Stanford GSB Sloan Program Stramgt 258 Strategic Management 10 Managing Entry Cemex.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Industry Analysis – Firm performance is closely tied to industry performance – a firm’s profitability is circumscribed by industry profitability and the.
Advertisements

Copyright ©2003 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved. Slide 2-1 The Competitive Environment: Assessing Industry Attractiveness.
Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm
Industry and Competitive Analysis
A Framework for Industry Analysis
I. Industry and Competitive Analysis Questions involved 1.What are the boundaries of the industry? 2. What is the structure of the industry? 3. Which firms.
Environmental analysis
Industry & Competitive Analysis
Presented By:- Dharm Jeeta Singh
COMPETITIVE STRATEGY - Dolly Dhamodiwala.
Chapter 2 The External Environment:
EVALUATING A COMPANY’S EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
Lecture 2 External Environment Analysis & Globalisation.
Porter’s Five Forces Model of Competition
Planning, Strategy and Competitive Advantage
Exploring Corporate Strategy 8e, © Pearson Education The Focus of Part 1: The Strategic Position  How to analyse an organisation’s position in.
Robert E. Hoskisson Michael A. Hitt R. Duane Ireland
from Competitive Advantage: Creating and Sustaining
The Environment Macro-environment Micro-environment
External Analysis BUSI 7130/7136 Dr. Shook. What’s an Environment? What’s an Environment? Analyzing the Industry Analyzing the Industry v Five Forces.
The Competitive Environment Threat of New Entrants Rivalry Among Existing Competitors Bargaining Power of Customers Bargaining Power of Suppliers Threat.
Conducting an Industry Analysis. Seven Questions for Industry Analysis 1. What are the industry dominant economic traits? 2. What competitive forces are.
I. Identification of Strategy (includes but not limited to SWOT) A. Firm Situation 1. General macro environment 2. Industry and Competitive analysis 
Competing for Advantage
Chapter 61 Formulating Strategy Chapter 6. 2 Strategic Planning and Strategy  strategic planning - The process by which a firm’s managers evaluate the.
Strategy A View From the Top Chapter 8 – Global Strategy Formulation Larin Sanders Ivan Salazar Brian Davis.
International marketing
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Gordon Walker McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004 McGraw Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 Partnering.
Essentials of Health Care Marketing 2nd Ed. Eric Berkowitz
CISB444 - Strategic Information Systems Planning
The Strategy Environment Session 2 Business Strategy.
The Honda Question (via Rumelt)  In 1977 my MBA final exam on Honda motorcycle case asked “Should Honda enter the global automobile business”?  Giveaway.
Chapter 2 --Market Imperfections and Value: Strategy Matters u Wealth creation is impossible in a perfect market u Porter’s five forces can be used to.
1 UNIT 7: STRATEGIC ANALYSIS: INDUSTRY, COMPETITORS, CUSTOMERS.
Ch2-1 Chapter 4: Competitor Analysis “What are they going to do?”
COM333 – IS3 IS and Competition. A number of techniques exists that support the analysis and assessment of Organisations’ competitive position from an.
4-1 The Firm’s External Environment Remote Environment (Global and Domestic) Industry Environment (Global and Domestic) Operating Environment (Global and.
Corporate Strategy -Kishore Kumar August Characteristics of Strategic Decisions Concerned with the scope of an organization’s activities Concerned.
01/08/03John Roberts1 Stanford GSB Sloan Program Stramgt 258: Strategic Management Strategy and Organization in the Global Economy Introduction AT&T in.
Recap Chapter 1 & 2. CHAPTER 1 The 3 Basic Functions of Business Organizations Operations Finance Marketing Organization.
Copyright © 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning All rights reserved. Power Point Presentation by Dr. Leslie A. Korb Georgian Court University.
Irwin/McGraw-Hill Copyright © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies. All Rights reserved Chapter Customer Value and Relative Positioning 2.
©2003 Southwestern Publishing Company 1 The External Environment: Opportunities, Threats, and Industry Competition, and Competitor Analysis Michael A.
CH 2 STRATEGY ANALYSIS. Strategy Analysis Strategy analysis is an important starting point for the analysis of financial statements –Allows the analyst.
Stanford GSB Sloan Program Stramgt 258 Strategic Management 7: Introduction to Industry Analysis Airborne Express.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Evaluating a Company’s External Environment.
3 chapter Student Version EVALUATING A COMPANY’S EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights.
Stanford GSB Sloan Program Stramgt 258 Strategic Management 14: Strategy, Organization and Globalization Daimler Chrysler CVD.
1 4.6 The relationship between businesses and the competitive environment.
INDUSTRY PROFILE of TOP INDUSTRY SECTORS IN CAMARINES SUR.
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT II Porter’s five forces module.
Porters 5 Forces Model. What is it? Porter’s 5 forces is a model that identifies and analyses 5 competitive forces that shape an industry. It help determines.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2008 Chapter 9 Market structure and imperfect competition David Begg, Stanley Fischer and Rudiger Dornbusch, Economics, 9th.
Advanced Strategy Nathan Washburn Associate Professor Huntsman School of Business.
Fundamentals of Strategic Advantage. The Strategic Cube Customer Power Supplier Power Present Competitors Potential Competitors Substitute Products COMPETITIVE.
©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 8 Strategy in the Global Environment
Porter’s Five Forces Model
Creating Business Advantage with IT
Stanford GSB Sloan Program Stramgt 258 Strategy and Organization
Knowledge Objectives Understand the 4 strategies for foreign expansion
Ch. 8 Global Strategies and the Multinational Corporation
External Environmental Analysis
Chapter 8 Strategy in the Global Environment
International Strategy
Global Strategies and the Multinational Corporation
Chapter 8 Strategy in the global Environment
Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
What affects our business from the outside?
Dynamic Capabilities and Strategic Management
Presentation transcript:

