Solution Manual For Strategic Management: Text and Cases, 10th Edition
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Chapter 2
Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating
Competitive Advantages …………………………………………………….
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Enhancing Awareness of the External Environment…………………………
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The Role of Scanning, Monitoring, Competitive Intelligence,
and Forecasting ……………………………………………………………………………………..
SWOT Analysis ………………………………………………………………………………………………….
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The General Environment ……………………………………………………………….
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The Demographic Segment …………………………………………………………………………………
The Sociocultural Segment ………………………………………………………………………………….
The Political/Legal Segment ……………………………………………………………………………….
The Technological Segment ………………………………………………………………………………..
The Economic Segment ………………………………………………………………………………………
The Global Segment …………………………………………………………………………………………..
Relationships among Elements of the General Environment ……………………………………
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The Competitive Environment …………………………………………………………
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Porterโs Five Forces Model of Industry Competition ……………………………………………..
How the Internet and Digital Technologies
Are Affecting the Five Competitive Forces …………………………………………………
Using Industry Analysis: A Few Caveats ………………………………………………………………
Strategic Groups within Industries ………………………………………………………………………
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Issue for Debate
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Reflecting on Career Implications
Summary
End-of-Chapter Teaching Notes
Connect Resources
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Chapter 2
Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm:
Creating Competitive Advantages
Summary/Objectives
PowerPoint Slide 2: Learning Objectives
The purpose of this chapter is to familiarize students with techniques for evaluating a
firmโs external environment. This chapter focuses on the value managers add when they have a
sense of events outside the company. By focusing on external events, managers are able to stay a
step ahead of competitors by accurately anticipating and promptly responding to actions that can
impact the organization. The chapter is organized into three sections.
1. The environmentally aware organization. Emphasize that managers use scanning,
monitoring, and competitive intelligence to develop forecasts. Also, the role of
scenario planning is discussed.
2. The influence of the six broad segments (demographic, sociocultural, political/legal,
technological, economic, global) of the general environment of the firm.
3. The role of the competitive (also called the task or industry) environment and its
analysis through the application of Porterโs five-forces model. We address how
industry and competitive practices are being affected by the Internet and digital
technologies. We also address the concept of strategic groups. Managers use strategic
groups to identify who its main competitors are and how a company fits in with the
overall industry in which it competes.
Lecture/Discussion Outline
We lead off the chapter with the opening case of Airbus in LEARNING FROM
MISTAKES. Hereโs a firm that had a different vision of how to exploit an opportunity than its
closest competitor, Boeing. Airbus did misjudge this particular market opportunity. Ask:
Discussion Question 1: Given that it is difficult to predict future market needs and trends
in industries with long product life-cycles (such as jetliners), how should managers deal
with this uncertainty?
Response guidelines: Students should understand that effective strategy is often an opportunitydriven process, meaning effective strategy starts with identifying changes in the environment.
Airbus saw a market opportunity for extra-large jumbo jets and focused on โperksโ (such bars
and beauty salons) while Boeing saw a market opportunity for smaller jumbo jets and focused on
efficiency and comfort. While both companies made a bet on an uncertain future, Boeing better
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
predicted the needs of customers and airlines. Specifically, filling a large A380 with passengers
is a daunting task for airlines, while filling a fuel-efficient Boeing Dreamliner is much more
manageable for airlines. Students should understand that it is not only the end-consumer that
determines the success of a product or service (passengers loved the A380) but also the service
providers (airlines) must be able to operate the airliner effectively and efficiently. Companies
must therefore consider a broad range of important stakeholders and use effective strategy tools
(such as the tools we introduce in chapter 2) to predict changes in the general and competitive
environment. Students should also realize that strategic analysis of the general and competitive
environment becomes increasingly important when the life-cycle of the product or service is very
long as changes or adjustment become infeasible.
Discussion Question 2: How should Airbus compete against Boeing going forward?
Response guidelines: Students may come up with a few intriguing suggestions. After they do,
instructors may want to group the responses into external and internal categories. It is expected
that some students focus on perceived internal strengths and weaknesses (such as improving
Airbusโ R&D competence) while others focus on opportunities (such as investing in the market
for short-haul airplanes or space travel). The instructor should illustrate that competition between
two large (and in many aspects similar) competitors is often driven by taking a position and seize
external opportunities effectively.
Of course, taking a position is uncertain and risky (as we saw with the A380) so the key is not to
avoid uncertainty and risk, but to manage it effectively (with the tools we introduce in chapter 2).
The instructor may also point out that if executives want certainty and clarity, they can just wait
for other firms to take a position and see how they do. Then they will know what works, but it
will be too late to profit from the knowledge.
I.
Enhancing Awareness of the External Environment
PowerPoint Slide 4: The Importance of External Environment
PowerPoint Slide 5: Enhancing Awareness of the External Environment
PowerPoint Slide 6: Environmental Scanning and Monitoring
PowerPoint Slide 7: Competitive Intelligence
PowerPoint Slide 8: Environmental Forecasting
PowerPoint Slide 9: SWOT Analysis
We address three important processesโscanning, monitoring, and gathering competitive
intelligenceโwhich managers use to develop environmental forecasts. EXHIBIT 2.1 depicts
relationships among these activities. Also, we address scenario analysis and its role in
anticipating future major changes in the external environment as well as the role of SWOT
analysis.
We lead off the section with a discussion of Ram Charanโs concept of โperceptual
acuityโโthe ability to sense what is coming before the fog clears. We give three examples of
what three CEOs have done to improve their perceptual acuity: met with key managers
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
periodically to discuss what is going on, met with the CEOs of other organizations four times a
year, and asked outsiders to critique their firmโs strategy.
Teaching Tip: Most students in your class will not likely be CEOs or top executives. So,
one way to help them apply this idea is to ask them how they could apply it in their
present positionโor in a job to which they immediately aspire. Hopefully, they will come
up with ideas such as spending time with people in their organization to address issues
outside of their immediate job, describing how their efforts affect other
areas/departments in the firm, and seeking perspectives of colleagues and friends who
work in a different organization. The key point, of course, is to encourage them to look at
issues from a broader perspective instead of focusing on their immediate work
responsibilities.
A.
The Role of Scanning, Monitoring, Competitive Intelligence, and Forecasting
1.
Environmental Scanning
Environmental scanning involves surveillance of the firmโs external environment to
predict environmental changes to come and detect changes that are already underway. We
discuss the example of how Procter & Gamble, with its wide range of household products, can be
a good barometer of household spending.
Discussion Question 3: Would these โtipsโ be equally appropriate for all industries?
Why? Why not?
Discussion Question 4: Could such an approach be used in other industries? What
investments would be required?
Environmental scanning can also involve obtaining information from your customer base.
The SUPPLEMENT below provides an example of how this was effectively used by an online
contact-lens retailer, Coastal Contacts.
Extra Example: Ask your Customers for Ideas
Coastal Contacts, one of the largest online contact-lens retailers in North America, came out of its two-day planning
session with few ideas about how to spur growth. Thus, over the next six months CEO Roger Hardy and his senior
team called customers each week to see whether they had any ideas. To the companyโs surprise, one recurring theme
emergedโcustomers wanted to get their lenses the next day. โWe started overnighting everything,โ he reports. Sales
in the U.S., where he recently made the change, were up 41 percent for the year, bringing company sales to $155
million.
Source: Harnish, V. 2011. Five ways to get your strategy right. Fortune. April 11: 42.
Discussion Question 5: What are some other examples of firms that got excellent ideas
by simply asking their customers for input?
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
2.
Environmental Monitoring
Environmental monitoring tracks the evolution of trends, events, or streams of activities
in the external environment. In this section, we present some of the factors monitored by three
organizations: Motel 6, Pier 1 Imports, and Johnson and Johnson Medical Products. Such factors
are vital for managers in determining their firmโs strategic direction and resource allocations.
The SUPPLEMENT below represents the factors that the Director of Planning of Vought
Aircraft considered critical. You may initially ask the students:
Discussion Question 6: What indicators do you believe a firm should monitor that
produces both (1) weapon systems for the military, and, (2) key components for the
commercial aircraft industry?
Extra Example: Factors to MonitorโVought Aircraft
Commercial Aircraft:
1.
Oil prices
2.
Age of fleet of airlines
3.
Profitability of airlines
Defense Department:
1.
Where weapons are in the life cycle
2.
Mission requirements of the military
Source: Authorsโ interviews.
The SUPPLEMENT below discusses how Cisco, the $47 billion (2014 revenues)
networking giant, learned from its mistakes during the Internet bust in 2001โand now carefully
it monitors its inventory levels. It points out that managers must monitor key aspects of the
firmโs internal environmentโas well as the firmโs external environment.
Extra Example: How Cisco Learned from Its Mistakes
In April 2001, Cisco made one of the more painful confessions of the Internet bust: It had so much networking gear
piled up that it had to take a $2.5 billion write-off for equipment that it figured nobody would ever buy. It has been
working hard ever since to make sure that such a thing never happens again.
Supply chain chief Angel Mendez is grilled at monthly reviews by CEO John Chambers and other top executives.
Now, Cisco has half the inventory it did in 2001โeven though its revenues are twice as large. Says Mendez: โIt
didnโt take John eight years to start asking questions (about inventory levels). He asks about every eight minutes.โ
Source: Burrows, P. 2009. Tech: Lean and Ready to Spring. BusinessWeek.
April 27: 14-16.
Discussion Question 7: Are you aware of other firms that have failed to effectively
monitor key aspects of their internal environment (e.g., excessive numbers of employees
and layers of management; high levels of inventory that became obsolescent; insufficient
sales, marketing, engineers, etc. to meet increasing demand for goods/services and
innovations, etc.)?
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
The SUPPLEMENT below discusses why Caterpillar may serve as a macroeconomic
early-warning system.
Extra Example: CaterpillarโA Macroeconomic Early-Warning System?
Although it is hard to confuse a 40-ton excavator with a crystal ball, forecasters could do worse than tracking retail
sales of the huge, yellow machines sold by Caterpillar Inc. Being the largest seller of equipment used to build stuff
or extract the stuff from the ground used to build that stuff, Caterpillarโs customersโ appetite is sort of a
macroeconomic early-warning system.
Two big worriesโthe slowdown in Chinaโs property market and a related slump in demand for commodities from
crude oil to iron oreโshow up quickly in its monthly sales reports, helpfully broken down by region and type of
machinery.
2014 has, not surprisingly, been a tough year for the firmโs shareholders. Its stock price trailed the S&P 500 by 31
percent.
Source: Jakab, S. 2015. Caterpillar is stuck in its cocoon. Wall Street Journal. April 23: C1.
