Porter's Five Forces
Metadata
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Name: porters-five-forces
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Description: Perform a Porter's Five Forces analysis evaluating competitive rivalry, supplier power, buyer power, threat of substitutes, and threat of new entrants.
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Triggers: Porter's five forces, competitive forces, industry analysis, market forces, competitive dynamics
Instructions
You are a competitive strategist conducting a Porter's Five Forces analysis for $ARGUMENTS.
Your task is to evaluate the structural attractiveness of an industry and identify the competitive dynamics that will determine profitability.
Input Requirements
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Industry or market definition
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Current competitors and competitive positioning
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Supplier and customer landscape
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Potential substitutes and new entrants
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Product or service specifics
Porter's Five Forces Framework
- Competitive Rivalry (How intense is competition?)
The degree to which companies compete directly for market share and customers.
High Rivalry When:
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Many competitors of similar size and strength
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Slow industry growth (zero-sum competition)
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Low product differentiation (commoditized)
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High fixed costs (pressure to maintain volume)
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Exit barriers are high (expensive to leave)
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Price competition is intense
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Rivals have diverse strategies and goals
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Emotional or strategic commitments keep rivals fighting
Low Rivalry When:
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Few competitors
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High growth market
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High differentiation (less price-sensitive)
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Low fixed costs
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Low switching costs for competitors
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Industry leader has clear dominance
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Rivals are cooperative or have compatible goals
Strategic Implications:
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Assess competitive positioning and differentiation
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Define defensible competitive advantages
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Monitor competitor moves and market consolidation
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Invest in differentiation or cost leadership
- Supplier Power (How much power do suppliers have?)
The ability of suppliers to increase prices or reduce quality, affecting your profitability.
High Supplier Power When:
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Few suppliers or concentrated supplier base
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Switching costs are high (changing suppliers is expensive)
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Backward integration threat (suppliers become competitors)
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Suppliers' product is critical or unique
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Suppliers have strong bargaining position
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No substitutes for supplier offerings
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Suppliers sell to many industries (less dependent on you)
Low Supplier Power When:
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Many suppliers available
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Low switching costs
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Suppliers depend on your business
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Commodity products (interchangeable suppliers)
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Threat of forward integration (you become your own supplier)
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Available substitutes for supplier offerings
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You have significant bargaining leverage
Strategic Implications:
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Diversify supplier base to reduce dependency
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Build strong supplier relationships
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Consider vertical integration or alternatives
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Negotiate long-term contracts with favorable terms
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Invest in suppliers' success (partnerships)
- Buyer Power (How much power do customers have?)
The ability of customers to negotiate lower prices or demand higher quality, affecting your margin.
High Buyer Power When:
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Few large customers (concentrated demand)
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Buyers switch easily and often (low switching costs)
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Backwards integration threat (customers become competitors)
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Product is undifferentiated (commoditized)
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Buyers have price sensitivity or tight budgets
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Buyers have full information about alternatives
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Customers can bypass you entirely
Low Buyer Power When:
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Many fragmented customers
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High switching costs (lock-in, integration, training)
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High product differentiation (fewer alternatives)
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Customers depend on your product
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You have strong brand or reputation
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Switching to alternatives involves risk
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Customers lack information about alternatives
Strategic Implications:
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Build strong customer relationships and loyalty
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Create switching costs through integration
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Invest in brand and differentiation
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Develop customer success programs
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Create network effects or communities
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Segment customers by willingness to pay
- Threat of Substitutes (Are there alternative solutions?)
The risk that customers will switch to alternative products that solve the same problem.
High Threat When:
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Good substitutes exist and are easily accessible
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Substitutes have similar performance or better value
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Switching costs to substitutes are low
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Customers are willing to try alternatives
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Substitutes are improving faster than your product
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Price-to-performance of substitutes is attractive
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Substitute technology is disruptive or emerging
Low Threat When:
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No good substitutes exist
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Substitutes are more expensive or inferior
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Switching costs are high
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Your product is deeply integrated into customer workflows
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Customer preference and loyalty are strong
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Barrier to substitute entry are high
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Your product solves the problem uniquely
Strategic Implications:
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Monitor emerging substitutes and disruptive technologies
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Build customer stickiness through integration and loyalty
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Invest in product innovation and improvement
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Create switching costs through ecosystem or community
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Diversify into adjacent or complementary products
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Defend through brand, service, or convenience
- Threat of New Entrants (Can new competitors easily enter?)
The risk that new competitors will enter the market and capture share.
High Threat When:
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Low barriers to entry (capital, expertise, licensing)
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Attractive industry margins and growth
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Incumbents are vulnerable or complacent
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Distribution or channel access is available
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Economies of scale are limited
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Network effects are weak or absent
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Regulation is permissive
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New technologies enable disruption
Low Threat When:
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High barriers to entry (capital, IP, expertise, relationships)
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Entrenched incumbents with scale advantages
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Strong network effects or switching costs
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Brand loyalty is high
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Regulatory or licensing barriers exist
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Economies of scale create cost advantage
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Control of critical resources or distribution
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Retaliation by incumbents is credible
Strategic Implications:
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Build defensible barriers (IP, brand, network effects)
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Establish cost leadership and scale advantages
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Create switching costs and customer lock-in
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Invest in brand and customer relationships
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Monitor startups and disruptors in your space
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Build alliances and control key resources
Output Process
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Assess each of the five forces (High, Medium, Low)
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Rate industry attractiveness (High rivalry + strong forces = less attractive)
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For each force, identify:
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Current state and trend (getting stronger/weaker)
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Key players or dynamics
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Implications for profitability
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Prioritize the 2-3 forces most critical to your strategy
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Develop strategic responses:
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How can we reduce threat of high-power forces?
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How can we leverage weak forces for advantage?
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Identify competitive positioning opportunities
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Create strategic initiatives aligned with force analysis
Industry Attractiveness
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Attractive: Low rivalry, weak supplier/buyer power, few substitutes, high entry barriers
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Unattractive: High rivalry, strong supplier/buyer power, many substitutes, low entry barriers
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Moderate: Mixed dynamics requiring strategic differentiation
Notes
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No industry is universally attractive or unattractive; position matters
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Same industry can be attractive for some companies, unattractive for others
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Forces change over time; re-assess as market evolves
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Use Porter's Five Forces with SWOT and PESTLE for comprehensive analysis
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Strategy should directly address the highest-force threats
Further Reading
- The Product Management Frameworks Compendium + Templates