Porter's 5 Forces Flashcards
Why are Porter’s 5 forces important?
- Shape industry profitability by enabling value capture by different groups
- Firms can shape conditions in their favor, or exploit changing circumstances
- Firms can find segments in industries wherein conditions are more favorable
- Firms can identify attractive / unattractive industries
- Investors can make smart investment decisions
- Governments can use them to understand the implications of policies, regulations, etc.
- Each of these forces is important and deserves consideration, but some may be more problematic for a given industry at a given time.
What are Porter’s 5 Forces (BESSI)
- The power of BUYERS
- The threat of potential ENTRANTS into the industry
- The power of SUPPLIERS
- The threat of product SUBSTITUTES
- The INTENSITY of competitive rivalry
Name potential new entrants
- New ventures
- Existing firms who can leverage their resources
Name the 7 major sources of advantages of entry barriers incumbents have over new entrants.
- Supply-side economies of scale
- Demand-side benefits of scale
- Switching Costs
- Capital Requirements
- Incumbent cost advantages beyond scale
- Unequal access to distribution channels
- Restrictive Government Policy
Also:
Expected Retaliation
How do suppliers increase bargaining power?
Demand for their offering
How is supplier bargaining power reduced?
Availability of alternatives
Name reasons why supplier bargaining power is increased
- Supplier industry is more concentrated than buyer industry
- Supplier industry is not reliant on particular buyers
- Suppliers’ products create switching costs
- Suppliers’ products are differentiated
- Suitable substitute products are not available
- Suppliers pose a threat to integrate forward into buyers’ industry
What is buyer bargaining power?
Buyer ability to capture value, the quality of the items exchanged, the terms of the exchange
Bargaining power of buyers is based on their dependence on particular suppliers (True or False)
True
Name ways buyer bargaining power is increased
- Buyers are large and few in number
- Products are standardized
- Buyers may integrate backward into the sellers’ industry
- Buyers face few switching costs
- Intermediate customers can influence the buying decisions of downstream customers
Name ways price sensitivity increases
- The industry’s products are a large share of buyers’ costs
- Buyers lack funds
- The perceived quality of buyers’ products are unaffected by industry’s products
What are substitutes?
Substitutes exist when another product or service performs the same function in a different manner.
Substitutes can only exist in the same industry (True / False)
False
Substitutes don’t exist within the same product category, i.e. different brands of coffee are not substitutes (True / False)
True
Energy drinks vs. coffee are substitutes (True / False)
True
When does the threat of substitutes increase?
- Price-performance characteristics of the substitute are superior (e.g. transportation)
- Buyers face few switching costs
Define Rivalry in the context of Porter’s 5 forces
Rivalry manifests in pricing, products, advertising, services, etc., often limiting industry profitability by transferring value to others.
Name reasons why intensity of competition increases
- Numerous or equally balanced competitors
- Slow or declining industry growth
- Exit barriers
- Non-economic commitments
- Signaling difficulties (unfamiliarity, diversity, attention)
List elements of Price Competition
- Nearly identical products/services
- Fixed or storage costs are high and marginal cost is low
- Capacity must be expanded in large chunks
- Product may perish (rot, obsolete, etc.)
Why is non-price competition beneficial?
It incentivizes differentiation and innovation
What is a result of narrow focus on growth?
Poor decisions
What is a complementor?
A product or service with functionality that is greater together than separate
Investments should be judged relative to cost of capital, which affects both actual financial outlays and opportunity costs (True / False)
True
What is punctuated equilibrium?
Describes how many industries change (long periods of stability or gradual change, interrupted by seismic shifts and transformation; energy)