Business Plan
Analyze Competition
Identify
and Analyze Your Competition
The
competitive analysis is a statement of the business strategy and how it
relates to the competition. The purpose of the competitive analysis is to
determine the strengths and weaknesses of the competitors within your
market, strategies that will provide you with a distinct advantage, the
barriers that can be developed in order to prevent competition from entering
your market, and any weaknesses that can be exploited within the product
development cycle.
The first
step in a competitor analysis is to identify the current and potential
competition. There are essentially two ways you can identify competitors.
The first is to look at the market from the customer's viewpoint and group
all your competitors by the degree to which they contend for the buyer's
dollar. The second method is to group competitors according to their various
competitive strategies so you understand what motivates them.
Once
you've grouped your competitors, you can start to analyze their strategies
and identify the areas where they're most vulnerable. This can be done
through an examination of your competitors' weaknesses and strengths. A
competitor's strengths and weaknesses are usually based on the presence and
absence of key assets and skills needed to compete in the market.
To determine just what constitutes a key asset or skill within an industry,
David A. Aaker in his book, Developing Business Strategies, suggests
concentrating your efforts in four areas:
-
The reasons behind successful as well as unsuccessful firms
-
Prime customer motivators
-
Major component costs
-
Industry mobility barriers
According
to theory, the performance of a company within a market is directly related
to the possession of key assets and skills. Therefore, an analysis of strong
performers should reveal the causes behind such a successful track record.
This analysis, in conjunction with an examination of unsuccessful companies
and the reasons behind their failure, should provide a good idea of just
what key assets and skills are needed to be successful within a given
industry and market segment.
Through
your competitor analysis, you will also have to create a marketing strategy
that will generate an asset or skill competitors don't have, which will
provide you with a distinct and enduring competitive advantage. Since
competitive advantages are developed from key assets and skills, you should
sit down and put together a competitive strength grid. This is a scale that
lists all your major competitors or strategic groups based upon their
applicable assets and skills and how your own company fits on this scale.
Create a
Competitive Strength Grid
To put
together a competitive strength grid, list all the key assets and skills
down the left margin of a piece of paper. Along the top, write down two
column headers: "weakness" and "strength." In each asset or skill category,
place all the competitors that have weaknesses in that particular category
under the weakness column, and all those that have strengths in that
specific category in the strength column. After you've finished, you'll be
able to determine just where you stand in relation to the other firms
competing in your industry.
Once
you've established the key assets and skills necessary to succeed in this
business and have defined your distinct competitive advantage, you need to
communicate them in a strategic form that will attract market share as well
as defend it. Competitive strategies usually fall into these five areas:
- Product
- Distribution
- Pricing
- Promotion
- Advertising
Many of the factors leading to the formation of a strategy should already have been highlighted in previous sections, specifically in marketing strategies. Strategies primarily revolve around establishing the point of entry in the product life cycle and an endurable competitive advantage. As we've already discussed, this involves defining the elements that will set your product or service apart from your competitors or strategic groups. You need to establish this competitive advantage clearly so the reader understands not only how you will accomplish your goals, but also why your strategy will work.