chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

41
TOP 10 Learning Questions for Chapter 11: Dealing with Competition Tanya Marie C. Labrador September 24, 2010

Upload: tanya-marie-labrador

Post on 30-May-2015

691 views

Category:

Education


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

TOP 10 Learning Questions for

Chapter 11: Dealing with Competition

Tanya Marie C. LabradorSeptember 24, 2010

Page 2: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

2

1. A company is more likely to be hurt by ____________.

A. Current competitorsB. New technologiesC. Emerging competitorsD. World-class businessesE. New technologies & emerging

competitors

Page 3: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

3

Types of emerging giants

Current competitors

New Technologies

Emerging competitors

World Class Business

Page 4: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

4

Current competitors

New Technologies

Emerging competitors

World Class Business

In recent years, a no. of new“emerging giants” have arisenfrom developing countries,and these nimble competitorsare not only competing withmultinationals on their hometurf but also becoming globalforces in their own right.

A company is more likely to be hurt by new technologies & emerging competitors.

The range of a company’s actual & potential competitors can be much broader than the obvious.

Page 5: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

5

1. A company is more likely to be hurt by ____________.

A. Current competitorsB. New technologiesC. Emerging competitorsD. World-class businessesE. New technologies & emerging

competitors

Page 6: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

6

2. Companies that satisfy the same customer needs are called ______________.

A. Competitive new entrantsB. ChallengerC. CompetitorsD. Market opponentE. Business rival

Page 7: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

7

Competition can be examined from 2 points of view:

INDUSTRY MARKETERS

group of firms that offer a product that are close substitutes for one another

classify industries according to number of sellers; degree of product differentiation; presence or absence of entry, mobility and exit barriers; cost structure; degree of vertical integration: and degree of globalization

Page 8: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

8

Using the Market Approach..

INDUSTRY MARKETERS

COMPETITORS are defined as companies that satisfy the same customer need (e.g a customer who buys a word-processing package really wants “writing ability” – a need that can also be satisfied by pencils, pens, or typewriters).

Page 9: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

9

2. Companies that satisfy the same customer needs are called ______________.

A. Competitive new entrantsB. ChallengerC. CompetitorsD. Market opponentE. Business rival

Page 10: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

10

3. Many factors shape a competitor’s objectives except

A. Profits B. BehaviorC. Current management & financial

situationD. Size and HistoryE. Growth

Page 11: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

11

Factors that shape a competitor’s objectives

Size

History

Current Management

Financial Situation

Growth

Profits

Page 12: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

12

Factors that shape a competitor’s objectives

Once a company has identified its maincompetitors and their strategies, it mustask the ff. questions:

What is each competitor seeking in the marketplace?

What drives each competitor’s behavior?

Knowing what drives a competitor’sbehavior is one step in determiningobjectives of competitor which does notnecessarily mean that BEHAVIOR is afactor that shapes a competitor’s

objectives

Size

History

Current Management

Financial Situation

Growth

Profits

Page 13: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

13

3. Many factors shape a competitor’s objectives except

A. Profits B. BehaviorC. Current management & financial

situationD. Size and HistoryE. Growth

Page 14: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

14

4. Steps to competitor analysis are the ff. except

A. Gather information about a competitor’s strengths & weaknesses

B. Identify a company’s main competitorsC. Determine objectives of competitorsD. Selecting competitor & customersE. None of the above

Page 15: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

15

Steps in Competitor Analysis

Gather information about a competitor’s strengths & weaknesses

Identify a company’s main competitors

Determine objectives of competitors

Selecting competitor & customers

Page 16: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

16

All choices are part of the competitor’s analysis

Gather competitor’s strengths & weaknesses

Identify a company’s main competitors

Determine objectives of competitors

Selecting competitor & customers

Once a company identifies its primary competitors, it must ascertain their strategies, objectives, strengths and weaknesses

Selecting Competitors & Customers come after analyzing strengths and weaknesses of competitors

Page 17: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

17

4. Steps to competitor analysis are the ff. except

A. Gather information about a competitor’s strengths & weaknesses

B. Identify a company’s main competitorsC. Determine objectives of competitorsD. Selecting competitor & customersE. None of the above

Page 18: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

18

5. Which of the following is true?

A. To improve market share, many companies benchmark their most successful competitors, as well as other world-class performers.

B. A business interest so small has the ability to control prices in a given industry.

C. Market nichers are not required to know their customers well.

D. Market challengers should lead the industry in developing new products to overtake the market leader.

E. A company must spend all its time focusing on competitors.

Page 19: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

19

Benchmarking

Any new business entering the same field will judge

their overall performance against the standards already

in place within the industry to gain more market share

Page 20: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

20

5. Which of the following is true?

A. To improve market share, many companies benchmark their most successful competitors, as well as other world-class performers.

