1 - Basic Concepts of Strategic Management
Strategy formulation includes
defining the competitive advantages of the business, crafting the corporate mission, specifying achievable objectives, and setting policy guidelines
Innovation
describes new products, services, methods, and organizational approaches that allow the business to achieve extraordinary returns
Mintzberg's Modes of Strategic Decision-making
Entrepreneurial mode Adaptive mode Planning mode Logical incrementalism
Strategic Decision-making Process
Evaluate current performance results. Review corporate governance. Scan and assess the external environment. Scan and assess the internal corporate environment. Analyze strategic factors. Generate, evaluate, and select the best alternative strategies. Implement selected strategies. Evaluate implemented strategies.
It is the implementation of potential innovations that truly drives businesses to be remarkable
Innovation
Strategic management includes:
Internal and external environmental scanning Strategy formulation Strategy implementation Evaluation and control
Population ecology
Once an organization is successfully established in a particular environmental niche, it is unable to adapt to changing conditions.
Institution theory
Organizations can and do adapt to changing conditions by imitating other successful organizations.
As managers attempt to better deal with their changing world, a firm generally evolves through the following four phases of strategic management
Phase 1: Basic financial planning Phase 2: Forecast-based planning Phase 3: Externally oriented strategic planning Phase 4: Strategic management
Theories of Organizational Adaptation
Population ecology Institution theory Strategic choice perspective
simple way to conduct environmental scanning
SWOT analysis
Strategic Management
a set of managerial decisions and actions that determines the long-run performance of a corporation
Logical incrementalism
a synthesis of the planning, adaptive, and, to a lesser extent, the entrepreneurial modes
Organizational learning theory
an organization adjusts defensively to changing environment and uses knowledge offensively to improve fit between itself and its environment
Learning organization
an organization skilled at creating, acquiring, and transferring knowledge and at modifying its behavior to reflect new knowledge and insights Organizational learning is a critical component of competitiveness in a dynamic environment.
Adaptive mode
characterized by reactive solutions to existing problems, rather than a proactive search for new opportunities
Consequential strategic decisions
commit substantial resources and demand a great deal of commitment from people at all levels
Research indicates that the planning mode is not only more analytical and less political than are the other modes, but also more appropriate for
dealing with complex, changing environments
Vision
describes what the organization would like to become
Strategy
forms a comprehensive master approach that states how the corporation will achieve its mission and objectives maximizes competitive advantage and minimizes competitive disadvantage corporate, business, functional
The attainment of an appropriate match, or "fit," between an organization's environment and its strategy, structure, and processes
has positive effects on the organization's performance
Planning mode
involves the systematic gathering of appropriate information for situation analysis, the generation of feasible alternative strategies, and the rational selection of the most appropriate strategy
Strategic choice perspective
not only do organizations adapt to a changing environment, but also have the opportunity and power to reshape their environment
Business strategy
occurs at the business unit or product level, and it emphasizes improvement of the competitive position of a corporation's products or services in the specific industry or market segment served by that business unit
Strategy formulation
process of investigation, analysis, and decision-making that provides the company with the criteria for attaining a competitive advantage
Strategic audit
provides a checklist of questions, by area or issue, that enables a systematic analysis to be made of various corporate functions and activities
Strategic flexibility
the ability to shift from one dominant strategy to another demands long-term commitment to development and nurturing of critical resources also demands that the company become a learning organization
Functional strategy
the approach taken by a functional area to achieve corporate and business unit objectives and strategies by maximizing resource productivity.
Sustainability
the use of business practices to manage the triple bottom line
Rare strategic decisions
unusual and typically have no precedent to follow
Strategy implementation
process by which strategies and policies are put into action through the development of programs, budgets, and procedures
Mission
purpose or reason for the organization's existence (what the organization is now)Corporate strategy
three characteristics Strategic decisions
rare consequential directive Mintzberg's Modes of Strategic Decision-making
Performance
result of activities includes actual outcomes of the strategic management process
Objectives
results of planned activity
Feedback/learning process
revise or correct decisions based on performance
Directive: Strategic decisions
set precedents for lesser decisions and future actions throughout an organization.
Initiation of Strategy: Triggering event
something that acts as a stimulus for a change in strategy and can include: new CEO external intervention threat of change of ownership performance gap strategic inflection point
Entrepreneurial mode
strategy is made by one powerful individual
Strategic planning becomes increasingly important as
the environment becomes more unstable.
Globalization
the integrated internationalization of markets and corporations has changed the way modern corporations do business
The triple bottom line involves:
the management of traditional profit/loss the management of the company's social responsibility the management of its environmental responsibility
Environmental Scanning
the monitoring, evaluating and disseminating of information from the external and internal environments to key people within the organization
Basic model of Strategic management - four basic elements:
Environmental scanning Strategy formulation Strategy implementation Evaluation and control
strategy formulation
(strategic or long-range planning)
Benefits of Strategic Management
Clearer sense of strategic vision for the firm Sharper focus on what is strategically important Improved understanding of a rapidly changing environment
Learning organizations are skilled at four main activities
Solving problems systematically Experimenting with new approaches Learning from the organization's own experiences and past history as well as from the experiences of others Transferring knowledge quickly and efficiently throughout the organization
Strategic Decision-making
Strategic decisions deal with the long-term future of an entire organization and havec: rare consequential directive
Policy
a broad guideline for decision-making that links formulation of a strategy with its implementation
Corporate strategy
a company's overall direction regarding its general attitude toward growth and the management of its various businesses and product lines
hierarchy of strategy
a grouping of strategy types by level in the organization. A nesting of strategies by level from corporate to business to functional, so that they complement and support one another
Evaluation and control
a process in which corporate activities and performance results are monitored so that actual performance can be compared with desired performance