Environmental Scanning and Industry Analysis
Environmental Scanning and Industry Analysis
Environmental Scanning and Industry Analysis
SCANNING AND
INDUSTRY ANALYSIS
CHAPTER 4
The arctic is undergoing an extraordinary
transformation-a transformation that will have
global impact not only on wildlife, but upon many
countries and a number of industries. Some of the
most significant environmental changes are
retreating sea ice, melting glaciers, thawing
permafrost, increasing coastal erosion, and shifting
vegetation zones.
According to Impacts of a Warming Arctic: Arctic
Climate Impact Assessment, a 2004 report by the
eight-nation Arctic Council, the melting of the area’s
highly reflective snow and sea ice is uncovering
darker land and ocean surfaces, further increasing
the absorption of the sun’s heat.
Lawson Brigham, Alaska Office Director of the U.S.
Arctic Research Commission and a former chief of
strategic planning for the U.S. Coast Guard,
examined how regional warming will affect
transportation systems, resource development,
indigenous Arctic peoples, regional environmental
degradation and protection schemes and overall
geopolitical issues.. From this, he proposes four
possible scenarios for the Arctic in 2040:
Globalized frontier- In this scenario, the Arctic by
2040 has become an integral component of the global
economic system, but is itself a semi-lawless frontier
with participants jockeying for control.
Adaptive frontier- In this scenario, the Arctic in 2040
is being drawn much more slowly into the global
economy. The area is viewed as an international
resource. Competition among the Arctic countries
for control of the region’s resources never grew
beyond a low level and the region is the scene of
international cooperation among many international
stakeholders.
Fortress frontier- In this scenario, widespread
resource exploitation and increased international
tension exist throughout the Arctic. The region is
viewed by much of the global community as a
storehouse of natural resources that is being
jealously guarded by a handful of wealthy
circumpolar nations.
Equitable frontier- In this scenario, the Arctic is
integrated with the global economic system by 2040,
but international concern for sustainable
development has slowed the region’s economic
development. Mutual respect and cooperation
among the circumpolar nations allows for the
development of a respected Arctic governance
system.
A changing environment can help as well as hurt a
company. Many pioneering companies have gone out of
business because of their failure to adapt to
environmental change or, even worse, because of their
failure to create change.
Examples:
Trends in the economic part of the social environment can have an obvious impact on business
activity.
Table 4.1 Some Important Variables in the Societal Environment
1. Portable information devices and electronic networking: Combining the computing power of
the personal computer, the networking of the Internet, the images of television, and the
convenience of the telephone, this appliances will soon be used by majority of population of
industrialized nations to make phone calls, send e-mail, and transmit documents and other data.
2. Alternative energy sources: The use of wind, geothermal, hydroelectric, solar, biomass, and
other alternative energy sources should increase considerably
4. Virtual Personal Assistant: Very smart computer programs that monitor e-mail , faxes, and
phone calls will be able to take over routine tasks, such as writing a letter, retrieving a file, making
a phone call, or screening requests.
5. Genetically altered organism: A convergence of biotechnology and agriculture is creating a
new field of life sciences. Plant seeds can be genetically modified to produce more needed
vitamins or to be less attractive to pests and more able to survive. Animals (including people)
could be similarly modified for desirable characteristics and to eliminate genetic disabilities and
diseases.
6. Smart, mobile robots: Robot development has been limited by a lack of sensory devices and
sophisticated artificial intelligence systems . Improvement in these mean that robots will be
created to perform more sophisticated factory work, run errands, do household chores, and assist
the disabled.
1. Increasing environmental awareness: Recycling and conservation are becoming more than slogans.
2. Growing health consciousness: concern about personal health fuel the trend toward physical fitness
and healthier living
3. Expanding seniors market: As their number increase, people over age 55 will become an even more
important market. Already some companies are segmenting the senior population into Young Matures,
Older Matures, and the Elderly-each having a different set of attitudes and interests.
4. Impact of Generation Y Boomlet: Born between 1978 and 1994 to the baby boom and X generation ,
this cohort is almost as large as the baby boom generation.
5. Declining mass market: Niche markets are defining the marketers’ environment. People want
products and services that are adapted more to their personal needs.
6. Changing pace and location of life: Instant communication via e-mail, cellphones, and overnight
mail enhances efficiency, but it also puts more pressure on people. Merging the personal computer
with the communication and entertainment industries through telephone lines, satellite dishes, and
capable television increases consumers’ choices and allows workers to leave overcrowded urban areas
for small towns and telecommute via personal computers and moderns.
