Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byWillis McKenzie Modified over 9 years ago
1
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-1 The New Venture’s Environment New Venture Industry Environment Ecological TechnologicalEconomic Political Socio-demographic
2
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-2 Five Segments of Macroenvironment Technology Economy Political Sociodemography Ecology
3
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-3 Tasks of Environmental Analysis Scanning: detect changes Monitoring: track events that affect business Forecasting: make plausible projections Assessing: most difficult, “What does it all mean?”
4
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-4 Technology Pure Invention: creation of something radically different from existing technologies or products. Process Innovation: incremental and evolutionary with the purpose of making existing industries more efficient.
5
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-5 Economy Global National Regional Local
6
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-6 Political Stakeholders Seven Dimensions Global Trade Tariffs and Agreements Risks National Taxes Regulations Patents Governments State and Local Licensing Securities and Incorporation Laws Incentives
7
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-7 Sociodemographic Demographics Social Trends and Values
8
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-8 Ecology Current state of ecology Cuts across all other environmental areas
9
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-9 Quantitative and Judgemental Forecasting Methods Method Sales force estimate Juries of executive opinion Customer surveys: Market research focus groups Scenario development Delphi method Brainstorming Description A bottom-up approach that aggregates unit demand Forecasts jointly prepared by experts in a functional area Learning about intentions of potential customers and final users Effects of anticipated conditions imagined by forecasters Experts guided to consensus Idea generation in a non-critical group situation Cost Low Medium Low Complexity Low Medium Low Medium
10
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-10 Sources of Entrepreneurial Opportunities The unexpected The incongruous The process need Industry and market structures Demographics Changes in perception New knowledge
11
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-11 Elements of Industry Structure New Entrants Substitutes Buyers Industry Competitors Intensity of Rivalry Suppliers Bargaining Power of Suppliers Bargaining Power of Buyers Threat of Substitutes Threat of New Entrants
12
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-12 Entry Barriers: Economies of scale Proprietary product differences Brand identity Switching costs Capital requirements Access to distribution Absolute cost advantages Proprietary learning curve Access to necessary inputs Proprietary low-cost product design Government policy Expected retaliation Elements of Industry Structure
13
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-13 Rivalry Determinants: Industry growth Fixed (or storage) costs / value added Intermittent overcapacity Product differences Brand identity Switching costs Concentration and balance Informational complexity Diversity of competitors Corporate stakes Exit barriers Elements of Industry Structure
14
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-14 Determinants of Supplier Power: Differentiation of inputs Switching costs of suppliers and firms in the industry Presence of substitute inputs Supplier concentration Importance of volume to supplier Cost relative to total purchases in the industry Impact of inputs on cost or differentiation Threat of forward integration relative to threat of backward integration by firms in the industry Elements of Industry Structure
15
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-15 Bargaining Leverage: Buyer concentration versus firm concentration Buyer volume Buyer switching costs relative to firm switching costs Buyer information Ability to backward integrate Substitute products Pull-through Elements of Industry Structure
16
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-16 Elements of Industry Structure Price Sensitivity: Price / total purchases Product differences Brand identity Impact on quality performance Buyer profits Decision makers’ incentives
17
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-17 Determinants of substitution threats: Relative price performance of substitutes Switching costs Buyer propensity to substitute Elements of Industry Structure
18
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-18 Political and Governmental Issues Effecting Entrepreneurs GlobalNationalState and RegionalLocal Trade barriersTaxationTaxationTaxation Trade agreements RegulationSecurities lawZoning Tariffs and duties Antitrust issuesLicensing Political riskPatent issuesIncentives Gov’t spending
19
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-19 Entry Barriers Structural Barriers Economies of scale Excess capacity Product differentiation core Specific assets Capital requirements Switching costs Access to distribution channels Non-size cost disadvantages
20
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-20 Entry Barriers Retaliatory Barriers Competitors' reputation Industry history Attack competitors Slow industry growth rate Competitors with substantial resources Price cutting Legal challenges
21
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-21 Factors Affecting Retaliatory Pricing Encouraging Factors Discouraging Factors Elastic demand Inelastic demand Cost advantages No cost advantages Excess capacity Tight capacity Small competitors Large competitors New competitors Long-time rivalries Single-product markets Mkt. interdependence
22
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-22 Industry Environment Issues Competitive analysis Industry analysis Buyer power Supplier power Threat of substitutes Entry barriers Rivalry between firms
23
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-23 The Sweet Spot Attractive Opportunity Interest, Passions and Commitment Capabilities and Skills
24
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-24 Characteristics of an Attractive Opportunity Timely: a current need or problem Solvable: a problem that can be solved in the near future with accessible resources Important: customer deems the problem or need important Profitable: customer will pay for the solution and allow it to be profitable Context: a favorable regulatory and industry situation
25
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-25 Characteristics of Interests and Passions Like to do the tasks Like the challenge Committed to do what is necessary
26
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-26 Capabilities and Skills Good at the needed tasks Willingness to learn
27
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-27 The Firm Clear about its vision and mission Must know customers, suppliers and competitors Understand Intellectual Capital Understand environment
28
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-28 Firm’s Intellectual Capital Human Capital (HC): skills, capabilities and knowledge of firm’s people Organizational Capital (OC): patents, technologies, processes and networks Social Capital (SC): quality of relationships with customers, suppliers, and partners IC = HC + OC + Sc
29
© 2002 by Prentice Hall 3-29 Competitor Resource Analysis Resource TypeOwn Firm#1#2#3#4#5 Financial Physical Human Technical Reputational Organizational Total Scores Grand Mean +/- from Mean Evaluate each resource base from 1-7. 1: Firm has no advantage in this area. 4: Firm’s capabilities are about the same as other competitors. 7: Firm possesses an absolute advantage in this area.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.