Thursday, December 12, 2013

1.3 THE STRATEGIST IN YOU: Porter’s Five Forces

(SHORT NOTES FROM STRATEGY TOOLS:
Core Strategy Tools at http://www.mindtools.com)
 
The Porter's Five Forces tool is a simple but powerful tool for understanding where power lies in a business situation.  it helps to understand both the strength of current competitive position, and the strength of a position you're considering moving into.  Five Forces Analysis assumes that there are five important forces that determine competitive power in a business situation.

Porter’s Five Forces
1
Supplier Power
·        assess how easy it is for suppliers to drive up prices
·        driven by
o   the number of suppliers of each key input
o   the uniqueness of their product or service
o   their strength and control over you
o   the cost of switching from one to another
·        The fewer the supplier choices you have, and the more you need suppliers' help, the more powerful your suppliers are
2
Buyer Power
·        Assess how easy it is for buyers to drive prices down
·        driven by
o   the number of buyers
o   the importance of each individual buyer to your business
o   the cost to them of switching from your products and services to those of someone else
·        If you deal with few, powerful buyers, then they are often able to dictate terms to you.
3
Competitive Rivalry
·        Assess the number and capability of your competitors
4
Threat of Substitution
·        affected by the ability of your customers to find a different way of doing what you do
·        If substitution is easy and substitution is viable, then this weakens your power.
5
Threat of New Entry
·        affected by the ability of people to enter your market


Porter's Five Forces Simplified
Example: Buying a Farm
THREAT OF NEW ENTRY
Time and cost of entry
Specialist knowledge
Economies of scale
Cost advantages
Technology protection
Barriers to entry
COMPETITIVE RIVALRY
Very many competitors
Commodity products
Low switching costs
Low customer loyalty
High cost of leaving market
SUPPLIER POWER
Moderate number of suppliers
Suppliers large
Similar products
Able to substitute
Neutral supplier power
BUYER POWER
Few, large supermarkets
May be co-operatives
Very large orders
Homogeneous product
Extreme price sensitivity
Ability to substitute
High buyer power
THREAT OF SUBSTITUTION
Some cross-product substitute
Ability to import food
Some substitution

Porter's Five Forces Analysis is an important tool for assessing the potential for profitability in an industry.


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