Porter’s Five Forces Checklist
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Transcript Porter’s Five Forces Checklist
Porter’s Five Forces
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
•
•
•
•
•
•
Economies of scale.
Proprietary product
differences.
Brand identity.
Switching costs.
Capital requirements.
Access to distribution
channels.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Differentiation of
inputs.
Switching costs of
suppliers and firms in
the industry.
Presence of
substitute inputs.
Supplier
concentration.
Importance of
volume to supplier.
•
•
•
Cost relative to total
purchases in the
industry.
Impact of inputs on
cost or differentiation.
Threat of forward
integration relative to
threat of backward
integration by firms in
the industry.
“The goal of competitive strategy for a
business unit in an industry is to find a position
in the industry where the company can best
defend itself against these competitive forces
or can influence them in its favour.”
Micheal Porter
INTERNAL INDUSTRY RIVALRY
IMPACT OF SUPPLIERS
•
Absolute cost
advantages:
– Proprietary
learning curve.
– Access to
necessary inputs.
– Proprietary lowcost product
design.
Government policy.
Expected retaliation.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Industry growth.
Fixed (or storage)
costs/ value added.
Intermittent
overcapacity.
Product differences.
Brand identity.
Switching costs.
Concentration and
balance.
•
•
•
•
Informational
complexity.
Diversity of
competitors.
Corporate stakes.
Exit barriers.
IMPACT OF BUYERS
•
•
•
•
•
•
Bargaining leverage.
Buyer concentration
vs. firm
concentration.
Buyer volume.
Buyer switching costs
relative to firm
switching costs.
Buyer information.
Ability to backward
integrate.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Substitute products.
Pull-through.
Price sensitivity.
Price / total purchases.
Product differences.
Brand identity.
Impact on quality /
performance.
Buyer profits.
Decision-makers
incentives.
SUBSTITUTE PRODUCTS
•
This is a free resource from
StrategyExpert.com which contains lots more
useful tools, templates and resources
Not to be sold or published.
•
•
Relative price
performance of
substitutes.
Switching costs.
Buyer propensity to
substitute.
STRATEGYEXPERT.COM
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Porter’s Five Forces
“The goal of competitive strategy for a
business unit in an industry is to find a
position in the industry where the
company can best defend itself
against these competitive forces or
can influence them in its favour.”
Micheal Porter
IMPACT OF SUPPLIERS
• Differentiation of inputs.
• Switching costs of suppliers and firms in the
industry.
• Presence of substitute inputs.
• Supplier concentration.
• Importance of volume to supplier.
• Cost relative to total purchases in the
industry.
• Impact of inputs on cost or differentiation.
• Threat of forward integration relative to
threat of backward integration by firms in
the industry.
This is a free resource from
StrategyExpert.com which contains lots more
useful tools, templates and resources
Not to be sold or published.
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
• Economies of scale.
• Proprietary product differences.
• Brand identity.
• Switching costs.
• Capital requirements.
• Access to distribution channels.
• Absolute cost advantages:
– Proprietary learning curve.
– Access to necessary inputs.
– Proprietary low-cost product design.
• Government policy.
• Expected retaliation.
INTERNAL INDUSTRY RIVALRY
• Industry growth.
• Fixed (or storage) costs / value added.
• Intermittent overcapacity.
• Product differences.
• Brand identity.
• Switching costs.
• Concentration and balance.
• Informational complexity.
• Diversity of competitors.
• Corporate stakes.
• Exit barriers.
IMPACT OF BUYERS
• Bargaining leverage.
• Buyer concentration vs. firm concentration.
• Buyer volume.
• Buyer switching costs relative to firm
switching costs.
• Buyer information.
• Ability to backward integrate.
• Substitute products.
• Pull-through.
• Price sensitivity.
• Price / total purchases.
• Product differences.
• Brand identity.
• Impact on quality / performance.
• Buyer profits.
• Decision-makers incentives.
SUBSTITUTE PRODUCTS
• Relative price performance of substitutes.
• Switching costs.
• Buyer propensity to substitute.
STRATEGYEXPERT.COM
2