Tutorial 7 & 8 Flashcards

1
Q

Which questions should you ask yourself when analysing an industry using Porter’s five forces framework? (Internal rivalry, ENtry)

A

Internal Rivalry
- How many firms are there in the market?
- Is demand growing or declining?
- Are there switching costs?
- Is there a history of price leadership?
- Are there strong barriers to exit?

Entry
- Are fixed costs of entry high?
- Are incumbents protected by regulations?
- How did incumbents respond to entry in the past?

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2
Q

Which questions should you ask yourself when analysing an industry using Porter’s five forces framework? (Substitutes & Complements, Suplier power)

A

Substitutes and Complements
- Are products differentiated or are they close substitutes?
- Are substitutes priced high?
- Are complements priced low?

Supplier Power
- How concentrated is the group of suppliers?
- Is there a threat of forward integration by suppliers?
- Can suppliers price discriminate?

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3
Q

Which questions should you ask yourself when analysing an industry using Porter’s five forces framework? (Buyer power)

A

Buyer Power
- How concentrated is the group of buyers?
- Is there a threat of backward integration by customers?
- Is it possible to price discriminate among consumers?

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4
Q

Comment on the following:
All of Porter’s wisdom contained in the five forces framework is reflected in the economic identity:

Profit = (Price – Average Cost) x Quantity
(FOocus on: Internal rivalry, entry)

A

Internal rivalry
High internal rivalry might
- drive prices down
- cause a redistribution of market shares (i.e. quantities)
- drive up costs (e.g. high advertising expenditures)

Entry
- High barriers to entry prevent potential entrants from entering

  • So incumbents can save costs while maintaining higher prices and larger quantities
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5
Q

Comment on the following:
All of Porter’s wisdom contained in the five forces framework is reflected in the economic identity:

Profit = (Price – Average Cost) x Quantity
(FOocus on: Substitutes & complements)

A

Substitutes and complements
- The availability of close substitutes limits the price that a producer can charge and potentially increases the producer’s costs (e.g. advertising)
- Substitute products can also reduce quantity (e.g. when substitutes are priced lower and demand for the product is elastic)
- The price and quantity of a given product are also affected by the availability of complements and their price

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6
Q

Comment on the following:
All of Porter’s wisdom contained in the five forces framework is reflected in the economic identity:

Profit = (Price – Average Cost) x Quantity

Focus on buying pwoer and supplier power)

A

Buyer Power
- Buyers force the price down if they hold high bargaining power
- Costs might go up due to investments in relationship-specific assets
- Quantity might decrease as a result of backward integration by buyers

Supplier Power
- If suppliers of an input hold bargaining power, they can increase the prices they charge for inputs
- This might be reflected in the cost, price, and quantity of the good for which the input is needed

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7
Q

How does the magnitude of switching costs affect

a)** the intensity of internal rivalry and**
b) entry?

A

Intensity of Internal Rivalry

Low switching costs
- When a competitor offers a better price or service, consumers are inclined to switch
- Internal rivalry increases as firms try to steal customers

High switching costs
- It is hard to poach consumers from another firm when they are ‘lockedin’
- Therefore the intensity of rivalry is smaller than in the case of low switching cost

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8
Q

How does the magnitude of switching costs affect

a) the intensity of internal rivalry and
b) entry?

A

Entry
- High switching costs represent an entry barrier
- Entrants cannot easily entice away incumbents’ consumers
- Potential entrants should therefore seek niches or target specific clusters that are not locked-in

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9
Q

How do the following industry characteristics affect rivalry
among firms?
a) Fixed costs of production are high
b) Products are differentiated

A

High fixed costs of production
- Strong barriers to entry for new firms
–>Market has **few **participant
–>Rivalry is limited

Differentiated products
- When products are NOT differentiated (and switching costs are low), firms are more likely to try to steal market share
–>price reductions, advertising battles,…

  • With differentiation, firms target different customer segments
    –> Rivalry is limited
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10
Q

What are the limitations of the five forces model?

A
  • The framework pays limited attention to factors that affect demand
  • It focuses on a whole industry rather than on individual firms
  • The framework does not explicitly account for the role of the government
  • In the Five-Forces other firms are considered as threats to profitability
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11
Q

What is the differentiate the value net model from the five forces model?

A
  • In the value net model interactions between firms can also be positive
    (coopetition)
  • So the value net complements the five forces approach by considering opportunities posed by each force

The value net consists of:

suppliers, customers, competitors and complementor

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12
Q

What are the five dimensions develop by Brandenburger & Nalebuff to develop business strategies?

A
  • Step 1: Identify Players
  • Step 2: Calculate Added Value
  • Step 3: Define Rules
  • Step 4: Identify Tactics
  • Step 5: Define Scope
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13
Q

What are the five dimensions develop by Brandenburger & Nalebuff to develop business strategies?

Explaint the first step

A

Step 1: Identify Players
- Identify and categorize the players that affect your business

  • Are there opportunities for cooperation?
  • Would bringing in extra players create any more benefits?

e.g. a higher number of suppliers can lead to lower costs

e.g. extra complementors give more value to a company’s product

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14
Q

What are the five dimensions develop by Brandenburger & Nalebuff to develop business strategies?

Explaint the second step

A

Step 2: Calculate Added Value

  • Calculate your company’s (and other firms’) added value
  • How uniquely valuable is your product to the market?
  • Are your customers and suppliers loyal?
  • Take action to increase this added value in order to increase profitability:
    e.g. a company can introduce affinity programs to create loyal customers or suppliers
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15
Q

What are the five dimensions develop by Brandenburger & Nalebuff to develop business strategies?

Explaint the thrid step

A

Step 3: Define Rules
- Every industry has certain established “rules” that must be followed
- Which of these rules help your organization?
- Which of these rules limit what your organization can achieve?

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16
Q

What are the five dimensions develop by Brandenburger & Nalebuff to develop business strategies?

Explaint the 4 step

A

Step 4: Identify Tactics

  • Tactics are actions that players take to shape the perception of other players
  • Have you established credibility in your market?
  • Are your organization’s actions predictable or unpredictable?
  • A company can influence other players’ perceptions and actions by deliberately sending out certain signals (e.g. soft moves vs. tough moves)
17
Q

What are the five dimensions develop by Brandenburger & Nalebuff to develop business strategies?

Explaint the 5 step

A

Step 5: Define Scope
- Scope: the boundaries of your game, or market
- These can be extended by linking to other markets
- A firm can extend its business to other games or, alternatively, deliberately keep two games separate when linking the games would cannibalize its traditional busines

18
Q

What is the value chain and what are the activities (what do they benefit?)

A

The value chain
- describes the vertical chain of production
- is a useful device for thinking about how value is created in a firm

Each activity in the value chain can

  • add to the benefit (B) that consumers get from the firm’s product
  • add to the cost (C) that the firm incurs in producing and selling the product
19
Q

Which strategic positions can be identified by analysing the value chain?

A

Strategic positions that can be identified by analyzing a firm’s value chain:

  • Cost advantage (activities generate a lower C compared to the firm’s rivals)
  • Differentiation / Benefit advantage (activities generate a superior B compared to the firm’s rivals)
20
Q
A