determining whether the driving forces are acting to strengthen or weaken market demand
D. Determining whether the driving forces are acting to make competition more or less
intense
E. Determining whether the driving forces are acting to raise or lower industry profitability
78. The real payoff for strategy making comes when managers draw conclusions about
A. what strategy adjustments are needed to deal with the changes in conditions.
B. determining the overall strength of the five competitive forces.
C. determining whether the industry's strategic group map will be static or dynamic.
D. conditions in the economy at large.
E. the extent to which rivals have more than two competitively valuable competencies or
capabilities
Question 4: How Are Industry Rivals Positioned—Who Is Strongly Positioned and Who
Is Not?
79. What is the best technique for revealing the market position of industry competitors?
A. Strategic group mapping.
B. Global industry change.
C. Dynamic mapping analysis.
D. Distribution analysis.
E. None of these.
3-26
83. Which one of the following pairs of variables is least likely to be useful in drawing a
strategic group map?
A. Geographic coverage and degree of vertical integration
B. Brand name reputation and distribution channel emphasis
C. Product quality and product line breadth
D. Level of profitability and size of market share
E. Price/quality range and whether the company's product appeals to many or few types of
buyers
3-27
84. The concept of strategic groups is relevant to industry and competitive analysis because
A. firms in the same strategic groups are rarely close competitors—a firm's closest
competitors are usually in distant strategic groups.
B. strategic group maps help identify each company's market position and its closest
competitors.
C. competition grows in intensity as the number and diversity of the strategic groups in an
industry increases.
D. the profit potential of firms in the same strategic group is usually very similar.
E. competitive pressures tend to be weaker within strategic groups than across strategic
groups.
86. Which of the following is not an appropriate guideline for developing a strategic group
map for a given industry?
A. The variables chosen as axes for the map should indicate big differences in how rivals have
positioned themselves to compete in the marketplace.
B. The variables chosen as axes for the map can be either quantitative or qualitative.
C. The variables chosen as axes for the map should be highly correlated.
D. Several maps should be drawn if more than one pair of variables help illuminate
differences in the competitive positioning of industry members.
E. The sizes of the circles on the map should be drawn proportional to the combined sales of
the firms in each strategic group.
3-28
88. One of the things that can be gleaned from a strategic group map of industry rivals is
A. which rivals have been in business longer and thus have greater access to experience curve
effects.
B. which rivals have newer manufacturing facilities.
C. which strategic groups have the highest profit margins and the highest customer switching
costs.
D. whether profit prospects vary among strategic groups due to strengths and weaknesses in
their respective market positions on the map (perhaps because competitive pressures are
acting to favor some strategic groups and to disadvantage other groups).
E. which strategic groups are currently viewed as the most prestigious by customers and
which companies are being shunned by customers because of high prices and relatively low
product quality.
3-29
90. Having good competitive intelligence about rivals' strategies and moves to improve their
situation is important because
A. it identifies who the industry's current market share leaders are.
B. it helps a company to anticipate what moves rivals are likely to make next and to craft its
own strategic moves with some confidence about what market maneuvers to expect from its
rivals.
C. good scouting reports help identify which rival is in which strategic group.
D. it enables company managers to determine which rival has the worst strategy and how to
avoid making the same strategy mistakes.
E. it enables more accurate predictions about how long it will take a particular rival to copy
most of what the strategy leader is doing.
91. Good competitive intelligence about the strategies and competitive strengths and
weaknesses of rival companies helps management determine
A. which competitor has the best strategy and which competitors have flawed or weak
strategies.
B. which rivals are poised to gain market share and which seem destined to lose market share.
C. which rivals are likely to rank among the industry leaders on the road ahead.
D. which rivals are likely to initiate what kinds of fresh strategic moves and why.
E. All of these.
92. In seeking to predict the next moves of close or key rivals, it is useful to consider such
questions as:
A. Which rivals badly need to increase their unit sales and market share and what new
offensive initiatives are they likely to employ?
B. Which rivals are poised to gain market share and which seem destined to lose market
share?
C. Which rivals are good candidates to be acquired?
D. Which rivals are likely to enter new geographic markets or expand their product offerings
(so as to enter new market segments where they currently do not have a presence)?
E. All of these.
3-30
Question 6: What Are the Key Factors for Future Competitive Success?
3-31
96. Which of the following is not a question asked to deduce a marketing-related key success
factor?
A. What are the industry product R & D capabilities and expertise in product design?
B. What basis do buyers choose between the competing brands of sellers?
C. What product attributes and service characteristics are crucial?
D. What resources must a company have to be competitive?
E. What shortcomings are almost certain to put a company at a significant disadvantage?
97. Which of the following can aid industries in identifying key success factors?
A. Global distribution capabilities
B. Crucial product attributes and service characteristics
C. Low distribution costs
D. Accurate filling of buyer orders
E. Short delivery time capability
3-32
Question 7: Does the Industry Offer Good Prospects for Attractive Profits?
98. Which of the following is particularly pertinent in evaluating whether an industry presents
a sufficiently attractive business opportunity?
A. The industry's growth potential, whether competition appears destined to become stronger
or weaker, and whether the industry's overall profit prospects are above average, average, or
below average
B. An assessment of which firms in the industry have the best and worst competitive
strategies, whether the number of strategic groups in the industry is increasing or decreasing,
and whether economies of scale and experience curve effects are a key success factor
C. Whether there are more than 5 key success factors and more than 5 barriers to entry
D. Constructing a strategic group map and assessing the attractiveness of the competitive
position of each strategic group
E. Whether the market leaders enjoy competitive advantages and how hard it is to develop a
strongly differentiated product
3-33
101. What are the seven key questions which form the framework of thinking strategically
about a company's industry and competitive environment?
3-34
102. Draw the five-forces model of competition and briefly describe the relevance of each of
the five forces in determining the overall strength of competitive pressures a company faces.
Which of the five competitive forces is typically the strongest?
103. What are the five competitive forces that comprise the five-forces model of
competition?
105. Identify and briefly explain any four of the factors that influence the strength or intensity
of competitive rivalry among an industry's member firms.
3-35
106. Identify five factors that tend to intensify competitive rivalry among an industry's
member firms.
107. Identify five factors that tend to weaken the intensity of competitive rivalry among an
industry's member firms.
108. Identify and briefly describe five common barriers to entering an industry.
109. Identify and briefly explain any three factors that intensify competitive pressures
stemming from the threat that new firms will enter the industry.
3-36
110. Identify three conditions that tend to make potential entry a strong competitive force.
111. Identify and briefly explain any three factors that weaken the competitive pressures
stemming from the threat that new firms will enter the industry.
112. Identify and briefly explain any two of the factors that influence the strength of
competition from substitute products.
113. Identify and briefly explain any three of the factors that influence the bargaining strength
and leverage of suppliers.
3-37
114. Identify and briefly explain any three factors that lead to strong bargaining power on the
part of suppliers.
115. Identify and briefly explain any three factors that lead to weak bargaining power on the
part of suppliers.
