Ch 3 -1 Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Chapter 3 The External Assessment Strategic Management: Concepts & Cases 11 th Edition Fred David
Ch 3 -2 Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Identify & Evaluate factors beyond the control of a single firm –Increased foreign competition –Population shifts –Information technology External Strategic Management Audit
Ch 3 -3 Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Competitors Suppliers Distributors Creditors Customers Employees Communities Managers Stockholders Labor Unions Special Interest Groups Products Services Key External Forces Opportunities & Threats Key External Forces & the Organization
Ch 3 -4 Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Performing External Audit External Factors Measurable Long-term orientation Applicable to competing firms Hierarchical
Ch 3 -5 Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Economies of Scale Industry Properties Barriers to market entry Product differentiation Level of competitiveness I/O Perspective Firm Performance
Ch 3 -6 Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Social, Cultural, Demographic & Environmental Forces U.S. Facts Aging population Less Caucasian Widening gap between rich & poor 2025 = 18.5% population >65 years 2075 = no ethnic or racial majority
Ch 3 -7 Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Key Social, Cultural, Demographic & Environmental Variables Number of marriages & divorces Number of special interest groups Number of births & deaths Immigration & emigration rates Childbearing rates
Ch 3 -8 Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Political, Government & Legal Forces Worldwide trend toward similar consumption patterns Global buyers and sellers E-commerce Technology for instant currency transfers Globalization of Industry
Ch 3 -9 Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Competitive Forces Strengths Weaknesses Capabilities Opportunities Threats Objectives Strategies Identifying Rival Firms
Ch Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Competitive Forces 1. Market share matters 2. Understand what business you are in 3. Broke or not, fix it 4. Innovate or evaporate 7 Characteristics of most Competitive U.S. Firms:
Ch Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Competitive Forces 5. Acquisition is essential to growth 6. People make a difference 7. No substitute for quality 7 Characteristics of most Competitive U.S. Firms:
Ch Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall The Five-Forces Model of Competition Potential development of substitute products Rivalry among competing firms Bargaining power of suppliers Potential entry of new competitors Bargaining power of consumers
Ch Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall The Global Challenge Faced by U.S. Firms -- Gain & maintain exports to other nations Defend domestic markets against imported goods
Ch Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Industry Analysis: The External Factor Evaluation (EFE) Matrix CompetitivePoliticalCultural TechnologicalEnvironmentalSocial GovernmentalDemographicEconomic Summarize & Evaluate
Ch Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall
Ch Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall
Ch Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Total weighted score of 4.0 Organization response is outstanding to threats and weaknesses Industry Analysis EFE Total weighted score of 1.0 Firm’s strategies not capitalizing on opportunities or avoiding threats
Ch Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall Industry Analysis: Competitive Profile Matrix (CPM) Identifies firm’s major competitors and their strengths & weaknesses in relation to a sample firm’s strategic positions
Ch Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall GatewayAppleDell CSF’s WtRatingWt’d Score Ratin g Wt’d Score RatingWt’d Score Market share Inventory sys Fin. position Prod. Quality Cons. Loyalty Sales Distr Global Exp Org. Structure
Ch Copyright 2007 Prentice Hall GatewayAppleDell CSF’s (cont’d) WtRatingWt’d Score Ratin g Wt’d Score RatingWt’d Score Prod. Capacity E-commerce Customer Serv Price competitive Mgt. experience Total