Michael E Porter, professor Harvard Business School, visited Kenya for the first time in 2007, and held a seminar at the Strathmore Business School. But today, I wonder aloud
how relevant his most famous work applies to Kenya?You see at only 26 years of age, the young professor earned his PhD in Business Economics from Harvard and 6 years later (in 1979) developed his famous business strategy framework - Porter's five forces:
attractiveness of industry determined by rivalry, substitutes, buyer power, supplier power, and new entrantsBut in Kenya, the biggest and by far most uncertain factor is
GOVERNMENT. I read the headlines of the East African and Business Daily today with empathy:
1. How does government decide in one fell swoop to award market dominance to a laggard in the sector of fibre optic and data business?
2. How does government decide to perpetuate the same monopoloy by giving preference to a crippled player in all future government data contracts?
3. How does government hand over majority ownership of TEAMS - a telecom competitors joint venture - to one player at the expense of all the others?
4. How does government hand over, in a silver platter, management of taxpayers nationwide fibre backbone and trust it will be managed competitively?
All the while:
5. Instituting lopesided legislation to
"improve competitiveness" in the telecoms sector
6. Insisting acquisition of small telecom companies - shells issued with licenses/spectrum by same government - require their approval so as to eliminate speculators
Business made in Kenya I tell you; business made in Kenya.
How the French got their way in battle for Telkom KenyaTough rules for buyers of telecoms companies