116. Explain why low switching costs and weakly differentiated products tend to give buyers
a high degree of bargaining power.
117. Not all buyers of an industry's product are likely to possess the same degree of
bargaining power or leverage over the terms and conditions under which they purchase the
product. True or false? Explain.
3-38
118. Identify and briefly discuss any three of the factors that influence the bargaining strength
and leverage of buyers.
119. Identify and briefly explain any three factors that lead to strong bargaining power on the
part of buyers.
120. Identify and briefly explain any three factors that lead to weak bargaining power on the
part of buyers.
3-39
122. In doing driving forces analysis, is it sufficient to simply identify the driving forces that
are operating to alter industry and competitive conditions? Why or why not? If not, then
explain what else is required for a complete driving forces assessment.
123. Identify at least five common driving forces and briefly explain how each one can
produce important changes in industry and competitive conditions.
3-40
125. What is the analytical value of studying competitors and trying to predict what moves
rivals will make next?
126. What is the strategy-making value of identifying an industry's key success factors?
127. Identify four factors that affect whether an industry does or does not present a company
with a good business opportunity?
3-41
128. Can an industry be attractive to one company and unattractive to another company? Why
or why not?
3-42
AACSB: Diversity
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Company Macro-Environment
3-43
2. (p. 50) Which one of the following is not part of a company's macroenvironment?
A. Conditions in the economy at large
B. Population demographics and societal values and lifestyles
C. Technological factors and governmental regulations and legislation
D. The industry and competitive environment arena in which the company operates
E. The company's resource strengths, resource weaknesses, and competitive capabilities
AACSB: Diversity
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Company Macro-Environment
3. (p. 53) Which of the following is not a major question to ask in thinking strategically about
industry and competitive conditions in a given industry?
A. How many companies in the industry have good track records for revenue growth and
profitability?
B. What strategic moves are rivals likely to make next?
C. What are the key factors for future competitive success?
D. Does the outlook for the industry present the company with sufficiently attractive
prospects for profitability?
E. What forces are driving changes in the industry, and what impact will these changes have
on competitive intensity and industry profitability?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Strategic Thinking
3-44
4. (p. 53) Thinking strategically about industry and competitive conditions in a given industry
involves evaluating such considerations as
A. the forces driving change in the industry.
B. the dominant economic features of the industry in which the company operates.
C. the kinds of competitive forces industry members are facing and the strength of each
competitive force.
D. the key factors influencing future competitive success in the industry.
E. All of these.
AACSB: Diversity
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Strategic Thinking
5. (p. 53) Which of the following is not a factor to consider in identifying an industry's dominant
economic features?
A. Market size and growth rate
B. The extent of backward integration of buyer needs and requirements
C. Whether the products or services of rival firms are becoming more or less differentiated
D. Strength of driving forces and competitive forces
E. The pace of technological change, scale economies and experience curve effects, and
product innovation
AACSB: Diversity
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Industry Growth Opportunities
3-45
6. (p. 53) Which of the following is not a relevant consideration in identifying an industry's
dominant economic features?
A. Market size and growth rate, the geographic scope of competitive rivalry, and demand-
supply conditions
B. The extent to which economies of scale and learning/experience curve effects are present
C. How many strategic groups the industry has and which ones are most profitable and least
profitable
D. The number and sizes of buyers, the number of rivals, and the pace of product innovation
E. The prevalence of technological change
AACSB: Diversity
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Industry Growth Opportunities
Question 2: What Kinds of Competitive Forces are Industry Members Facing, and How
Strong are They?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Forces
3-46
8. (p. 54) The nature and strength of the competitive forces that prevail in an industry is
generally a joint product of
A. the pressures induced by the market maneuvering and jockeying for buyer patronage that
goes on among rival sellers in the industry.
B. the threat that firms outside the industry will decide to enter the market.
C. the attempts of companies in other industries to win buyers over to their own substitute
products.
D. competitive pressures stemming from the bargaining power of both suppliers and buyers.
E. All of these.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Forces
9. (p. 54) Which of the following is not one of the five typical sources of competitive pressures?
A. The power and influence of industry driving forces
B. The bargaining power of suppliers and seller-supplier collaboration
C. The threat of new entrants into the market
D. The attempts of companies in other industries to win customers over to their own substitute
products
E. The market maneuvering and jockeying for buyer patronage that goes on among rival
sellers in the industry
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Forces
3-47
10. (p. 54) The most powerful of the five competitive forces is usually
A. the competitive pressures that stem from the ready availability of attractively-priced
substitute products.
B. the competitive pressures associated with the market maneuvering and jockeying for buyer
patronage that goes on among rival sellers in the industry.
C. the benefits that emerge from close collaboration with suppliers and the competitive
pressures that such collaboration creates.
D. the competitive pressures associated with the potential entry of new competitors.
E. the bargaining power and leverage that large customers are able to exercise.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Forces
11. (p. 54) Typically, the weakest of the five competitive forces in an industry is/are:
A. the threat posed by potential new entrants.
B. the bargaining power and leverage that suppliers are able to exercise.
C. the competitive pressures that stem from the ready availability of attractively-priced
substitute products.
D. the bargaining power and leverage that buyers are able to exercise.
E. None of these is typically weakest.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Forces
3-48
12. (p. 54) Using the five-forces model of competition to determine what competition is like in a
given industry involves
A. building the picture of competition in three steps: (1) identifying the specific competitive
pressures associated with each of the five competitive forces; (2) evaluating how strong the
pressures comprising each competitive force are; and (3) determining whether the collective
impact of all five competitive forces is conducive to earning attractive profits.
B. building the picture of competition in two steps: (1) determining which rival has the
biggest competitive advantage and (2) assessing whether the competitive advantages
possessed by various industry members allow most industry members to earn above-average
profits.
C. evaluating whether competition is being intensified or weakened by the industry's driving
forces and key success factors.
D. assessing whether the collective impact of all five forces is weak enough to allow industry
members to go on the offensive or use a defensive strategy to insulate against fierce
competitive pressures.
E. gauging the overall strength of competition based on how many industry rivals are
operating with a competitive advantage and how many are operating at a competitive
disadvantage.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Forces
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
3-49
14. (p. 54) Competitive jockeying and market maneuvering among industry rivals
A. determines whether the industry's strategic group map will be static or dynamic.
B. centers around collaborative efforts to overcome the bargaining power of powerful
suppliers and powerful buyers.
C. is usually an industry's strongest driving force.
D. is usually one of the two or three weakest competitive forces because of the close
familiarity that rivals have for one another's likely next moves.
E. is ever-changing as fresh offensive and defensive moves are initiated and as rivals
emphasize first one mix of competitive weapons and tactics and then another.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
15. (p. 57) Which one of the following does not cause the rivalry among competing sellers to be
weak?
A. High buyer switching costs
B. Rapid growth in buyer demand
C. Industry conditions that tempt rivals to use price cuts or other competitive weapons to
boost unit sales
D. Low barriers to entry
E. Strongly differentiated products among rival sellers
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
3-50
16. (p. 57-58) Factors that tend to result in weak rivalry among competing sellers include
A. low buyer switching costs and low barriers to entry.
B. rapid growth in buyer demand, high buyer costs to switch brands, and so many industry
rivals that any one company's actions have little impact on rivals' businesses.
