Strategic Management_Chapter 2
Strategic Management_Chapter 2
Strategic Management_Chapter 2
STRATEGIC
MANAGEMENT
Lecturers in charge: Nguyễn Hiệp and Lê Gia Phúc
CHAPTER
2
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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Analysis of
The General, Industry, and Competitor Environments
An analysis of the general environment focuses on environmental trends and their
implications.
An analysis of the industry environment focuses on the factors and conditions
influencing an industry’s profitability potential.
An analysis of competitors is focused on predicting competitors’ actions, responses,
and intentions.
In combination, the results of these three analyses influence the firm’s:
• Vision
• Mission
• Choice of strategies
• Competitive actions and responses it will take to implement those strategies.
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Scanning
Monitoring
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Forecasting
Assessing
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Age Structure
• The world’s population is rapidly aging.
• The aging of the population:
o Has significant implications for availability of qualified labor, health care,
retirement policies, and business opportunities among others.
o Threatens the ability of firms to hire and retain a workforce that meets their needs.
Geographic Distribution
• How a population is distributed within countries and regions is subject to change
over time.
o Examples: In the United States, the shift from states in the Northeast and Great
Lakes region to states in the West, South, and Southwest; in China, the shift from
rural areas to urban communities
Ethnic Mix
• The ethnic mix of countries’ populations continues to change.
o Example: The increase in the Hispanic population in the United States
• The ethnic diversity of the population is important because of:
o Consumer needs
o The labor force composition
Income Distribution
• Income distribution within and across populations informs firms of different groups’
purchasing power and discretionary income.
o Example: The rise in domestic consumption of consumer goods by India’s
middle class has positioned it as a market of interest.
o Of particular interest are the average incomes of households and individuals.
The economic environment refers to the nature and direction of the economy in
which a firm competes or may compete.
In general, firms seek to compete in relatively stable economies with strong growth
potential.
It is challenging for firms studying the economic environment to predict economic
trends that may occur and their effects on them.
When facing economic uncertainty, firms especially want to study closely the
economic environment in multiple regions and countries throughout the world.
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The political / legal segment is the arena in which organizations and interest groups
compete for attention, resources, and a voice in overseeing the body of laws and
regulations guiding interactions among nations as well as between firms and various
local governmental agencies.
Essentially, this segment is concerned with:
• How organizations try to influence governments
• How they try to understand the current and projected influences of those
governments on their competitive actions and responses
The relationship between national, regional, and local laws and regulations creates a
highly complex environment within which businesses must navigate.
The sociocultural segment is concerned with a society’s attitudes and cultural values.
• Attitudes and values
o Form the cornerstone of a society
o Often drive demographic, economic, political / legal, and technological
conditions and changes
o Are relatively stable, but can and often do change over time. Firms must
identify these changes in order to stay ahead of their competitors and stay
relevant in the minds of their consumers.
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The global segment includes relevant new global markets and their critical cultural
and institutional characteristics, existing markets that are changing, and important
international political events.
When studying the global segment, firms should recognize that globalization of business
markets may create opportunities to enter new markets, as well as threats that
competitors from other economies may enter their market.
• Global focusing:
• Is a more cautious approach to globalization in which firms focus on global
niche markets.
• Allows firms to build onto and use their competencies while limiting their
risks within the niche market.
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Identifying new entrants is important because they can threaten the market share of
existing competitors.
How likely firms will enter an industry is a function of two factors:
• Barriers to entry
• The retaliation expected from current industry participants
Barriers to Entry
• Companies competing within a particular industry study entry barriers to
determine the degree to which their competitive position reduces the likelihood of
new competitors being able to enter the industry to compete against them.
• Firms considering entering an industry study entry barriers to determine the
likelihood of being able to identify an attractive competitive position within the
industry.
o Economies of Scale
With economies of scale, the cost of producing each unit declines as
the quantity of a product produced during a given period increases.
A new entrant is unlikely to quickly generate the level of demand
for its product that would allow it to develop economies of scale.
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o Capital Requirements
Competing in a new industry requires a firm to have capital for physical
facilities, inventories, marketing activities, and other critical business
functions.
The capital required for successful market entry may not be available to
pursue the market opportunity.
o Switching Costs
Switching costs are the one-time costs customers incur when they buy from a
different supplier.
If switching costs are high, a new entrant must attract buyers by offering either:
• A substantially lower price
• A much better product
o Government Policy
Governmental decisions and policies that can control entry into an industry
include:
• The granting of licenses and permits
• Deregulation
• Antitrust issues
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o Suppliers can exert power over firms competing within an industry by:
Increasing prices
Reducing the quality of their products
o A supplier group is powerful when:
It is dominated by a few large companies and is more concentrated than the
industry to which it sells.
Satisfactory substitute products are not available to industry firms.
Industry firms are not a significant customer for the supplier group.
Suppliers’ goods are critical to buyers’ marketplace success.
The effectiveness of suppliers’ products has created high switching costs for
industry firms.
It poses a credible threat to integrate forward into the buyers’ industry.
o Substitute products are goods or services from outside a given industry that perform
similar or the same functions as a product that the industry produces.
o In general, product substitutes present a strong threat to a firm when:
Customers face few, if any, switching costs
The substitute product’s price is lower
The substitute product’s quality and performance capabilities are equal to or
greater than those of the competing product
o To reduce a substitute’s attractiveness, a firm can differentiate a product along
dimensions that are valuable to customers, such as:
Quality
Service after the sale
Location
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Analysis of the five forces within a given industry allows the firm to determine the industry’s
attractiveness in terms of the potential to earn average or above-average returns.
• Stronger competitive forces usually mean a lower potential to earn profits.
An unattractive industry has:
• Low entry barriers
• Suppliers and buyers with strong bargaining positions
• Strong competitive threats from product substitutes
• Intense rivalry among competitors
An attractive industry has:
• High entry barriers
• Suppliers and buyers with little bargaining power
• Few competitive threats from product substitutes
• Relatively moderate rivalry
Strategic Groups
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Strategic Groups
Strategic Groups
Competitor Analysis
How companies gather and interpret information about their competitors is called
competitor analysis.
• Understanding the firm’s competitor environment complements the insights
provided by studying the general and industry environments.
Competitor analysis focuses on each company against which a firm competes directly.
In a competitor analysis, the firm seeks to understand the following:
• What drives the competitor, as shown by its future objectives
• What the competitor is doing, as revealed by its current strategy
• What the competitor believes about the industry, as shown by its assumptions
• What the competitor’s capabilities are, as shown by its strengths and weaknesses
Knowledge about these four dimensions helps the firm prepare an anticipated
response profile for each competitor.
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Competitor Analysis
Ethical Considerations
Firms must follow laws, regulations, and ethical guidelines when gathering competitor
intelligence.
• Practices considered both legal and ethical include:
o Obtaining publicly available information
Examples: Court records and annual reports
o Attending trade fairs and shows to obtain competitors’ brochures, view their
exhibits, and listen to discussions about their products
• Practices widely viewed as unethical include:
o Blackmail
o Trespassing
o Eavesdropping
o Stealing drawings, samples, or documents
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