• Present where there is a large number of undifferentiated, small suppliers, such as small farming businesses supplying large grocery companies;
• Low cost of switching between suppliers, such as from one fleet supplier of trucks to another. Force 5: Supplier Power Supplier power is a mirror image of the buyer power. As a result, the analysis of supplier power typically focuses first on the relative size and concentration of suppliers relative to industry participants and second on the degree of differentiation in the inputs supplied. The ability to charge customers different prices in line with differences in the value created for each of those buyers usually indicates that the market is characterized by high supplier power and at the same time by low buyer power (Porter, 1998). Bargaining power of suppliers exists in the following situations: • Where the switching costs are high (switching from one Internet provider to another);
• High power of brands (McDonalds, British Airways, Tesco);
• Possibility of forward integration of suppliers (Brewers buying bars);
• Fragmentation of customers (not in clusters) with a limited bargaining power (Gas/Petrol stations in remote places). The nature of