8. Increasing diversity of workforce and markets: Heavy immigration from the developing to the
developed nations is increasing the number of minorities in all developed countries and forcing an
acceptance of the value of diversity in races, religions and life style.
International Societal Considerations. Each country or group of countries in
which a company operates presents a unique societal environment with a different set of
economic, technological, political-legal, and sociocultural variables for the company to face.
International societal environments vary so widely that a corporation’s internal environment and
strategic management process must be very flexible.
Issues priority matrix - one way to identify and analyze developments in the
external environment.
1. Identify a number of likely trends emerging in the natural, societal, and task
environments. These are strategic environmental issues those important trends
that, if they occur, determine what the industry or the world will look like in the
near future.
IDENTIFYING EXTERNAL STRATEGIC FACTORS
2. Assess the probability of three trends actually occurring, from low to medium to
high.
3. Attempt to ascertain the likely impact (from low to high) of each of these trends
on the corporation being examined.
IDENTIFYING EXTERNAL STRATEGIC FACTORS
External strategic factors - the key environmental trends that are judged to have
both a medium to high probability of occurrence and a medium to high probability
of impact on the corporation.
The issues priority matrix can then be used to help managers decide which
environmental trends should be merely scanned (low priority) and which should
be monitored as strategic factors (high priority) - categorized as opportunities and
threats and are included in strategy formulation.
INDUSTRY ANALYSIS: ANALYZING THE TASK
ENVIRONMENT
Industry - group of firms that produces a similar product or service, such as soft
drinks or financial services.
An examination of the important stakeholder groups, such as suppliers and
customers, in a particular corporation’s task environment is a part of industry
analysis.
INDUSTRY EVOLUTION
Fragmented industry - no firm has large market share, and each firm serves only a
piece of the total market in competition with others.
Consolidated industry - by the time an industry enters maturity, products are tend
to become more like commodities.
- dominated by a few large firms, each of which struggles to differentiate its
products from those competition.
CATEGORIZING INTERNATIONAL INDUSTRIES
Multidomestic industries are specific to each country or group of countries. This
type of international industry is a collection of essential domestic industries, such
as retailing and insurance. The activities in a subsidiary of a multinational
corporation (MNC) in this type of industry are essentially independent activities of
the MNC’s subsidiaries in other countries.
CATEGORIZING INTERNATIONAL INDUSTRIES
Global industries in contrast, operate worldwide. With MNCs making only small
adjustments for country-specific circumstances. In global industries an MNC’s
activities in one country are significantly affected by its activities in other
countries.
CATEGORIZING INTERNATIONAL INDUSTRIES
The factors that tend to determine whether an industry will be primarily
multidomestic or primarily global are:
1. Pressure for coordination within the MNCs operating in the industry
2. Pressure for local responsiveness on the part of individual country markets
CATEGORIZING INTERNATIONAL INDUSTRIES
To extent that the pressure for coordination is strong and the pressure for
local responsiveness is weak for MNCs within the particular industry, that
industry tend to be global. In contrast, when pressure for local responsiveness is
strong and the pressure for coordination is weak for multinational corporations in
an industry, that industry will tend to be multidomestic.
INTERNATIONAL RISK ASSESSMENT
Some firms develop elaborate information networks and computerized
system to evaluate and rank investment risks. Small companies may hire outside
consultant to provide political risk assessments.
STRATEGIC GROUPS
• A set of business units or firms that “pursue similar strategies with similar
resources.” Categorizing firms in any one industry into a set of strategic groups
is very useful as a way of better understanding the competitive environment.
STRATEGIC GROUPS
Strategic groups in a particular industry can be mapped by plotting the
market positions of industry competitors on a two-dimensional graph, using two
strategic variables as the vertical and horizontal axes.
1. Select two broad characteristic, such as price and menu, that differentiate the
companies in an industry from one another.
2. Plot the firms, using these two characteristics as the dimensions.
STRATEGIC GROUPS
3. Draw a circle around those companies that are closest to one another as one
strategic group, varying the size of the circle in proportion to the group’s share of
total industry sales. (You could also name each strategic group in the restaurant
industry with an identifying title, such as quick title, such as quick fast food of
buffet-style service)
STRATEGIC GROUPS