Lecture Topic 1.2 ENVIORNMENT SCANNING TECHNIQUES
Lecture Topic 1.2 ENVIORNMENT SCANNING TECHNIQUES
Lecture Topic 1.2 ENVIORNMENT SCANNING TECHNIQUES
DEPARTMENT: BBA
Bachelor of Business Administration
Business Environment 20BAT-158
By- Dr. Chitvan Khosla
UNIT 1 : Lecture 2
Environment Scanning : Meaning
and Techniques DISCOVER . LEARN .
EMPOWER
Environment
Scanning
Course Outcome Will be covered in
CO Title Level this lecture
Number
2
Environment Scanning : Meaning
• Environmental scanning is the acquisition and use of information about events, trends,
and relationships in an organization's external environment, the knowledge of which would
assist management in planning the organization's future course of action.
• Environmental scanning is a process that systematically surveys and interprets relevant
data to identify external opportunities and threats. An organization gathers information
about the external world, its competitors and itself.
• Environmental Scanning is a process of analyzing internal and external factors of the
environment. It is a process in which the organization undertakes a study to identify the
opportunities and threats in an industry.
• The information obtained through environmental scanning can be used by leaders to design
new objectives and strategies or modify existing objectives and strategies.
• The purpose of the scan is the identification of opportunities and threats affecting the
business for making strategic business decisions.
• As a part of the environmental scanning process, the organization collects information
regarding its environment and analyzes it to forecast the impact of changes in the
environment. This eventually helps the management team to make informed decisions.
Concept of Scanning
• Events – These are specific occurrences which take place in different environmental sectors of a business.
These are important for the functioning and/or success of the business. Events can occur either in the
internal or the external environment. Organizations can observe and track them.
• Trends – As the name suggests, trends are general courses of action or tendencies along which the events
occur. They are groups of similar or related events which tend to move in a specific direction. Further,
trends can be positive or negative. By observing trends, an organization can identify any change in the
strength or frequency of the events suggesting a change in the respective area.
• Issues – In wake of the events and trends, some concerns can arise. These are Issues. Organizations try to
identify emerging issues so that they can take corrective measures to nip them in the bud. However,
identifying emerging issues is a difficult task. Usually, emerging issues start with a shift in values or
change in which the concern is viewed.
• Expectations – Some interested groups have demands based on their concern for issues. These demands
are Expectations.
Importance of Environment Scanning
• Identification of strength: Strength of the business firm means capacity of the
firm to gain advantage over its competitors. Analysis of internal business
environment helps to identify strength of the firm. After identifying the strength,
the firm must try to consolidate or maximize its strength by further improvement
in its existing plans, policies and resources.
• Optimum use of resources: Proper environmental assessment helps to make optimum utilisation of
scare human, natural and capital resources. Systematic analyses of business environment helps the firm
to reduce wastage and make optimum use of available resources, without understanding the internal and
external environment resources cannot be used in an effective manner.
• Survival and growth: Systematic analyses of business environment help the firm to maximize their
strength, minimize the weakness, grab the opportunities and diffuse threats. This enables the firm to
survive and grow in the competitive business world.
• To plan long-term business strategy: A business organisation has short term and long-term objectives.
Proper analyses of environmental factors help the business firm to frame plans and policies that could
help in easy accomplishment of those organisational objectives. Without undertaking environmental
scanning, the firm cannot develop a strategy for business success.
