Monopolistic Success: The Success Of The Cheesecake Factory '

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The success of the Cheesecake Factory
Monopolistic competition is defined as differentiated types of products that are similar but not alike. The restaurant industry truly captures the monopolistic principal, and each one offers a different element of uniqueness, but all are basically competing for the same customers. Keeping this in mind this makes monopolistic competition inefficient because of product differentiation. However the inefficiency of monopolistic competition is a small price to pay for a diverse range of restaurant choices. The industry I analyzed will center on casual dining specifically “The cheese cake factory” which has restaurants in numerous areas, but my focus is the one located in a shopping town center surrounded …show more content…

Firms such as P.F. Chang’s and Applebee’s, and Olive Garden, offer’s menus that may be (more or less) good substitutes of each other, but none of them perfect substitutes. When viewed from this stand point, no one company has the market cornered. Indeed, virtually every restaurant location must compete not only against other publicly traded chains, but also a wide array of delis, pizzerias, fine dining restaurants and the economy. The Cheesecake Factory is noticeably differentiated in its bakery, and represents commodity diversity that uses this segment of the company to stand out from a large number of …show more content…

Because of this the company faces a downward-sloping demand curve, and its marginal revenue curve is a downward-sloping line that lies below the demand curve. If demand decreases, you can be sure that price will fall in the short run, with some restaurants shutting down, and exit the industry as easy as they entered. When addressing short and long run equilibrium, the short run restaurant profits depend on how many other businesses are in the industry. For example, if there is a smaller amount of restaurant’s in the industry (comparative to the long-run equilibrium amount of restaurants), then a typical restaurant in monopolistic competition will make a profit. But “too many” will dilute the industry, causing restaurants to experience a loss in the short run. Yet, regardless of the competition and economic uncertainty, the Cheesecake Factory has expanded in the domestic and international

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