1 / 21

BUS 497: analyzing the industry environment

Phil Gorman, Ph.D. BUS 497: analyzing the industry environment. Porter 5 forces model of ‘industry attractiveness’. Each of the 5 forces is comprised of a number of factors There is no mathematical formula; judgment is needed A snapshot of how attractive the industry is for incumbents.

hanh
Download Presentation

BUS 497: analyzing the industry environment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Phil Gorman, Ph.D. BUS 497: analyzing the industry environment

  2. Porter 5 forces model of ‘industry attractiveness’ • Each of the 5 forces is comprised of a number of factors • There is no mathematical formula; judgment is needed • A snapshot of how attractive the industry is for incumbents

  3. “Industry attractiveness”: Porter 5 forces Threat of potential entrants Entry barriers Supplier power Buyer power Rivalry Threat of substitutes

  4. “Industry attractiveness”: Porter 5 forces • Example: discount retail sales • Wal-Mart and Target are rivals • Procter & Gamble (toothpaste) is a supplier • You and I are buyers Supplier power Buyer power Rivalry

  5. “Industry attractiveness”: Porter 5 forces • Discount retail sales • Wal-Mart and Target are rivals • Procter & Gamble (toothpaste) is a supplier • You and I are buyers Supplier power Buyer power Rivalry • Example: toothpaste • Procter & Gamble and Colgate Palmolive are rivals • People who supply the raw ingredients, • and the tubes, are suppliers • Wal-Mart is a buyer

  6. “Industry attractiveness”: Porter 5 forces Threat of potential entrants Entry barriers Supplier power Buyer power Rivalry Threat of substitutes

  7. “Industry attractiveness”: Porter 5 forces Threat of potential entrants Entry barriers Supplier power Buyer power Rivalry Threat of substitutes

  8. “Industry attractiveness”: Porter 5 forces Threat of potential entrants Entry barriers Supplier power Buyer power Rivalry Threat of substitutes

  9. “Industry attractiveness”: Porter 5 forces Threat of potential entrants Entry barriers Supplier power Buyer power Rivalry Threat of substitutes

  10. “Industry attractiveness”: Porter 5 forces Threat of potential entrants Entry barriers Supplier power Buyer power Rivalry Threat of substitutes

  11. Porter 5 forces: notes • It is a snapshot; need to turn it into a moving picture • Depends on how you draw the boundaries of the playing field • There is no mathematical formula that allows you to simply sum the tallies of the various factors within each of the 5 forces • In the end you make a judgment call

  12. Porter 5 forces: notes • It is a snapshot; need to turn it into a moving picture • Depends on how you draw the boundaries of the playing field • There is no mathematical formula that allows you to simply sum the tallies of the various factors within each of the 5 forces • In the end you make a judgment call

  13. Porter 5 forces: notes • It is a snapshot; need to turn it into a moving picture • Depends on how you draw the boundaries of the playing field • There is no mathematical formula that allows you to simply sum the tallies of the various factors within each of the 5 forces • In the end you make a judgment call

  14. Porter 5 forces: notes • It is a snapshot; need to turn it into a moving picture • Depends on how you draw the boundaries of the playing field • There is no mathematical formula that allows you to simply sum the tallies of the various factors within each of the 5 forces • In the end you make a judgment call

  15. Industry life cycle • As the industry evolves, so does the list of things a company needs to pay attention to

  16. Industry life cycle • Infancy: Sales are sparse; when the great majority of consumers don’t really know how or why they would use the product (but some ‘lead users’ will buy the product anyway) • Growth: Demand is increasing quickly; this is when consumers increasingly can see how and why they would use the product • Maturity: when consumers know exactly what the product is about; demand is leveling off • Decline: When the product is no longer important due to the introduction of some product that does the same job but better/cheaper

  17. Industry life cycle • Infancy: Sales are sparse; when the great majority of consumers don’t really know how or why they would use the product (but some ‘lead users’ will buy the product anyway) • Growth: Demand is increasing quickly; this is when consumers increasingly can see how and why they would use the product • Maturity: when consumers know exactly what the product is about; demand is leveling off • Decline: When the product is no longer important due to the introduction of some product that does the same job but better/cheaper

  18. Industry life cycle • Infancy: Sales are sparse; when the great majority of consumers don’t really know how or why they would use the product (but some ‘lead users’ will buy the product anyway) • Growth: Demand is increasing quickly; this is when consumers increasingly can see how and why they would use the product • Maturity: when consumers know exactly what the product is about; demand is leveling off • Decline: When the product is no longer important due to the introduction of some product that does the same job but better/cheaper

  19. Industry life cycle • Infancy: Sales are sparse; when the great majority of consumers don’t really know how or why they would use the product (but some ‘lead users’ will buy the product anyway) • Growth: Demand is increasing quickly; this is when consumers increasingly can see how and why they would use the product • Maturity: when consumers know exactly what the product is about; demand is leveling off • Decline: When the product is no longer important due to the introduction of some product that does the same job but better/cheaper

  20. Industry life cycle • Infancy: Sales are sparse; when the great majority of consumers don’t really know how or why they would use the product (but some ‘lead users’ will buy the product anyway) • Growth: Demand is increasing quickly; this is when consumers increasingly can see how and why they would use the product • Maturity: when consumers know exactly what the product is about; demand is leveling off • Decline: When the product is no longer important due to the introduction of some product that does the same job but better/cheaper

  21. Summary • Porter 5 forces: industry attractiveness • It is a snapshot • Must also assess the trajectory (“moving picture”) • Industry life cycle • Industries generally move in a predictable direction • But the timing is not know ahead of time (15 years to maturity? 100 years to maturity?)

More Related