When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Growth–share matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Growth–share_matrix

    The growth–share matrix [2] (also known as the product portfolio matrix, [3] Boston Box, BCG-matrix, Boston matrix, Boston Consulting Group portfolio analysis and portfolio diagram) is a matrix used to help corporations to analyze their business units, that is, their product lines.

  3. Strategic business unit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strategic_business_unit

    The precise location is determined by the two axes, market Growth as the Y axis, Market Share as the X axis. Alternatively, changes over or two years can be shown by shading or other differences in design.xx. [3] Star products currently have high growth and high market-share. The Question Mark identifies products with low share but high growth.

  4. Market share analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_share_analysis

    Market share analysis is a part of market analysis and indicates how well a firm is doing in the marketplace compared to its competitors. Givon, Mahajan, and Muller have researched spreadsheet and word processing software firms to give a clearer image of how to determine market share in the software industry .

  5. Monopolistic competition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopolistic_competition

    The long-run characteristics of a monopolistically competitive market are almost the same as a perfectly competitive market. Two differences between the two are that monopolistic competition produces heterogeneous products and that monopolistic competition involves a great deal of non-price competition, which is based on subtle product ...

  6. Market domination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_domination

    Market dominance is the control of a economic market by a firm. [1] A dominant firm possesses the power to affect competition [2] and influence market price. [3] A firms' dominance is a measure of the power of a brand, product, service, or firm, relative to competitive offerings, whereby a dominant firm can behave independent of their competitors or consumers, [4] and without concern for ...

  7. Market power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_power

    It is salient to note that only a few firms make up the market share. Hence, their market power is large as a collective and each firm has little or no market power independently. [27] For firms trying to enter these industries, unless they can start with a large production scale and capture a significant market share, the high average costs ...

  8. Benchmarking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benchmarking

    Benchmarking is the practice of comparing business processes and performance metrics to industry bests and best practices from other companies. Dimensions typically measured are quality, time and cost.

  9. Fama–French three-factor model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fama–French_three-factor...

    In 2015, Fama and French extended the model, adding a further two factors — profitability and investment. Defined analogously to the HML factor, the profitability factor (RMW) is the difference between the returns of firms with robust (high) and weak (low) operating profitability; and the investment factor (CMA) is the difference between the returns of firms that invest conservatively and ...