3.
Competitive Intelligence
Competitive intelligence helps firms define and understand their industry and identify
rivalsโ strengths and weaknesses. Done properly, competitive intelligence helps a company to
avoid surprises by effectively anticipating and responding to competitorsโ moves.
We briefly address the importance of competitive intelligence to firms in the banking,
airline, and automobile industry.
Discussion Question 8: What are other industries where competitive intelligence is
extremely important? How might such information be collected?
We address how the Internet has accelerated the speed at which firms can find
competitive intelligence.
STRATEGY SPOTLIGHT 2.1 discusses some of the ethical guidelines that United
Technologies has implemented.
Discussion Question 9: Are you aware of ethical guidelines that other companies have
developed? Were they effective? Why? Why not?
Teaching Tip: The discussion of Competitor Intelligence provides the instructor with an
opportunity to introduce the subject of ethics into the classroom. We suggest presenting
scenarios that are not โblack and white.โ For example, a firm advertises a position in
order to get a chance to interview employees of a rival company with no intention to hire
them. While this may not be illegal, clearly it is difficult to justify morally. The ensuing
discussion will help to clarify the distinction between illegal and unethical behavior.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
4.
Environmental Forecasting
Environmental scanning, monitoring, and competitive intelligence are important inputs
for analyzing the external environment. However, they are of little use unless they provide raw
material that is accurate enough to help managers make accurate forecasts.
We address the twin problems of either assuming that the world is certain and open to
precise predictions, or the assumption that it is uncertain and totally unpredictable. And, we
provide the famous example of poor forecasting by Digital Equipment Corp., which caused it to
ignore the potential of personal computers. We also provide several other predictions about the
future of technology which did not pan out.
Discussion Question 10: What are some other errors in forecasting with which you are
familiar?
It should be interesting to ask students to provide a few more examples of technology
forecasts that really missed the markโsome of them go farther back in time than the ones listed
in the text. A few of them are listed in the SUPPLEMENT below.
You might even ask them what forecasts/predictions for the future of technology that
they have.
Extra Example: Technology Forecasts That Missed the Mark
1946: โTelevision wonโt be able to hold on to any market it captures after the first six months. People will soon get
tired of staring at a plywood box every night.โ โ20th Century Fox Studio executive Darryl Zanuck
1959: โBefore man reaches the moon, your mail will be delivered within hours from New York to Australia by
guided missiles. We stand on the threshold of rocket mail.โโU.S. Postmaster General Arthur Summerfield
1961: โThere is practically no chance communications space satellites will be used to provide better telephone,
telegraph, television, or radio service inside the United States.โโFederal Communications Commission (FCC)
commissioner T.A.M. Craven
1966: โRemote shopping, while entirely feasible, will flop.โ โTime Magazine
Source: Dunn, M. 2016. 20 tech predictions that failed. www.news.com.au. March 8: np.
5.
Scenario Analysis
Scenario analysis provides a set of tools that enable managers to imagine threats and
opportunities the future may bring. As a general rule, scenarios should be used by businesses
whose external environments are prone to fundamental or sudden change and whose anticipation
of such change is of vital strategic importance.
It is important to note that scenario analysis draws on a wide range of disciplines and
interests, among them economics, psychology, sociology, and demographics.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Discussion Question 11: Why must scenario analysis and scenario planning draw on a
variety of disciplines and interests?
We provide a detailed example of how PPG Industries has benefited from the use of
scenario analysis and planning.
We address the value of a firm in creating an environmentally aware organizationโ
which includes environmental scanning and monitoring, as well as competitive intelligence,
forecasting, and scenario planning. In contrast, the late Steve Jobs (Appleโs former Chairman)
took a far different approach to determining what customers really wanted. We discuss Jobsโ
distaste for sophisticated approaches to market research.
Discussion Question 12: Would such a mindset work for other organizations? Why? Why
not? (Firms in commodity industriesโwhich experience much less uncertainty than
technology industries have less need for such โintuitionโ since these industries face much
less dramatic change in market demand and technologies. And, of course, very few firms
have the visionary genius of a Steve Jobs! Also, you might point out how Ron Johnson
(who was fired as CEO of J.C. Penney in early April 2013) relied too much on his
intuition and drove the firm into the groundโand almost into bankruptcy.
B.
SWOT Analysis
We briefly address SWOT Analysis at this point. SWOT stands for strengths,
weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. SWOT analysis provides a framework for analyzing these
four elements of a companyโs internal and external environment.
It is important to note that SWOT analysis provides the โraw material,โ that is, a basic
listing of conditions and factors inside and outside of a company.
Discussion Question 13: What do you consider to be some of the major advantages and
disadvantages of SWOT analysis? (This issue is addressed in more detail in Chapter 3,
but you should point out that a key disadvantage is that strengths may not necessarily
convert to sources of competitive advantage that are sustainable in the marketplace.)
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
II.
The General Environment
PowerPoint Slide 11: The General Environment
PowerPoint Slide 12: The Demographic Segment
PowerPoint Slide 13: The Social Segment
PowerPoint Slide 14: The Political/Legal Segment
PowerPoint Slide 15: The Technological Segment
PowerPoint Slide 16: The Economic Segment
PowerPoint Slide 17: The Global Segment
PowerPoint Slide 18: General Environment: Relationships among Elements
The general environment consists of factors that can have a dramatic effect on a firmโs strategy.
Typically, a firm has little ability to predict trends and events in the general environment, and
even less ability to control them.
We divide the general environment into six segments: demographic, sociocultural,
political/legal, technological, economic, and global.
EXHIBIT 2.2 provides examples of key trends and events in each of the six segments of
the general environment
Discussion Question 14: How will the factors in Exhibit 2.3 affect specific industries?
Discussion Question 15: Which factors are more difficult to predict than others? (e.g.,
macroeconomic changes are typically more difficult to predict than demographic
changes)
Discussion Question 16: How are these factors interrelated?
Discussion Question 17: What factors that are not listed in this exhibit do you feel are
important?
A.
The Demographic Segment
Demographics are the most easily understood and quantifiable elements of the general
environment. Demographics include elements such as the aging population, rising or declining
affluence, changes in ethnic composition, geographic distribution of the population, and income
level disparities.
Discussion Question 18: What are the implications of ethnic diversity for the work
place?
Discussion Question 19: What implications does the migration to the South and West in
the United States have for individual businesses?
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Discussion Question 20: How does the โgraying of Americaโ affect U. S. companies?
Among the trends we discuss are the aging of the population and how it may
differentially affect a wide variety of industries. We also discuss the increasing number of older
Americans and its importance for attracting and retaining older workers.
Ask:
Discussion Question 21: It might be interesting to ask what the implications (of the aging
of the population) are for todayโs organization (e.g., how can firms attract and retain
older workers, changes in financial and non-financial incentives, etc.) as well as for
public policy (e.g., changes in tax policies, increasing the number of immigrants, etc.).
We also provide INSIGHTS FROM RESEARCH: New Tricks: Research Debunks Myths
about Older Workers (in text, The General Environment section). Here, results from a metaanalysis points out some findings about older workers many people would find counterintuitive.
The findings concluded older workers are NOT less motivated, more resistant to change, less
trusting, less healthy, or more valuable to work-family issues. The only โmythโ supported by the
data was older workers are less willing to participate in training and career development.
Discussion Question 22: What are the practical implications of these findings
As noted in the IFR: provide more opportunities for younger and older workers to work
together; promote positive attributes of older workers; and, engage employees in open
discussions about stereotypes. The broader learning point would be to encourage students to
always question their assumption basesโthey might be wrong, at times!
B.
The Sociocultural Segment
Sociocultural forces influence the values, beliefs, and lifestyles of a society. Examples
include a higher percentage of women in the workforce, dual-income families, increases in the
number of temporary workers, greater concern for healthy diets and physical fitness, greater
interest in the environment, and families postponing having children.
Discussion Question 23: Name two industries that have benefited from the growing
awareness about health and fitness. Also name two that have been adversely affected by
this trend.
Discussion Question 24: What must firms do to attract and retain women employees?
Why are such efforts becoming increasingly important?
The section also addresses how values and beliefs shaped changes in consumer
preferences. Traditionally, values and beliefs affect the demand for types of products (e.g., more
environmentally friendly products), but values and beliefs may also influence the amount of
products and services customers demand. Younger generations often have different attitudes
towards owning products, leading to more cautious and frugal consumer spending.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Ask:
Discussion Question 25: Can you think of an industry that may need to respond to the
values and beliefs (such as environmental concerns and product ownership) of younger
customers?
The SUPPLEMENT below provides some perspective on the consumer preferences of
the Generation Z.
Extra Example: Consumer Preferences of the Gen Z
Consumers of the Generation Z (born in the mid-1990s and early-2000s) are about to become the most sought-after
target market in countries around the world. However, these consumers may be more frugal than earlier generations
because their early life experiences shaped their values and beliefs when it comes to consuming. Specifically, kids of
the Gen Z experienced economic downturns or saw their parents struggle during recessions (such as the global
financial crisis of 2008). These early life experiences have shaped the consumer attitudes of Gen Z consumers and
imprinted a thrifty attitude.
For example, Japan had five recessions in the past 20 years, transforming Japanese consumers into one of the most
frugal consumers in the world. These frugal attitudes learned at a young age also persist and hardly change when
economic conditions brighten. In Japan, recent economic conditions are more positive and wages are growing. Fast
Retailing Co. (the owner of the fashion company Uniqlo), for instance, is raising entry level pay by 20% to win the
war for talent in the tight Japanese labor market. However, young Japanese are not increasing their spending, but
stick to buying necessities.
Executives around the world adjust their strategies to effectively address frugal consumer attitudes and broader
preferences for sustainable consumption. For instance, fashion company โUrban Outfittersโ recently started a
subscription clothing rental business called Nuuly. For a fee of $88 dollars per month, consumers get six clothing
pieces, a reusable bag, and a prepaid return envelope to return the clothes (or pay full price in case you love and
want to keep them). The hope is that young consumers will find this new clothing business model not only attractive
for its reduced environmental impact but also for meeting the broader values of beliefs regarding product ownership
of Gen Z consumers.
Sources: Du, L., & Milligan, E. 2019. In regions hit by recession, Gen Z is turning out to be frugal. Bloomberg.com.
April 25: np. Naughton, K., Dawson, C., Welch, D., & Coppola, G. 2019. Gen Zero. Bloomberg BusinessWeek.
April 29: 18โ19; Safdar, K. 2019, May 21. Urban Outfitters to start renting clothes. Wall Street Journal. June 21: np.
C.
