Principles of management - Chapter 4
OST
(OST) Objectives, strategies, tactics, system
Economics of Scope
economics in which materials and processes employed in one product can be used to make related products
What two ways can companies gain competitive advantage?
1 Attempt to be unique in some way by pursuing a differentiation strategy or 2 they can focus on efficiency and price by pursuing a low-cost strategy
Strategy Implementation
1 Define strategic tasks, 2 assess organization capabilities, 3 develop agenda, 4 create implementation plan
How do firms become true learning organizations?
1 Engaging in disciplined thinking and paying attention to details 2 searching constantly for new knowledge and ways to apply it 3 valuing and rewarding individuals who expand their knowledge 4 reviewing successes and failures carefully 5 bench-marking identifying and implementing the best business practices 6 sharing ideas throughout the organization via reports, info systems, informal discussions, site visions, education, training
Formal planning steps
1 Situational analysis, 2 alternative goals and plans, 3 goal and plan selection, 4 implementation, 5 monitor and control
6 major components of strategic management
1 establishment of mission, 2 analysis of external opportunities and threats, 3 analysis of internal strengths and weakness, 4 SWOT analysis and strategies, 5 strategy implantation, 6 strategic control
Resources are a source of competitive advantages
1 if resource is instrumental for creating customer value 2 a source of advantage if they are rare 3 difficult to imitate 4 enhance a firms competitive advantage when well organized
2 categories of resources
1 tangible assets like real estate and raw materials, 2 intangible such as company reputation
The 5 questions for effective strategy
1 where will we be active, 2 how will we get there, 3 how will we win the marketplace 4 how fast will we move in what sequence 5 how will we obtain financial returns
Differentiation Strategy
A company attempts to be unique in its industry or market segment along some dimensions that customers value. Based on high product quality, excellent marketing and distribution or superior service.
Strategic alliance
A formal relationship created among independent organizations with the purpose of joint pursuit of mutual goals.
Scenario
A narrative that describes a particular set of future conditions
Strategy
A pattern of actions and resource allocations designed to achieve the organization's goals.
Core capability
A unique skill or knowledge an organization possesses that gives and edge over competitors
How do managers manage resources?
Accumulate the right resources (such as talented people), combine the resources in ways that give the organization capabilities, such as researching new products/resolving problems for the customers, and leverage or exploit their resources to identify the opportunities where their competencies deliver value to their customers.
Plan
Actions or means the manager intends to use to achieve goals.
Core Capability
Also referred to as competence is something a company does especially well relative to its competitors.
Second Step in Strategic management
Analysis of external opportunities and threats
Third Step in Strategic management
Analysis of internal strengths and weaknesses
Rightsizing
Arrival at the size at which the company performs most effectively
Low cost strategies
Attempt to be efficient and offer a standard, no-frills product. Often are large companies and try to take advantage or the economics of scale in production or distribution. In many cases, their scale allows them to buy and sell at a lower price which leads to higher market share, volume and profits. Usually require low production costs.
Strategic planning
Becomes an ongoing activity in which all managers are encouraged to think strategically and focus on long term externally oriented issues as well as short term tactical and operational issues. A time horizon from 3-7 years. Making decisions about an organizations long term goals and strategies. Senior executives are responsible for the development and execution but usually don't formulate or implement entire plan personally
Situational Analysis
identifying the and diagnosing problem
Intermediate customers
Buy raw materials or wholesale products and then sell to final customers
Small companies
Can move fast, provide quality goods and services to targeted market niches, and inspire greater involvement from their people. May improve speed.
Mission
Clear, conscience expression of the basic purpose of the organization
Competitor Analysis
Competitor profile (major competitors), competitor analysis (goals, strategies, etc), competitor advantages (degree to which industry competitors have differentiated their products or services or achieved cost leadership
Barriers to Entry
Conditions that prevent new company for entering industry
What-if plans
Contingency plans
conglomerate (unrelated) diversification
Corporate strategies that involves expansion into unrelated businesses. Diversified business are also known as business portfolio
Summarize the types of choices available for corporate strategy
Corporate strategy identifies the breadth of a firm's competition domain. Can be kept narrow as in a concentration strategy or can move to suppliers and buyer via a vertical integration. Corp strategy can broaden a firm's domain via concentric (related) diversification or conglomerate (unrelated) diversification.
