TIM 002
· 약 3분
Market Structure
| Perfect Competition | Monopolistic Competition | Oligopoly | Monopoly | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of firms | Almost Infinite | Many | Few | One |
| Barriers to Entry | No barriers | No barriers / Low barriers | Some barriers | High barriers |
| Influence over Price | Price Taker | Limited | Some | Price Maker |
| Nature of Product | Homogeneous | Differentiated | Similar, Differentiated | No close substitutes |
| Examples | Common agricultural products | Fast-food restaurants | Auto Industry | Utilities |
Porter's 5 Competitive Forces
- Threat of New Entrants: Profitable industries that yield high returns will attract new firms. New entrants eventually will decrease profitability for other firms in the industry.
- Threat of Substitutes: A substitute product uses a different technology to try to solve the same economic need.
- Bargaining Power of Customers: The market outputs. The ability of customers to put the firm under pressure, which also affects the customer's sensitivity to price changes.
- Bargaining Power of Suppliers: The market inputs. Suppliers of raw materials, components, labor, and services (such as expertise) to the firm can be a source of power over the firm when there are few substitutes.
- Competitive rivalry: For most industries the intensity of competitive rivalry is the major determinant of the competitiveness of the industry.
Threat of New Entrants
Barriers to entry ⬆️, Profits ⬆️
- How difficult it is for new business to enter an industry and compete with already established ones.
- Many competitors lead to lower average profits
- Threat of New Entrants:
- Barriers to entry
- Economies of scale
- Brand loyalty
- Capital requirements
- Cumultative experience
- Government policies
- Access to distribution channels
- Switching costs
Threat of Substitute Products
- A substitute product or service is an alternative that serves the same purpose for the customers, from a different industry.
- For example,
- Taxi vs. Uber
- Train vs. Plane
- Tea vs. Coffee vs. Soft Drinks
- Threat of Substitutes Products:
- Number of substitute products available
- Buyer propensity ot substitute
- Relative price performance of substitute
- Perceived level of product differentiation
- Switching costs
Bargaining Power of Customers and Suppliers
- Bargaining power of customers:
- Number of customers
- Size of each customer order
- Differences between competitors
- Price sensitivity
- Buyer's ability to substitute
- Buyer's information availability
- Switching costs
- Bargaining power of suppliers:
- Number of suppliers
- Size of suppliers
- Uniqueness of each supplier's product
- Focal company's ability to substitute
Rivalry among Existing Competitors
- The extent of competition within an industry
- Price wars
- Rivalry among existing competitors:
- Number of competitors
- Diversity of competitors
- Industry concentration
- Industry growth
- Quality differences
- Brand loyalty
- Barriers to exit
- Switching costs
- For example,
- Woolworths vs. Coles
- Apple vs. Samsung
KANO Model
- Expected (Basic or Must-be) Attribute: whose presence doesn't directly increase satisfaction, but their absence causes extreme dissatisfaction.
- car: a functioning brake is a must be quality
- hotel: providing a clean room is a basic necessity
- One-Dimensional (Performance) Attribute: can both satisfy and dissatisfy customers depending on their execution.
- car: acceleration
- hotel: waiting service at a hotel
- Attractive (Delight) Attribute: differentiate products and services, creating a "wow factor" and delighting customers when present, but causing no dissatisfaction when absent.
- car: advanced parking sensor
- hotel: providing free food
- Indifferent Attribute
- car: the color of the car
- hotel: highly polite speacking and very prompt responses not be necessary to satisfy customers
- Reverse Attribute
- web: auto-playing videos/audio
- venue: unnecessary security checks at the entrance of a venue
Possible movement of Attributes' place
- As customer expectations change with the level or performance from competing products, attributes can move from delighter to performance need and then to basic need.