Chapter 2-A
Chapter 2-A
Chapter 2-A
• Market profitability is based primarily on two key factors. First, the target market must have plenty
of disposable income. No income means no sales. It’s as simple as that. Secondly, the market
must be known to buy. Your product could be perfectly designed and marketed, but if the market
you are selling to does not possess these two key factors, then your efforts will be in vain.
• While different firms in a market will have different levels of profitability, the average profit
potential for market can be used a guideline for knowing how difficult it is to make money in the
market. Michael Porter devised a useful framework for evaluating the attractiveness of an
industry or market.
• This framework, known as Porter’s Five Forces, identifies five factors that influence the market
profitability-
• Buyer Power – The customers
• Supplier Power – The Suppliers of raw materials
• Barriers to entry – Potential new companies
• Threat of substitute products – Sustitue products offered in the market
• Rivalry among firms in the industry – Existing firms
High Growth Market and Market Risks
• Growth Risk
• Stagnation of operations and the complacency that naturally occurs as firms
age and reach maturity stage
• Mature companies often forget or forsake the thing that made them
successful in the first place: a customer-centric business model. They lose
focus on the customer and start focusing on the bottom line and quarterly
results. They look for ways to cut costs or increase revenues, often at the
expense of the customer. They forget that satisfying customer needs and
continuous value innovation is the only path to sustainable growth. This
creates opportunities for new, smaller companies to emulate and improve
upon what made their bigger competitors successful in the first place and
steal their customers.
• Resistance to change at both individual and organizational level
• Detailed long term planning is difficult due to volatility of the market situation
• Management left with little space for innovation due to the need to achieve
short-term, yearly and quarterly results