Size
Creates scale economics, lower costs per unit of productions
Final Customer
Customers who purchases products in the final form
Business Strategy
Defines the major actions by which an organization builds and strengthens its competitive position in the marketplace.
Value of Diversified Corporate Strategy
Depends on the individual circumstances.
First Step in Strategic management
Establishment of mission, vision and goals
Typical strategic goals include:
Growth, increasing market share, improving profitability, boosting return on investment, fostering both quantity and quality of outputs, increasing productivity customer service and contributing to society
BCG Matrix
Each business in the corp is plotted on the matrix on the basis of growth rate of its market and the relative strength of its competitive position in that market.
Macroeconomic Analysis
Economic factors that affect supply, demand, growth, competition and profitability within the industry
Strategic goals
Evolve from the mission and vision of the organization. CEO, with inputs from board of directors, establishes mission, vision and major strategic goals.
Other Internal Resource Analyses
Examine, as necessary, the strengths and weaknesses of other organizational activities such as R&D, management information systems, engineering and purchasing
Other internal resource analyses
Examine, as necessary, the strengths and weaknesses of other organizational activities such as R&D, management information systems, engineering and purchasing
Marketing audit
Examines strengths and weakness of major marketing activists and identifies markets, key market segments, and competitive position of organization and key markets
Human resources assessment
Examines strengths and weaknesses of all levels of management and employees and focus on key HR activities
Human Resources Assessment
Examines strengths and weaknesses of all levels of management and employees and focuses on key HR activities.
Marketing Audit
Examines strengths and weaknesses of major marketing activities and identifies markets, key market segments and the competitive position (market share) of the organization within key markets
Financial Analysis
Examines strengths and weaknesses through financial statements such as a balance sheet and income statement and compares trends to historical and industry figures
Operational analysis
Examines the strengths and weakness of the manufacturing and production or service delivery activities of the organization
Operations Analysis
Examines the strengths and weaknesses of the manufacturing, production or service delivery activities of the organization.
vertical integration
Expanding the domain of the organization into supply channels or to distributors. Companies that operate vertically often do so to reduce their costs
Internal resource audit
Financial analysis, marketing audit, operations analysis, other internal resource analyses, human resource assessment
Financial analyses
Financial strengths and weakness through financial statements such as balance sheets and income statements and comparative trends
Internal Resource Analysis
Financial, Marketing, Operational, Other Internal Resources (R&D), HR. This type of analysis gives strategic decision makers an inventory of the organization's existing functions, skills and resources as well as its overall performance levels.
What can be done to manage downsizing effectively or help make it more effective?
Firms should avoid excessive (cyclical) hiring to help reduce the need to engage in major or multiple downsizing, avoid common mistakes such as making slow, small, frequent layoffs; implementing voluntary early retirement programs that entice the best people to leave
Switching Costs
Fixed costs buyers when they change suppliers
Tactical planning
Focus on major actions a unit must take to fulfill the plan, Translates broad strategic goals and plans into specific goals and plans, Serves as the foundation for planning done by middle level front line managers
concentration strategy
Focuses on a single business competing in a single business industry
Mechanistic Organization
Form of organization that seeks to maximize internal efficiency
Planning
Formal expression of managerial intent
Management level of operational
Frontline manager with high detail less than one year
Planning process stage
Gather, interpret and summarize all information
Bench-marking
Goal is to understand the "best practices" of other firms thoroughly and to undertake actions to achieve both better performance and lower costs. Aligning a firms bottom line practices with best practices can improve its competitiveness.
Stakeholders
Groups and individuals who affect and are affected by the achievements of the organization's mission, goals and strategies. They include buyers, suppliers, competitors, government and regulatory agencies, unions, and employee groups.
Question Marks
High Growth, weak competitive positions businesses. Substantial investment to improve their position; otherwise divestiture is recommended.
