Threat of new
entrants: How easy
is the market to
enter? Do you
require capital?
Customer Loyalty
will make it
difficult for new
entrants.
Threat of substitutes:
What is an alternative
to the product? Could
it take market share?
By creating a product
differenciator the
company can reduce
the threat of
substitutes.
Competitor Rivalry: How are
the existing competitors in
the market? Is it complacent
or is there tension being
companies? By building
customer relationships and
loyalty and offering a niche
product the company can
avoid rivalry
Supplier Power: Can the supplier change the cost of the goods, without you
flowing that through to the customer? How many suppliers are there to service
the market? Supplier rivalry can be reduced by creating contacts and building
strong relationships.
Buyer power:
The buyer has
the ability to
influence
pricing. Creating
a niche product
can avoid this.
Competitive Advantage
Can be achieved by using Porter's value chain:
Inbound: Receiving resources/materials
Operations: How the goods/services are processed
Outbound: How the service is delivered
Marketing and sales: How the product is communicated
Service: The after-care
Firm infrastructure: The way the business/people are set up
Human resources: Key employees, training
Procurement: Where to source resources?
Technology development: How the systems use MIS to
support each other.
Means a company is
offering a product of
service that the
consumer feels is more
valuable than the
competitor. This can be
achieved through a
product differenciator.
Always temp
Website issues
Measure success: Reach
% of visitors - Frequency:
Average number of times
site accessed by unique
visitor - Duration -
Average time spent on
site per visit. This will
determine the reliability
(if the site is functioning),
scalability (can handle the
amount of users),
usability (easy to use).
Planning a good website will include using teh systems
development lifecycle: 1. Planning: creating the idea - 2.
Analysing: determining what the user needs - 3.
Designing: Determining the look and functionality of the
site. - 4. Develop: Create the site. - 5. Test: Does it meet
the needs. - 6. Implement: Go live! - 7. - Maintainance:
Update. This relies on COMMUNICATION. Steps can't be
missed and requirements need to be clear
Users, general managers
and IS managers need to
agree on the site. Is it
easy to use? Does it
produce business? Does it
function well?
Multilingual with unique
domain by country
The website should be
insourced to use company
expertise to maximise
revenue.
Data and information
Data: Raw facts
Information: Data put into context that can be
used for decision- making
Data should remain free
from inconsistancies in
order to be valuable.
These include: Accuracy:
Correct information.
Complete: Everything
there. Consistent: The
same format. Timely:
Available on time.
Unique: No duplicates.
Databases
Databases hold
all relevant
information to
the business. Is
editable.
Using a DATABASE
MANAGEMENT
SYSTEM as the
go-between. This
handles: Security,
integrity
(uniqueness), and
user permissions
Data warehousing
works to combine data
from multiple location
into one database. This
allows for a greater
depth of information
and interprise wide
business intelligence.
Reports and analysis.
Not editable.
Data marts are specific
aras, or departments of
the data warehouse that
can be used to create
sepecific business
intelligence. For example
HR or IT services.
Data mining is the
ability to search data
marts to find trends,
reationships and
patterns that you
didn't know exsisted.