F12 course and enviro models student version

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BU 111: Fall 2012 Course Model & Environmental Analysis Models

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Transcript of F12 course and enviro models student version

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BU 111: Fall 2012

Course Model &Environmental Analysis Models

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Opening Thoughts

“It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.”

Charles Darwin

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Learning Objectives

• Understand the relationship between the firm and its external environment– Course model– Diamond-E model

• Describe what an external analysis is• Explain how to do an external analysis– PEST factors– Porter’s five forces model– Data sources

• Understand the benefits and challenges of doing an external analysis

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Critical Success Factors

Stakeholders

Top Management

Vision

Strategy

Mission

Middle Management

First-Line Management

Planning Organizing

DirectingControlling

EXTERNAL

INTE

RNAL

Economic

Social

Technological

Political

Marketing

Finance

Human Resources

Operations

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Critical Success Factors Critical Success Factors

• Achieving financial performance• Meeting customer needs• Building quality products and services• Encouraging innovation and creativity• Gaining employee commitment• Creating a distinctive competitive advantage

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Diamond-E Framework

• Identifies key variables to be considered in strategic analysis

Management Preferences

Organization

Resources

Strategy Environment

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Strategy-Environment linkage

• Strategy: what opportunities the business is pursuing – determines needed resources, organizational capabilities, and

management preferences

• critical linking variable• each variable related to the rest• any variable can either drive or constrain strategy• Principal logic – CONSISTENCY or alignment• First task - deal with strategy-environment linkage– Assess forces at work and their implications

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Principal Logic

• Importance of Consistency between variables

• Examples: – P&G Strategy in 2000 (inconsistency)– Ikea Strategy (consistency)

• Note: Absolute alignment is not realistic

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Strategy-Environment Linkage

• First task: Deal with strategy-environment linkage• Assess forces at work and their implications

Examples:- Digital Camera Market: Canon vs. Kodak

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Quick Review: Course Model & Diamond-E

• What factors make up the external environment?

• What are the components of the Diamond-E model?

-What is the most important linkage within it?

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External analysis

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How to do an external analysis

• General environment– PEST model – considers political, economic,

social/demographic, and technological factors– Identifies general trends and changes

• Specific environment– Porter’s Five Forces - analyzes five important sources

of competitive pressure and intensity; predicts profitability of industry

• Look for data, statistics, trends, forecasts, expert opinions, etc.

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PEST - Political-Legal

Elements:• Laws, regulations • Taxes• Trade agreements or conditions• Political system• Political stabilityGovernment can create incentives, constraints, or support/bail

out when neededAffects uncertainty, risk, and costs faced by firm

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PEST – Economic

Elements:• Economic growth – GDP and standard of living• Economic stability – inflation, unemployment &&• Trade balance – importing vs. exporting• National debt – government borrowing• Interest rates - the higher, the less ppl buy• Exchange ratesInfluences costs, potential sales, and financial uncertainty

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PEST – Social

Elements:• Customs, values, attitudes, and demographic characteristics• Influences customer preferences• Influences worker attitudes and behaviours• Influences standards of business conduct• Ethics, social responsibility, stakeholder management

Affects how we live, work, consume and produce

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PEST – Technological

Elements:• Internet affects buying, selling, communication• Information technologies affects information access,

inter-firm cooperation, cycle times• Computer technologies have changed our products and how

we design and build• Not limited to computers and informationAffects what we produce/what it can do, affects how we produce

and how we sellDemands constant learning and scanning

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Questions to answer from PEST

• Do the economic conditions support my business?• What legal protection do I have or laws do I have to

consider?• What demographic and social trends affect my

business and how?• What technological forces affect me now and in the

future? How do they assist or constrain? • What opportunities or threats does the environment

possess?

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Porter’s Five Forces

POTENTIAL ENTRANTS

SUBSTITUTES

BUYERSSUPPLIERS

INDUSTRY COMPETITORS

Rivalry AmongExisting Firms

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Porter’s Five Forces

• Suppliers – Fewer suppliers, high switching costs, low attractiveness of

substitute suppliers, high threat of forward integration means = increased bargaining power (ex. Our choice of only bell or rogers)

– Bargaining power increases costs of inputs– Use strategic alliance or internal supply

• Potential Entrants– Can cause big changes– Ease of entry = more intense competition– Barriers = capital intensity, technology, know-how/who,

regulatory approval, brand loyalty etc.

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Porter’s Five Forces

• Substitutes– Many substitutes = increased competition– Puts ceiling on price that can be charged– Pressure increases as price of substitutes and switching

costs decline

• Buyers perspective– Few or concentrated buyers, standardized products, low

switching costs, discretionary purchases = increased bargaining power

– Reduces price that you can demand

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Porter’s Five Forces

• Rivalry among existing firms“Nothing focuses the mind better than the constant sight of a competitor who wants to wipe you off the map.” - Wayne

Calloway

– Results in price competition and increased costs– Most powerful of five forces– Causes:

• Many competitors of equal size/capability• Growth rate of industry• Consumers switching costs • Products are commodities or are perishable

Caveat: Power and relevance of a force will vary by industry

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Value of Five Forces Model

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYF2_FBCvXw

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Questions to answer with Five Forces analysis

1. Is the industry a realistic place for a new venture to enter? If yes, then...

2. Can we do a better job than incumbents at avoiding or diminishing factors that suppress industry profitability?

3. Is there a unique position we can pursue?4. Is there a superior business model that incumbents

would find hard to duplicate?

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Sources of Information

Some library databases:• Standard and Poors NetAdvantage –– Provides Industry Trends, Industry Ratios, and lots of key

industry data

• GMID – market share data by company and brand; industry growth data

• DataMonitor – five forces analysis and SWOT• FPInfomart – Canadian data

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Benefits of External Analysis

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Challenges of External Analysis

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Learning Objectives Summary

• Understand the relationship between the firm and its external environment– Course model– Diamond-E model

• Describe what an external analysis is• Explain how to do an external analysis– PEST factors– Porter’s five forces model– Data sources

• Understand the benefits and challenges of doing an external analysis