Chapter 02
Strategy Analysis
Prepared By:
NUSRAT NARGIS
Assistant Professor
Department of Business Administration
Business Strategy Analysis
• Strategy analysis allows the analyst to probe the economics
of the firm at a qualitative level so that the subsequent
accounting and financial analysis is grounded in business
reality.
• Strategy analysis allows the identification of the firm’s profit
drivers and key business risks.
• Strategy analysis enables the analyst to assess the
sustainability of the firm’s current performance and make
realistic forecasts of future performance
• A firm’s value is determined by its ability to earn a return on
its capital in excess of the cost of capital.
Business Strategy Analysis
While a firm’s cost of capital is determined by the capital
markets, its profit potential is determined by its own strategic
choices:
1. the choice of an industry or a set of industries in which the firm
operates (industry choice);
2. the manner in which the firm intends to compete with other
firms in its chosen industry or industries (competitive
positioning); and
3. the way in which the firm expects to create and exploit synergies
across the range of businesses in which it operates (corporate
strategy)
Business strategy analysis involves industry analysis, competitive
strategy analysis, and corporate strategy analysis
Industry Analysis
• In analyzing a firm’s profit potential, an analyst has to first assess
the profit potential of each of the industries in which the firm is
competing.
• There is a vast body of research in industrial organization on
the influence of industry structure on profitability.
• Average profitability of an industry is influenced by the “five
forces” shown in Figure.
• According to this framework, the intensity of competition
determines the potential for creating abnormal profits by the
firms in an industry.
• Whether or not the potential profits are kept by the industry is
determined by the relative bargaining power of the firms in the
industry and their customers and suppliers.
The competitive forces analysis is made by the identification
of 5 fundamental competitive forces:
– The entry of competitors (how easy or difficult is it for new entrants to
start to compete, which barriers do exist)
– The threat of substitutes (how easy can our product or service be
substituted, especially cheaper)
– The rivalry among the existing players (is there a strong competition
between the existing players, is one player very dominant or all equal
in strength/size)
– The bargaining power of buyers (how strong is the position of buyers,
can they work together to order large volumes)
– The bargaining power of suppliers (how strong is the position of
sellers, are there many or only few potential suppliers, is there a
monopoly)
Industry Structure and Profitability
Rivalry Among
Existing Firms Threat of Threat of
New Entrants Substitute Products
Industry growth
Concentration Scale economies Relative price and
Differentiation First mover advantage performance
Switching costs Distribution access Buyers’ willingness to
Scale/Learning Relationships switch
economies Legal barriers
Fixed-Variable costs
Excess capacity
Exit barriers
INDUSTRY PROFITABILITY
BARGAINING POWER IN INPUT AND OUTPUT MARKETS
Bargaining Power Bargaining Power
of Buyers of Suppliers
Switching costs Switching costs
Differentiation Differentiation
Importance of product Importance of product
for cost and quality for cost and quality
Number of buyers Number of suppliers
Volume per buyer Volume per supplier
Industry Analysis Application
Do the Industry Analysis of your Sector
Already Distributed the Sector and Company.
Industry Analysis (Other Models)
1. The Five Forces
2. SWOT analysis
3. PESTLE analysis
4. Scenario planning
5. Critical success factor analysis
6. And more
COMPETITIVE STRATEGY ANALYSIS
The profitability of a firm is influenced not only by its industry
structure but also by the strategic choices it makes in
positioning itself in the industry.
While there are many ways to characterize a firm’s business
strategy, as Figure shows, there are two generic competitive
strategies:
(1) cost leadership and
(2) differentiation.
Both these strategies can potentially allow a firm to build a
sustainable competitive advantage.
COMPETITIVE STRATEGY ANALYSIS
Cost leadership involves offering the same product or service
that other firms offer at a lower cost.
Differentiation involves satisfying a chosen dimension of
customer need better than the competition, at an
incremental cost that is less than the price premium that
customers are willing to pay.
To perform strategy analysis, the analyst has to identify the
firm’s intended strategy, assess whether or not the firm
possesses the competencies required to execute the strategy,
and recognize the key risks that the firm has to guard against.
The analyst also has to evaluate the sustainability of the
firm’s strategy.
Strategies for Creating Competitive Advantage
Cost Leadership Differentiation
Supply same product or service at a Supply a unique product or service
lower cost. at a cost lower than the price premium
Economies of scale and scope customers will pay.
Efficient production
Simpler product designs Superior product quality
Lower input costs Superior product variety
Low-cost distribution Superior customer service
Little research and development or More flexible delivery
brand advertising Investment in brand image
Tight cost control system Investment in research and
development
Control system focus on creativity
and innovation
Competitive Advantage
• Match between firm’s core competencies and key success
factors to execute strategy
• Match between firm’s value chain and activities required
to execute strategy
• Sustainability of competitive advantage
Corporate Strategy Analysis
• Corporate strategy analysis involves examining whether a
company is able to create value by being in multiple businesses
at the same time.
• A well-crafted corporate strategy reduces costs or increases
revenues from running several businesses in one firm relative to
operating the same businesses independently and transacting
with each other in the marketplace.
BUSINESS STRATEGY ANALYSIS IN GUIDING FINANCIAL ANALYSIS
Business strategy analysis is also useful in guiding financial
analysis. For example, in a cross sectional analysis the
analyst should expect firms with cost leadership strategy to
have lower gross margins and higher asset turnover than
firms that follow differentiated strategies.
In a time series analysis, the analyst should closely monitor
any increases in expense ratios and asset turnover ratios for
low-cost firms, and any decreases in investments critical to
differentiation for firms that follow differentiation strategy.
Business strategy analysis also helps in prospective analysis
and valuation.