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Porter’s generic strategies and Five forces

Porter’s generic strategies and Five forces. By: Kavita , Chris, and Jake. What Is it? . Michael Porter Is this profitable? Where is the power? What is my current competitive position? . Five Forces. Is this an attractive market or industry for us to compete in?. Generic Strategies.

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Porter’s generic strategies and Five forces

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  1. Porter’s generic strategies and Five forces By: Kavita, Chris, and Jake

  2. What Is it? • Michael Porter • Is this profitable? • Where is the power? • What is my current competitive position?

  3. Five Forces • Is this an attractive market or industry for us to compete in? Generic Strategies • How can we best compete for customers in this market/industry?

  4. Generic Strategies • Market Scope asks How broad or narrow is our target market? • Source For Competitive Advantage asks Will you compete for competitive advantage by lower price or product uniqueness?

  5. Generic strategies

  6. Generic strategies • Differentiation Strategy Organization’s resources and attention are directed toward making its products appear different from those of the competition (ex: Coke, Pepsi) • Market scope = Broad • Source of competitive advantage = Unique product

  7. Generic strategies • Cost Leadership Organization’s resources and attention are directed toward minimizing costs to operate more efficiently than the competition (ex: Wal-Mart) • Market scope = Broad • Source of competitive advantage = Low price

  8. Generic strategies • Focused Differentiation Concentrates on a particular market segment and tries to offer the most unique product in that segment • Market scope = Narrow • Source for competitive advantage = Unique product • Focused Cost Leadership Concentrates on a particular market segment and tries to be the provider with the lowest costs in that segment • Market scope = Narrow • Source for competitive advantage = Low price

  9. Generic strategies • Differentiation Strategy (in depth) • Seeks advantage though uniqueness Done by: • Certain look (ex: Polo Ralph Lauren, American Apparel, Roots) • Lifestyle advertising (ex: Coca Cola, Pepsi, Much Music) ____________________________________________________________ • Goal is to attract consumers who will be loyal and ignore the competitions’ products • This strategy requires organizational strengths in marketing, research and development, and creativity. Differentiation’s success is dependent upon the consumers’ continuing perceptions of quality and uniqueness.

  10. Generic Strategies • Cost Leadership Strategy (in depth) • Your goal is to have the lowest prices available to receive the largest profit Done by: • Continually improving operating efficiencies of production, distribution, and other organizational systems. _________________________________________________ • Requires tight cost and managerial controls as well as products that are easy to manufacture and distribute • Perfect example is Wal-Mart

  11. Generic Strategies • Focus Strategies (in depth) • Concentrate on a special market segment with the objective to serve it better thananyone else • Focus organizational resources and attention on a particular customer , geographical region, or product/service line • Seek the competitive advantage in that singular segment through product differentiation or cost leadership • Example = WestJet

  12. Competitive Rivalry • Can other companies offer equally attractive products? • Who holds the power? • Can other companies do what you do? • Will your customers stay or go? • Number of competitors • Quality differences • Other (product) differences • Switching costs • Customer loyalty • Costs of leaving the market • Fixed costs/value added • Brand identity • Diversity of rivals • Industry growth • Corporate stakes

  13. Competitive Rivalry • Rivalry drives profits to zero • Varies across industries • Industry concentration • Companies can choose from various rival strategies to win a competitive advantage • There are many characteristics to determine the intensity of rivalry

  14. Buyer Power • Monopsony: multiple suppliers and one buyer Buyer Power depends on the following: • Number of customers • Size of each order • Differences between competitors • Price sensitivity • Ability to substitute • Cost of changing

  15. Supplier Power • How easy it is for suppliers to drive up prices • Less suppliers = more power for the suppliers

  16. Threat of New Entry • Profitable markets that yield high returns will attract new firms • New companies= decrease profits • Time and cost of entry • Investment cost • Technology protection • Barriers to entry • Specialized Assets Types: • Experience is needed • Training is available • Economies of scale • Brand identity • Access to distribution

  17. High vs. Low Industry Profits

  18. Barriers to Entry • Examples of Barriers to Entry: -Patents -Copy Rights • Most attractive market segment is one in which entry barriers are high and exit barriers are low • Governments creates barriers too –permits, grants, restrictions ..etc.

  19. Entering and Exiting a Market

  20. Brand Identity • Consumers will believe that a product with a well-known name is better than products with a less well-known name • New firms won’t join if there is a big name brand

  21. Economics of Scale • This has to do with the MES which is the Minimum Efficient Scale • Unit cost for production are at a minimum ex. the most cost efficient level of production • If MES for firms in an industry is known, then we can determine the amount of market share necessary for low cost entry • Creates a barrier: The greater the difference between industry MES and entry unit cost, the greater the barrier to entry.

  22. Specialized Assets • Extent to which the firms assets can be utilized to produce a different product • Expensive assets/ equipment • Provides a barrier for two reason: • when a firm already holds specialized assets, new companies don’t bother in joining the market segment because it would be intense rivalry (not a lot of profit) • Potential entrants do not want to make huge investments in highly specialized assets -hard to sell if venture fails

  23. Others…. • Time and cost of entry: -is it expensive to enter the market? Does it require a lot of time to enter? ______________________________________________________________________________ • Access to distribution: -is there a company that already has the distribution rights? -A lack of access will make it difficult for newcomers to enter the market ______________________________________________________________________________ • Training is available: -do your employees need to be specially trained? Can they get the training somewhere? Ex- CPR training

  24. Others… • Experience is needed: -do you already have to have experience in the field to join the market? --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- • Investment Cost: -High cost will deter entry -High capital requirements might mean that only large businesses can compete

  25. Threat of Substitutes • Refers to products in other industries • Substitution is easy=weakens your power • Ex: Instead of

  26. Threat of Substitutes • Threat of Substitute exists when a products demand is affected by the price change of substitute products • Price elasticity: as more substitutes become available, demand becomes more elastic since buyers have more options • A close substitute product constrains the ability of firms in an industry to raise prices • Substitute performance: price and performance of the substitute can match the industry’s product • Cost of Change: if it is low cost to switch then you is in serious trouble

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