ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Investing Videos 424 videos
What is Devaluation? The process by which a nation deliberately lowers the value of its currency relative to other international currencies is call...
What is the Advance Decline Ratio? The advance decline ratio is used to determine how the market performed on a given day. It does this by comparin...
What is speculation? Speculation refers to a high risk, high reward scenario in investing. When an investor engages in a speculation, they take on...
Finance: What is Cannibalization? 14 Views
Share It!
Description:
Cannibalization in the market refers to when a company has a new service or product that competes with its own previous offerings more than with its competitors, and unless introduced by design, it is usually a negatively impacting event to the company’s revenues and market share.
- Social Studies / Finance
- Finance / Financial Responsibility
- Life Skills / Personal Finance
- Finance / Finance Definitions
- Life Skills / Finance Definitions
- Finance / Personal Finance
- Courses / Finance Concepts
- Subjects / Finance and Economics
- Finance and Economics / Terms and Concepts
- Terms and Concepts / Investing
- Terms and Concepts / Managed Funds
- Terms and Concepts / Stocks
- College and Career / Personal Finance
Transcript
- 00:00
finance a la shmoop -what is cannibalization ? pass me some more leg.
- 00:09
yeah the real Paleo diet. so yeah cannibalization in the business [leg and foot on a plate]
- 00:13
world isn't all that different from this. you'll hear the catchphrase you'd better
- 00:17
cannibalize your own business before someone else does. well what does that
- 00:22
mean? well the newspaper industry had a great gig for about 250 years. its profit
Full Transcript
- 00:28
Center was the help-wanted slash classified ad pages. in a major Metro
- 00:34
like Los Angeles they'd sell one page for 80 grand. that's ink on paper and had
- 00:40
a whole bunch of help-wanted ads on it and that page would cost them about 10 [classified page shown]
- 00:44
grand to produce. 70 grand in profit for a big page like that LA. yeah great great
- 00:49
work. if you can get it well then came along the commercial
- 00:52
Internet in the mid-1990s. instead of cannibalizing itself and building or
- 00:57
buying its own classifieds business albeit at lower margin it more or less
- 01:02
hid like a scared ostrich from the much more competitive and lower profit margin
- 01:08
world of the internet. cannibalizing for the industry would have meant that yes
- 01:12
they put out Help Wanted sections at vastly lower prices like the equivalent
- 01:16
of a page that instead of charging advertisers in LA 80 grand charging them [business models listed]
- 01:21
12 grand or less on a page that cost them maybe 5 grand to put out. and why
- 01:25
did it cost less? like not 10 grand but just 5 ? well a web server is way cheaper
- 01:31
to run then killing and pressing a bunch of dead trees, printing them with union
- 01:36
labor, delivering them and so on. so less revenues less profits but still
- 01:41
a relevant player in the help-wanted category. so what happened? well
- 01:45
Craigslist happened. and so did monster.com and indeed and Glassdoor and
- 01:50
a bunch of other specialty market players like dice in technology. while [glassdoor website pictured]
- 01:54
the newspaper industry acted like the local monopoly it was for 250 years and
- 02:00
instead of cannibalizing itself and living with lower profit margins, but
- 02:05
still living well it ignored the new threat of the internet and well it
- 02:09
starved to death. and now it's the internet company
- 02:12
tasting the sweet flavor of victory and the newspaper companies have well turned
- 02:17
into the modern-day Donner Party, sadly. [Donner party defined]
Related Videos
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
What is bankruptcy? Deadbeats who can't pay their bills declare bankruptcy. Either they borrowed too much money, or the business fell apart. They t...
What's a dividend? At will, the board of directors can pay a dividend on common stock. Usually, that payout is some percentage less than 100 of ear...
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...