C. weakly differentiated products among rival sellers.
D. rivals that are quite diverse in terms of their strategies, objectives, and countries of origin.
E. conditions where outsiders have recently acquired weak competitors and are trying to turn
them into major contenders.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
17. (p. 57-58) The rivalry among competing sellers tends to be less intense when
A. industry conditions tempt competitors to use price cuts or other competitive weapons to
boost unit sales.
B. buyer demand is weak and many sellers have excess capacity and/or inventory.
C. industry rivals are not particularly aggressive or active in making fresh moves to improve
their market standing and business performance.
D. rivals have diverse strategies and objectives and are located in different countries.
E. rival sellers have weakly differentiated products.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
3-51
18. (p. 57-59) Rivalry among competing sellers is generally more intense when
A. there are relatively few industry key success factors and rivals have highly differentiated
products.
B. the industry's driving forces are strong and rivals have strongly differentiated products.
C. barriers to entry are moderately high and the pool of likely entry candidates is small.
D. rivals are active in making fresh moves to lower prices, introduce new products, increase
promotional efforts and advertising, and otherwise gain sales and market share.
E. barriers to entry are high and buyer switching costs are high.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
19. (p. 57-59) Rivalry among competing sellers grows in intensity when
A. rivals' products/services are sold at widely varying prices and there are only 2-4 rivals.
B. rivals have highly differentiated products and buyer demand is growing rapidly.
C. there are so many industry rivals that the impact of any one company's actions is spread
thinly across all industry members.
D. the products/services of rivals are strongly differentiated and buyers have high switching
costs.
E. buyer demand is growing slowly and the industry is composed of 6 to 10 competitors that
are fairly equal in size and competitive capability.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
3-52
20. (p. 57-58) The rivalry among competing firms tends to be more intense
A. when demand for the product is growing slowly, buyers have low switching costs, and the
actions of any one company to attract more customers and boost market share have strong
direct impact on their rivals.
B. when the products/services of rival sellers are strongly differentiated and buyer demand is
strong.
C. when rivals are relatively content with their market position.
D. when there are so many industry rivals that the impact of any one company's actions is
spread thinly across all industry members.
E. the smaller the number of firms in the industry and the more unequal their market shares.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
21. (p. 57-59) Which of the following is not among the factors that affect whether competitive
rivalry among participating firms is strong, moderate, or weak?
A. Whether the products of rival sellers are strongly or weakly differentiated
B. Whether demand for the industry's product is growing rapidly or slowly
C. The degree to which rivals are satisfied with their current market position
D. Whether industry driving forces are strong or weak
E. Whether industry conditions tempt competitors to use price cuts or other competitive
weapons to boost unit sales and whether one or two rivals have particularly powerful
strategies
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
3-53
22. (p. 57-58) Rivalry among competing sellers tends to be more intense when
A. competitors are very unequal in size and capability, such that small competitors must really
scramble to even survive.
B. buyer switching costs are high and market demand is growing rapidly.
C. several competitors are under pressure to improve their market share or profitability and
launch fresh strategic initiatives to attract more buyers and bolster their business position.
D. the products of rival sellers are strongly differentiated.
E. there are fewer than 5 competitors and their products are strongly differentiated.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
23. (p. 57-59) The competitive force of rival firms' jockeying for better market positions, higher
sales and market shares, and competitive advantage
A. is stronger when firms strive to be low-cost producers than when they use differentiation
and focus strategies.
B. is typically a weaker competitive force than is the threat of entry of new rivals.
C. is largely unaffected by whether industry conditions tempt rivals to use price cuts or other
competitive weapons to boost unit sales.
D. tends to intensify when strong companies outside the industry acquire weak firms in the
industry and launch aggressive, well-funded moves to transform the acquired companies into
strong market contenders.
E. is weaker when more firms have weakly differentiated products, buyer demand is growing
slowly, and buyers have moderate switching costs.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
3-54
24. (p. 58) In analyzing the strength of competition among rival firms, an important
consideration is
A. the potential for buyers to exercise strong bargaining power.
B. the diversity of competitors in terms of visions, strategic intents, objectives, strategies,
resources and countries of origin.
C. the number of firms pursuing differentiation strategies versus the number pursuing low-
cost leadership strategies and focus strategies.
D. the extent to which some rivals have more than two competitively valuable competencies
or capabilities.
E. whether the industry is characterized by a strong learning/experience curve and whether the
industry is composed of many or few strategic groups.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
25. (p. 58) In which one of the following instances is rivalry among competing sellers not more
intense?
A. When certain competitors are dissatisfied with their market position and make moves to
bolster their standing
B. When strong companies outside the industry acquire weak firms in the industry and launch
aggressive moves to transform their newly-acquired competitors into stronger market
contenders
C. When competitors are fairly equal in size and capability
D. When the products of rivals are weakly differentiated, buyer switching costs are low, and
market demand is growing slowly
E. When there are vast numbers of small rivals so the impact of any one company's actions is
spread thinly across all industry members
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
3-55
26. (p. 59-60) Which of the following is generally not considered as a barrier to entry?
A. Rapid market growth
B. Sizable capital requirements and an array of regulatory requirements
C. Strong buyer loyalty to existing brands
D. Sizable economies of scale in production
E. Difficulties in gaining access to technological know-how
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
27. (p. 60) Potential entrants are more likely to be deterred from actually entering an industry
when
A. incumbent firms have previously been aggressive in defending their market positions
against entry.
B. incumbent firms are complacent.
C. buyers are not particularly price sensitive and the industry already contains a dozen or
more rivals.
D. the relative cost positions of incumbent firms are about the same, such that no one
incumbent has a meaningful cost advantage.
E. buyer switching costs are moderately low because of strong product differentiation among
incumbent firms.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
3-56
28. (p. 62) Competitive pressures associated with the threat of entry are greater when
A. incumbent firms are unable or unwilling to strongly contest the entry of newcomers.
B. newcomers can expect to earn attractive profits and a number of outsiders have the
expertise and resources to hurdle whatever entry barriers exist.
C. entry barriers are relatively low and buyer demand for the product is growing fairly rapidly.
D. existing industry members are looking to expand their market reach by entering product
segments or geographic areas where they currently do not have a presence.
E. All of these conditions heighten the competitive pressures associated with fresh entry into
the industry.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
29. (p. 62) Which one of the following does not intensify the competitive pressures associated
with the threat of entry?
A. When incumbent firms are unable or unwilling to launch competitive initiatives to strongly
contest the entry of newcomers
B. When industry members are struggling to earn good profits
C. When entry barriers are relatively low and buyer demand for the product is growing fairly
rapidly
D. When existing industry members are looking to expand their market reach by entering
product segments or geographic areas where they currently do not have a presence
E. When newcomers can expect to earn attractive profits and a number of outsiders have the
expertise and resources to hurdle whatever entry barriers exist
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
3-57
30. (p. 62) Which one of the following increases the competitive pressures associated with the
threat of entry?
