@Wale1920@StatiSense No. That's not the meaning of what you said. You said "all SE states voted against MKO."
That's false. He marginally lost 3 states and won 1 since the vote gap is 50k.
Be sincere to yourself
@Cyru5kd7@CecilD77634@UnitedDays99 Except you are new to FT, fans have often considered his Man Utd stint a disappointing one. Same way I also consider Gvardiol (most expensive defender in the world)
@Cyru5kd7@UnitedDays99 Jack Grealish was the flop of the decade. Gvardiol hasn't played a season fit. Cancelo left after just 2 season. None of the players you listed has made TOTY
@I_am_Tawyyib@Imranmuhdz That bill is there bcos of Kano which has 44 LGAs. Some LGA are merged to produce 1 representative. Reason why it was stated the highest is 44
Porter's Five Forces and how you think about it when you evaluate that business or company.
β Buyer's power: Can customers force prices down?
The strategic implication is that strong buyers weaken pricing power (the cement guys can not relate sha, but the brewery guys can relate very well).
β Supplier's power: Can suppliers raise input costs?
The strategic implication is that strong suppliers squeeze gross margin.
β Rivalry: How hard are competitors fighting?
The strategic implication is that high rivalry compresses margins and raises spend.
β Threat of substitutes: Can customers solve the same need differently?
The strategic implication is that substitutes cap pricing and growth (NB: Pepsi is not a substitute for Coca-Cola. A Chivita juice or even bottled water looks more like a substitute).
β Threat of entrants: Can new players enter easily?
The strategic implication is that low barriers reduce long-term returns (for more than twenty years, we have not seen another entrant in the telco space).
And then there is one last one that does not get mentioned often: "regulatory power". This one can cascade every other force.
For example, MTNN is green in four of Porter's Five Forces. Even the last one (rivalry) is increasingly weakening. But "regulation" has a very strong hold on their business (re: the 2015 fine, capital repatriation, NIN-SIM, tariff-hike embargo, etc.).