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Economic Environment of Business-1

INTRODUCTION TO BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT & Components of Business Environment

Economi Environment of Business 2/2 A.N.Charlu

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ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT OF BUSINESS-1Meaning & Classification

EEB - Introduction Every business operates in a particular environment and each business unit has its own environment Change in Eco Env presents opportunity to some and threat to others. Change in tariff rates have changed the toy industry of India with the market now being dominated by Chinese products Slight change in RBI s monetary policy can increase or decrease interest rates in the market A slight shift in the government s fiscal policy can shift the whole demand curve towards the right or the left

EEB Introduction.. HUL took advantage of the new takeover and merger code and acquired brands like Kissan from UB group Tomco (Tata Oil Mills Co) and Lakme from Tata and Modern Foods from Govt

The New Moguls of Indian business are those who predicted the changes in the environment

Azim Premzi of Wipro Narayan Murthy of Infosys Subhash Goyal of Zee Ambanis of Reliance L.N. Mittal of Mittal Steel Sunil Mittal of Bharti Kishore Biyani of Future Group

EEB Introduction.. Even a small business man who plans to open a small shop as a general merchant in his own town needs to study the environment before deciding Where he wants to open Products intended to sell Brands to stock

Relation between a business and an environment is not one way affair. Business also influences the external environment and bring about changes in it. Successful business does not look at the env on an ad hoc basis but develops a system to study the env on a continuous basis to try and protect the business from every possible threat and to take advantage of every possible opportunity Turning a threat into an opportunity is also possibility if environment is keenly studied

EEB Introduction.. Even a small business man who plans to open a small shop as a general merchant in his own town needs to study the environment before deciding Where he wants to open Products intended to sell Brands to stock

Relation between a business and an environment is not one way affair. Business also influences the external environment and bring aobut changes in it. Successful business does not look at the env on an ad hoc basis but develops a system to study the env on a continuous basis to try and protect the business from every possible threat and to take advantage of every possible opportunity Turning a threat into an opportunity is also possibility if environment is keenly studied

EEB Introduction.. Even a small business man who plans to open a small shop as a general merchant in his own town needs to study the environment before deciding Where he wants to open Products intended to sell Brands to stock

Relation between a business and an environment is not one way affair. Business also influences the external environment and bring about changes in it. Successful business does not look at the env on an ad hoc basis but develops a system to study the env on a continuous basis to try and protect the business from every possible threat and to take advantage of every possible opportunity Turning a threat into an opportunity is also possibility if environment is keenly studied

EEB Meaning Env literally means the surrounds, external objects, influences or circumstances under which some or something exists. Environment of any organization is The aggregate of all conditions, events and influences and Surround and affect it

All external forces that have a bearing on the functioning of a business Bus Env is not just economic env but also about the social and political env as well Social Env and Demographic Env is also part of Bus Env Cultural Env and changes in it, besides the prevailing International Env also influences the Bus Env

EEB Classification Internal Environment

Culture and Value System Mission and Objectives Management Structure and Nature Human Resource Political Environment Regulatory and Legal Environment Demographic Socio Culture Technological

Macro Environment

Global Environment National Competitive Advantage Micro Environment

Introduction to Business Environment-2 Components of Business Environment Microeconomic Environment Direct (Customers, Intermediaries, Suppliers, Employees, Financial Stakeholders, Competitors) Indirect (Government, Community, Pressure Groups etc)

Mesoeconomic Environment What is Mesoeconomics? Industry Forces

Macroeconomic environment Economic, Social, Technological, Legal, Political, Ethical, Ecological facilitating and/or binding the business units

Environment Turbulence and the need for adaptation/change in business decision makingEconomi Environment of Business 2/2 A.N.Charlu 10

Microeconomic Environment- Direct Stakeholders Direct (Stakeholders-Resource Providers) Customers Intermediaries Suppliers Employees Financial Stakeholders Competitors

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Micro Firm Stakeholder Relationships

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Stakeholder Suppliers (1/6) Key determinant of availability, delivery times and quality of the product Cost of materials are an important factor in the total cost of many products Supply chain may have many links back to primary producers and be susceptible to disruption Relative power of suppliers is often critical and depends on size, substitutes and degree of actual competition between them Quality of the supplier relationship is a crucial parameter in marketing effectiveness Suppliers can assume the stockholding function allowing maximum space for selling operations If partnership fails to deliver marketing benefits, backward integration may be considered.