A. When incumbent firms are likely to launch competitive initiatives to strongly contest the
entry of newcomers
B. When buyers have a high degree of loyalty to the brands and product offerings of existing
industry members
C. When buyer demand for the product is growing fairly slowly
D. When few outsiders have the expertise and resources to hurdle whatever entry barriers
exist
E. When newcomers can expect to earn attractive profits
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
31. (p. 62) The competitive threat that outsiders will enter a market is weaker when
A. financially strong industry members send strong signals that they will launch strategic
initiatives to combat the entry of newcomers.
B. the industry is characterized by the lack of sizable scale economies and learning/experience
curve effects.
C. the industry's market growth is rapid.
D. there are more than 2 entry barriers.
E. buyers have little loyalty to the brands and product offerings of existing industry members.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
3-58
32. (p. 62) Competitive pressures stemming from the threat of entry are weaker when
A. there are fewer than 20 potential entry candidates and more than 10 firms already in the
industry.
B. there are more than 3 entry barriers.
C. the industry outlook is risky or uncertain.
D. incumbent firms have little ability to leverage distributors, dealers, and/or retailers to retain
their business.
E. the nature of the industry entails few scale economies.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
33. (p. 61) The best test of whether potential entry is a strong or weak competitive force is
A. the strength of buyer loyalty to existing brands.
B. whether the industry's driving forces make it harder or easier for new entrants to be
successful.
C. whether the strategies of industry members are well-matched to the industry's key success
factors.
D. whether there are any vacant spaces on the industry's strategic group map.
E. to ask if the industry's growth and profit prospects are strongly attractive to potential entry
candidates.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
3-59
34. (p. 63) Which of the following is not a good example of a substitute product that triggers
stronger competitive pressures?
A. A salad as a substitute for French fries
B. Wireless phones as a substitute for wired telephones
C. Coca-Cola as a substitute for Pepsi
D. Snowboards as a substitute for snow skis
E. Video-on-demand services from a cable TV company as a substitute for going to the
movies
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Substitute Product Sellers
35. (p. 63-64) The competitive pressures from substitute products tend to be stronger when
A. buyers are relatively comfortable with using substitutes and the costs to buyers of
switching over to the substitutes are low.
B. there are more than 10 sellers of substitute products.
C. the quality and performance of the substitutes is well above what buyers need to meet their
requirements.
D. buyers have high psychic costs in severing existing brand relationships and establishing
new ones.
E. demand for the industry's product is not very price sensitive.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Substitute Product Sellers
3-60
36. (p. 63) Industry rivals tend to experience weak competitive pressures from substitute
products when
A. the available substitute products are weakly differentiated from one another.
B. the buyers of the industry's products are few in number and they have substantial amounts
of leverage with sellers.
C. rival sellers experience strong bargaining power from both suppliers and influential
customers.
D. buyers incur high costs in switching to substitutes and substitutes are higher priced relative
to the performance they deliver.
E. the producers of substitute products are all pursuing strategies to strongly differentiate their
products on the basis of quality and product performance.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Substitute Product Sellers
37. (p. 64) Whether supplier-seller relationships in an industry represent a strong or weak source
of competitive pressure is a function of
A. whether the profits of suppliers are relatively high or low.
B. the number of suppliers that each seller/industry member purchases from on average.
C. how aggressively rival industry members are trying to differentiate their products.
D. whether suppliers can exercise sufficient bargaining power to influence the terms and
conditions of supply in their favor and the extent of seller-supplier collaboration in the
industry.
E. whether the prices of the items being furnished by the suppliers are rising or falling.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
3-61
38. (p. 65) The strength of competitive pressures that suppliers can exert on industry members is
mainly a function of
A. whether needed inputs are in short supply or whether ample supplies are readily available
from several different suppliers.
B. whether suppliers self-manufacture what they supply or source their items from other
manufacturers.
C. the industry's position in the growth cycle.
D. whether technological change in the businesses of suppliers is rapid or slow.
E. whether the needs and expectations of buyers of the industry product are changing slowly
or rapidly.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
3-62
40. (p. 65-67) In which one of the following instances are the competitive pressures that industry
members experience in their dealings with suppliers not weakened?
A. When industry members pose a credible threat of backward integration into the business of
suppliers
B. When the cost of switching from one supplier to another is low
C. When the buying firms purchase in large quantities and thus are important customers of the
suppliers
D. When the item being supplied is a commodity
E. When the items purchased from suppliers are in short supply
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
3-63
42. (p. 65-67) Which one of the following is not a factor that affects the strength of supplier
bargaining power?
A. Whether needed inputs are in ample supply and are readily available from several different
suppliers
B. Whether industry members are a strong threat to integrate backward into the business of
suppliers and self-manufacture their own requirements
C. Whether industry members are struggling to make good profits because of slow-growing
market demand
D. Whether the costs of industry members to switch their purchases to alternative suppliers
are high or low
E. Whether the item being supplied is a commodity or is highly differentiated from supplier to
supplier
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
43. (p. 65) Which one of the following is not a factor in causing supplier bargaining power to be
relatively strong?
A. The inputs needed from suppliers are in short supply.
B. Suppliers are a strong threat to integrate forward into the business of industry members.
C. The input being supplied is a commodity.
D. The input being supplied significantly enhances the quality or performance of the products
of industry members.
E. There are only a few suppliers of the input.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
3-64
44. (p. 66-67) When one or more industry members have unusually effective and mutually
advantageous partnerships with their suppliers,
A. it is rare for such partnerships to have much competitive impact on those industry members
not having such partnerships.
B. one unfortunate outcome is that it tends to give the supply partners much enhanced
bargaining power in their dealings with these industry members.
C. there is a strong likelihood such partnerships will put increased competitive pressure on
those industry members who lack productive collaborative relationships with their suppliers.
D. there is a high likelihood of such partnerships reducing competitive pressures on all
industry members, provided technological change in the suppliers' business is rapid and the
item being supplied is a commodity.
E. the usual result is to reduce competitive pressures on all industry members, provided the
costs of the items furnished by supply chain partners amount to 50% or more of total cost.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
45. (p. 65-66) Which one of the following is not a reason why industry members are often
motivated to enter into collaborative partnerships with key suppliers?
A. To reduce the costs of switching suppliers
B. To speed the availability of next-generation components
C. To enhance the quality of parts and components being supplied and reduce defect rates
D. To squeeze out important cost savings for both themselves and their suppliers
E. To reduce inventory and logistics costs
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
3-65
46. (p. 67) Whether buyer-seller relationships in an industry represent a strong or weak source of
competitive pressure is a function of
A. the speed with which general economic conditions and interest rates are changing.
B. the extent to which buyers can exercise enough bargaining power to influence the
conditions of sale in their favor and whether strategic partnerships between certain industry
members can adversely affect other industry members.
C. how many buyers purchase all of their requirements from a single seller versus how many
purchase from several sellers.
