

This article is an excerpt from the Shortform summary of "Understanding Michael Porter" by Joan Magretta. Shortform has the world's best summaries of books you should be reading.
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Are you looking for information on understanding Porter’s Five Forces?
Understanding Porter’s Five Forces is one way to develop a business model that works. With an improved understanding of Porter’s Five Forces, you can conduct industry analyses and build strong business strategies. Here’s a guide to the Five Forces.
What is Competition?
Part of understanding Porter’s Five Forces is knowing what competition is, and how competition is decided.
Aim to be unique, not the “best.” Create unique value, don’t focus on just beating rivals. There is no “best” in any industry, just like there is no “best performance artist.” There are different buyer needs, and there can be multiple winners.
For example, McDonald’s is a winner in fast food and fast burgers. But In-N-Out deliberately focuses on slow burgers, with non-processed meat and fresher ingredients. Both are winners in their own right. They’re each playing their own sport.
Competition is about profits, not market share. There is no glory in growth if it’s profitless.
Understanding Porter’s Five Forces
Why are some industries consistently more profitable than others? What makes information technology so stereotypically profitable, while airlines are a cutthroat, low-margin grind?
This is all part of understanding Porter’s Five Forces. The Five Forces that matter in any industry are:
- Buyers
- Suppliers
- Substitutes
- Incumbents
- New entrants
The more powerful the force, the more pressure it will put on decreasing prices or increasing costs, or both.
Understanding Porter’s Five Forces and Strategy
A distinctive value proposition, and a tailored value chain to deliver it, are the foundation of strategy. Your activities need to be different from rivals to have a meaningful strategic difference. As you work on understanding Porter’s Five Forces, you’ll learn how and why strategy works.
If you have a real competitive advantage, compared with rivals, you operate at a lower cost, command a premium price, or both. A good strategy is a set of activities that achieves competitive advantage.
A good strategy should pass five tests:
- Is there a distinctive value proposition?
- Is there a unique set of activities?
- Are the trade-offs different from rivals?
- Do the activities fit with each other?
- Is there continuity over time?
A good strategy delivers distinctive value through a distinctive value chain. It must perform different activities from rivals, or perform similar activities in different ways.
If the activities reinforce each other, imitating them all is difficult. If they involve trade-offs, your activities may contradict those of competitors, making it difficult for them to plunge in.
In one sense, strategy is choosing what not to do.
Don’t feel you have to make every customer happy. Trying to be something for everyone means you’re nothing to everyone. Make some customers unhappy.
Define what your company will not do. This is as important as defining what your company will do. Trade-offs make competitive advantage sustainable – rivals with different value chains will find it difficult to adopt your activities.
Instead of a single core competence, think of an interconnected web of activities that reinforce each other. This makes replication much more difficult.
- Read the full summary for descriptions of the master strategies of IKEA and Southwest Airlines, and how their activities reinforce each other to produce a large competitive advantage.
Strategy does not require heroic predictions about the future. All you need is a bet that your customers and needs will be robust for years.
- setting different prices for the same seat based on when someone bought a ticket. This may have seemed like smart price segmentation, but it trained customers to shop for prices.
- Rivalry among competitors is fierce. Empty seats are perishable goods, leading to price competition to make sure planes fly empty as little as possible.
- New entrants have a lower barrier than it seems – one can start an airline by leasing planes instead of buying them. Failed airlines have extra planes leading to excess capacity.
- Substitutes for travel like car, bus, and train keep prices down.
Understanding Porter’s Five Forces: Steps in Industry Analysis
The Five Forces are used to study the profitability of any industry. Michael Porter outlines the process on how to apply them to analyze an industry. Understanding Porter’s Five Forces will allow you to accurately conduct an industry analysis.
1. Define the industry by its product scope and geographic scope.
- Rule of thumb: Where there are large differences in forces, you are likely dealing with distinct industries. Each industry will need its own strategy.
- Product scope
- Motor oil used in consumer cars is different from those used in trucks. The latter involve corporate buyers and use different selling channels.
- Geographic scope: global, national, regional
- Buyers may be very different across geographies, even with the same product.
2. Identify the players comprising each of the Five Forces. Segment them into groups.
3. Understand the drivers of each force. Which are strong? Which are weak? Why?
4. Step back and understand the industry as a whole.

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Here's what you'll find in our full Understanding Michael Porter summary :
- How Porter's famous Five Forces help you analyze every industry
- How IKEA, Southwest Airlines, and Zara have ironclad, defensible strategies
- Why the best companies reject opportunities to focus on what they know