close Visitor Edition

The McKinsey Quarterly is the business journal of McKinsey & Company. Register now for immediate access to hundreds of articles.

Register to read this article

  • Text Size

  • Print

  • Download PDF

  • Link to This

How companies respond to competitors: A McKinsey Global Survey

Management theory suggests that companies facing serious competitive threats should extensively analyze how to fight back. Actual managers, however, say they are satisfied with the results of a less active approach, according to a McKinsey survey. Companies that understand how their competitors really react may be able to gain an edge.

MAY 2008

Strategy, Strategic Thinking Article, competitive response survey

In This Article

When a competitor strikes—introducing an innovative new product, for example, or slashing prices—management theory suggests that companies should immediately dive into complex analyses of their possible moves and countermoves across the whole competitive landscape, assess these potential responses with sophisticated financial metrics such as net present value (NPV), and promptly mount a response.

The real world is much simpler, according to a McKinsey survey of executives from around the world and from a variety of sectors, including financial services, manufacturing, and high tech.1 On the whole, as companies determine how to respond to a competitor’s moves, they generally assess three or fewer options and don’t look forward more than two years. About half don’t examine more than one round of countermoves by any competitor. A significant number rely on intuition to determine a response. And companies most frequently respond with whatever counteraction is most obvious in the moment—answering a price cut, for example, with a cut of their own, which often doesn’t hit the market until at least one or two sales cycles after the competitor’s move.

Even so, most respondents to the survey say they were able to counteract at least some of the reduction in earnings...

Free Membership

As a free member you can also:

  • Read hundreds of free articles
  • Receive e-mail newsletters and alerts
  • Search our archive

Simply fill in this form

View our privacy policy.
We will not share your e-mail. See details.

* Required