D. the number of buyers versus the number of sellers.
E. whether industry members are spending more or less on advertising.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Buyer Bargaining Power
47. (p. 68-69) Whether buyer bargaining power poses a strong or weak source of competitive
pressure on industry members depends in part on
A. whether most buyers possess roughly equal or varying degrees of bargaining power and
leverage.
B. how many buyers are engaged in collaborative partnerships with sellers.
C. whether entry barriers are high or low and the size of the pool of likely entry candidates.
D. whether the overall quality of the items being furnished by industry members is rising or
falling.
E. whether demand-supply conditions represent a buyer's market or a seller's market.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Buyer Bargaining Power
3-66
48. (p. 69) Which of the following is not a factor that causes buyer bargaining power to be
stronger?
A. Some buyers are a threat to integrate backward into the business of sellers and become an
important competitor.
B. The industry is composed of a few large sellers and the customer group consists of
numerous buyers that purchase in fairly small quantities.
C. Buyers have considerable discretion over whether and when they purchase the product.
D. Buyers purchase the item frequently and are well-informed about sellers' products, prices,
and costs.
E. The costs incurred by buyers in switching to competing brands or to substitute products are
relatively low.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Buyer Bargaining Power
49. (p. 68-70) Which of the following factors does not affect whether buyer bargaining power and
seller-buyer collaboration are an important source of competitive pressure in an industry?
A. Whether winning the business of certain customers, offer a seller important market
exposure or prestige
B. The extent and importance of collaborative partnerships and alliances between particular
sellers and buyers
C. Whether buyers pose a major threat to integrate backward into the product market of
sellers
D. Whether sellers' products are weakly differentiated, making it easy and inexpensive for
buyers to switch to competing brands
E. Whether buyers have a strong preference for products of superior quality or just average
quality
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Buyer Bargaining Power
3-67
50. (p. 67-68) Which of the following factors is not a relevant consideration in determining the
strength of buyer bargaining power?
A. Whether winning the business of prestigious customers gives a seller important market
exposure and heightens its brand name
B. Whether the seller is a manufacturer.
C. Whether buyers pose a major threat to integrate backward into the product market of
sellers
D. Whether sellers' products are weakly differentiated, making it easy for buyers to switch to
competing brands
E. Whether collaborative partnerships and alliances between particular sellers and buyers put
rivals lacking such collaborative relationships at a competitive disadvantage
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Buyer Bargaining Power
51. (p. 70) Collaborative relationships between particular sellers and buyers in an industry can
represent a source of strong competitive pressure when
A. virtually all buyers have strong brand attachments and are highly brand loyal.
B. demand for the product is growing rapidly.
C. sales are made to buyer groups with either strong bargaining power or high sensitivity.
D. sellers are racing to add the latest and greatest performance features so as to attract the
patronage of important or prestigious buyers.
E. buyers are very quality conscious.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Buyer Bargaining Power
3-68
52. (p. 69) In which of the following circumstances are competitive pressures associated with
the bargaining power of buyers not relatively strong?
A. When buyer demand is growing rapidly
B. When buyers are relatively well informed about sellers' products, prices, and costs
C. When buyers pose a major threat to integrate backward into the product market of sellers
D. When sellers' products are weakly differentiated, making it easy for buyers to switch to
competing brands
E. When buyers have considerable discretion over whether and when they purchase the
product
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Buyer Bargaining Power
53. (p. 69) Competitive pressures stemming from buyer bargaining power tend to be weaker
when
A. the number of buyers is small, such that each customer's business tends to be particularly
important to a seller.
B. buyer demand is growing slowly or maybe even declining.
C. the costs incurred by buyers in switching to competing brands or to substitute products are
relatively high.
D. buyers purchase the item frequently and are well-informed about sellers' products, prices,
and costs.
E. the buyer group consists a few large buyers and the seller group consists of numerous small
firms.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Buyer Bargaining Power
3-69
54. (p. 69) Which of the following conditions acts to weaken buyer bargaining power?
A. When buyers are unlikely to integrate backward into the business of sellers
B. When buyers purchase the item frequently and are well-informed about sellers' products,
prices, and costs
C. When the costs incurred by buyers in switching to competing brands or to substitute
products are relatively low
D. When the products of rival sellers are weakly differentiated and buyers have considerable
discretion over whether and when they purchase the product
E. When buyers are few in number and/or often purchase in large quantities
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Buyer Bargaining Power
55. (p. 69) Buyers are in position to exert strong bargaining power in dealing with sellers when
A. their costs to switch to competing brands or to substitute products are relatively high.
B. a particular seller's product delivers quality or performance that is very important to the
buyer and is not matched by other brands.
C. they buy the product infrequently or in small quantities and are not particularly well-
informed about sellers' products, prices, and costs.
D. buyer demand is growing rapidly.
E. the number of buyers is small or when a customer is particularly important to a seller.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Buyer Bargaining Power
3-70
56. (p. 69) Which of the following factors is not a relevant consideration in judging whether
buyer bargaining power is relatively strong or relatively weak?
A. Whether certain customers offer sellers important market exposure or prestige
B. Whether customers are relatively well informed about sellers' products, prices, and costs
C. Whether buyer needs and expectations are changing rapidly or slowly
D. Whether sellers' products are highly differentiated, making it troublesome or costly for
buyers to switch to competing brands or to substitute products
E. Whether sellers pose little threat of forward integration into the product market of their
customers and whether buyers pose a major threat to integrate backward into the product
market of sellers
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Buyer Bargaining Power
57. (p. 70-71) A competitive environment where there is weak to moderate rivalry among sellers,
high entry barriers, weak competition from substitute products, and little bargaining leverage
on the part of both suppliers and customers
A. lacks powerful driving forces.
B. gives each industry competitor the best potential for building sustainable competitive
advantage over rival firms.
C. makes it hard for industry members to compete successfully unless they can strongly
differentiate their products.
D. is conducive to industry members earning attractive profits.
E. requires that industry members have low costs in order to be competitively successful.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Forces and Collective Strength
3-71
58. (p. 70) A competitive environment where there is strong rivalry among sellers, low entry
barriers, strong competition from substitute products, and considerable bargaining leverage on
the part of both suppliers and customers
A. is competitively unattractive from the standpoint of earning good profits.
B. offers little ability to build a sustainable competitive advantage.
C. is highly conducive to achieving strong product differentiation and high customer loyalty
to the company's brand.
D. offers moderate to good prospects for making a reasonable profit and building a
sustainable competitive advantage.
E. requires that industry members have a strongly differentiated product offering in order to
be profitable.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Forces and Collective Strength
59. (p. 71) As a rule, the stronger the collective impact of competitive pressures associated with
the five competitive forces,
A. the stronger are the industry's driving forces.
B. the lower the combined profitability of industry members.
C. the fewer companies that can achieve a competitive advantage via anything other than
being the industry's low-cost leader.
D. the larger the number of competitive advantage opportunities for industry members.
E. the greater the number of industry key success factors.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Forces and Collective Strength
3-72
60. (p. 57) Factors that cause the rivalry among competing sellers to be weak include
A. low buyer switching costs and rival sellers that are relatively equal is size and capability.
B. rapid growth in buyer demand and high buyer switching costs.
C. few industry rivals that any one company's actions can easily be anticipated and countered
by its rivals.