Stakeholder Competitors (2/6) Exceptions in the micro-environment. They continuously threaten rather than contribute to the survival of the firm No business can make decisions without reference to its competitive environment Even a monopoly must be concerned about potential entrants or effective substitutes Pricing must account for what the market will bear and the reactions of competitors The more competitors there are and the closer their product offering the more sensitively will sales respond to a relative change in price Price wars may erupt from time to time but non-price competition using banding and other product and promotional tactics are the norm

Stakeholder Customers (3/6) Customers are the final link in the input-output chain Customers are the only source of revenue for most organizations If they withdraw or transfer their customer to a competitor then survival is threatened A dissatisfied customer tells many more of the experience than does a satisfied one Customer retention is normally more cost effective than recruiting new ones due to the life-time revenue stream that is often involved Customers are looking for value for money. Value: Satisfaction derived from consumption of the product and its relative price

Stakeholder Intermediaries/Distributors (4/6) Firms do not sell directly and uses marketing channel Power and position of intermediaries is significant for survival of the firm Distributors who are ineffective in delivering the product to the customer as, where and when they want it will negatively impact on the business Effective partners deliver advantage in the form of transport, stock management, market knowledge, merchandizing and display, together with after sales service The marketer must communicate with both the final customer and the distributor(s) delivering the product to this end user Distributors have economic leverage arising from their strategic position Distributors have mutual interests in common to form the basis of joint ventures and partnerships

Stakeholder Shareholders (5/6) Shareholders provide longer-term capital Clear and timely communication with shareholders based on an understanding of their needs is required Adverse shareholder perceptions may lead to selling which drives down the market valuation of the company relative to its net asset value. This causes risk of unwelcome take-over bids Trade and bank credit are critical to maintaining a healthy cash flow. Relationships with both must be nurtured and improved The public image of the business is largely the responsibility of marketing

Stakeholder Employees (6/6) Employees contribute their time and skills for monetary and other rewards They are affected by company activities. They represent wider society and reflect the values and beliefs found there. Retention of skilled staff is normally more cost effective than the uncertainties of recruitment Image of organization is an important determinant in the quality of applicant attracted Business will attract the caliber of employees it deserves Employees is central to achievement of goals They can unionize, adversely affect productivity, leave or have equally positive effects on company fortune

Micro Environment Indirect Stakeholders Indirect Stakeholders: Government Community Pressure Groups

Indirect or external stakeholder groups are not directly engaged in the business These groups exert influence on and be seriously affected their activities All stakeholders may not have same degree of power and influenceEconomi Environment of Business 2/2 A.N.Charlu 19

Indirect Stakeholders - Government 1/3 Local Government: Interested in its investment Creation of jobs by the business unit Creation of prosperity / wealth for the society Revenue contribution Prestige the organization generates locally Compliances under different laws

Central Government: Holds controlling influence over many public sector organizations and hence direct stakeholders Make, interpret and enforce laws, monitor compliance, levy taxes and implement economic policies Provide infrastructure, spend, protect, subsidize, rescue and restructure Seeks influence through trade associations, lobbying, provision of information, joint projects and even political donationsEconomi Environment of Business 2/2 A.N.Charlu 20

Indirect Stakeholders - Community 1/3 Concerned with property values Quality of life, jobs and prosperity Links with local schools and charitable activities Can protest, mobilize the media, obstruct planning applications etc

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Indirect Stakeholders Pressure Groups 1/3

Consider Environment Groups Can protest, resist development and generate considerable media attention (eg: Protest against coastal corridor, Silent valley of Kerala) Demands cut in redtapism and regulations Clamour for more jobs and improved competitiveness

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Mesoeconomic Environment- What is it? Mesoeconomics is used to describe the study of economic arrangements which are not based either on the microeconomics of buying and selling and supply and demand, nor on the macroeconomic reasoning of aggregate totals of demand, but on the importance of under what structures these forces play out, and how to measure these effects.Economi Environment of Business 2/2 A.N.Charlu 23

Meso Economics Further Explained Economics is the study of the economic system, and a market capitalist economy is an evolutionary system. So, why not use evolutionary and complex systems theory for economic analysis? Option 1: Existing framework, but with evolutionary extensions Option 2: New framework

Micro Meso Macro is Option 2 But a new framework means a new theory to conclude new theoretical and empirical analysis. This is based about meso.

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Relevance of Meso Economics to Business EnvironmentThe problem How to analyse economic coordination and change in a way that is useful for the study of growth and development, technological and institutional change, market and price dynamics? The problem is that micro-macro is no good. Why? Because it cannot analyse the process of change as it actually happens, through changing connections and changing populations. Micro sums to macro is static and without structure (also without knowledge as interactions and populations). It does not deal with populations, networks, structures or processes. For analysis of economies as evolving complex adaptive systems, we need to start with what exists and what changes

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Meso Economics Meaning Economic systems are made of rules Rules are the elements of meso. A meso is a rule and its population of actualizations. The complexity of an economic system resides in the variety of the actualizations (meso population) the micro systems (of actualizations) and the macro systems (of meso)Economi Environment of Business 2/2 A.N.Charlu 26

Meso Economics: Example- the bicycle rule

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Meso Trajectory

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Complex System of MesoEconomic evolution is the process by which a novel generic rule enters the economic system Systems of meso rules carried by agents : micro-economics Changing population of rule actualizations : meso-economics The system of meso populations of rules : macro-economics The emergent rule and its growing population (meso trajectory) Micro structure and dynamics of agents carrying rules (meso systems) Macro structure and dynamics of rule populations (systems of meso)Economi Environment of Business 2/2 A.N.Charlu 30

Three-Phase Meso Trajectory Phase 1: Origination of a novel generic rule. The origination phase is that where the rule enters into existence (changing the dimensionality of the system) by entrepreneurial imagination or consumer experimentation. Phase 2: Adoption and adaptation of the rule in a population of carriers. The adoption phase is the communication of the rule to other carriers, who then adopt the rule. The population of the rule changes from one to many. Phase 3: Retention and maintenance of that rule in a population of carriers. Retention is where the carriers stabilize the rule for ongoing use. This is where behavioural routines and social institutions form.