The Political/Legal Segment
Political processes and legislation influence the regulations with which industries must
comply. Some important elements of the political/legal arena include tort reform, the Americans
with Disabilities Act (ADA), deregulation of utilities and other industries, and increases in the
federally mandated minimum wage.
Discussion Question 26: What do you see as some of the pros/cons of the Americans with
Disabilities (ADA) Act?
We close this section with a brief discussion of how legislation in the U.S. has restricted
the number of H-1B visas for highly skilled professionals.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Discussion Question 27: Should the U.S. Congress increase the number of H-1B visas?
Why? Why not?)
STRATEGY SPOTLIGHT 2.2 addresses how advocacy groups and public opinion can
put pressure on companies to address environmental sustainability concerns such as waste
reduction in a proactive manner.
Discussion Question 28: What are some of the challenges associated with companies
facing increasing pressure for sustainable business practices? Do you have ideas about
how companies could use eco-friendly business practices and models to differentiate
themselves in the market?
D.
The Technological Segment
Developments in technology lead to new products and services and improve how theyโre
produced and delivered to the end user. Innovations can create entirely new industries and alter
existing industries.
Discussion Question 29: Ask students to speculate on the impact of the following
technologies on American industry: (1) the Internet, (2) manufacturing innovations (e.g.,
robotics), (3) genetic engineering/designer genes. (The last items may provoke some
heated discussion regarding the ethical implications.)
We also address a fascinating issue: some of the promising future applications of
nanotechnology and how it will impact some industries.
The SUPPLEMENT below discusses how SkyMall, the inflight magazine was forced into
bankruptcy by technologyโsmartphones and tablets.
Extra Example: It Seems That Technology Killed SkyMall
The firm behind the inflight catalog, SkyMall, filed for bankruptcy protection. It is clearly a victim of evolving rules
and technology that now permit airline passengers to keep their smartphones and tablets powered up during flights.
For 25 years it sold quirky products like a Darth Vader toaster or a paper-towel holder with USB ports. However,
SkyMall is now seeking a court supervised sale of its assets, according to papers filed on January 22, 2015 with the
Phoenix Bankruptcy Court.
CEO Scott Wiley cited a โcrowded, rapidly evolving and intensely competitiveโ retail environment as the reason for
the firmโs recent struggles. And, he said, โWith the increased use of electronic devices on planes, fewer people
browsed the SkyMall inflight catalog.โ
SkyMall had revenue of $33.7 million in 2013. But, its sales sank to only 15.8 million for the nine months ending on
September 28, 2014.
Source: Corrigan, T. 2015. SkyMall Succumbs to a New Jet Age. Wall Street Journal. January 24โ25: B3.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Discussion Question 30: Are you aware of other cases where technology is a key factor
that is reshapingโor adversely affectingโan industry? What industries are most likely to
be influenced by technological changes?
E.
The Economic Segment
The economy has an impact on all industries, from suppliers of raw materials to
manufacturers of finished goods and services, as well as all organizations in the service,
wholesale, retail, government, and nonprofit sectors of economies. Key indicators include
interest rates, unemployment rates, the consumer price index (CPI), the Gross Domestic Product
(GDP), and net disposable income.
Discussion Question 31: Compare the impact of rising (or declining) interest rates on
the overall demand for the following industries: (1) housing (will have a significant
impact), (2) automobiles (will have a significant impact), (3) fast food (will have very
little effect).
F.
The Global Segment
Globalization provides both opportunities to access larger potential markets and a broad
base of factors of production such as raw materials, labor, skilled managers, and technical
professionals. However, such endeavors carry many political, social, and economic risks.
Examples of important elements in the global segment include currency exchange rates,
increasing global trade, the economic emergence of India, and Chinaโs admittance to the World
Trade Organization.
Discussion Question 32: Provide examples of firms that have succeeded (stumbled) in
their efforts to expand into international markets. What factors can explain their success
(failure)?
We also address the rising middle class in emerging countries and how it has led to increased
employment in those countries by multinationals.
Discussion Question 33: What are the risks associated with accessing a larger potential
market overseas as a result of the process of globalization? Do the risks of globalization
outweigh its benefits?
G.
Relationships among Elements of the General Environment
In our discussion of the general environment, we have addressed many relationships
among the various elements.
EXHIBIT 2.3 provides many examples of how the impact of trends or events in the
general environment can vary across industries.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
The SUPPLEMENT below provides some insights on how many elements of the General
Environment are interrelated. It is a rather interesting contextโCairo, Egypt after the Arab
Spring.
Extra Example: Entrepreneurship in Cairo after the Arab Spring
A different type of grassroots revolution has begun in the aftermath of the Arab Spring. According to Ramez
Mohamed, CEO of Flat6Labs, a Cairo-based startup accelerator, entrepreneurship has thrived over the past two
years. He contends that Egyptโs youth feel empowered to make a difference, one venture at a time.
Here are some of his firmโs most promising startups and the opportunity that they are tackling:
โข
โข
โข
โข
Ekshef: With an Arabic-only platform and Yelp-like rating system, the service enables Egyptians to search,
review, and recommend doctors from the directory. Opportunity: The country has more than 75,000 health care
clinics, but it is hard for patients to find the right physician.
Nafham: The service condenses the countryโs public-school curriculum into online, crowdsourced lessons.
Users can vote up or down based on quality. Its staff also produces video content. Opportunity: Egyptโs rising
population is putting a squeeze on classroom space.
Eshtery: The utility lets users shop by scanning codes on signs around town and having the items delivered to
them. The business was inspired by Home Plus, a supermarket that offers a similar service in South Korea.
Opportunity: It is hard to buy groceries if you work two hours from the market.
Ogra: A mobile app, a la Uber, which connects passengers with reliable drivers. Opportunity: With social
tensions spilling onto the street, public transportation that is dependable is hard to find.
Source: Anonymous. 2013. Emerging tech scene: Cairo. Fast Company. March: 31.
For the Tenth Edition, we have added the topic of โDigital Economyโ as one of the new
features with numerous examples and โStrategy Spotlightsโ throughout the text. Here, we
introduce the topic and provide Spotlight 2.3 as an example of how it can be applied to monitor
federal, state, and local government expenditures.
As we note in the text, corporations are increasingly collecting and analyzing data on
their customers, including data on customer characteristics, purchasing patterns, employee
productivity, and physical asset utilization. Such efforts have the potential to help firms better
customize their product and service offerings to customers as well as more efficiently use the
resources of the company. We provide examples of Pepsi and Kaiser Permanente as well as some
figures on how its use has dramatically increased in recent yearsโas well as how it can improve
a firmโs performance.
STRATEGY SPOTLIGHT 2.3 provides an example of how big data can be used in the
public sector, i.e., how to monitor governmental expenditures. Examples, which should be of
particular interest to students, is how it can help detect malfeasance and acts of corruption by
public officials.
Discussion Question 34: How can governmentsโas well as โpublic watchdogsโโ
effectively use big data to monitor governmental expenditures? (It might be interesting to
see how students can come up with ideas/insights about how to avoid problems
associated with the proverbial โfox guarding the henhouse.โ
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
III.
The Competitive Environment
PowerPoint Slide 19: The Competitive Environment
PowerPoint Slide 20: Porterโs Five Forces Model of Industry Competition
PowerPoint Slide 21: The Threat of New Entrants
PowerPoint Slide 23: The Bargaining Power of Buyers
PowerPoint Slide 24: The Bargaining Power of Suppliers
PowerPoint Slide 25: The Threat of Substitute Products and Services
PowerPoint Slide 26: The Intensity of Rivalry among Competitors in an Industry
PowerPoint Slide 27: How the Internet and Digital Technologies Affect Competitive Forces
PowerPoint Slide 28: Using Industry Analysis: A Few Caveats
PowerPoint Slide 29: The Value Net
PowerPoint Slide 30: Doing a Good Industry Analysis
PowerPoint Slide 31: Strategy Groups within Industries
PowerPoint Slide 32: Strategy Groups as an Analytic Tool
PowerPoint Slide 33: Example: Strategic Groups within Industries
Here, we draw upon a well-known analytic tool, Michael Porterโs five-forces model of industry
competition. We introduce this model and discuss examples of each force. We then address the
impact of the Internet on the five forces and the strategic groups concept and its implications for
studying rivalry and competition.
A.
Porterโs Five-Forces Model of Industry Competition
EXHIBIT 2.4 illustrates Porterโs five-forces model of industry competition
When introducing this model, it is useful to show how the model provides insight into an
industryโs dynamics and expected profit levels. The SUPPLEMENT below provides such an
analysis on the paint and allied products industry. The analysis is restricted to the trade sales (i.e.,
house paint) segment of the industry. The competitive forces are very different for other
segments such as the specialized high-tech automobile finishes.
Note: For our purposes of illustrating the โbasicsโ of the โfive forces,โ the analysis has
been simplified. We assume buyers to be consumers, although there are, of course, other distinct
groups such as hardware stores, and large discounters such as Wal-Mart. Obviously firmsโ
bargaining power vis-ร -vis paint manufacturers vary significantly. Similarly, our analysis
assumes the industryโs products to be commodity products. However, there are exceptions, such
as Olympic Stain, that have successfully differentiated their products on the basis of quality.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Extra Example: The Paint and Allied Products (PAP) Industry
An analysis of the Paints and Allied Products industry (SIC 2851), using the five-forces model, demonstrates why
this industry has traditionally been caught in a price-cost squeeze and is unable to pass on rising raw material costs
to its customers.
To illustrate the price-cost squeeze that this industry is facing, consider that between the years 1995 to 2000, the PPI
(producer price indexโthe price for which it sells its output) of the PAP industry increased an average of only 2
percent. The PPI for petroleum refining and related productsโa key supplier to this industryโincreased at a rate of
6 percent over this same period of time. Hence the price of this key raw material was roughly twice the rate of
inflation (about 3 percent); whereas, the PAP industry was lower than the rate of inflation. Thus, the PAP industry
has been unableโdue to unfavorable industry competitive forcesโto pass on cost increases to their suppliers; thus
eroding profitability.
Consider the PAP industry in terms of each of Porterโs Five Forces:
Threats of Entry: Very High (minimal capital investment needed, little proprietary technology, regional firms can
compete in local markets due to high transportation costs, little brand identification of existing competitors)
Buyer Power: Very High (low brand loyalty, relatively little product differentiation, relatively low switching costs)
Supplier Power: High (especially for petroleum derivative raw materialsโa key input in industry)
Substitute Products: High (plastics, wood paneling, wallpaper coverings, etc.)
