by Tim Berry
You need to explain the type of business you’re in. You’ll be
expected to explain the general state of your industry and the nature of
the business, especially if your plan is going outside your company to
banks or investors.
Whether you’re a service business, manufacturer, retailer, or some
other type of business, you should do an Industry Analysis, describing:
- Industry Participants.
- Distribution Patterns.
- Competition and Buying Patterns.
Industry analysis
Everything in your industry that happens outside of your business will affect your company. The more you know about your industry the more advantage and protection you will have.
Everything in your industry that happens outside of your business will affect your company. The more you know about your industry the more advantage and protection you will have.
A complete business plan
discusses general industry economics, participants, distribution
patterns, factors in the competition, and whatever else describes the
nature of this business to outsiders.
The Internet has had an enormous impact on the state of business
information. Finding information isn’t really the problem any more,
after the information explosion and the huge growth in the Internet
beginning in the 1990s and continuing in the 21st Century. Even 10 or 15
years ago, dealing with information was more a problem of sorting
through it all than of finding raw data. That generality is more true
every day. There are Web sites for business analysis, financial
statistics, demographics, trade associations, and just about everything
you’ll need for a complete business plan.
Industry participants
You should know who else sells in your market. You can’t easily describe a type of business without describing the nature of the participants. There is a huge difference, for example, between an industry like broadband television services, in which there are only a few huge companies in any one country, and one like dry cleaning, in which there are tens of thousands of smaller participants.
You should know who else sells in your market. You can’t easily describe a type of business without describing the nature of the participants. There is a huge difference, for example, between an industry like broadband television services, in which there are only a few huge companies in any one country, and one like dry cleaning, in which there are tens of thousands of smaller participants.
This can make a big difference to a business and a business plan. The
restaurant industry, for example, is what we call “pulverized,” which,
like the dry cleaning industry, is made up of many small participants.
The fast food business, on the other hand, is composed of a few national
brands participating in thousands of branded outlets, many of them
franchised.
Economists talk of consolidation in an industry as a time when many
small participants tend to disappear and a few large players emerge. In
accounting, for example, there are a few large international firms whose
names are well known and tens of thousands of smaller firms. The
automobile business is composed of a few national brands participating
in thousands of branded dealerships. In computer manufacturing, for
example, there are a few large international firms whose names are well
known, and thousands of smaller firms.
Distribution patterns
Products and services can follow many paths between suppliers and users. Explain how distribution works in your industry. Is this an industry in which retailers are supported by regional distributors, as is the case for computer products, magazines, or auto parts? Does your industry depend on direct sales to large industrial customers? Do manufacturers support their own direct sales forces, or do they work with product representatives?
Products and services can follow many paths between suppliers and users. Explain how distribution works in your industry. Is this an industry in which retailers are supported by regional distributors, as is the case for computer products, magazines, or auto parts? Does your industry depend on direct sales to large industrial customers? Do manufacturers support their own direct sales forces, or do they work with product representatives?
Some products are almost always sold through retail stores to
consumers, and sometimes these are distributed by distribution companies
that buy from manufacturers. In other cases, the products are sold
directly from manufacturers to stores. Some products are sold directly
from the manufacturer to the final consumer through mail campaigns,
national advertising, or other promotional means.
In many product categories there are several alternatives, and
distribution choices are strategic. Encyclopedias and vacuum cleaners
are traditionally sold door-to-door, but are also sold in stores and
direct from manufacturer to consumer through radio and television ads.
Many products are distributed through direct business-to-business
sales, and in long-term contracts such as the ones between car
manufacturers and their suppliers of parts, materials, and components.
In some industries companies use representatives, agents, or
commissioned salespeople.
Technology can change the patterns of distribution in an industry or
product category. The Internet, for example, is changing the options for
software distribution, books, music, and other products. Cable
communication is changing the options for distributing video products
and video games.
Distribution patterns may not be as critical to most service
companies, because distribution is normally about physical distribution
of specific physical products such as a restaurant, graphic artist,
professional services practice, or architect.
For a few services, distribution may still be relevant. A phone
service or cable provider, or an Internet provider, might describe
distribution related to physical infrastructure. Some publishers may
prefer to treat their business as a service rather than a manufacturing
company, and in that case distribution may also be relevant.
Competition and buying patterns
It is essential to understand the nature of competition in your market. This is still in the general area of describing the industry, or type of business. Explain the general nature of competition in this business, and how the customers seem to choose one provider over another. What are the keys to success? What buying factors make the most difference–Price? Product features? Service? Support? Training? Software? Delivery dates? Are brand names important?
It is essential to understand the nature of competition in your market. This is still in the general area of describing the industry, or type of business. Explain the general nature of competition in this business, and how the customers seem to choose one provider over another. What are the keys to success? What buying factors make the most difference–Price? Product features? Service? Support? Training? Software? Delivery dates? Are brand names important?
In the computer business, for example, competition might depend on
reputation and trends in one part of the market, and on channels of
distribution and advertising in another. In many business-to-business
industries, the nature of competition depends on direct selling, because
channels are impractical. Price is vital in products competing with
each other on retail shelves, but delivery and reliability might be much
more important for materials used by manufacturers in volume, for which
a shortage can affect an entire production line.
In the restaurant business, for example, competition might depend on
reputation and trends in one part of the market, and on location and
parking in another.
In many professional service practices the nature of competition
depends on word of mouth, because advertising is not completely
accepted. Is there price competition between accountants, doctors, and
lawyers? How do people choose travel agencies or florists for weddings?
Why does someone hire one landscape architect over another? Why choose
Starbucks, a national brand, over the local coffee house? All of this is
the nature of competition.
Main competitors
Do a very complete analysis of your main competitors. List the main competitors. What are the strengths and weaknesses of each? Consider their products, pricing, reputation, management, financial position, channels of distribution, brand awareness, business development, technology, or other factors that you feel are important. In what segments of the market do they operate? What seems to be their strategy? How much do they impact your products, and what threats and opportunities do they represent?
Do a very complete analysis of your main competitors. List the main competitors. What are the strengths and weaknesses of each? Consider their products, pricing, reputation, management, financial position, channels of distribution, brand awareness, business development, technology, or other factors that you feel are important. In what segments of the market do they operate? What seems to be their strategy? How much do they impact your products, and what threats and opportunities do they represent?
SOURCE: http://articles.bplans.com/starting-a-business/know-your-industry-before-you-start-your-business/72
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