بنقرة واحدة
map-strategic-groups
// Map strategic groups within an industry using Porter's framework. Use when asked to segment competitors, identify positioning opportunities, or analyze mobility barriers.
// Map strategic groups within an industry using Porter's framework. Use when asked to segment competitors, identify positioning opportunities, or analyze mobility barriers.
Analyze industry structure using Porter's Five Forces. Use when asked to assess industry attractiveness, competitive dynamics, profit potential, or structural threats.
Evaluate market entry opportunities using Porter's entry analysis framework. Use when asked to assess whether to enter a new market, how to enter, or what entry barriers exist.
Audit a competitive strategy for internal consistency using Porter's tests. Use when evaluating whether a strategy hangs together, after formulating strategy, or when diagnosing strategic drift.
Design offensive or defensive competitive moves using Porter's framework. Use when planning competitive actions, responding to competitor moves, or managing industry discipline.
Classify an industry's evolutionary stage and structural type using Porter's criteria. Use when asked to diagnose industry maturity, identify if an industry is emerging/fragmented/declining, or understand industry evolution.
Route competitive strategy analysis to the right Porter skill. Use when asked for broad competitive analysis, industry assessment, strategy formulation, or any Porter-related question.
| name | map-strategic-groups |
| description | Map strategic groups within an industry using Porter's framework. Use when asked to segment competitors, identify positioning opportunities, or analyze mobility barriers. |
Construct a strategic group map of an industry to reveal mobility barriers, inter-group rivalry dynamics, and positioning opportunities by plotting competitors along the two most structurally significant strategic dimensions.
select-generic-strategy (to choose a strategy within the identified group), design-competitive-move (to plan movement between groups or defend position).Profile every competitor along these dimensions (Porter's exhaustive list):
| # | Dimension | What to Assess |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Specialization | Width of product line, target customer segments, geographic markets served |
| 2 | Brand identification | Degree of reliance on branding (via advertising, sales force, etc.) vs. price competition |
| 3 | Push vs. pull | Emphasis on direct consumer brand identification vs. relying on distribution channels to sell |
| 4 | Channel selection | Company-owned channels, specialty outlets, or broad-line outlets |
| 5 | Product quality | Raw materials, specifications, adherence to tolerances, features |
| 6 | Technological leadership | Pioneer vs. follower/imitator (note: tech leadership and quality do not necessarily go together) |
| 7 | Vertical integration | Extent of forward and backward integration -- captive distribution, owned retail, in-house service |
| 8 | Cost position | Investment in cost-minimizing facilities and equipment for manufacturing and distribution |
| 9 | Service | Ancillary services: engineering assistance, in-house service network, credit |
| 10 | Price policy | Relative price position in the market (related to but distinct from cost position and quality) |
| 11 | Leverage | Amount of financial leverage and operating leverage |
| 12 | Relationship with parent company | Objectives, shared resources, and constraints from being part of a conglomerate, vertical chain, or foreign subsidiary |
| 13 | Relationship with home/host government | Regulatory constraints or assistance from home and host governments |
When choosing which two dimensions to use as map axes, apply Porter's three rules:
Mobility barriers are the economic factors that deter firms from shifting strategy to move from one group to another. They are the same factors as entry barriers -- economies of scale, capital requirements, product differentiation, switching costs, absolute cost advantages, access to distribution -- but applied to protect specific strategic positions within the industry.
For each pair of adjacent groups, assess:
For each strategic group, assess the five competitive forces at the group level:
Rivalry intensity -- determined by four factors:
Bargaining power with suppliers/buyers -- groups differ because:
Substitute vulnerability -- which groups' strategies expose them most to substitutes from outside the industry?
Formulating competitive strategy is the choice of which strategic group to compete in. This choice involves finding the best trade-off between a group's profit potential and the firm's cost of entering it. Identify opportunities using Porter's four categories:
Also assess:
## Strategic Group Map: [Industry]
### Axes Selected
- **X-axis:** [Dimension] -- rationale: [why this determines key mobility barriers]
- **Y-axis:** [Dimension] -- rationale: [why this determines key mobility barriers]
### Map
High | [Group C] [Group D]
| (15%) (25%)
[Y-Dimension] |
| [Group A] [Group B]
Low | (35%) (25%)
+-----------------------------
Low High
[X-Dimension]
### Group Profiles
#### Group A: [Name]
- **Members:** Firm 1, Firm 2, Firm 3
- **Shared strategy:** [description across key dimensions]
- **Mobility barriers protecting this group:** [list]
- **Rivalry exposure:** [high/medium/low + rationale]
- **Bargaining position:** Suppliers [assessment], Buyers [assessment]
- **Substitute vulnerability:** [assessment]
[Repeat for each group]
### Mobility Barriers Between Groups
| From \ To | Group A | Group B | Group C | Group D |
|-----------|---------|---------|---------|---------|
| Group A | -- | [barrier] | [barrier] | [barrier] |
| ... | | | | |
### Positioning Opportunities
1. [Opportunity type]: [description]
2. ...
### Strategic Implications for [Focal Firm]
- Current group: [which group]
- Recommended action: [stay/move/create new group]
- Rationale: [structural analysis]
Industry: U.S. Chain Saw Industry (Porter's example)
Axes: Brand identification (Y) vs. Channel selection (X: servicing dealers / mass merchandisers / private label)
Groups identified:
Key insight: Moving from private label (Group C) to professional-grade (Group A) requires overcoming barriers in brand identification, dealer network development, and product quality -- a candidate for sequenced entry through Group B first.