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Inflection Point Analysis

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Inflection Point Analysis

Inflection point analysis (IPA) is extremely helpful in determining when leverage points are in transition. [18] Inflection points are defined as points of major change in any being, one relative to another. In people, inflection points may be identified as marriages, deaths, births, divorces, job changes, home purchases, etc.

Companies 1 and 2 are relatively close in Phase A, but suddenly one gets it, and the other does not. At the inflection point, valuations based upon performance diverge in Phase B.

In business entities, we try to identify inflection points, because they typically indicate one, or more, competitor(s) is/are "getting it," while the others are not, or are not as well. Business is replete with examples of this phenomenon. Pictorially, we may view an inflection point as in Figure 9.

Click To expand
Figure 9: Inflection Point

In Table 10, what we see is that one company, relative to others in the pairs, "got it," compared to the others. For instance, in 1998, Apple had a bigger market cap than Microsoft. However, by 1998, Microsoft's market cap far exceeded Apple's. In fact, Apple's market cap remained at $4 billion. Clearly, one company got it, and one did not. Microsoft wanted itssoftware on everyone's computer; Apple only wanted its software on its own hardware. Such conditions are examples of major inflection points.

Table 10: Comparative Company Market Capitalization

Group

Company

Year/Market

Cap

($s)

Year/Market

Cap

($s)

A

Microsoft

1989/3 billion

1998/220 billion

 

Apple

1989/4 billion

1998/4 billion

       

B

GE

1983/25 billion

1997/260 billion

 

Westinghouse

1983/4 billion

1997/17 billion

       

C

Cisco

1993/4 billion

1998/76 billion

 

Bay Networks

1993/2 billion

1998/6 billion

       

D

Nike

1990/4 billion

1998/10 billion

 

Reebok

1990/3 billion

1998/2 billion

Source: Examples of major inflection points were highlighted by Slywotzky et al. (1999), as shown in table form. [a]

However, knowing intellectually what an inflection point is and determining the early onset of such a condition is a whole other matter.

[18]Based on the pioneering work of Slywotzky, A. J., Morrison, D. J., Moser, T., Mundt, K. A., & Quella, J. A. (1999). Profit Patterns. New York: Random House, in their discussion of "The Polarization Phenomenon."



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