Rivalry: High (competition is based mostly on price competition, because of little brand loyalty and product
differentiation; easy entry and exit from the industry gives rise to frequent price wars; little price leadership
exhibited by larger firms)
Sources: www.bls.gov (Bureau of Labor Statistics); www.ita.doc.gov (International Trade Administration)
It is useful to point out that there can also be very profitable opportunities to compete in
industries that have overall low profits. For example, in the paint industry, Olympic Stain has
typically been a very successful and highly profitable firm because they have found an attractive
niche in the market and developed a differentiated product (through product development and
advertising).
We also provide a brief discussion of some of the competitive forces affecting the hotel
industry.
1.
Threat of New Entrants
After summarizing the major barriers to entry, ask students to provide examples of
industries characterized by each of these entry barriers. This may help them to understand what
initially may appear to be rather complex ideas.
We discuss the concept of โthe era of Lego innovation.โ Here, valuable advances in
technology can be attained by imaginatively combining components and software available to
everyone. Clearly, this serves to lower entry barriers.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Teaching Tip: The chapter explains how economies of scale and economies of
experience (learning curve) erect significant entry barriers. In the auto industry, U.S.
manufacturers such as Ford and G.M. have high economies of scale (being the large
producers) and all the benefits of learning curve (having been in the business for almost
a century). Despite these advantages, foreign auto producers have entered the U.S.
market and have increasingly gained market share over the past few decades. Ask the
students why this happened? Does this prove that the concepts we discussed are wrong?
Or does it point out that additional factors have to be considered? Point out that foreign
producers have the benefits of lower labor costs and/or have developed better
manufacturing technologies (such as Toyotaโs lean manufacturing).
2.
Bargaining Power of Buyers
It may be interesting to discuss when a group of buyers becomes powerful. For instance,
organizations that produce โtalentโ (i.e., business schools) may have varying power against
groups of organizations that hire business school graduates. For instance, large employers may
require changes to the curriculum or shift talent production in house (see Apple University).
Moreover, Apple uses its buyer power to negotiate very low rental ratesโcompared to
other storesโfor its stores in shopping malls. This is because its powerful brand/products can
help drive customers to the mall and increase overall sales in a mall by as much as 10 percent.
Roughly speaking, Apple pays 2 percent of salesโcompared to other tenants who may pay as
much as 15 percent of sales.
Discussion Question 35: Can you think of other tenants that would be able to negotiate
low rental rates? Why?
The SUPPLEMENT below explains that many huge consumer product firms are going to
cut the amount of money they will spend on advertising. Clearly, this will enhance their buyer
power.
Extra Example: Large Consumer Product Firms Cut Advertising Budgets
Procter & Gamble is planning to make deep cuts in its number of advertising agencies. It hopes to save up to half-abillion dollars in fees that it now pays to outside firms to help pitch its wide variety of everyday itemsโfrom
Gillette razors, to Tide detergent, to Pantene hair care, to Bounty paper towels.
Needless to say, this worries Madison Avenue. P&G is joining other companiesโsuch as Unilever, LโOreal SA,
Coca-Cola Co, S.C. Johnson, and Visaโthat are all trying to force advertisers to either lower prices or risk losing
the business altogether. These firms are striving to offset slow growth with cost cuts.
P&G CFO Jon Moeller said the household-products giant plans to โsignificantly simplify and reduceโ the number of
agencies it works with on ads, media buying, public relations, package design and in-store marketing. Similarly,
Unilever, which spent about $7 billion on advertising and marketing in 2014, is currently reviewing its global
media-buying business. A person familiar with the issue said the process is driven in part by the need to find โcost
savings and efficiencies.โ
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Such pressures have prompted extensive industry consolidation. For example, giants Publicis Groupe SA and
Omnicom Group Inc. triedโbut failedโto merge in 2014. The agencies remain at the behest of clients that are in an
increasingly frugal mood.
Source: Tadena, N. & Ng, Serena, A. S. 2015. P&G Joins the Movement to Reduce Costs. Wall Street Journal.
April 27: B1-B2.
3.
Bargaining Power of Suppliers
Briefly discuss some of the conditions under which a supplier group may become
powerful. The bargaining power of suppliers can be presented as the mirror opposite of the
bargaining power of suppliers. For example, the relative sizes and concentrations largely
determine the bargaining power of the two parties involved in the transaction.
The section discusses how catfish farmers in Mississippi increased their power by
forming a cooperativeโDelta Pride Catfish.
The SUPPLEMENT below discusses how hotel companies in โtightโ housing markets
such as San Francisco raise their profits by exploiting the limited supply of housing, highlighting
potentially negative consequences of supplier power. Clearly, raising prices benefits hotel firms
in the short run, but is it prudent in the long run?
Extra Example: Risk your reputation if you have strong bargaining power?
J.P. Morgan organizes one of the leading annual healthcare conference in San Francisco, which attracts thousands of
attendees who are linked to 450 companies every year. It is no secret that San Franciscoโs housing market is one of
the most expensive in the world. But that is not all. San Francisco is also famous for a lack of hotel rooms, meaning
hotels operate in a sellerโs market. It is therefore no surprise that the arrival of around 9,000 travelers leads to
exorbitant hotel rates because hotels flex their muscles and exploit their powerful supplier position. In 2018, for
instance, a room at a Holiday Inn Express close to the conference venue was $527 a night. Other hospitality
providers such as restaurants also join in on the high-price game. For instance, cold lunch buffets at some
establishments close to the conference venue were offered for more than $70 dollars a head and came with a
mandatory 25% service charge.
While these high prices are a consequence of market principles such as โsupply and demand,โ hotels and other
hospitality firms should also consider the wider consequences of excessively high prices. For instance, smaller
healthcare and biotech startups may not be able to attend the conference, which may be perceived as stifling
entrepreneurship. In addition, people living in close proximity to the conference venue or travelers that visit San
Francisco for unrelated business reasons may protest against the high costs of hospitality services. The media may
have an open ear to these outcries over high prices.
Overall, hospitality providers may expose themselves to reputational penalties if they charge the highest possible
price. While these reputational penalties are likely to be lower than price gauging in events of natural disasters (e.g.,
Hurricane Harvey destroying much of the Houston metropolitan area in 2017), hotel chains and other hospitality
providers may be well-advised to consider ways to address any potential backlash.
Source: Grant, C. 2018. The real winners in biotech. Wall Street Journal. December 28: np.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
4.
The Threat of Substitute Products and Services
Emphasize that the viability of a substitute product depends largely on its relative priceperformance trade-off, i.e., more value for the same price or the same value for a lower price.
Examples are electronic security systems versus security guards, and the use of steel versus
plastic for components in the manufacture of automobiles.
We discuss substitutes and give the example of how the use of teleconferencing poses a
threat to the airline industry.
5.
The Intensity of Rivalry among Competitors in an Industry
After discussing the factors that lead to intense rivalry in an industry, provide an example
of an industry in which competition has recently been intense. For example, most students are
familiar with the recurring price wars in the U. S. airline industry. Ask them to explain this using
the factors discussed (e.g., undifferentiated service, low switching costs, slow industry growth,
numerous competitors, etc.) You might point out that this industry was expected to report huge
losses in 2001 even before the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack. Beginning in late 2005, the
airlinesโ problems were further aggravated by extremely high fuel costs.
In this section, we discuss the intense rivalry among U.S. grocers (see STRATEGY
SPOTLIGHT 2.4).
The SUPPLEMENT below is Michael Porterโs response to a question as to whether or
not he would add a โsixth forceโ if he were developing his framework today.
Extra Example: Should There Be a โSixth Force?โ Michael Porterโs Perspective
โThere have been two nominees for the sixth force. One is government. After much further work using and teaching
the framework, I have reaffirmed my original conclusion that government is not a sixth force because there is no
monotonic (direct linear) relationship between the strength and influence of government and profitability of an
industry. You canโt say that โgovernment is low, industry profitability is high.โ It all depends on exactly what
government does. Also, there are many different parts of government, each with its own distinct impacts. And, how
do you assess the consequence of what government does? Well, you look at how it affects the five forces.
โThe other, more recent, candidate for a sixth force involves organizations whose products and services are
complementary to the primary organizationโs products and services. Again, there is no monotonic relationship
between the extent of complements and profitability. Sometimes having many complements is consistent with high
industry profitability, sometimes with low profitability. It has to do with how complements affect the five forces.โฆ
Clearly, complements have much to do with the size of the pie, but their role in the division of the pie is independent
of other factors.โ
Source: Argyres, N. & McGahan, A. M. 2002. An interview with Michael Porter. Academy of Management
Executive. 16 (2): 43-52.
EXHIBIT 2.5 provides a summary of key points from the discussion of industry fiveforces analysis.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
B.
How the Internet and Digital Technologies Are Affecting the Five Competitive
Forces
The changes caused by the Internet economy have made strategizing more challenging.
Strategic analysis, informed formulation, and successful implementation may be even more
difficult in the Internet era because of the uncertainty surrounding the new technology. In this
section, we address the impact of the Internet and digital technologies in terms of Porterโs fiveforces model of competition.
1.
The Threat of New Entrants
In most industries, new entrants will be a bigger threat because the Internet lowers
barriers to entry. Thus, scale economies may be less important in an Internet context, and new
entrants can go to market with lower capital costs.
Businesses launched on the Internet may enjoy savings on traditional expenses such as
office rent, salaries, and postage. Thus, a new entrant could use the savings to charge lower
prices and compete on price despite an incumbent competitorโs scale advantages. Alternatively, a
new entrant may be able to serve a market more effectively, with more personalized services and
greater attention to product details. Then they could build a reputation in their niche and charge
premium prices.
Another potential benefit for Internet-based businesses is access to distribution channels.
Manufacturers or distributors that can reach potential outlets for their products via the Internet
may be encouraged to enter markets that were previously closed to them. Such access is not
guaranteed, however.
Discussion Question 36: What are some examples of industries where there have been a
lot of new entrants because of the Internet? Have these new entrants been successful?
How have incumbent firms reacted?
2.
The Bargaining Power of Buyers
The Internet may increase buyer power by providing consumers with more information to
make buying decisions and lowering switching costs. But, by giving buyers new ways to access
sellers, the Internet may also suppress the power of traditional buyer channels that have
concentrated buying power in the hands of a few. In this section, we address two types of buyers:
end users and buyer channel intermediaries.
End users are the final customers in a distribution channel. Internet sales activity that is
labeled โB2Cโ is concerned with end users. Because a large amount of consumer information is
available on the Internet, end users can easily shop for quality merchandise and bargain for price
concessions. Switching costs are also potentially lower because the cost of switching may
involve only a few clicks of the mouse to find and view a competing product or service online.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Buyer channel intermediaries are the wholesalers and distributors who serve as
โmiddlemenโ between manufacturers and end users. In some industries buyer channels are
dominated by powerful players. The Internet, however, makes it easier and less expensive for
businesses to reach customers directly. Thus, the Internet may increase the power of incumbent
firms relative to these traditional buyer channels.
