Planning, Goal Setting, Strategy Formulation, Execution, Organizational Structure, Innovation and Change, Communication, Leading Teams, Quality and Performance
Portfolio strategy
Pertains to units and product lines that fit together in a logical way to provide synergy and competitive advantage for the organization
Michel Porter's 5 competitive forces
Potential new entrants, bargaining power of buyers, bargaining power of suppliers, threat of substitute products, rivalry among competitors
Crisis plans
Preparing to cope with catastrophic events that could destroy the organization
Delegating authority
Process managers use to transfer authority/responsibility to positions below them in hierarchy
Managing Innovation and Change
Product innovation, process innovation, disruptive innovation, design thinking, ambidextrous approach
Good plans
Reduce uncertainty and add clarity
Staff authority
Right to advise/recommend/counsel (but not command) in a specialist's area of expertise
Team effectiveness
Satisfaction, production, adaptation
Operational planning
Scope: departments/individuals, purview: lower-level management, goals: results (precise & measurable) expected from departments/work groups/individuals, plans: specify action steps towards achieving operational goals and that help meet tactical and strategic goals, timeframe: shortest time horizon
Reporting relationships
Division of labor, span of management, authority, chain of command
Strategic Business Unit (SBU)
Fully functional, independent business division with a unique mission, product line, competitors, and markets
Leading Teams
Functional teams, cross-functional teams, self-managed teams, agile teams, team effectiveness, team demographics, member roles, team processes, team conflict, conflict handling styles, negotiation
Managerial skill set for effective communication
Give feedback, use candor, asking questions, listen, pay attention to non-verbal communication, empathy
Planning
Identify goals and resources required to obtain goals
Scenario building
Looking at current trends/discontinuities and visualizing future possibilities
Creating a sense of urgency
Making people aware of problems and motivating them to accept change
Quantitative measures
Numerical information that can be measured
Vertical integration
Organization expands into businesses that either produce supplies needed to make its products/services or that distribute/sell those products/services to customers
Line authority
People in management positions have formal authority to direct and control immediate subordinates
Plan
A blueprint for goal achievement which specifies necessary resource allocations, schedules, tasks, and other actions
Goal
A desired future circumstance/condition that the organization attempts to realize
Flow
A state of concentration or complete absorption with the activity at hand and the situation... in which people are so involved in an activity that nothing else seems to matter
Information/channel richness
Amount of information that can be transmitted during a communication episode
Organizing
Assign tasks, group tasks, delegate authority, and allocate resources
BCG Matrix
Boston consulting group management strategy/portfolio matrix
Mission statement
Broadly stated definition of purpose that distinguishes the organization from others of a similar type
Methods for managing goal conflict
Build a coalition alliance, modify goals by time/location, debate and dialogue, promote cross-silo cooperation, manager departures
Limitations of Planning
Can create too much pressure, can create a false sense of certainty, may cause rigidity in a turbulent environment, can get in the way of intuition/creativity
Managing Quality and Performance
Controlling, monitoring, organizational control approaches, feedback control model, total quality management, budgetary control, financial control
Levels of strategy
Corporate, business, functional
Centralization
Decisions authority is located at/near the top
Decentralization
Decisions authority is pushed downward to lower organizational levels
Contingency plans
Define organization response for emergencies/setbacks/unexpected conditions
Michel Porter's 3 competitive strategies
Differentiation, cost leadership, focus
Tactical planning
Scope: major divisions, purview: middle management, goals: results major divisions/departments intend to achieve, plans: help execute major strategic plans and accomplish specific part(s) of organization's strategy, timeframe: short time horizon than the strategic plans
Strategic planning
Scope: the organization as a whole, purview: senior management, goals: board statements for where organization wants to be in the future, plans: action steps by which organization intends to attain strategic goals, timeframe: tends to be long term (two to five years)
Strategic management
Set of decisions and actions used to formulate and execute strategies that will provide a competitively superior fit between the organization and its environment
Organizational structure
Set of formal tasks assigned to individuals/departments, formal reporting relationships, effective employee coordination
Planning benefits
Source of motivation/commitment, guide resource allocation, guide action, set standard of performance
Goal setting criteria
Specific and measurable, challenging but realistic, linked to rewards, defined time period(s), translated (mapped) to key results
Portfolio diversification
Spreading investments around to limit exposure to any asset type and reduce portfolio volatility
Team processes
Stages of development, team norms, psychological safety, equal participation
SWOT
Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats
Mission
The organization's reason for existence
Strategy execution
The use of managerial/organizational tools to direct resources toward accomplishing strategic results
Implication tactics
Top management support, communication and education, participation, negotiation, coercion
Managing Communication
Transmission, interaction, transaction, communication needs, encoding, message, channel, decoding, feedback, field of experience, non-verbal communication
Chain of command
Unbroken line of authority that links all employees in an organization and shows who reports to whom
Reasons people resist change
Uncertainty, self-interest, lack of understanding/trust, different assessments and goals
Stages for implementing change
Unfreezing, changing, refreezing
Departmentalization
Vertical functional, vertical divisional, horizontal matrix, horizontal team, virtual network organization
Competitive Advantage
What sets organizations apart from others and provides a distinctive edge for meeting customer/client needs