Porter’s Five Forces Strategy Skills Team FME www.free-management-ebooks.com ISBN 978-1-62620-999-2 Copyright Notice © www.free-management-ebooks.com 2013. All Rights Reserved ISBN 978-1-62620-999-2 The material contained within this electronic publication is protected under International and Federal Copyright Laws and treaties‚ and as such any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is strictly prohibited. You may not copy‚ forward‚ or transfer this publication or any part of
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Evolution of Porter ’s Five Forces Model Five forces is a framework for the industry analysis and business strategy development developed by Michael E. Porter of Harvard Business School in 1979. Michael Porter is a professor at Harvard Business School andis a leading authority on competitive strategy and international competitiveness.Michael Porter was born in Ann Arbor‚ Michigan. Five forces uses concepts developing‚ Industrial Organization (IO) economics to derive five forces that determine the competitive
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Purdue extension EC-722 Industry Analysis: The Five Forces Cole Ehmke‚ Joan Fulton‚ and Jay Akridge Department of Agricultural Economics Kathleen Erickson‚ Erickson Communications Sally Linton Department of Food Science Overview Assessing Your Marketplace The economic structure of an industry is not an accident. Its complexities are the result of long-term social trends and economic forces. But its effects on you as a business manager are immediate because it determines the competitive
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The Five Forces Model of Porter The Five Forces Model (P5F) and the framework behind it dates back to the early 80s and was the work of Michael Porter‚ a scholar working and teaching at the Harvard Business School. This model (see figure 1)‚ as declared by its creator‚ was able‚ at that time‚ to fill a void‚ in the management field corresponding to the development of a new discipline‚ Competitive Strategy. It came at a time when down-sizing‚ re-engineering etc. were elements of strategic choice
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Application of Porter’s Five Forces The main objective of Porter’s five forces is to assess the attractiveness of an industry by analysing the five forces acting upon it. Once this is evaluated and understood‚ the business leaders should be able to analyse whether it has a high‚ medium or low impact on the industry attractiveness. Porter (2008) suggested that the industry competition intensity is determined by the relative strengths of five forces which are competitive rivalry among
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Michael Porter’s Five Forces Model Michael Porter … “An industry’s profit potential is largely determined by the intensity of competitive rivalry within that industry.” Porter’s Five Forces Portfolio Analysis … … Strategy at the time (1970s) was focused on two dimensions of the portfolio grids … … Industry Attractiveness … Competitive Position Where was Michael Porter coming from? School of Economics … … at Harvard … Structural reasons why … … some industries were profitable
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analyze the strategy of each player in conjunction with the news I chose. Focusing on one industry made me realize how much the strategic aspects that we have learned in the class are working to shape the industry dynamics. News Nintendo has joined forces with McDonald’s to offer free wireless internet access in the US for its DS handheld games console. (BBC News‚ October 18‚ 2005‚ retrieved from http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4353480.stm) Analysis This deal reflects a Nintendo’s strategy
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FIVE FORCES ANALYSIS WORKSHEET Exhibit III-1 Five Forces Affecting Industry Structure ENTRY BARRIERS Economies of scale Proprietary product differences Brand identity Switching costs Capital requirements Access to distribution Absolute cost advantages Proprietary learning curve Access to necessary inputs Proprietary low-cost product design Government policy and international treaties Expected retaliation RIVALRY DETERMINANTS Industry Growth Fixed (or storage) costs/value-added Intermittent overcapacity
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In this paper‚ we will examine the video game console industry and apply Porter’s Five Force model to SONY. Sony is a big media conglomerate with businesses in the gaming‚ music‚ movies/entertainment and electronics industries. It has a strong brand image‚ a wide product range and had over $75 billion in sales in 2010. For the purposes of doing this analysis‚ we will concentrate on Sony’s performance in the video game industry‚ understand its current position with respect to its competitors and recommend
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Firstly I will provide an overview of how the prices in the vertical chain for music compact discs correlates with how prices are divided according to the mentioned links in production chain of the music industry. Secondly I will by use of Porter’s five forces explain the pattern of this. Very few big record companies heavily control the music industry. This is also known as Oligopoly‚ which makes the record companies price setters in the music industry and leaves them with significant more power
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