Stars
High growth, strong competitive position businesses. Requires heavy investment but their strong positions allow them to generate the needed revenues.
corporate strategy
Identifies the sets of businesses, markets, or industries in which the organization competes and the distribution of resources among those businesses.
Managers who want to strengthen their firm's competitiveness via core capabilities should focus on
Identify existing core capabilities, acquire or build core capabilities that will be important for the future, keep investing in capabilities so that the firm remains world class and better than competitors, extend capabilities to find new applications and opportunities for the markets of tomorrow
General decision making steps
Identifying and diagnosing the problem, generate alternative solutions, evaluating alternatives, making the choice, implementing, evaluation
Functional Strategy
Implemented by each functional are of the organization to support the business strategy (Production, HR, marketing, R&D, finance, and distribution). Typically developed by the functional area executives with input of and approval from the executives responsible for the business strategy.
Supply Chain Management
The managing of the network of facilities and people that obtain materials from outside the organization, transform them into products and distribute them to customers right product/right quantities/right place/right cost
Environmental Analysis
Industry and Market Analysis, Competitor Analysis, Political and Regulatory Analysis, Social Analysis, HR Analysis, Macroeconomic Analysis and Technological Analysis. Should examine is forecasting future trends. Judgement is susceptible to bias and managers have limited ability to process information
Industry and Market Analysis
Industry profile (major product lines), industry growth (entire industry and key market segments), industry forces (threats of new industry entrants)
Resources
Inputs that can be accumulated over time to enhance the performance of a firm
Effective vision statements
Inspire, offer a worthwhile target for entire organization to work together
Strategic management
Involves managers from all parts of the organization in the formulation and implementation of strategic goals and strategies
High Quality Strategy
Is often more difficult for competitors to imitate
Define core capabilities and explain how they provide the foundation for business strategy
Is something a company does especially well relative to its competitors. It can provide a sustainable advantage if it's valuable, rare, difficult to imitate and well organized.
Downsizing
Is the planned elimination of positions or jobs. Common approaches include eliminating functions, hierarchical levels, or even whole units
Human Resources Analysis
Labor issues, key labor needs, shortages, opportunities
Political and Regulatory Analysis
Legislation and regulatory activities and their effects on the industry, political activity the level the industry undertakes
Survivor's syndrome
Loss of productivity and moral in employees who remain after downsizing
Dogs
Low Growth, weak competitive positions businesses. The remaining revenues from these businesses are realized and the then the businesses are divested.
Cash Cows
Low growth, strong competitive position businesses. Generate revenues in excess of their investment needs and therefore fund other businesses.
Strategic goals
Major targets or results that relate the the long term survival value and growth of the organization
Strategic triangle
Managers need to balance by meeting customer requirements better than competitors do.
M&A
Mergers and Acquisitions. The targets chosen depend on the organization's corporate strategy of either concentrating in one industry or diversifying its portfolio.
Strategy map
Method for aligning the organization's strategic and operational goals by providing a tool managers can use to communicate their strategic goals
Large companies
Market share grows, customers begin to view their products as having lower quality, future growth is complicated because winning over more customers, more difficult to coordinate and control.
Management level of tactical plan
Middle manager with medium detail for 1-2 years
Strategic decision making
Most exciting and controversial topics in management
concentric (related) diversification
Moving into businesses that are related to the companies original core business
Customer relationship management (CRM)
Multifaceted process, typically meditated by a set of information technologies, that focuses on creating two way exchanges with customers so that firms have an intimate knowledge of their needs.
Strategic, tactical and operational goals
Must be consistent, mutually supportive, and focused on achieving common purpose and direction
Competitive Environment Model
New Entrants, Suppliers, Substitutes & Complements, Customers, Rival Firms
Organic Structure
Organization form that emphasizes flexibility.
Strategic vision
Points to the future and provides a prospective on where the organization is headed and what it can become
How does the value chain add value in each step?
R&D focus on innovation and new products, inbound logistics receive and store raw material, operations transform the raw materials into final product, outbound logistics warehouse the product, marketing and sales identify customer requirements, service offers customer support such as repair.