• The aim of any SWOT analysis is to identify the key internal and external factors that are
important to achieving the objective. SWOT analysis groups key pieces of information
into two main categories:
1. Internal factors – The strengths and weaknesses internal to the organization.
2. External factors – The opportunities and threats presented by the external environment.
• Examples of SWOT:
• Strengths and Weaknesses:
1. Resources: financial, intellectual, location
2. Cost advantages from proprietary know-how
3. Creativity / ability to develop new products
4. Valuable intangible assets: intellectual capital
5. Competitive capabilities
6. Big campus selection
• Opportunities and Threats
1. Takeovers
2. Market Trends
3. Economic condition
4. Mergers
5. Joint ventures
6. Strategic alliances
7. Expectations of stakeholders
8. Technology
9. Public expectations
10. Competitors and competitive actions
11. Poor Public Relations Development
12. Criticism (Editorial)
13. Global Markets
14. Environmental Conditions
Uses of SWOT Analysis
• Helps in Corporate planning
• Analysis of existing strategies: this should determine relevance from the results of an
internal/external appraisal. This may include gap analysis (compare its actual performance
with its potential performance which will look at environmental factors)
• Strategic Issues defined – key factors in the development of a corporate plan which needs to
be addressed by the organization.
• Develop new/revised strategies – revised analysis of strategic issues may mean the objectives
need to change
• Establish critical success factors – the achievement of objectives and strategy
implementation.
• Monitoring results – mapping against plans, taking corrective action which may
mean amending objectives/strategies.
• Also; Use SWOT analysis for business planning, strategic planning, competitor
evaluation, marketing, business and product development and research reports.
PEST Analysis
• A scan of the external macro-environment in which the firm operates can be
expressed in terms of the following factors:
• Political
• Economic
• Social
• Technological
• The acronym PEST (or sometimes rearranged as "STEP") is used to describe a
framework for the analysis of these macroenvironmental factors. A PEST analysis
fits into an overall environmental scan as shown in the following diagram:
• Political Factors: Political factors include government regulations and legal issues
and define both formal and informal rules under which the firm must operate. Some
examples include:
• tax policy
• employment laws
• environmental regulations
• trade restrictions and tariffs
• political stability
• Porter’s five forces model is an analysis tool that uses five industry forces to
determine the intensity of competition in an industry and its profitability level.
• Five forces model was created by M. Porter in 1979 to understand how five key
competitive forces are affecting an industry.
Threat of
new entrants
Threat of
substitutes
Substitute
products
1. Threat of new entrants. This force determines how easy (or not) it is to enter a
particular industry. If an industry is profitable and there are few barriers to enter,
rivalry soon intensifies. When more organizations compete for the same market
share, profits start to fall. It is essential for existing organizations to create high
barriers to enter to deter new entrants. Threat of new entrants is high when:
3. Bargaining power of buyers. Buyers have the power to demand lower price or higher product
quality from industry producers when their bargaining power is strong. Lower price means lower
revenues for the producer, while higher quality products usually raise production costs. Both scenarios
result in lower profits for producers. Buyers exert strong bargaining power when:
• Buying in large quantities or control many access points to the final customer;
• Only few buyers exist;
• Switching costs to other supplier are low;
• They threaten to backward integrate;
• There are many substitutes;
• Buyers are price sensitive.
• Threat of substitutes. This force is especially threatening when buyers can easily
find substitute products with attractive prices or better quality and when buyers can
switch from one product or service to another with little cost. For example, to switch
from coffee to tea doesn’t cost anything, unlike switching from car to bicycle.
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QUEST Analysis
• . QUEST ANALYSIS QUEST stands for Quick Environmental Scanning
Technique. It is a four-step process which uses scenario-writing for scanning the
environment and identifying strategic options.
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APPLICATION
• Application of business environment can be as follows:
1. In area of Economic affairs
2. In analyzing business situations
3. Tackling the competition in business
4. Market Research
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FAQS
• Define environmental scanning.
• What are the various techniques of environmental scanning?
• Define swot analysis.
• What are the objectives of scanning?
• Discuss Porter’s five forces Model as a technique of Environment Scanning.
• What is Pest Analysis?
REFERENCES
• Reference Books-
• K. Aswathappa, Essentials of Business environment.
• Francis Cherrunilam, International Trade and Export Management, Himalaya
Publications.
• References of websites
• http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/environmental-scanning.html
• http://www.wisenepali.com/2016/01/environmental-scanning-types-importance.h
tml
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THANK YOU
For queries:
Email: Chitvan.e8637@cumail.in