Supermarket Industry Pest Analysis POLITICAL

Transcription

Supermarket Industry Pest Analysis POLITICAL
Supermarket Industry Pest Analysis
POLITICAL
MMC report – Oct 2000 – report on restrictive trade practices
within the industry.
Planning report – 1995/6 – restriction of planning on out of town
supermarkets.
Pressure from declining agriculture industry to increase prices.
See fig 1.1
Fig 1.1 Pigmeat Price Changes 1996-2000, £
per head
200
£ per head
“The price of livestock in the uk has dropped
in the last few years and in cash terms to
the customer has fallen even more. For
example, for pig meat, the farmer gets £38
per head less than in 1996, the processor
gets £2 per head less than in 1996 and
Sainsburys gets £4 per head less than in
1996. Prices to Sainsburys customers
however are equivalent to £44 per head less
than in 1996.”
Retail Value
Farmers Share
Producers Share
Retailer Share
150
100
50
0
1996
2000
Time
Supermarket Industry Pest Analysis
Economical
Economies of Scale & Scope
Barriers to entry e.g Planning Report
“Over the last five years over 650 new grocery stores have
opened nationwide, ranging in size from 3,000 sq feet to over
25,000 sq feet. Retailers have created no barriers to entry for
new competitors who continue to fight for market share with
the more established retailers. There have been five major new
companies which have entered the UK market in the last ten
years. These include Wal-Mart, the worlds largest retailer and
Aldi the 6th largest retailer in Europe”
Brutal Price Competition
Increased competition within industry
Expansion and Acquisition.
e.g Sainsburys bought out Star markets and opened stores in Egypt. Asda bought 60
Gateway stores in 1994.
Non price / Brand competition – e.g reward points, advertising
Competition from European discount stores. E.g. Lidl
Competition from independent, small chain, specialists
Fall in return on net assets/profits across industry – compounded by price
promotions.
Cost of groceries falls below rate of inflation in real terms 9.4% since 1989
Product Life Cycle – Supermarkets saturated industry
Supermarket Industry Pest Analysis
Social
Sophisticated shopping patterns of UK consumer increase market competitiveness.
“The notion of ‘one-stop shopping’ is fictitous. In the UK 75% of
consumers shop more than once a week and spread their custom
around two other stores as well as the store they use for their main
shop. Sainsburys customers do over 22% of their grocery shopping at
shops run by smaller chains, specialists and independents.”
Car ownership increase – easier access to out of town centres.
Supermarkets major employer, especially female & part time
e.g Sainburys directly employs 140,000 people nationwide
People have les leisure time, therefore supermarkets offer more convenience
Supermarket shopping voted no.1 favourite family Sunday past time.
In store events such as single nights & fancy dress dress days. The first
person to marry as a result of these receives reception at cafeteria and
marriage in store.
Change in consumer taste – increased demand for organic produce & ban of GM foods.
Health concerns – eg BSE outbreak precipitated ban of British beef.
Increased out of town locations implies a change in customers because you need a
car to get to them.
Supermarket Industry Pest Analysis
Technological
Quicker Shopping.
Personal shopping with a trolley gun – e.g Waitrose.
High investment costs of new tills in M&S.
Online Shopping – e.g Tesco. Sainbury estimates by 2005 £25 billion
will be spent on this.
Storage systems – sourcing from other stores.
Layout of stores designed to optimise sales – e.g most popular goods at back.
Quicker building time of supermarkets – e.g Asda store took 32 weeks to build.
Technology to predict buying habits.
Supermarket Industry 5 Forces Analysis
Threat of entry
No barriers to newcomers. E.g. Walmart, Aldi
Investment & Technological costs to enter. E.g. M&S New tills
Size and power of large supermakets unable to retaliate. E.g. on price/value/quality
MMC reports.
Government legislation opposing out of town supermarkets in some areas.
Power of Buyers & Suppliers
High buyer power – There is a high volume of buyers and thus few retailers dominate
Alternative sources of supply – e.g. beef crisis – looked to Europe
Low cost of switching supplier. – Famers lose out.
Supermarket Industry 5 Forces Analysis
Competitive Rivalry
V high price wars / reductions.
Quality & value – attract new/diff segments of market
Difficult to differentiate. E.g. M&S no longer is niche market.
Higher advert costs – Sainsbury £64 – Jamie Oliver
M&S – naked woman
Customer incentives – e.g. Leeland, BOGOFS – 2 for ones.
Loyalty cards – need to retain ustomers and reduce switching
Threat of substitutes
Product for product substitution within industry
Smaller chain / independent retailers – loyalty cards.