D. low barriers to entry and weakly differentiated products among rival sellers.
E. slow growth in buyer demand and strongly differentiated products.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
61. (p. 58) The intensity of rivalry among competing sellers does not depend on whether
A. the industry has more than two strong driving forces and whether the industry has more
than 2 strategic groups.
B. competitors are diverse in terms of visions, strategic intents, objectives, strategies,
resources and countries of origin.
C. strong companies outside the industry have acquired weak firms in the industry and are
launching aggressive moves to transform the acquired companies into strong market
contenders.
D. one or two rivals have particularly powerful and successful strategies.
E. industry conditions tempt industry members to use price cuts or other competitive weapons
to boost unit sales.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
3-73
62. (p. 63) In which of the following instances are industry members not subject to stronger
competitive pressures from substitute products?
A. The costs to buyers of switching over to the substitutes are low.
B. Buyers are dubious about using substitutes.
C. The quality and performance of the substitutes is well matched to what buyers need to meet
their requirements.
D. Buyer brand loyalty is weak.
E. Substitutes are readily available at competitive prices.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Substitute Product Sellers
63. (p. 63) Just how strong the competitive pressures are from substitute products depends on
A. whether the available substitutes are strongly or weakly differentiated and whether buyers
make purchases frequently or infrequently.
B. whether attractively priced substitutes are readily available and the ease with which buyers
can switch to substitutes.
C. whether the available substitutes are products or services.
D. whether the producers of substitutes have ample budgets for new product R&D.
E. the speed with which buyer needs and expectations are changing.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Substitute Product Sellers
3-74
Question 3: What Forces Are Driving Industry Change and What Impacts Will They
Have?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Driving Forces
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces
3-75
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces
3-76
68. (p. 73-75) Which of the following is not generally a "driving force" capable of producing
fundamental changes in industry and competitive conditions?
A. Changes in the long-term industry growth rate
B. Increasing globalization of the industry
C. Product innovation and technological change
D. Ups and downs in the economy and in interest rates
E. New government regulations or significant changes in government policy toward the
industry
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces
69. (p. 73-75) Which of the following are most unlikely to qualify as driving forces?
A. Changes in the long-term industry growth rate, the entry or exit of major firms, and
changes in cost and efficiency
B. Increasing globalization of the industry and product innovation
C. New Internet technology applications, new government regulations, and significant
changes in government policy toward the industry
D. Mounting competition from substitutes and increasing efforts to collaborate with suppliers
via strategic alliances
E. Marketing innovations and changes in who buys the industry's product and how they use it
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces
3-77
70. (p. 73-75) Which of the following do not qualify as potential driving forces capable of
inducing fundamental changes in industry and competitive conditions?
A. Changes in who buys the product and how they use it and changes in the long-term
industry growth rate
B. Entry or exit of major firms, product innovation, and marketing innovation
C. Increases in the economic power and bargaining leverage of customers and suppliers,
growing supplier-seller collaboration, and growing buyer-seller collaboration
D. Growing buyer preferences for differentiated products instead of mostly standardized or
identical products
E. Changes in economies of scale and experience curve effects brought on by changes in
manufacturing technology and new Internet capabilities
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces
71. (p. 74) Which of the following is most likely to qualify as a driving force?
A. Increases in price-cutting by rival sellers and the launch of major new advertising
campaigns by one or more rivals
B. Wildly successful introduction of innovative new products by one or more industry rivals
that force other rivals to respond quickly or lose a major share of their customers to the
innovating rival(s)
C. An increase in the prices of substitute products
D. Decisions on the part the industry's three biggest competitors not to pursue a strategy of
striving to be the industry's low-cost leader
E. Decisions by one or more outsiders not to attempt to enter the industry
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Apply
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces
3-78
72. (p. 73-75) Which one of the following is not a common type of driving force?
A. Reductions in uncertainty and business risk
B. Changing societal concerns, attitudes, and lifestyles
C. Diffusion of technical know-how across more companies and more countries
D. Increasing efforts on the part of industry members to collaborate closely with their
suppliers
E. Technological change and manufacturing process innovation
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces
73. (p. 73) Increasing globalization of the industry can be a driving force because
A. the products of foreign competitors are nearly always cheaper or of better quality than
those of domestic companies.
B. foreign producers typically have lower costs, greater technological expertise, and more
product innovation capabilities than domestic firms.
C. it tends to increase rivalry among industry members and often shifts the pattern of
competition among an industry's major players, favoring some and disadvantaging others.
D. it results in companies having fewer competitors and a strategic group map with fewer
circles.
E. market growth rates go up, product innovation speeds up, and new firms are likely to enter
the industry.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces
3-79
74. (p. 76) Driving forces analysis helps managers identify whether
A. the combined impacts of the driving forces will act to increase/decrease market demand,
increase/decrease competition, and raise/lower industry profitability in the years ahead.
B. it will become more or less important to aim the company's strategy at being the industry's
low-cost producer.
C. the driving forces will have a bigger impact on company profitability than competitive
forces.
D. the industry is likely to become more or less vertically integrated and why.
E. competitive advantages are likely to grow or diminish in importance.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces Impact
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces Impact
3-80
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces Impact
77. (p. 76) Which one of the following is not an integral part of driving forces analysis?
A. Identifying the specific factors causing fundamental changes in industry conditions and/or
the industry's competitive structure
B. Determining whether the driving forces are acting to cause one or more industry rivals to
shift to a different strategic group
C. Determining whether the driving forces are acting to strengthen or weaken market demand
D. Determining whether the driving forces are acting to make competition more or less
intense
E. Determining whether the driving forces are acting to raise or lower industry profitability
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces Impact
3-81
78. (p. 77) The real payoff for strategy making comes when managers draw conclusions about
A. what strategy adjustments are needed to deal with the changes in conditions.
B. determining the overall strength of the five competitive forces.
C. determining whether the industry's strategic group map will be static or dynamic.
D. conditions in the economy at large.
E. the extent to which rivals have more than two competitively valuable competencies or
capabilities
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Strategy for Changing Industry Conditions
Question 4: How Are Industry Rivals Positioned—Who Is Strongly Positioned and Who
Is Not?
79. (p. 77) What is the best technique for revealing the market position of industry competitors?
A. Strategic group mapping.
B. Global industry change.
C. Dynamic mapping analysis.
D. Distribution analysis.
E. None of these.
3-82
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Strategic Group
81. (p. 78) A strategic group consists of those firms in an industry that
A. are subject to the same driving forces.
B. are placing about the same emphasis on each distribution channel.
C. use the same key success factors to differentiate their products.
D. employ similar competitive approaches and occupy similar positions in the market.
E. have similar size market shares.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Strategic Group
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Strategic Group
3-83
83. (p. 78) Which one of the following pairs of variables is least likely to be useful in drawing a
strategic group map?