Discussion Question 37: What are some other ways that end users can increase their
buying power by using the Internet?
STRATEGY SPOTLIGHT 2.5 addresses the role of the Internet in shaking up the legal
services industry. It has clearly led to an increase in the power of buyers.
Discussion Question 38: What are some examples of other companies that have used the
Internet to enhance their buying power?
3.
The Bargaining Power of Suppliers
The Internet has streamlined and quickened the process of acquiring supplies. But the
extent to which the Internet is a benefit or a detriment to suppliers may depend on where the
supplier is positioned along the supply chain.
Suppliers provide products or services to other businesses. The term โB2Bโ is used to
refer to businesses that supply or sell to other businesses. On the one hand, the Internet makes it
possible for suppliers to access more customers at a relatively lower cost per customer. On the
other hand, because buyers can comparatively shop more easily and negotiate prices faster,
suppliers may not be able to hold on to them. This is especially damaging to supply chain
intermediaries, such as product distributors, who may not be able to stop suppliers from directly
accessing other potential business customers.
Discussion Question 39: What can supply chain intermediaries do to strengthen their
position, that is, make it worthwhile for their customers in the supply chain to continue
using their services?
Discussion Question 40: What are some examples of companies that have abandoned
their traditional method of reaching customers and are using the Internet to reach
customers directly?
One of the greatest threats to supplier power is that the Internet inhibits a supplierโs
ability to offer highly differentiated products or unique services. Other factors may, in contrast,
contribute to stronger supplier power:
1.
The growth of Web-based business in general may create more downstream
outlets for suppliers to sell to.
2.
Suppliers may be able to create Web-based purchasing arrangements that make
purchasing easier and discourages their customers from switching.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
3.
The use of proprietary software that links buyers to a supplierโs website may
create a rapid, low-cost ordering capability that discourages the buyer from
seeking other sources of supply.
4.
Suppliers will have greater power to the extent that they can reach end users
directly without intermediaries.
A process known as disintermediation is removing organizations or business process
layers responsible for intermediary steps in the value chain in many industries. The Internet is
also creating an opening for new functions. These new activities are entering the value chain by a
process known as reintermediation, the introduction of new types of intermediaries. Electronic
delivery is an example.
Discussion Question 41: What are some examples of new companies that have emerged
to offer new types of electronic intermediary functions?
Discussion Question 42: If you were Home Depot, what would you do if one of your
major suppliers responded that they intended to sell directly to consumers online
anyway?
4.
The Threat of Substitutes
In general, the threat of substitutes is heightened because the Internet introduces new
ways to accomplish the same tasks.
The primary factor that leads to substitution is economicโconsumers will use a product
or service until a substitute that meets the same need becomes available at a lower cost. The
economies created by Internet technologies have led to the development of numerous substitutes
for traditional ways of doing business. An example is provided:
1.
Online electronic storage by companies such as Dropbox and Amazon Web
Services.
Discussion Question 43: What are some other examples of Internet companies that are
offering products or services that are viable substitutes for existing products or services?
5.
The Intensity of Competitive Rivalry
Because the Internet provides more tools and means for competing, rivalry among
competitors is likely to be more intense. The Internet increases rivalry by making it difficult for
firms to differentiate themselves and by shifting customersโ attention to issues of price.
Discussion Question 44: What do you think the impact of diminishing brand loyalty will
be on the intensity of competitive rivalry? Explain.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Discussion Question 45: What are some examples of companies that still rely heavily on
brand loyalty to maintain their market power and sales?
Rivalry is more intense when switching costs are low and product or service
differentiation is minimized. The Internet has โcommoditizedโ products that might previously
have been regarded as rare or unique. The Internet also eliminates the importance of location
making products that were previously distant readily available online. This makes competitors
more equally balanced, thus intensifying rivalry.
The problem is made worse for marketers because of shopping infomediaries that search
the Web for the best prices. Such infomediary services may be good for consumers, but they
increase business rivalry by consolidating the marketing messages that consumers use to make
purchases to a few key pieces of information that the selling company has little control over.
Discussion Question 46: What steps can companies take to make their online business
more distinctive or unique?
Discussion Question 47: What are some examples of companies that have maintained the
distinctiveness of their online business? What features make them distinct? Are these
features sustainable?
C.
Using Industry Analyses: A Few Caveats
This section was written as a โcaveatโ to address some limitations of Porterโs five-forces
model. First, managers should not always avoid low profit industries. We provide the example of
WellPoint Health Networks (now Anthem, Inc.).
Teaching Tip: Even when industry analysis shows that an industry is unattractive, there
are a few firms that seem to be able to earn high returns. For example, Southwest
Airlines has been consistently profitable in an otherwise unattractive industry over the
past several years. Does this mean that industry analysis is misleading? You may point
out that industry analysis is useful to predict an industryโs average profitability, but not
necessarily, a single firmโs profitability. This is a good opportunity to introduce the role
of the strategist in outperforming industry norms.
Second is the idea that business is not always a zero-sum gameโ which is an assumption
that is implicit in Porterโs five-forces model. We discuss how companies can collaborate with
suppliers for mutually beneficial outcomes.
The SUPPLEMENT below provides a rather counterintuitive perspective on rivalry in an
industry. With examples from Yoplait and McDonaldโs, sometimes a firm can benefit from a
rivalโs new product.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Extra Example: Firms Can Benefit from a Rivalโs New Product
Conventional wisdom that a rivalโs launch can hurt a firmโs profits is often correct. But not always. Research has
shown that companies sometimes see profits increase after a rivalโs rolloutโeven when they donโt aggressively seek
ways to undermine the new productโs sales.
The underlying mechanism is rather straightforward: When a firm extends a product line, it often raises the prices of
its existing products. These hikes may be designed to make the new product look cheaper and thus more attractive
by comparison or to capture the value customers place on a broader line of offerings. As the company adjusts its
pricing, its competitors can follow suit without risking customer defections over price.
For example, consider what happened with Yoplait became the first major producer to market low-fat yogurt in the
United States. Although Dannon took a 5 percent hit in units sold during the new productโs initial year, the vast
majority of its customers did not defect to Yoplait. Instead, they preferred Dannonโs style of yogurt. And, since
Yoplait had raised prices across its product line, Dannon raised its prices as well, by more than 10 percent. Thus,
despite the 5 percent decrease in volume, Dannonโs revenue increased by 5 percent.
A similar dynamic plays out in fast food. My research shows that McDonaldโs franchisees who open additional
outlets (a type of horizontal product extension) often price the menu items in all their locations higher than before.
This allows competing Burger Kings to raise their prices as well. At independent Burger Kings in Silicon Valley,
this has led to increase margins more than 10 percent of the time.
Source: Thomadsen, R. 2013. You can benefit from a rivalโs new product. Harvard Business Review. 91(4): 24.
The third issue we raise is that the five-forces analysis has often been criticized for being
a static, rather than a dynamic, analysis. Brandenberger and Nalebuff introduced the concept of
the value net, which we include in EXHIBIT 2.6.
The concept of complementors is often considered to be the single most important
contribution of value net analysis. Complements typically are products or services that have a
potential impact on the value of the firmsโ own product and services. We provide the examples
of complements (software and microprocessors) in the personal computer industry and the video
game industry. (As we noted in an earlier supplement, Professor Michael Porter would not add
complements to the โfive forcesโ because they donโt have a direct linear relationship to industry
profitability. However, they clearly can have an impact on an industryโs profitability.)
D.
Strategic Groups within Industries
Most of your students are probably very interested in the automobile industry. EXHIBIT
2.7 provides a strategic grouping of the worldwide automobile industry. It is rather clear from the
discussion in the text that the intensity of competition within strategic groups is much more
intense than competition across groups.
Point out four benefits of strategic groups as an analytical tool:
1.
Strategic groupings help a firm identify mobility barriers that protect a group from
attacks by other groups.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
2.
It helps a firm to identify groups whose competitive position may be marginal or
tenuous.
3.
It helps chart the future directions of firmsโ strategies.
4.
It helps in thinking through the implications of each industry trend for the
strategic group as a whole.
It may be interesting to ask the students what dynamics they envision in the automobile
industry, i.e., how membership in strategic groups may change and if new strategic groups may
emerge.
Discussion Question 48: What are some of the strategic groups in other industries with
which you may be familiar? What are the implications? (e.g., retailing)
We close with an example with an industry closely related to the one addressed in this
sectionโmotorcycles. The SUPPLEMENT below discusses the two major clusters in this
industry and how the basis for competition is quite different.
Extra Example: The Two Key Strategic Groups in the Motorcycle Industry
In most industries, firms cluster around a relatively small number of strategic positions and within each cluster hold
similar ideas about how to compete. In the motorcycle industry, there are two major clusters of firms.
The Japanese producersโHonda, Yamaha, Suzuki, and Kawasakiโcompete on technical innovation and lower
costs. The Harley-Davidsons and Ducatis, in contrast, view their business through a very different lensโas
entertainment. Hereโs how Federic Minoli, the CEO and chairman of Ducati from 1996 to 2007 described his
decision to build a museum celebrating the firm before he repaired a damaged factory: โDucati is not, or not only, a
motorcycle company. We sell something more: a dream, passion, a piece of history.โ
Analyze most industries, and you will find a similar situation: two or three groups of firms jostling for position upon
the same two or three competitive mountaintops. Now consider the major U.S. airlines. They all struggled for many
years in cutthroat competition around the same position until Herb Kelleher of Southwest Airlines saw a different,
low-cost way to compete.
Source: Gavetti, G. 2011. The new psychology of strategic leadership. Harvard Business Review. 89 (7/8): 118-125.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
IV.
Issue for Debate
The topic should be of great interest because many students are familiar with drones (or perhaps
own a drone or use drones for fun). What may be less well known is that drones are also
extremely prevalent and effective in commercial applications such as building inspections. In
effect, this is a good example of a new technology that has great potential for business (e.g.,
reducing costs) and workers (e.g., improving safety), but also faces challenges (e.g., privacy
concerns). This tension between benefits and costs is certainly not unusual when new
technologies get introduced into established markets. The instructor can point to other industries
that have seen great efficiency benefits but also faced much opposition from various stakeholders
(such as ridesharing).
Discussion Question 1: If you were a local regulator, would you permit the use of
drones?
