Unit 2 HO 2-4 (continued)
THE VALUE OF ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS
"Coping with the constantly changing environment is probably
the most important determinant of a company's success or fail
ure in a free-enterprise system."' Although most businesses
large and small-will agree with this statement,
small businesses
must be particularly sensitive to environmental influences. There
are two important reasons why this is so.
First, the small firm's responsiveness to environmental is
sues may be a source of considerable competitive strength. The
small business can stay closer to the consumer, holding a mon
itoring thumb on the pulse of its target consumers. By virtue
of its size, the small firm can move with speed, flexibility, and
sensitivity when shifts in customer desire and preference arise.
Larger, more structured, and hierarchically-bound organiza
tions may be unable to alter quickly their direction or focus.
Consequentl, the small business may be able to etch out a
competitive edge against the large firms.
Second, size
also renders small businesses particularly vul
nerable to environmental influences. They can ill-afford to mis
read the environment. Although one mistake, one misreading
of a critical environmental trend may adversely affect a large
firm, such errors can be readily absorbed into the breadth of
its total operations. However, a mistake of similar magnitude
may destroy asmall business. Rare is the small business whose
resources are sufficient to withstand such mistakes. In short,
the small company may be significantly impacted by environ
mental upheavals that larger firms can easily navigate and
weather.
I. Alan J. Rowe, Richard 0. Mason,
and Karl E. Dickel, Strategic
ManagementandBusinessPoliy:A MethodologicalApproach. (Reading, Mas
sachusetts: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1982), 57.
22 PartOne The Analysis Phase
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