Analyzing the External Environment of the Firm

Analyzing the External
Environment of the Firm: Creating
Competitive Advantages

Looking
Ahead
Enhancing
Awareness of
the External
Environment.
The General
Environment.
The
Competitive
Environment.

The Important of External
Environment
Successful managers are always aware of what’s going on
outside their company. Their
perceptual acuity allows them
to sense what’s coming. Detecting early warning signals,
keeping pace with changes in the external environment can
sustain a competitive advantage.

Breakout Session
As a manager and strategist what are the
steps you take to analyze the external
environment?
How can you gain perceptual acuity (the
ability to sense what is coming before the
fog clears)
?
What are the tools you learned so far that
can help with environmental analysis?

Enhancing
Awareness of
the External
Environment

Environmental Scanning
and Monitoring
Environmental scanning involves surveillance of a
firm’s external environment.
• Predicts environmental changes to come.
• Detects changes already under way.
• Allows firm to be proactive.
Environmental monitoring tracks evolution of
environmental trends.
• Sequences of measurable facts/events.
• Streams of activities or trends from outside the organization.

Competitive
Intelligence
Helps firms define and understand their industry.
• Collect data on competitors.
• Interpret intelligence data.
Identifies rivals’ strengths & weaknesses.
• Anticipate competitors’ moves.
• Decrease response time.
Helps firms avoid surprises.
Potential for unethical behaviour while gathering intelligence.

Environmental
Forecasting
Environmental forecasting predicts change.
Plausible projections about
Direction of environmental change?
Scope of environmental change?
Speed of environmental change?
Intensity of environmental change?
Scenario analysis is an in-depth approach.
What are some of the ways trends may
affect an issue?
Can we project alternative futures
based on these assessments?

The Competitive
Environment
The competitive environment consists of
factors in the task or
industry environment
that are particularly relevant to a firm’s
strategy.
Competitors (existing or potential).
Including those considering entry
into an entirely new industry.
Customers (or buyers).
Suppliers.
Including those considering
forward integration.

Porter’s Five Forces Model of Industry Competition
Exhibit 2.4 Porter’s Five Forces Model of Industry Competition
Source: From Michael E. Porter, “The Five Competitive Forces That Shape Strategy,” Special Issue on HBS Centennial.. Harvard
Business Review 86, No. 1 (January 2008), 78-93. Reprinted with permission of Michael E. Porter.
Access the text alternative for slide images.
The Value Net
Exhibit 2.6 The Value Net
Source: Adapted from “The Right Game: Use Game Theory Shape Strategy,” by A. Brandenburger and B.J.
Nalebuff, July-August 1995 Harvard Business Review.

Strategy Groups within
Industries
• No two firms are totally different.
• No two firms are exactly the same.
Two unassailable assumptions in industry analysis:
• Breadth of product & geographic scope.
• Price/quality.
• Degree of vertical integration.
• Type of distribution.
Strategic groups – clusters of firms that share similar strategies:
Strategy
Groups as an
Analytic Tool
Strategic groups can be analytical tools.
Helps identify barriers to mobility that protect a
group from attacks by other groups.
Helps identify groups whose competitive
position may be marginal or tenuous.
Helps chart the future direction of firms’
strategies.
Helps to think through the implications of each
industry trend for the strategic group as a whole.

Example: Strategic Groups within Industries
Exhibit 2.7
The World
Automobil
e Industry:
Strategic
Groups

Note: Members
of each strategic
group are not
exhaustive, only
illustrative.

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