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2 Start-up and the Need for Competitive Advantage PowerPoint Presentation by Ian Anderson, Algonquin College Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. Looking Ahead After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. Give several reasons for starting a new business rather than buying an existing firm or acquiring a franchise. 2. Identify several factors that determine whether an idea for a new venture is a good investment opportunity. 3. Distinguish between the different types and sources of start-up ideas. 4. Define competitive advantage and assess features of the environment and organization itself that support competitive advantage. Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-2 Looking Ahead 5. Evaluate the feasibility of a business. 6. Identify and compare strategy options for building and sustaining competitive advantage. 7. Define market segmentation and its related strategies. 8. Explain the concept of niche marketing and its importance to small business Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-3 Creating a New Business • Entrepreneurs may start a new business from scratch due to several reasons: – A new product or service – Favourable conditions such as location, equipment, employees, suppliers or bankers – To capitalize on competitors’ weaknesses Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-4 Evaluative Criteria – Market Factors Exhibit 2-1a Source: Adapted from Jeffrey A. Timmons and Stephen Spinelli, New Venture Creation: Entrepreneurship for the 21st Century (Boston: McGraw-Hill Irwin, 2007), pp. 128–129. Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-5 Evaluative Criteria – Competitive Advantage Exhibit 2-1b Source: Adapted from Jeffrey A. Timmons and Stephen Spinelli, New Venture Creation: Entrepreneurship for the 21st Century (Boston: McGraw-Hill Irwin, 2007), pp. 128–129. Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-6 Evaluative Criteria – Economics Exhibit 2-1c Source: Adapted from Jeffrey A. Timmons and Stephen Spinelli, New Venture Creation: Entrepreneurship for the 21st Century (Boston: McGraw-Hill Irwin, 2007), pp. 128–129. Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-7 Types of Ideas that Develop into Start-ups Exhibit 2-2 Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-8 Types of Start-up Ideas • Type A –Start-up ideas centered around providing customers with an existing product not available in their market • Type B –Start-up ideas, involving new ideas, involving new technology, centered around providing customers with a new product • Type C –Start-up ideas centered around providing customers with an improved product Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-9 Sources of Start-up Ideas Exhibit 2-3 Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-10 Competitive Advantage • A firm offers a product or service that is perceived by customers to be superior to those of competitors, thereby promoting firm profitability • To establish competitive advantage, a business owner needs to understand the nature of the environment – External – what business potentials exist – Internal – what the firm is able to do Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-11 Assessing The Environment • The Macroenvironment –A broad environment with its multiple factors that affect most businesses in a society • STEP – Sociocultural, Technological, Economic Political/Legal • Industry Environment –The combined forces that directly impact a given firm and its competitors Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-12 Five Forces Model Concept by Michael Porter Threat of New Competitors Threat of Substitute Products or Services Rivalry Among Existing Products Attractiveness and Profitability of a Target Market Bargaining Power of Suppliers Bargaining Power of Buyers Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-13 Environmental and Organizational Impact on Opportunity Assessment Part of Exhibit 2-4 Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2 -14 Core Competencies and Assessing the Organization • Core Competencies • Value-creating organizational capabilities that are unique to a firm • Resources versus Capabilities – Resources are basic inputs that a firm uses to conduct business (capital, technology, equipment, employees, etc.) • intangible and tangible resources – Capabilities are the integration of several resources which are deployed together to the firm’s advantage. Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-15 Venture Feasibility Assessment Model • Stage 1: Back-of-the-Envelope concept – Potential customers, technology available, match to entrepreneur, financial feasibility » Decision: go or no go • Stage 2: Research and Verification – Detailed analysis of customers, competition, HR required, technical and financial feasibility » Decision: go or no go • Stage 3: Refine the Concept – Detailed business plan » Decision: go or no go • The Leap of Faith Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-16 Competitive Advantage Factors Unique Service Features Price/Value Competitive Advantage Notable Product Attributes Accessibility Customer Service Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-17 Strategic Terms • Strategy – An action plan that guides resource investments to capitalize on business opportunities • Strategic Decision –A decision regarding the direction a firm will take in relation to its customers and competitors. Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-18 Strategies that Capture Opportunities • Broad-Based Strategy Options –Seek an advantage in cost or marketing • Cost-Advantage Strategy and Options Requires the firm to be the lowest-cost producer » WestJet began as a low-fare, no-frills airline • Marketing-Advantage Strategy Emphasizing the uniqueness of the firm’s product or service » WestJet is moving to differentiate based on quality service Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-19 Sustaining Competitive Advantage •An established, value-creating industry position that is likely to endure over time •Results include superior profitability, increased market share, and improved customer satisfaction Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. Market Segmentation and its Variables • Market Segmentation – division of a market into several smaller groups with similar needs or buying behaviour • Market – a group of customers or potential customers who have purchasing power and unsatisfied needs Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-21 Ingredients of a Market Ingredient 1 Customers: People or businesses Ingredient 2 Purchasing power: Money/credit Ingredient 3 Unsatisfied needs Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. Market Segmentation Variables • Segmentation Variables – The parameters used to distinguish one form of market behaviour from another • Geographic Variables – Defining a market by its location, size, or extent • Benefit Variables – Specific characteristics that distinguish market segments according to the benefit sought • Demographic Variables – Specific characteristics that describe customers and their purchasing power • Psychographic Variables – Lifestyle trends such as fitness, diet, political and sexual orientation Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-23 Types of Market Segmentation Strategies • Unsegmented Strategy (Mass Marketing) –A strategy that defines the total market as the target market • Multisegmented Strategy –A strategy that recognizes different preferences of individual market segments and develops a unique marketing mix for each • Single-Segmentation Strategy –A strategy that recognizes the existence of several distinct segments but focuses on only the most profitable segment Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-24 Small Business (Community Writing Company) Marketing Mix 2 Marketing Mix 1 Marketing Mix 3 Product: Felt-Tip Pen Product: Felt-Tip Pen Product: Gold Fountain Pen Price: $1.00 Price: $0.49 Price: $50.00 Promotion: Professional Magazines Promotion: Campus Newspapers Promotion: Personal Selling Distribution: Direct from Factory Distribution: Bookstores Distribution: Department Stores Market Segment A Students Market Segment B Professors Market Segment C Executives Multisegmentation Market Strategy Chapter 2 Exhibit 2-6 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. Small Business (Community Writing Company) Marketing Mix 1 A SingleSegmentation Market Strategy Product: Price: Promotion: Distribution: Felt-Tip Pen $0.49 Campus Newspapers Bookstores Market Segment A Students Market Segment B Professors Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. Market Segment C Executives Implementation of Niche Marketing Strategies • Restricting focus to a single subset of customers not adequately serviced by competitors. • Limiting the market to a single geographical region. • Emphasizing a single product or service. • Concentrating on superiority of product or service. Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-27 Niche Market Potential • Niche markets can quickly erode if: –The focus strategy is imitated. • Price, Product, Design, Service, Packaging, etc. –The target segment is structurally unattractive. –The target segment’s differences from other segments narrow. –New firms sub segment the industry. Chapter 2 Copyright © 2010 by Nelson Education Ltd. 2-28