Response Guideline: The benefits of drones seem to outweigh potential costs. In 2016,
the White House estimated that drones could lead to $82 billion in economic growth by 2025 and
support up to 100,000 jobs. Less obvious benefits include increased safety in many professions
such as building inspectors (less risk for slipping on roofs or ladders). Drones also have a lot of
potential to assist first responders. This question can direct the discussion to the risk aversion of
regulators. It also pushes students to think about how to balance the costs and benefits of new
technologies that have the potential to revolutionize a range of commercial applications.
Discussion Question 2: How should regulators respond to drone accidents?
Response guideline: This would be a good application of stakeholder management and
can be tied to the commercialization of other novel technologies. For instance, Elon Musk
tweeted in 2013 following media coverage of a Tesla on fire: โWhy does a Tesla fire [with] no
injury get more media headlines than 100,000 gas car fires that kill [hundreds] of people per
year?โ A potential solution for regulators may be to allow commercial drone use (since the
benefits are quite clear) and restrict private drone use (as the benefits are more experimental and
uncertain).
Discussion Question 3: Do you think drone use could be successful in other commercial
applications such as package delivery?
Response guideline: Students should think about how the nature of the business may
affect adaptation. Building inspections are generally seen as a public service whereas the
โpackage deliveryโ sector is mostly privately organized (USPS being the exception of course).
Private companies such as Amazon that want to break into the โdrone delivery marketโ may
engage in political strategies and sophisticated PR strategies (the following article illustrates
nicely how Amazon tries to educate and lobby the public and politicians:
https://goo.gl/1P5aUK).
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
V.
Reflecting on Career Implications
Below, we provide some suggestions on how you can lead the discussion on the career
implications for the material in Chapter 2.
๏ Creating the Environmentally Aware Organization: Advancing your career requires
constant scanning, monitoring, and intelligence gathering to find out not only about
future job opportunities but also to understand how employersโ expectations are
changing. Consider using websites such as LinkedIn to find opportunities. Merely posting
your resume on a site such as LinkedIn may not be enough. Instead, consider in what
ways you can use such sites for scanning, monitoring, and intelligence gathering.
Students will likely be very interested in the topic of learning about new job opportunities and
their associated skill requirements and compensation. Later in the course, there will be specific
advice related to finding jobs through networking. Here, the point is to raise in students a general
awareness of the types of career options available to them. On LinkedIn, job postings are
grouped in various ways. Employers list desired skills and experience. Students should browse a
number of these postings in order to identify trends concerning the types of skills that are
currently in demand. To find compensation levels, students can join LinkedIn and ask experts.
Compensation is a very tricky topic, though, because companies will tailor it to the specific skills
of their chosen candidate. The point here is that students will gain from learning about the job
market in their fields and how their specific skills and capabilities match up with what the market
values. A related topic to consider is the value of experience. Ask students why employers value
experience in addition to skills and training. The question does not have an obvious answer.
Students should appreciate that as they progress through their careers, they will gain subtle and
powerful capabilities related to, for example, leadership, handling complex situations, and
stakeholder relations
๏ SWOT Analysis: As an analytical method, SWOT analysis is applicable for individuals
as it is for firms. It is important for you to periodically evaluate your strengths and
weaknesses as well as potential opportunities and threats to your career. Such analysis
should be followed by efforts to address your weaknesses by improving your skills and
capabilities.
The SWOT analysis directly pertains to individuals, and students will usually grasp how it
applies to them personally. A useful exercise is to have students complete a SWOT analysis on
themselves and then pair with another and share reviews. As a check, ask student volunteers to
share an element from each part to ensure that students are correctly classifying the elements.
The next step is to ask students to make a plan to address their weaknesses. Plans may be of two
types. One is to develop weak skills to the point they are not weaknesses. Two is to make a plan
to avoid the weakness. For example, if a student were weak at quantitative analysis, then he or
she could pursue a career, such as copywriting, that does not rely on that skill so much. The point
here is that students should be aware of their SWOT profile and plan their careers accordingly.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
๏ General Environment: The general environment consists of several segments, such as
the demographic, sociocultural, political/legal, technological, economic, and global
environments. It would be useful to evaluate how each of these segments can affect your
career opportunities. Identify two or three specific trends (e.g., rapid technological
change, aging of the population, increase in minimum wages) and their impact on your
choice of careers. These also provide possibilities for you to add value to your
organization.
When students choose a segment, they should identify a trend within that segment. Then they
should be able to identify an industry that would benefit from that trend. This industry is
therefore likely to be a growth industry that may provide good career opportunities. It also may
be useful to identify some weaknesses in this logic, such as reversal of a trend, or having an
industry become a magnet for workers, such as computer programming, where the labor supply
may exceed demand. Within industries, there may be specific functions that will offer growth in
areas that firms can exploit. An example may be e-business, where firms in many industries are
revolutionizing their distribution channels in response to the increasing acceptance by consumers
of e-tailing.
๏ Five-Forces Analysis: Before you go for a job interview, consider the five forces
affecting the industry within which the firm competes. This will help you to appear
knowledgeable about the industry and increase your odds of landing the job. It also can
help you to decide if you want to work for that organization. If the โforcesโ are
unfavorable, the long-term profit potential of the industry may be unattractive, leading to
fewer resources available andโall other things being equalโ fewer career opportunities.
It is good advice to do due diligence of a firm and its industry prior to a job interview. It helps
job candidates to appear knowledgeable about their prospective employers, which may be a
differentiator. In class discussions, it is probably less important to make a general conclusion of
โfavorablenessโ vs. โunfavorableness.โ Better is to identify the specific forces that are the
strongest threats to the industry. Then develop an argument as to how students, the candidates,
can help firms to address these threats. Later, provided that students have offers from firms in
multiple industries, students may use the assessment of industry overall attractiveness in their
decision as to which offer to accept. In discussions of this issue, it may be useful to remind
students that firm characteristics are a stronger explanation of firm success than industry
environment. It may be better to work for a strong firm in an unattractive industry than for a
weak firm in an attractive industry.
VI.
Summary
Managers must analyze the external environment to minimize or eliminate threats and exploit
opportunities. This involves a continuous process of environmental scanning and monitoring, as
well as obtaining competitive intelligence on present and potential rivals. These activities
provide valuable inputs for developing forecasts. In addition, many firms use scenario planning
to anticipate and respond to volatile and disruptive environmental changes.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
We identified two types of environment: the general environment and the competitive
environment. The six segments of the general environment are demographic, sociocultural,
political/legal, technological, economic, and global. Trends and events occurring in these
segments, such as the aging of the population, higher percentages of women in the workplace,
governmental legislation, and increasing (or decreasing) interest rates, can have a dramatic effect
on your firm. A given trend may have a positive impact on some industries and a negative or
neutral impact, or none at all on others.
The competitive environment consists of industry-related factors and has a more direct
impact than the general environment. Porterโs five-forces model of industry analysis includes the
threat of new entrants, buyer power, supplier power, threat of substitutes, and rivalry among
competitors. The intensity of these factors determines, in large part, the average expected level of
profitability in an industry. A sound awareness of such factors, both individually and in
combination, is beneficial not only for deciding what industries to enter but also for assessing
how a firm can improve its competitive position. We also address how industry and competitive
practices are being affected by Internet technologies. We also addressed some of the limitations
of Porterโs five-forces model, including its zero-sum perspective and its omission of the key role
of complements. Although we discussed the general environment and competitive environment
in separate sections, they are quite interdependent. A given environmental trend or event, such as
changes in the ethnic composition of a population or a technological innovation, typically has a
much greater impact on some industries than on others.
The concept of strategic groups is also very important to the external environment of a
firm. No two organizations are completely different nor are they exactly the same. The question
is how to group firms in an industry on the basis of similarities in their resources and strategies.
The strategic groups concept is valuable for determining mobility barriers across groups,
identifying groups with marginal competitive positions, charting the future directions of firm
strategies, and assessing the implications of industry trends for the strategic group as a whole.
Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm
Explain the profitability of an industry (of your choice) by applying the tools that you
learned in this chapter (five-forces analysis). How can the five-forces zero-sum perspective be
a disadvantage?
Teaching Suggestions:
You can organize the discussion on this topic around the following sub-questions:
๏ซ What are the five forces that drive the profitability in an industry?
The five forces are:
1. The threat of new entrants
2. The bargaining power of suppliers
3. The bargaining power of buyers
4. The threat of substitute products and services
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
5. The intensity of rivalry among competitors in an industry
๏ซ What are the barriers to entry into a particular industry? Are they high or low? What are the
implications?
Six major sources of entry barriers as outlined in the text are:
1. Economies of scale
2. Product differentiation
3. Capital requirements
4. Switching costs (one-time costs that the buyer faces when switching from one supplierโs
product or service to another)
5. Access to distribution channels
6. Cost disadvantages independent of scale (These derive from: proprietary product,
favorable access to raw materials, government subsidies and, favorable government
policies)
๏ซ Who are the buyers in this industry? Are they powerful? What makes the buyers powerful
(not powerful)? Are the buyers likely to engage in backward integration?
๏ซ What are the implications of buyers bargaining power?
๏ซ Who are the suppliers to your industry? Do you think the suppliers are powerful? What
makes the suppliers powerful (not powerful) in your industry? Are there any โswitching
costs?โ What are the implications of high bargaining power of the suppliers in the industry?
๏ซ If you are a firm in this industry, how would you define competition? Would you consider all
firms operating in the industry as your competitors? Why/why not?
๏ซ What are โstrategic groups?โ How would you know the โstrategic groupsโ in your industry?
What kind of dimensions should you choose when mapping the โstrategic groupsโ? Why is it
important to understand โstrategic groupsโ? (We provide the example of the worldwide
automobile industry.)
The concept of โstrategic groupsโ is important because competition would be more
intense among firms within the same strategic group as compared to competition with
other firms in the industry. Some dimensions that can be used for mapping strategic
groups are: breadth of product and geographic scope, price/quality, degree of vertical
integration etc.
You should emphasize that for strategic group mapping to serve any meaningful purpose,
the dimensions should be chosen in a manner that they reflect the variety of strategic
combinations in the industry. For example, in an industry where there is severe price-base
competition, price may not be the right dimension to choose. Similarly, if all firms have
the same level of product differentiation, then choosing product differentiation as a
dimension would not serve the purpose.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
๏ซ What are the substitutes to your products or services? How do substitutes impact the
profitability of your industry?
You might want to make a point here that identifying substitutes can be quite a difficult
task sometimes. Firms in seemingly unrelated industries may be providing products or
services that act as substitutes to each other. The example given in the text on the
substitution between airline industry and teleconferencing would help highlight this
point.