A. Geographic coverage and degree of vertical integration
B. Brand name reputation and distribution channel emphasis
C. Product quality and product line breadth
D. Level of profitability and size of market share
E. Price/quality range and whether the company's product appeals to many or few types of
buyers
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Strategic Group
84. (p. 78) The concept of strategic groups is relevant to industry and competitive analysis
because
A. firms in the same strategic groups are rarely close competitors—a firm's closest
competitors are usually in distant strategic groups.
B. strategic group maps help identify each company's market position and its closest
competitors.
C. competition grows in intensity as the number and diversity of the strategic groups in an
industry increases.
D. the profit potential of firms in the same strategic group is usually very similar.
E. competitive pressures tend to be weaker within strategic groups than across strategic
groups.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Strategic Group
3-84
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Strategic Group
86. (p. 78) Which of the following is not an appropriate guideline for developing a strategic
group map for a given industry?
A. The variables chosen as axes for the map should indicate big differences in how rivals have
positioned themselves to compete in the marketplace.
B. The variables chosen as axes for the map can be either quantitative or qualitative.
C. The variables chosen as axes for the map should be highly correlated.
D. Several maps should be drawn if more than one pair of variables help illuminate
differences in the competitive positioning of industry members.
E. The sizes of the circles on the map should be drawn proportional to the combined sales of
the firms in each strategic group.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Strategic Group
3-85
87. (p. 80) With the aid of a strategic group map, one can
A. readily identify the entry and exit barriers for each strategic group.
B. pinpoint precisely which firms are in profitable strategic groups and which are not.
C. identify which competitive forces are strong and which are weak.
D. measure accurately whether across-group rivalry is stronger than within-group rivalry or
vice versa.
E. often learn to what extent industry driving forces and competitive pressures favor some
companies or groups and hurt others.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Strategic Group Maps
88. (p. 80) One of the things that can be gleaned from a strategic group map of industry rivals is
A. which rivals have been in business longer and thus have greater access to experience curve
effects.
B. which rivals have newer manufacturing facilities.
C. which strategic groups have the highest profit margins and the highest customer switching
costs.
D. whether profit prospects vary among strategic groups due to strengths and weaknesses in
their respective market positions on the map (perhaps because competitive pressures are
acting to favor some strategic groups and to disadvantage other groups).
E. which strategic groups are currently viewed as the most prestigious by customers and
which companies are being shunned by customers because of high prices and relatively low
product quality.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Strategic Group Maps
3-86
89. (p. 81) The payoff of good scouting reports on rivals is improved ability to
A. anticipate what moves rivals are likely to make next, thereby providing a valuable assist in
outmaneuvering them in the marketplace.
B. determine which rivals are in the best strategic group.
C. figure out how many key success factors a rival has.
D. determine whether a rival is gaining or losing market share.
E. determine whether a rival has the best strategy and is the industry leader.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Competitive Strategy
90. (p. 81) Having good competitive intelligence about rivals' strategies and moves to improve
their situation is important because
A. it identifies who the industry's current market share leaders are.
B. it helps a company to anticipate what moves rivals are likely to make next and to craft its
own strategic moves with some confidence about what market maneuvers to expect from its
rivals.
C. good scouting reports help identify which rival is in which strategic group.
D. it enables company managers to determine which rival has the worst strategy and how to
avoid making the same strategy mistakes.
E. it enables more accurate predictions about how long it will take a particular rival to copy
most of what the strategy leader is doing.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Competitive Strategy
3-87
91. (p. 81) Good competitive intelligence about the strategies and competitive strengths and
weaknesses of rival companies helps management determine
A. which competitor has the best strategy and which competitors have flawed or weak
strategies.
B. which rivals are poised to gain market share and which seem destined to lose market share.
C. which rivals are likely to rank among the industry leaders on the road ahead.
D. which rivals are likely to initiate what kinds of fresh strategic moves and why.
E. All of these.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Competitive Strategy
92. (p. 81-82) In seeking to predict the next moves of close or key rivals, it is useful to consider
such questions as:
A. Which rivals badly need to increase their unit sales and market share and what new
offensive initiatives are they likely to employ?
B. Which rivals are poised to gain market share and which seem destined to lose market
share?
C. Which rivals are good candidates to be acquired?
D. Which rivals are likely to enter new geographic markets or expand their product offerings
(so as to enter new market segments where they currently do not have a presence)?
E. All of these.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Competitive Strategy
3-88
Question 6: What Are the Key Factors for Future Competitive Success?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-04 Understand why in-depth evaluation of a business's strengths and weaknesses in relation to the specific industry
conditions it confronts is an essential prerequisite to crafting a strategy that is well-matched to its external situation.
Topic: Key Factors for Competitive Success
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-04 Understand why in-depth evaluation of a business's strengths and weaknesses in relation to the specific industry
conditions it confronts is an essential prerequisite to crafting a strategy that is well-matched to its external situation.
Topic: Key Factors for Competitive Success
3-89
95. (p. 83) In identifying an industry's key success factors, strategists should
A. try to single out all factors which play a major role in shaping whether buyer demand
grows rapidly or slowly.
B. consider on what basis customers choose between competing brands, what resources and
competitive capabilities firms need to be competitively successful, and what shortcomings are
almost certain to put a company at a significant competitive disadvantage.
C. consider whether the number of strategic groups is increasing or decreasing and whether
the five competitive forces are powerful or relatively weak.
D. consider what it will take to overtake the company with the industry's overall best strategy.
E. focus their attention on what it will take to capitalize on impacts of the industry's driving
forces.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-04 Understand why in-depth evaluation of a business's strengths and weaknesses in relation to the specific industry
conditions it confronts is an essential prerequisite to crafting a strategy that is well-matched to its external situation.
Topic: Key Factors for Competitive Success
96. (p. 83) Which of the following is not a question asked to deduce a marketing-related key
success factor?
A. What are the industry product R & D capabilities and expertise in product design?
B. What basis do buyers choose between the competing brands of sellers?
C. What product attributes and service characteristics are crucial?
D. What resources must a company have to be competitive?
E. What shortcomings are almost certain to put a company at a significant disadvantage?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-04 Understand why in-depth evaluation of a business's strengths and weaknesses in relation to the specific industry
conditions it confronts is an essential prerequisite to crafting a strategy that is well-matched to its external situation.
Topic: Key Factors for Competitive Success
3-90
97. (p. 83) Which of the following can aid industries in identifying key success factors?
A. Global distribution capabilities
B. Crucial product attributes and service characteristics
C. Low distribution costs
D. Accurate filling of buyer orders
E. Short delivery time capability
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-04 Understand why in-depth evaluation of a business's strengths and weaknesses in relation to the specific industry
conditions it confronts is an essential prerequisite to crafting a strategy that is well-matched to its external situation.
Topic: Key Factors for Competitive Success
Question 7: Does the Industry Offer Good Prospects for Attractive Profits?
98. (p. 84) Which of the following is particularly pertinent in evaluating whether an industry
presents a sufficiently attractive business opportunity?