B. A business interest so small has the ability to control prices in a given industry.

C. Market nichers are not required to know their customers well.

D. Market challengers should lead the industry in developing new products to overtake the market leader.

E. A company must spend all its time focusing on competitors.

Page 21: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

21

6. Which of the following is false?

A. Expanding the total market demand would suggest more usage from existing customers as one of its strategies.

B. Larger package sizes have shown to increase the amount of product that consumers use at one time resulting to a decrease in frequency of consumption.

C. The usage of impulse consumption products such as snacks increases when the product is made more available.

D. An opportunity arises when consumers’ perceptions of their usage differs from the reality.

E. Market followers should look for new customers or more usage from existing customers.

Page 22: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

22

Marketers can try the following to increase consumption

Packaging

Product Re-design

Page 23: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

23

Marketers can try to increase the amount, level, or frequency of consumption

Packaging

Product Re-design

Larger package sizes increase the amount of product that consumers use at one time increasing the frequency of consumption

Page 24: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

24

6. Which of the following is false?

A. Expanding the total market demand would suggest more usage from existing customers as one of its strategies.

B. Larger package sizes have shown to increase the amount of product that consumers use at one time resulting to a decrease in frequency of consumption.

C. The usage of impulse consumption products such as snacks increases when the product is made more available.

D. An opportunity arises when consumers’ perceptions of their usage differs from the reality.

E. Market followers should look for new customers or more usage from existing customers.

Page 25: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

25

7. Company V discovers a perfect solution to weight loss . Though target customers were not interested in weight loss, they enthusiastically respond to it when launched. The type of marketer company V is called ________.

A. Creative B. ReactiveC. ResponsiveD. AnticipativeE. Proactive

Page 26: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

26

Defending market share

Continuous innovation is done by market leaders to defend its terrain

It should keep increasing its competitive strength and value to customers by providing comprehensive solutions

Page 27: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

27

The ff. are distinction bet. marketers in satisfying customer needs

Responsive

Anticipative

Creative

finds a stated need and fills it

looks ahead into what needs customers may have in the near futurediscovers and produces solutions customers did not ask for but to which they enthusiastically respond

Page 28: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

28

7. Company V discovers a perfect solution to weight loss . Though target customers were not interested in weight loss, they enthusiastically respond to it when launched. The type of marketer company V is called ________.

A. Creative B. ReactiveC. ResponsiveD. AnticipativeE. Proactive

Page 29: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

29

8. Company X matches Company Y’s product, advertising, price & distribution

A. Flank attackB. Bypass attackC. Guerilla attackD. Frontal attackE. Encirclement attack

Page 30: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

30

Six Defense Strategies

Page 31: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

31

The aim of defensive strategy is to reduce the probability of attack, divert attacks to less-threatening areas, and lessen their intensity

company matches its opponent’s product, advertising, price & distribution

Page 32: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

32

8. Company X matches Company Y’s product, advertising, price & distribution

A. Flank attackB. Bypass attackC. Guerilla attackD. Frontal attackE. Encirclement attack

Page 33: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

33

A. Market followerB. Market leaderC. Market nichersD. Market playerE. Market challenger

9. Firm B attacks Firm A for further market share. What is Firm B called?

Page 34: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

34

Types of “MARKET” that exists in business

Market Leader

Market Challenger

Market Follower

Market Nicher

Page 35: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

35

Market Leader

Market Challenger

Market Follower

Market Nicher

Market challengers canattack the leader and

othercompetitors in an

aggressivebid for further market

share

Page 36: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

36

A. Market followerB. Market leaderC. Market nichersD. Market playerE. Market challenger

9. Firm B attacks Firm A for further market share. What is Firm B called?

Page 37: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

37

10. Chewing gum manufacturers are producing nutraceutical products to strengthen or whiten teeth and launch gums with health and cosmetic benefits.

A. Product innovationB. Product developmentC. Product specializationD. Product re-engineeringE. Product redesigning

Page 38: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

38

Marketers can try the following to increase consumption

Packaging

Product Re-design

Page 39: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

39

Marketers can try the following to increase consumption

Packaging

Product Re-design

Product development is creation of products with new or different characteristics that offer new or additional benefits to the customer.

It may involve modification of an existing product or itspresentation.

Page 40: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

40

10. Chewing gum manufacturers are producing nutraceutical products to strengthen or whiten teeth and launch gums with health and cosmetic benefits.

A. Product innovationB. Product developmentC. Product specializationD. Product re-engineeringE. Product redesigning

Page 41: Chapter 11 dealing with competition labrador

TOP 10 Learning Questions for

Chapter 11: Dealing with Competition

Tanya Marie C. LabradorSeptember 24, 2010