Porter’s Five Forces
Analyze industry competition beyond direct rivals to uncover structural profit drivers.
VRIO Framework
Evaluate whether your resources create real, defensible competitive advantage.
Ohmae’s 3C’s Model
Emphasizes the balanced integration of Company, Customer, and Competitor for strategic decisions, avoiding a singular focus.
TOWS Model
Turn SWOT insights into concrete strategic options and actions.
Value Stick Model
Helps businesses balance willingness to pay and willingness to sell
CAGE Model
Provides a framework for comparing markets beyond surface-level metrics.
Porter’s Five Forces: Mastering Competitive Dynamics
Analyze industry competition beyond direct rivals to uncover structural profit drivers.
Porter’s Five Forces
The "Rules of the Game"
Porter's Five Forces is a strategic framework developed by Michael E. Porter, a professor at Harvard Business School. He introduced it in his 1979 book Competitive Strategy: Techniques for Analyzing Industries and Competitors.
It is designed to help businesses understand the underlying competitive dynamics of an industry and make better strategic decisions. The model identifies five forces that shape profitability and competitive intensity.
These forces help you see who holds power, where potential threats lie, and which opportunities you can tap into.
The model identifies five distinct forces that shape every market. It is based on a simple economic idea: competition is not just about rivals, but about structure.
By analyzing these forces, a company can predict industry trends, decide whether to enter a market, and position itself to defend against competitive pressures.
Threat of New Entrants
This force is all about the likelihood of new players entering your market. Gauge the ease or difficulty for new competitors to enter the market and compete effectively.
Factors to Consider:
- Technical barriers
- Customer learning barriers
- Strict regulations or policies
- High startup costs
- Strong brand loyalty
- Unique resources
When barriers to entry are low, it’s easier for competitors to jump in and share the profits, please expect increased competition and tighter profit margins.
Bargaining Power of Suppliers
Suppliers are the backbone of your operations, providing the resources you need to create your products or services. Evaluate how strong supplier are imposing their prices and conditions, impacting your cost and availability of materials.
Factors to Consider:
- Supplier options (the more options you have, the stronger position to negotiate favorable deals)
- Specificity of supplied goods
- Purchasing costs
- Switching cost
- Supply and delivery capability
Bargaining Power of Buyers
This force examines how much influence your customers have over your products and services.
Factors to Consider:
- Purchases volume and frenquecy
- Product alternatives
- Customer expertise
- Unique Value (tangible and intangible)
- Customer loyalty
If there are many alternatives in the market or if your buyers are highly price-sensitive, they can push you to lower prices. However, offering unique value or creating loyal customer relationships can help you reduce their bargaining power.
Threat of Substitute Products or Services
Substitutes are alternatives that solve the same problem for your customers. So this force is to identify the ease with which customer can switch to alternative products or services.
Factors to Consider:
- Changing habits
- Politics, economy and society changes
- Customer switching costs
If substitutes are more affordable, convenient, or innovative, you risk losing market share. Identifying and differentiating your offering can help you stay ahead of substitutes and retain customer loyalty.
Industry Rivalry
Assesses the intensity of competition and understand your competitors' influence in your market.
Factors to Consider:
- Product function differences
- Innovation or technology race
- Product portfolio
- Price war
- Brand value
- Marketing