A. The industry's growth potential, whether competition appears destined to become stronger
or weaker, and whether the industry's overall profit prospects are above average, average, or
below average
B. An assessment of which firms in the industry have the best and worst competitive
strategies, whether the number of strategic groups in the industry is increasing or decreasing,
and whether economies of scale and experience curve effects are a key success factor
C. Whether there are more than 5 key success factors and more than 5 barriers to entry
D. Constructing a strategic group map and assessing the attractiveness of the competitive
position of each strategic group
E. Whether the market leaders enjoy competitive advantages and how hard it is to develop a
strongly differentiated product
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-04 Understand why in-depth evaluation of a business's strengths and weaknesses in relation to the specific industry
conditions it confronts is an essential prerequisite to crafting a strategy that is well-matched to its external situation.
Topic: Industry Prospects and Profits
3-91
99. (p. 84) Evaluating whether an industry presents a sufficiently attractive business opportunity
usually does not involve a consideration of which of the following factors?
A. The industry's growth potential, whether competitive pressures will likely grow stronger or
weaker, and whether the industry's future profit prospects are above average, average, or
below average
B. An assessment of the degrees of business risk and uncertainty in the industry's future
C. Whether the industry's future profitability will be favorably or unfavorably affected by the
prevailing driving forces
D. The severity of the problems confronting the industry as a whole
E. Whether the industry's product is strongly or weakly differentiated
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-04 Understand why in-depth evaluation of a business's strengths and weaknesses in relation to the specific industry
conditions it confronts is an essential prerequisite to crafting a strategy that is well-matched to its external situation.
Topic: Industry Prospects and Profits
100. (p. 84) Evaluating whether an industry's environment presents a company with a
sufficiently attractive business opportunity involves
A. sizing up overall industry and competitive conditions to determine whether the industry's
overall profit prospects are above average, average, or below average.
B. determining which firms in the industry have a competitive advantage and how they got
their advantage.
C. determining the overall strength of the five competitive forces.
D. constructing a strategic group map and assessing the attractiveness of the competitive
position of each strategic group to determine the overall attractiveness of all the strategic
groups.
E. using value chain analysis to determine the relative cost positions of rival firms and to learn
who the industry's low-cost producer is.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-04 Understand why in-depth evaluation of a business's strengths and weaknesses in relation to the specific industry
conditions it confronts is an essential prerequisite to crafting a strategy that is well-matched to its external situation.
Topic: Industry Prospects and Profits
3-92
101. (p. 53) What are the seven key questions which form the framework of thinking
strategically about a company's industry and competitive environment?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Strategic Thinking
102. (p. 55-70) Draw the five-forces model of competition and briefly describe the relevance of
each of the five forces in determining the overall strength of competitive pressures a company
faces. Which of the five competitive forces is typically the strongest?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures
103. (p. 55) What are the five competitive forces that comprise the five-forces model of
competition?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Forces
3-93
104. (p. 54) Competitive markets are economic battlefields. True or false? Explain.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Apply
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures
105. (p. 56-58) Identify and briefly explain any four of the factors that influence the strength or
intensity of competitive rivalry among an industry's member firms.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
106. (p. 57) Identify five factors that tend to intensify competitive rivalry among an industry's
member firms.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
3-94
107. (p. 57) Identify five factors that tend to weaken the intensity of competitive rivalry among
an industry's member firms.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Rivalry
108. (p. 59-60) Identify and briefly describe five common barriers to entering an industry.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
109. (p. 59-61) Identify and briefly explain any three factors that intensify competitive pressures
stemming from the threat that new firms will enter the industry.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
3-95
110. (p. 59-61) Identify three conditions that tend to make potential entry a strong competitive
force.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
111. (p. 59-61) Identify and briefly explain any three factors that weaken the competitive
pressures stemming from the threat that new firms will enter the industry.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures and Threat of New Entry
112. (p. 63) Identify and briefly explain any two of the factors that influence the strength of
competition from substitute products.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Substitute Product Sellers
3-96
113. (p. 63) Identify and briefly explain any three of the factors that influence the bargaining
strength and leverage of suppliers.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
114. (p. 65-67) Identify and briefly explain any three factors that lead to strong bargaining power
on the part of suppliers.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
115. (p. 28-31) Identify and briefly explain any three factors that lead to weak bargaining power
on the part of suppliers.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
3-97
116. (p. 3-68) Explain why low switching costs and weakly differentiated products tend to give
buyers a high degree of bargaining power.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
117. (p. 68-70) Not all buyers of an industry's product are likely to possess the same degree of
bargaining power or leverage over the terms and conditions under which they purchase the
product. True or false? Explain.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
118. (p. 68-70) Identify and briefly discuss any three of the factors that influence the bargaining
strength and leverage of buyers.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
3-98
119. (p. 68-70) Identify and briefly explain any three factors that lead to strong bargaining power
on the part of buyers.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
120. (p. 68-70) Identify and briefly explain any three factors that lead to weak bargaining power
on the part of buyers.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Topic: Competitive Pressures from Supplier Bargaining Power
121. (p. 67-69, 72, 77, 82) Explain the meaning and significance of each of the following:
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-01 Gain command of the basic concepts and analytical tools widely used to diagnose the competitive conditions in a
company's industry.
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Competitive Strategy, Strategic Mapping
3-99
122. (p. 76) In doing driving forces analysis, is it sufficient to simply identify the driving forces
that are operating to alter industry and competitive conditions? Why or why not? If not, then
explain what else is required for a complete driving forces assessment.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces
123. (p. 72-75) Identify at least five common driving forces and briefly explain how each one can
produce important changes in industry and competitive conditions.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-02 Learn how to diagnose the factors shaping industry dynamics and to forecast their effects on future industry
profitability.
Topic: Driving Forces
124. (p. 79-80) Identify at least three benefits of constructing a strategic group map.
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Strategy Group
3-100
125. (p. 81-82) What is the analytical value of studying competitors and trying to predict what
moves rivals will make next?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-03 Become adept at mapping the market positions of key groups of industry rivals.
Topic: Competitive Strategy
126. (p. 82-83) What is the strategy-making value of identifying an industry's key success
factors?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-04 Understand why in-depth evaluation of a business's strengths and weaknesses in relation to the specific industry
conditions it confronts is an essential prerequisite to crafting a strategy that is well-matched to its external situation.
Topic: Key Factors for Competitive Success
127. (p. 84) Identify four factors that affect whether an industry does or does not present a
company with a good business opportunity?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-04 Understand why in-depth evaluation of a business's strengths and weaknesses in relation to the specific industry
conditions it confronts is an essential prerequisite to crafting a strategy that is well-matched to its external situation.
Topic: Key Factors for Competitive Success
3-101
128. (p. 84) Can an industry be attractive to one company and unattractive to another company?
Why or why not?
AACSB: Analytic
Bloom's: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 03-04 Understand why in-depth evaluation of a business's strengths and weaknesses in relation to the specific industry
conditions it confronts is an essential prerequisite to crafting a strategy that is well-matched to its external situation.
Topic: Industry Prospects and Profits
3-102