Stanford GSB Sloan Program Stramgt 258 Strategic Management 10 Managing Entry Cemex

February 8, 2002John Roberts Entry Normally evaluate an entry opportunity in terms of the market’s PIE and the usual forces affecting its division among players, plus the match with your capabilities, position and resources May also enter as a “global competitive move:” market entered not for its own sake but because entry will have implications across other (geographic or product) markets

February 8, 2002John Roberts Competitive Responses to Entry A new entrant can upset any established patterns of competition in an industry or market –Implications for industry and competitor analysis A new entrant may also meet a particularly strong, focused competitive response –To attempt to induce exit (predation) –To forestall other entry by building a reputation for predation

February 8, 2002John Roberts Market Features Conducive to Predatory Behavior Predator has –available capacity –considerable financial resources (“long purse”) –opportunity to build and use reputation (in this or other markets) “Prey” have little ability to retaliate High fixed costs associated with (re)entry Ease of exit for prey Absence of regulatory response

February 8, 2002John Roberts Some Implications A roll-out strategy makes you especially vulnerable to predatory responses by incumbents because if they stop you in the early markets they save the later ones and also frighten other potential entrants. Also, un-entered markets provide resources for the war. Commitment versus flexibility on the part of the entrant

February 8, 2002John Roberts Market Features Conducive to Tacit Collusion Across Markets Highly concentrated markets –Very hard if too many players involved –Implications for creating barriers to entry Asymmetry in market shares (“spheres of influence”) in relevant markets Each firm must have credible threat of predatory/retaliatory behavior on the other’s turf

February 8, 2002John Roberts Global Issues in Choice of Local Markets Global Share  –Efficiency through scale Global balance  –Strategy formulation and execution not dominated by a few, currently powerful countries’ needs –Can make integrated global competitive moves

February 8, 2002John Roberts Global Issues in Choice of Local Markets Presence in key countries –home of global and demanding customers –home of competitors –important markets for global competitors –sources of innovation (e.g., home of leading suppliers) Differentiate strategic roles of countries

February 8, 2002John Roberts9 Internal Implications of Developing Globally Coordinated Moves Decisions on moves taken not because they are the best for the BU/region involved but because of global logic must be centralized –Implications for an organizational strategy that features decentralization Ability of a firm to coordinate activities across markets depends on its ability to explicitly or implicitly cross-subsidize across markets –Implications for strength of incentives and firm boundaries (e.g., reliance on joint ventures, alliances)