Some more interesting questions to ask would be the following:
๏ซ If two industries have the same profitability levels, can you employ a common strategy in
both the industries?
Even though two industries might have the same profitability levels, the underlying
industry structures can be entirely different. For example, in both the automobile industry
and in the Internet-based businesses, profit margins are quite low. However, while the
entry barriers into the automobile industry are very high, the barriers are very low into the
Internet-based businesses. Competition is intense in both the industries, whereas supplier
and buyer bargaining powers are quite low. On the other hand, threat from substitutes
such as the โbrick-and-mortarโ stores, is very high in the Internet-based businesses,
whereas the threat from substitutes is low in the automobile industry. (Some students
might argue that the airline industry is a strong substitute and you would have to deal
with that objection.) Thus, even if a firm operates in both these industries, it needs to
formulate quite different strategies to suit the particular industry situation.
๏ซ Why is the five-force analysis important?
It is important to understand these five forces because they affect a firmโs ability to
compete in a given market. This analysis helps in deciding whether or not to remain in a
particular industry and also in choosing industries to enter. A sound understanding of the
forces operating in an industry helps in assessing how to improve the firmโs competitive
position with regard to each of the five forces. You can ask students to give their own
ideas on what strategies they would employ in the particular industries they have chosen
for analysis.
๏ซ Is the five-force analysis โzero sumโ in perspective? Is that a disadvantage?
It would often be the case that students, in the position of a company, think about
counteracting the effects of each force and blunting it. This is the essence of the zero-sum
perspective. You can explain the importance of thinking โwin-winโ and establishing
collaborative partnerships with suppliers and customers. For example, establishing longterm mutually beneficial relationships with suppliers improves a firmโs ability to
implement just-in-time (JIT) inventory systems, which let it manage inventories better
and respond quickly to the market demands.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
๏ซ Do the competitive forces remain the same over a period of time? What impact will it have
on profitability?
The key point is that in the five-force analysis, we are essentially taking a point in time
and trying to understand the industry situation at that point in time. This is a static
approach to understanding the competitive environment. However, these external forces
and the strategies of the firms within industries change over time and thus change the
structure of the industry itself. In order to understand how the profitability changes over
time, game theoretic approaches are being used.
๏ซ What is โValue Net?โ Who are on the vertical and horizontal dimensions? How are those on
the vertical dimension different from those on the horizontal dimension? Who are
complementors?โ How are complements different from substitutes? (We provide the example
of the video game industry.)
The value net represents all players in the game and analyzes how their interactions affect
a firmโs ability to generate and appropriate value.
Suppliers and customers form the vertical dimension of the value net and the firm
engages in transactions with them.
Substitutes and complements are on the horizontal dimension of the value net. These are
the players with who the firm interacts but does not necessarily transact.
Substitute products or services serve the same purpose that the products and services
from a chosen industry serve. Substitutes accentuate competition.
Complements are typically products or services that have a potential impact on the value
of a firmโs own products or services. The firms that produce complements are referred to
as โcomplementors.โ For example, very sophisticated cameras may be useless if we do
not have high-quality film to produce quality pictures. Powerful hardware might prove
useless without software to make it work and highly sophisticated software may be
useless if there is no hardware to support its working. Thus, complements in essence help
to increase the performance and efficiency of products or services of a particular industry
and thus improve their competitive situation vis-ร -vis other products and substitutes.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
End-of-Chapter Teaching Notes
Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm
Summary Review Questions
1. Why must managers be aware of a firmโs external environment? (in the text, Enhancing
Awareness of the External Environment, LO 2-1)
Response:
Being responsive to the external environment enables firms to avoid strategic mistakes. It is
possible for firms to become internally focused, efficient producers of obsolete goods and
services (e.g. buggy whips, carbon paper). Rather, managers need to respond to opportunities and
threats from the external environment in order to develop the most successful products and
services.
2. What is gathering and analyzing competitive intelligence and why is it important for
firms to engage in it? (in the text, Enhancing Awareness of the External Environment, LO
2-2)
Response:
Competitive intelligence is a firmโs activities of collecting and interpreting data on competitors,
defining and understanding the industry, and identifying competitorsโ strengths and weaknesses.
It is not spying, fortune-telling, simple data collection, or an isolated activity within a firm. The
purpose of competitive intelligence is to increase managementโs awareness of developments in
the external environment, thereby increasing the quality of strategic decisions.
3. Discuss and describe the six elements of the external environment. (in the text, The
General Environment, LO 2-4)
Response:
The six elements of the general environment are the demographic segment, the sociocultural
segment, the political/ legal segment, the technological segment, the economic segment, and the
global segment. The demographic segment refers to the statistics of a population, such as age,
income characteristics, ethnic groups, and geographic distribution. The sociocultural segment
refers to the values, beliefs, and lifestyles of a country. The political/legal segment refers to the
creation and use of power within a country, including the effect of various regulations, including
the areas of environmental protection, employment discrimination protection, and taxes.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
The technological segment refers to new products and services derived from advances in
engineering, applied science, and/or pure science. These new products and services can change
manufacturing processes, create new industries, and alter the boundaries between industries. The
economic segment refers to the level and change in monetary and macroeconomic factors such as
unemployment, inflation, interest rates, and economic growth. The global segment refers to
effects on a countryโs business environment from abroad, and include factors such as foreign
competition, foreign market opportunities, foreign supply opportunities, legal changes due to
international treaties, and regional economic integration.
4. Select one of these elements and describe some changes relating to it in an industry that
interests you. (in text, The Competitive Environment, LO 2-5)
Response:
The answer will vary according to segment and industry chosen. Exhibit 2.5 may summarize
some of the possible findings. The purpose of this question is to get students to classify various
environmental changes into the segments and articulate why a change belongs in a particular
segment. It might be useful to add a major change, the Internet, to the discussion. The Internet,
from the technological segment, has wide-reaching impacts (see Strategy Spotlight 2.5).
5. Describe how the five forces can be used to determine the average expected profitability
in an industry. (in text, The Competitive Environment, LO 2-5)
Response:
The five-forces model consists of the threat of new entrants, the bargaining power of buyers, the
bargaining power of suppliers, the threat of substitute products and services, and the intensity of
rivalry among competitors in an industry. Each force can be looked at as a way that the industry
environment limits a firmโs ability to earn profits through either raising prices or lowering costs.
The threat of new entrants limits a firmโs ability to raise prices because then a new entrant may
decide to enter the industry and offer a lower price. The bargaining power of buyers directly
limits a firmโs ability to raise prices. The bargaining power of suppliers directly limits a firmโs
ability to lower costs. The threat of substitute products and services limits a firmโs ability to raise
prices because customers would then buy the substitutes. The intensity of rivalry among
competitors in an industry limits a firmโs ability to raise prices because then customers would
buy from a competitor.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
6. What are some of the limitations (or caveats) in using five-forces analysis? (in text, The
Competitive Environment, LO 2-5)
Response:
Three limitations of the five-forces analysis are 1) the implication that low-profitability
industries should be avoided may not be optimal. Low-profitability industries may be profitable
opportunities for firms with innovative business models that change the competitive landscape.
2) The five-forces model assumes a zero-sum game, with a firmโs loss of profitability associated
with another firmโs gain. However, through strategic alliances or other forms of collaboration
with suppliers, buyers, or other industry players, firms can gain both profitability and
competitiveness. 3) The five-forces model is static and does not account for constant changes in
competitive position that characterize many industries. Included in the dynamic analyses is the
effect of complements, or other products and services that affect the value of a firmโs own
products and services. For example, software is a complement to hardware. Dynamic interactions
between firms and complements can affect the profitability prospects for a firm outside of the
five-forces model.
7. Explain how the general environment and industry environment are highly related. How
can such interrelationships affect the profitability of a firm or industry? (in text, The
General Environment and The Competitive Environment, LO 2-4 and LO 2-5)
Response:
The general environment can affect all of the five forces in various ways. A growing economy
can reduce the intensity of rivalry within the industry because firms will be scrambling to meet
growing demand. There is a detailed explanation of how the Internet, a development in the
technological segment, affects each of the five forces.
8. Explain the concept of strategic groups. What are the performance implications? (in text,
The Competitive Environment, LO 2-7)
Response:
Strategic groups are groups of firms, usually within an industry, that share similar strategies. The
performance implications are that firms can group themselves with close competitors and 1)
identify barriers between groups, 2) identify positions within the industry that are marginal or
tenuous, and 3) chart directions for future strategic development. Strategic group analysis is a
more fine-grained way to conduct competitor analysis, as the competitive environment of an
industry may differ from the competitive environment of the strategic group.
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Experiential Exercises and Application Questions
1. Strategy Spotlight 2.2 discusses the growing importance of environmental concerns and
illustrates how companies in different industries deal with plastic waste issues. Many other
environmental problems such as greenhouse gas emissions and the resulting climate change
issues are major concerns for todayโs businesses and governments. Pick an industry with
high greenhouse gas emissions such as electric utilities, air transportation, or livestock
agriculture and identify the threats and opportunities facing the industries. Do you think
companies with substantial greenhouse gas emissions should proactively address their
environmental impact?
Response:
This question should result in a lively discussion. Many students will agree that companies
should address environmental concerns related to climate change. What may be more
controversial is how companies should be compelled to become more environmentally
sustainable.
Some students may favor a regulatory approach. The instructor can point out that this may be an
effective way to compel industries to become greener since this may overcome collective action
problems and free rider issues in an industry. The strategic drawback of this approach is that it
will be very difficult for any company to differentiate its business if regulatory action triggers
resource commitments to green technologies for all companies in an industry.
Other students may favor a more proactive approach by individual companies. In other words,
companies proactively and voluntarily search for ways to reduce greenhouse emissions. The
instructor may point to the strategic benefit of this approach: Given that environmental concerns
regarding climate change are here to stay, companies that proactively invest in green technology
may establish a first-mover advantage and differentiate their image and brand from the
competition. The instructor may offer some examples of companies that have taken a proactive
approach. Good examples can be found in the book โGreen to Goldโ by Daniel Esty and Andrew
Winston.
2. Select one of the following industries: personal computers, airlines, or automobiles. For
this industry, evaluate the strength of each of Porterโs five forces as well as complementors.
Response:
This exercise is very useful for helping students understand the value of the five-forces model.
For undergraduate and even graduate classes, it might be useful to work with only one force at a
time. In general, students may identify a number of firms and organizations for each of the five
forces. To evaluate the strength of each force, it is important to refer to relevant characteristics.
