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Five forces
Another analytical concept developed by Porter is the Five Forces
Analysis. It is a useful concept in analyzing the competitive position
and strategic challenges of an industry. The five forces are:
- Rivalry among existing firms. Issues to be adressed in this
respect are: numerous or equally balanced competitors, slow industry
growth, high fixed or storage costs, lack of differentiation or
switching costs, capacity augmented in large increments, diverse
competitors, and high exit barriers.
- Bargaining power of suppliers. Issues here are: number of
suppliers, the degree to which the supplier is obliged to contend
with other substituted products, the importance of the industry as a
customer of the supplier group, the importance of the supplier‘s
product to the buyers business, the degree to which the supplier‘s
products are differentiated or it has built up switching costs, and
the question whether the supplier group poses a credible threat of
forward integration.
- Bargaining power of buyers. Issues here are: the share of
individual buyer’s volumes relative to the seller sales, the share
of the purchases of key buyer’s as a portion of the buyer’s
total costs, standard or undifferentiated products, switching costs,
importance of the product to the quality of the buyers’ products
or services, and the degree to which the buyer has full information.
- Threat of new entrants. Issues here are: economies of scale,
product differentiation, capital requirements, switching costs,
access to distribution channels, cost disadvantages independent of
scales, and government policy.
- Threat of substitute products or services. The main issue here is
that of radical technical change, i.e. the emergence of new products
or services which offer a better performance and/or a lower price.
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