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Unit 4: External Assessment




          4.3.2 Industry Analysis                                                               Notes

          1.   Industry Features: Industries differ significantly. So,  analyzing  a company’s industry
               begins with identifying the industry’s dominant economic features and forming a picture
               of the  industry landscape.  An industry’s  dominant economic  features  include  such
               factors as:

               (a)  Overall size
               (b)  Market growth rate
               (c)  Geographic boundaries of the market
               (d)  Number and sizes of competitors
               (e)  Pace of technological change

               (f)  Product innovations etc.
               Getting a handle on an industry features promotes understanding of the kinds of strategic
               moves that managers should employ. For example, in industries  characterized by one
               product advance after another, a strategy of continuous product innovation becomes a
               condition for survival.

                      Example: Video games, computers and pharmaceuticals.

          2.   Industry Boundaries: All the firms in the industry are not similar to one another. Firms
               within the same industry could differ across various parameters, such as:
               (a)  Breadth of market

               (b)  Product/service quality
               (c)  Geographic distribution
               (d)  Level of vertical integration
               (e)  Profit motives

          3.   Industry Environment: Based on their environment, industries are basically of two types:
               (a)  Fragmented Industries: A fragmented industry consists of a large number of small or
                    medium-sized companies, none  of which is in  a position  to determine  industry
                    price. Many  fragmented industries are characterized  by low  entry barriers  and
                    commodity type products that are hard to differentiate.

               (b)  Consolidated Industries: A consolidated industry is dominated by a small number of
                    large  companies  (an  oligopoly)  or in  extreme  cases,  by  just  one  company  (a
                    monopoly). These companies are in  a position  to determine  industry prices.  In
                    consolidated industries, one company’s competitive actions or moves directly affect
                    the market share of its rivals, and thus their profitability. When one company cuts
                    prices, the competitors also cut prices. Rivalry increases as companies attempt to
                    undercut each other’s prices or offer customers more value in their products, pushing
                    industry profits down in the process. The consequence is a dangerous competitive
                    spiral.
                    According to Michael Porter, industries can be categorized into:
                    Emerging industries: Are those in the introductory and growth phases of their life
                    cycle.




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