The list below shows these:
โข Threat of new entrantsโyou can look at the barriers to entry for the industry, as indicated
by economies of scale, product differentiation, capital requirements, and switching costs,
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Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
โข
โข
โข
โข
as well as other types of cost disadvantages to new entrants, such as proprietary products,
favorable access to raw materials, government subsidies, and favorable government
policies.
Bargaining power of buyersโidentify buyers who are large or in concentrated buyer
industries, standard or undifferentiated products, few buyer switching costs, buyer with
low profits, buyer has a credible threat of backwards integration, or the buyer views the
firmโs products or services as undifferentiated.
Bargaining power of suppliersโit is often a challenge to find suppliers, but to the extent
you can, look for suppliers that are large and concentrated (few in number), suppliers
with few substitutes, suppliers that view the firmโs industry as a minor proportion of its
sales, suppliers that provide an important input, suppliers with differentiated products,
and suppliers that pose a credible threat of forward integration.
Threat of substitute products and servicesโidentify substitutes that are a) outside the
industry, and b) that are an economical and feasible alternative for buyers.
Intensity of rivalryโidentify rivals within the industry and evaluate each rivalโs product
offerings for being lower priced or of higher quality than the firmโs offerings.
Then have students put them all together and provide a summary evaluation of the overall ability
of the firm to set prices and control costs.
3. Imagine yourself as the CEO of a large firm in an industry in which you are interested.
Please (1) identify major trends in the general environment, (2) analyze their impact on the
firm, and (3) identify major sources of information to monitor these trends. (Use Internet
and library resources.)
Response:
Students should respond with a variety of industries and approaches. It may be useful to have
students justify their classification of trends into segments of the general environment. It may
also be useful to have students justify why the trends they have identified are major trends and
not minor trends. And you can ask students to classify their chosen trends as threats or
opportunities. If students have focused on one, say, opportunity, then ask them to consider
threats.
As for sources of information, there are many good sources from the government. Try the census
department, the Bureau of Economic Analysis, Department of Commerce, Department of Labor,
and the Central Intelligence Agency. Many of these sources are freely available directly from the
government or through libraries. Some libraries of institutions of higher education subscribe to
industry analysts reports, which often include analyses of the business environment. In addition,
company websites often include information about potential market size and trends, although
note that company websites are inherently a biased source of information.
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McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
4. Analyze movements across the strategic groups in the U.S. retail industry. How do these
movements within this industry change the nature of competition?
Response:
We suggest following these five steps. First, develop a list of retailers. The list may include only
local retailers that the students are familiar with, or the stores within a local mall or shopping
area, or even a comprehensive list of all retailers in the region.
Second, choose two dimensions for mapping the firms. Depending on the type of stores chosen,
we suggest breadth of product line, degree of vertical integration, average store size, pricing
strategy, or target market (broad versus niche).
Third, for each store assign a value for each dimension and plot it on the strategic group space.
For example, Wal-Mart would have a broad product line, high vertical integration (it often buys
directly from suppliers, not wholesalers), large size, low pricing, and broad target market. These
assessments will determine its location on the two chosen dimensions. In addition, for at least
one firm get a sense of how it has changed in the past year or so.
Fourth, after putting your firms on the strategic group space, look for clusters and spaces
between clusters. Evaluate each cluster. Ask students which clusters would be more profitable
and which less so. And most important, ask why. Students should be able to articulate the
desirability of each cluster, and link their reasoning to the dimensions used for mapping the
firms. For the spaces, ask students if any of the spaces would be desirable places. Often, the
groupings do not make sense. If that were the case, then challenge students to come up with
dimensions that do make sense. You should help students to understand that they have control
over how the strategic space is defined.
Fifth, for the firm that has changed in the past year, chart that movement on the strategic group
space. No matter what dimensions you use, this firm will be moving away from some
competitors and toward others. Ask students how this movement affects the competition between
this firm and others. The purpose of the discussion is to get students to appreciate that increasing
distance associates with less competition and decreasing distance between firms represents a
threat.
5. What are the major trends in the general environment that have impacted the U.S.
pharmaceutical industry?
Response:
The U.S. pharmaceutical industry consists of firms that manufacture and market medicines for
people. All segments impact this industry. The demographic segment affects demand, as the
aging baby-boomers require age-specific medicines and marketing approaches. Also, older
people tend to require more medicines than younger people, so market demand in the U.S. is
growing. The sociocultural segment affects medicinal preferences. People value their health and
trust their doctors rather than use traditional medicines.
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McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
The political/legal segment is extremely important due to the regulatory approval process for
new medicines, intellectual property right protection, government insurance programs, and price
controls. Regulatory approval of new medicines is extremely rigorous and costly. To recoup the
costs of obtaining approval, pharmaceutical firms exploit their monopoly power that stems from
the patents and trademarks on the medicines. And this monopoly power enables pharmaceutical
companies to charge high prices. The recent trend in government support for prescription drugs
through Medicare, and the recent and ongoing implementation of near-universal health care and
prescription programs has two impacts: 1) more patients will be getting prescriptions, which
increases revenues, and 2) more patients will be covered by insurance, which will increase buyer
power and decrease revenue to pharmaceutical companies.
The technological segment affects the new product development process. Biotechnology
involves the use of living organisms to develop new drugs and has created an explosion in
potential new medicines. Other technologies developed by these companies are the ability to test
thousands of substances at a time and to map the human genome, which helps us to understand
the causes and potential cures of many ailments.
The economic segment affects the industry, as general economic growth affects market potential.
The recent recession has therefore hurt the industry. In addition, expected interest rates affect the
financial prospects of many biotech firms. These firms often take decades to develop new drugs
and bring them to the market. Lower interest rates enable them to make their investorsโ capital
last longer. The global segment affects the industry in a number of ways. Foreign markets offer
sales opportunities. Foreign labs are effective partners for collaboration. However, foreign
countries often put price controls on medicines, which limit profit potential from foreign sales.
And foreign competitors often do not respect the intellectual property of U.S. firms, giving rise
to loss through piracy.
6. Go to the Internet and look up www.kroger.com. What are some of the five forces
driving industry competition that are affecting the profitability of this firm?
Response:
A couple of clicks first to the โabout the Kroger companyโ at the bottom of the home page, then
to the Kroger Fact Books on the right side of the page will get you to the fact books. These
include information on the following topics.
The first step is to define Krogerโs industry. While Kroger does have jewelry stores and
houseware stores, its primary activity is in supermarkets. We will focus on supermarkets.
For the threat of new entrants, this force is weak. Kroger notes that the industry is consolidating.
There are very large barriers to entry due to capital requirements and economies of scale. The
bargaining power of buyers is weak. The buyers are the general public, which is an aggregation
of very small customers. No customer is a very large part of the market, and customers will not
have an information advantage over Kroger. The primary source of buyer power is the ability of
customers to shop at the competition. The bargaining power of suppliers is moderate. Some of
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McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
Krogerโs stated competitive advantages stem from the brand equity of suppliersโ products, such
as Kitchen Aid, Levis, Dockers, and Nikon. However, Kroger counters supplier power by
developing a series of corporate brands, and by backwards integrating into the suppliersโ
industries. The threat of substitute products and services is limited, as customers have developed
a habit of doing most of their food shopping at supermarkets as opposed to farmersโ markets,
convenience stores, or general stores (although students may note the growing food offerings at
retailers such as Wal-Mart or Target). And note that Kroger includes a number of other types of
store formats, like marketplace stores and convenience stores, to compete in substitute industries.
Alternatives do not have a very high market share. The intensity of rivalry among competitors in
the industry is very strong. Kroger competes with Wal-Mart, Meijer, and other chains of
supermarkets in every part of the country. These competitors are large, successful, and
aggressive. Kroger limits rivalry by acquiring smaller stores and chains where possible. One of
Krogerโs strategies for dealing with rivalry is to encourage customer loyalty through various
programs such as shopper cards and a customer relations management system in conjunction
with London-based dunnhumby.
Ethics Questions
1. What are some of the legal and ethical issues involved in collecting competitor
intelligence in the following situations?
a. Hotel A sends an employee posing as a potential client to Hotel B to find out who Hotel
Bโs major corporate customers are.
Response:
The scheme risks exposure. Hotel B might find out who the employee is and find out that he or
she represents Hotel A. Hotel Bโs list of major corporate customers is likely to be a trade secret,
and Hotel Aโs use of fraud to gain the trade secret is, depending on state law and the specific
circumstances, likely to be a crime.
It is likely that Hotel B will share this information with the press, trade publications, or other
media. It is also possible that Hotel B will use this information to tarnish Hotel Aโs reputation.
Hotel Aโs business could be affected and shareholders embarrassed. The cost to Hotel A of
overcoming these shortcomings is likely to exceed whatever gain was possible.
b. A firm hires an MBA student to collect information directly from a competitor while
claiming the information is for a course project.
Response:
It is possible that this action would be a crime, although doubtful. The competitor is not likely to
share trade secrets, because the course project is not likely to be kept confidential, but that
depends on the circumstances.
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McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 2: Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm: Creating Competitive Advantages
However, the scheme is certainly fraudulent and therefore unethical. The firm is using the MBA
student as a spy, which is abusive to the MBA student. The studentโs college or university,
though perhaps not directly involved, will have its name associated with the scheme.
In addition, the competitor can use the scheme to discredit the firm and embarrass its
shareholders.
c. A firm advertises a nonexistent position and interviews a rivalโs employees with the
intention of obtaining competitor information.
Response:
The scheme is fraudulent. Advertising a position without an intention of hiring is unethical. If the
scheme succeeds in obtaining trade secrets, then it is probably a violation of law. And the
coercive treatment of the rivalโs employees is a problem.
The possibility of criminal violations occurs within the purview of many statesโ trade secret
laws. If any individual suffers any harm, then civil damages are possible.
But the unethical nature of this scheme is likely to be the largest problem. The rival can use the
firmโs actions to discredit the firm and embarrass its shareholders.
2. What are some of the ethical implications that arise when a firm tries to exploit its power
over a supplier?
Response:
A monopsonist, or a firm that is the only buyer in a market, has great power over suppliers. It
might try to exploit this power by forcing the supplier to reduce prices or provide extra services.
In the extreme, suppliers will be forced to cut costs, lay off employees, cut salaries, and forego
investments in new technologies or capabilities. The downside of these actions is that the
supplier is less capable of contributing to industry development by infusing it with innovations.
CONNECT RESOURCES
Comprehension Case
Mayo Clinicโs Transformation and Adaptation
Case Analysis
Mayo Clinicโs Pursuit of a Health Care-Centric Platform
Gas versus Hybrids versus Electric: A Battle of Substitutes
Video Case
Analyzing Industry Forces
Analyzing the Macro-Environment
SWOT Analysis
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