Unit 2
HO 2-4 (continued)
eating out. However,
the attitude
and function
of dining
out
has changed.
Time is also
critical because
families seem to
want
to eat more
quickly. They
desire less
of a dining experience
and
more of a functional
orientation
from restaurants.
Quick
orders
are seen as
reasonable tradeoffs
for limited
menus with
few or no frills.
Apparently, the
restaurant has
not responded
to these needs and
therefore, is
losing ground
to more in-touch
competitors.
As another
example,
consider a running
store. Ten
years
ago the business
carried only
running shoes
and appealed
to
a target of
serious runners.
However, changing
social
values
have forced
the store
to change as more
people are
running
for exercise.
It has become
an activity
that refuses to
be bound
by sex or
age. Further,
as running has
gained in popularity,
so
has the consumer
demand
for running gear,
and how-to books.
These
accessories
have become bigger
sellers--on
a more reg
ular and higher
turnover
basis-than shoes.
By tracking
these
changes
and anticipating
their effects,
the store was
able to
expand
its original
business concept
to include these
extra and
quite
profitable items.
One
may argue that
logically any store
concentrating
only
on running shoes
would be
forced to change
because of con
sumer demand.
That may
be true, but it
is not the key point.
If
the shoe store was
blind to evolving
changes in
the industry,
and relied
solely on running
shoes, other
entrepreneurs
would
soon
become aware
of the gap and
enter the market
to fill the
consumer demand
for running
accessories. On
the other hand,
if the shoe
store monitors
its environment,
it can anticipate
these
changes and modify
and expand
its offerings.
Here, the
business
mitigates
the threat of potential
competition
and cap
italizes
on an opportunity
for expanding
its product
line and
increasing
sales
volume.
Economic Changes
Finally,
economic changes
must be considered.
Economic
pro
jections
or forecasts
are important
because of
the lag-effects
economic
,actors have
on business forces
and consumer
deci
28
Part One The Analysis
Phase
171