McDonalds is the number one quick service restaurant brand in the world, and by far and away the market leader in the U.S. While it would be reasonable to assume that a company so large and powerful could simply do whatever it wanted in terms of strategy, that is not necessarily the case. David took the basic SWOT analysis concept, an old diagnostic tool that is used frequently in strategic management, and built upon it, basically developing what would be considered an applied SWOT. This technique begins by gathering information about the company, and understanding this information in terms of strengths, weaknesses, threats and opportunities -- the classic SWOT. The application part is when the strengths are examined within the specific context of exploiting opportunities, or specifically to defend against threats. Weaknesses are examined in terms of reducing the ability to take advantage of opportunities, and weaknesses that expose the company to threats (Torlak & Sanal, 2007). This method of analysis will help the organization make sense of the SWOT, contextualizing the findings and helping management to prioritize actions on the basis of the SWOT findings. This exercise will be applied to McDonalds here.
SWOT
The basic SWOT analysis focuses on getting a baseline level of understanding of the company and its operating environment. The first thing we have to establish is that McDonald's is good. It's the #1 company in its industry, almost triple the size of the #2 (Subway), and is rivalled by very few in terms of key metrics like average sales per unit, and has done this with a much higher level of saturation than anybody else doing $2 million per unit (Oches, 2014). So right away, we know that McDonald's has more strengths than weaknesses -- if it didn't it wouldn't dominate its industry.
Strengths for McDonalds include its brand, which is ranked 9th in the world by Interbrand. The only competitors in the top 100 are KFC at 68th, Starbucks at 76th and Pizza Hut at 96th (Interbrand, 2014). So McDonalds has a globally-dominate brand in its industry. It has the 2nd-most number of stores in the U.S., double the next-largest burger chain. Its stores do $2.5 million per year on average, better than just about anybody else in quick service, and with a much higher level of saturation. With $35 billion in sales in the U.S., McDonalds has nearly three times the sales levels of the #2 firm, Subway, and four times the number of sales of the #2 burger chain, Wendy's. It is worth noting that McDonald's total revenues are $28.1 billion -- the discrepancy is that the QSR number includes franchises, which only pay to McDonalds the franchise fee. It is the latter -- an expense for the franchises -- that McDonalds Corp records (MSN Moneycentral, 2014). The value of the QSR figure is that it provides a better sense of how strong the brand actually is, rather than just the way that sales accrue to head office -- it's a figure more comparable throughout the industry.
This is not to speak of McDonalds' other strengths -- its management team, its rock solid balance sheet, its distribution systems and supply chain excellence, and its operational efficiency. There are few things that McDonald's is not good at.
This does not mean that McDonalds has a total lack of weaknesses. It has come under criticism for many things. Staffing is one -- the company is literally a meme, the McJob. It's a company that has no trouble attracting high-level managerial talent, but has a lot of turnover, and a poor employer brand at the lower levels (Prokopeak, 2011). The brand has also become associated -- rightly or wrongly -- with a litany of abuses, including contribution to obesity (Baerlein, 2013), marketing unhealthy food to children (Jargon, 2014), environmental problems (Gray, 2009), not paying a living wage to its employees (Patton, 2014), even facing criticism about its creepy clown mascot (Crain's, 2014). Basically, one of the company's biggest weaknesses -- aside from the causal factors behind these complaints, is that it has become a symbol of all that is wrong about corporate America, corporations in general, America in general and a general lightning rod for abuse. This creates a lot of negative publicity;...
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