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Meso Economics: Industry Forces Industries may involve

new products new consumers new expectations new organizations new interactions new markets new laws new competitions new institutions and perhaps all of these at once.Economi Environment of Business 2/2 A.N.Charlu 32

Macroenvironment Macro-environment is generally understood as the far environment (outside an organization s industry and markets)

Characteristics of the Macroenvironment Influences the micro-environment (industry and market) Will impact all organizations in an industry, a market, or even all organizations in an economy Source of competitive advantage being able to predict changes in the macro environment and take action

The PEST Analysis A scan of the external macroenvironment in which the firm operates can be expressed in terms of the following factors: Political Economic Social Technological35

Political Factors Political factors include government regulations and legal issues and define both formal and informal rules under which the firm must operate. Some examples include: Tax policy Employment laws Environmental regulations Trade restrictions and tariffs Political stability36

Political-Legal Organizations must operate within a framework or guideline based on national ideology. Regulation and policies reflect governmental ideology. Relating to organizations encompass subsidies, tariffs, quotas, and deregulation of industries.37

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Economic Factors Economic factors affect the purchasing power of potential customers and the firm's cost of capital. The following are examples of factors in the macro-economy: Economic growth Interest rates Exchange rates Inflation rate39

Economic Factors The economic environment consists of factors that affect consumer purchasing power and spending patterns Economic factors include inflation, income level and its distribution, unemployment, business cycles Changes in major economic variables have a significant impact on the marketplace.

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Socio-cultural Factors Social factors include the demographic and cultural aspects of the external macroenvironment. These affect customer needs and the size of potential markets. Some social factors include: Health consciousness Population growth rate Age distribution Career attitudes Emphasis on safety41

Socio-Cultural Influences Social environment is a demographic aspect. Demography concerns population size, family structure, age distribution. Important variables indicating consumer base on which marketing firms target. Changes in the demographic aspects can result in significant problems for firms.

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Technological Factors Technological factors can lower barriers to entry, reduce minimum efficient production levels, and influence outsourcing decisions. Some technological factors include: R&D activity Automation Technology incentives Rate of technological change43

Technological Environment The technological environment refers to new technologies, processes, materials, which create new or better product and market opportunities. Technology has a tremendous effect on life-styles, consumption patterns, and the economy. It is a driving force for changing every aspects of world and people at a fast pace

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Impact of Technology

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Environment TurbulenceWinds of Change Blow Through the Organisation

Organisations can be seen as systems operating in multidimensional environments. For some organisations, the winds of change are strong, gusty, variable, swirling. The next slide may not fully represent the possible turbulence in the external, temporal and internal environments.

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The organisational system operating in multidimensional environmentsEXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT

THE ORGANISATIONsociocultural influences Formal Sub-Systemmanagement goals strategy operations technology leadership culture politics structure

political-legal influences

economic influences

Informal Sub-System Subtechnological influences ecological influences

INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT

TEMPORAL ENVIRONMENT48

Responding to Levels of Environmental Turbulence

It has been claimed (Ansoff & McDonnell) that degree of aggressiveness and the responsiveness of an organisation should match the level of turbulence of the organisation s environment (Eg.Entry of Japanese firms into US & Sony) The greater the level of turbulence, the stronger the forces are for change

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Levels of Environmental TurbulenceWEAK FORCES FOR CHANGE

Level 1. Predictable. Stable markets. Pace of change is slow. Future will be like the past. Level 2. Some complexity, but the environment is Forecastable by extrapolation. Level 3. More complexity, but at least there are predictable threats and opportunities. Level 4. Complexity is further increased by the winds of global and social-political changes, but nonetheless there are partially predictable opportunities. Level 5. Unpredictable surprises. Unexpected events and situations occur more frequently that the organisation can respond to them.

Amount of Aggressiveness & responsiveness required50

Types of Change SituationCLOSE TO CERTAINTY

FAR FROM CERTAINTY Degree of Certainty51

Closed change. When explaining this type of change, people involved in it would readily be able to agree on, and describe, what happened, why it happened, what the consequences were, and how the business has been affected. Contained change. When explaining this type of change, people involved in it would only be able to say what probably happened, what the probable causes, consequences and business implications may be. Open-ended change. When explaining this type of change, people involved in it would have different and possibly conflicting accounts and explanations of what happened, why it happened, and what its consequences and implications are.

Organisations operate in multiple environments The key tasks for organisations is to achieve external adaptation and internal integration Organisations need to be quick on their feet to anticipate opportunities and threats and respond wisely to unpredictable surprises This requires understanding how the formal organisational subsystem responds to the external, internal and temporal environments It also requires understanding the informal subsystem

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