BUS 189 - Chapter 1
Strategy
A set of related actions that managers take to increase their company's performance.
Values
A statement of how employees should conduct themselves and their business to help achieve the company mission.
Risk Capital
Equity capital for which there is no guarantee that stockholders will ever recoup their investment or ear a decent return.
Corporate Level Managers
Individuals such as the CEO, other senior executives, and corporate staff that occupy the apex of decision making within the organization.
Functional Managers
Managers responsible for supervising a particular function, that is, a task, activity, or operation, such as accounting, marketing, research and development (R&D), information technology, or logistics.
Strategy Implementation
Putting strategies into action.
Shareholder Value
Returns that shareholders earn from purchasing shares in a company.
Strategy Formulation
Selecting strategies based on analysis of an organization's external and internal environment.
SWOT
Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats.
Cognitive Biases
Systematic errors in human decision making that arise from the way people process information.
Competitive Advantage
The achieved advantage over rivals when a company's profitability is greater than the average profitability of firms in its industry.
Vision Statement
The articulation of a company's desired achievements or future state.
Business Model
The conception of how strategies should work together as a whole to enable the company to achieve competitive advantage.
Mission Statement
The purpose of the company, or a statement of what the company strives to do.
Business Level Managers
The strategic role of these managers is to translate the general statements of direction and intent that come from the corporate level into concrete strategies for individual businesses.