Environmental Scanning
Environmental Scanning
Environmental Scanning
Scanning
Environmental scanning is the monitoring, evaluation, and dissemination of
information from the external and internal environments to key people within the
corporation.
A corporation uses this tool to avoid strategic surprise and to ensure its long-term
health. Research has found a positive relationship between environmental
scanning and profits.2 Approximately 70% of executives around the world state
that global social, environmental, and business trends are increasingly important
to corporate strategy, according to a 2008 survey by McKinsey & Company
The natural environment includes physical resources, wildlife, and climate that
are an inherent part of existence on Earth. These factors form an ecological
system of interrelated life.
The societal environment is mankind’s social system that includes general
forces that do not directly touch on the short-run activities of the organization that
can, and often do, influence its long-run decisions
These factors affect multiple industries and are as follows:
Economic forces that regulate the exchange of materials, money, energy, and
information.
Technological forces that generate problem-solving inventions.
Political–legal forces that allocate power and provide constraining and
protecting laws and regulations.
Sociocultural forces that regulate the values, mores, and customs of society.
The task environment includes those elements or groups that directly affect a
corporation and, in turn, are affected by it. These are governments, local
communities, suppliers, competitors, customers, creditors, employees/labor
unions, special-interest groups, and trade associations. A corporation’s task
environment is typically the industry within which the firm operates.
. Industry analysis (popularized by Michael Porter) refers to an in-depth
examination of key factors within a corporation’s task environment.
.
The natural, societal, and task environments must be monitored to detect the
strategic factors that are likely in the future to have a strong impact on corporate
success or failure. Changes in the natural environment usually affect a business
corporation first through its impact on the societal environment in terms of
resource availability and costs and then upon the task environment in terms of the
growth or decline of particular industries
Scanning the Natural Environment
The natural environment includes physical resources, wildlife, and climate that are
an inherent part of existence on Earth
STEEP Analysis, the scanning of Sociocultural, Technological, Economic,
Ecological, and Political-legal environmental forces.7 (It may also be called
PESTEL Analysis for Political, Economic, Sociocultural, Technological,
Ecological, and Legal forces.)
Eight Important Sociocultural Trends:
Growing health consciousness: Concerns about personal health fuel the trend
toward physical fitness and healthier living. As a result, sales growth is slowing at
fast-food “burgers and fries” retailers such as McDonald’s. Changing public tastes
away from sugar-laden processed foods forced Interstate Bakeries, the maker of
Twinkies and Wonder Bread, to declare bankruptcy in 2004. In 2008, the French
government was considering increasing sales taxes on extra-fatty, salty, or sugary
products
Expanding seniors market: As their numbers increase, people over age 55 will
become an even more important market. Already some companies are segmenting
the senior population into Young Matures, Older Matures, and the Elderly—each
having a different set of attitudes and interests. Both mature segments, for
example, are good markets for the health care and tourism industries; whereas, the
elderly are the key market for long-term care facilities.
Impact of Generation Boom.
Declining mass market: Niche markets are defining the marketers’ environment.
People want products and services that are adapted more to their personal needs.
For example, Estée Lauder’s “All Skin” and Maybelline’s “Shades of You” lines
of cosmetic products are specifically made for African-American women.
Changing pace and location of life: Instant communication via e-mail, cell
phones, and overnight mail enhances efficiency, but it also puts more pressure on
people. Merging the personal computer with the communication and
entertainment industries through telephone lines, satellite dishes, and cable
television increases consumers’ choices and allows workers to leave overcrowded
urban areas for small towns and telecommute via personal computers and
modems.
Changing household composition: Single-person households, especially those of
single women with children, could soon become the most common household
type in the United States. Married-couple households slipped from nearly 80% in
the 1950s to 50.7% of all households in 2002.
Increasing diversity of workforce and markets
Heavy immigration from the developing to the developed nations is increasing the
number of minorities in all developed countries and forcing an acceptance of the
value of diversity in races, religions, and life style. For example, 24% of the Swiss
population was born elsewhere.34 Traditional minority groups are increasing their
numbers in the workforce and are being identified as desirable target markets. For
example, Sears, Roebuck transformed 97 of its stores in October 2004 into
“multicultural stores” containing fashions for Hispanic, African-American, and
Asian shoppers.
International Societal Considerations
A substitute product is a product that appears to be different but can satisfy the
same need as another product.
According to Porter, “Substitutes limit the potential returns of an industry by
placing a ceiling on the prices firms in the industry can profitably charge.”50 To the
extent that switching costs are low, substitutes may have a strong effect on an
industry. Tea can be considered a substitute for coffee. If the price of coffee goes
up high enough, coffee drinkers will slowly begin switching to tea. The price of
tea thus puts a price ceiling on the price of coffee.
Bargaining Power of Buyers:
Buyers affect an industry through their ability to force down prices, bargain for
higher quality or more services, and play competitors against each other. A buyer
or a group of buyers is powerful if some of the following factors hold true:
Bargaining Power of Buyers
A buyer purchases a large proportion of the seller’s product or service (for example, oil filters purchased by
a major auto maker).
A buyer has the potential to integrate backward by producing the product itself (for example, a newspaper
chain could make its own paper).
Alternative suppliers are plentiful because the product is standard or undifferentiated (for example, motorists
can choose among many gas stations).
Changing suppliers costs very little (for example, office supplies are easy to find).
The purchased product represents a high percentage of a buyer’s costs, thus providing an incentive to shop
around for a lower price (for example, gasoline purchased for resale by convenience stores makes up half
their total costs).
A buyer earns low profits and is thus very sensitive to costs and service differences (for example, grocery
stores have very small margins).
The purchased product is unimportant to the final quality or price of a buyer’s products or services and thus
can be easily substituted without affecting the final product adversely (for example, electric wire bought for
use in lamps).
Bargaining Power of Suppliers
Suppliers can affect an industry through their ability to raise prices or reduce the quality of
purchased goods and services. A supplier or supplier group is powerful if some of the
following factors apply:
The supplier industry is dominated by a few companies, but it sells to many (for example,
the petroleum industry).
Its product or service is unique and/or it has built up switching costs (for example, word
processing software).
Substitutes are not readily available (for example, electricity).
Suppliers are able to integrate forward and compete directly with their present customers
(for example, a microprocessor producer such as Intel can make PCs).
A purchasing industry buys only a small portion of the supplier group’s goods and services
and is thus unimportant to the supplier (for example, sales of lawn mower tires are less
important to the tire industry than are sales of auto tires).
Relative Power of Other Stakeholders