SWOT
Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats, helps executives formulate a strategy. Helps managers summarize the relevant important facts from their external and internal analyses.
Fourth Step in Strategic management
SWOT analysis and strategy and formulation
Technological Analysis
Scientific or technical methods that affect the industry particularly recent and potential innovations
Value chain
Sequence of activities that flow from raw materials to the delivery of a good or service, with additional value created at each step
In setting a strategy, mangers try to match the organizations __________ and ___________ to the opportunity in the in the external environment
Skills and resources
Social Analysis
Social issues (current and potential), social interest groups (consumer, environmental, that attempt to influence the industry)
SMART
Specific goals, measurable, achievable, relevant, time-bound
Operational planning
Specific procedures and processes required at lower levels. Focus on routine tasks schedules and HR
Situational Awareness
Step 1 in the Planning process stage examines influences from external environment, examines current conditions and attempts to forecast future trends, outcome is the identification and diagnosis of planning assumptions, issues, and problems and helps decide whether to proceed with the next step.
Alternative Goals and Plans
Step 2 in the Planning process when you evaluate advantages, disadvantages, potential effects of each alternative goal and plan, prioritize or eliminate goals, consider implications of alternative plans for meeting high priority goals, pay a great deal of attention to the cost of any initiative and the investment return
Goal and Plan Selection
Step 3 in the Planning Process - identify the priorities and trade-offs among the goals and plans. Experienced judgment always plays an important role. A formal planning process leads to a written set of goals and plans for a particular set of circumstances. Manager will also be prepared to switch to another set of plans if the situation changes.
Implementation
Step 5 in the Planning Process - once managers have selected goals and plans, managers and employees must understand the plan, have resources and motivation, some have incentive programs to achieve goals and plans properly, to be successful requires a plan to be linked to other systems in the organization, particularly the budget and reward system
Monitor and Control
Step 6 in the Planning process - sometimes ignored but essential, without this stage you will never know if the plan is succeeding, measures performance and allow for corrective action
Two budget process
Strategic and operational using the (OST) Objectives, strategies, tactics, system
Sixth step in Strategic management
Strategic control
Describe how strategic planning should be integrated with tactical and operational planning
Strategic planning involves long term decisions about the entire organization. Tactical planning translates broad goals and strategies into specific actions to be taken to different parts of organization. Operational planning identifies the specific short term procedures and process required at a lower level of the organization.
Identify elements of the external environment and internal resources of the firm to analyze before formulating a strategy
Strategic planning is designed to leverage the strengths of a firm while minimizing the effects of its weaknesses. It's difficult to know the advantage a firm may have unless external analysis is done well.
Fifth Step in Strategic management
Strategy implementation
Describe the keys to effective strategy implementation
Strategy must be supported by structure, tech, HR, rewards info systems, culture, and leadership. The success of a plan depends on how well employees at low levels are able and willing to implement it. Participative management is one of the more popular approaches executives use to gain employees' input and ensure their commitment to strategy implementation.
Strategic planning
Strong external orientation and cover major portions of the organization
Strategic control
System designed to support managers in evaluating the organization's progress with its strategy and, when discrepancies exist, taking corrective action. Must encourage efficient operations that are consistent with the plan while allowing flexibility to adapt to changing conditions. Most include a budget to monitor and control major financial expenditures.
Goal and plan evaluation
evaluating alternatives
Monitor and control
evaluation
Alternative goals and plans
generating alternative solutions
Diseconomies of sale
The cost of being too big. "Small is beautiful" has become a favorite phrase of entrepreneurial business managers
Summarize the basic steps in the planning process
begins with situational analysis of the external and internal forces affecting the organization. This helps identify issues and problems and may bring alternative goals and plans. Next advantages and disadvantages should be evaluated against each other. Once goals and plans selected, implementation involves communicating the plan, allocating resources and making certain other systems support the plan. Institute control systems to monitor progress toward the goals
Management level of strategic plan
Top level manager, low detail for 3-7 years
High-Involvement Organization
Top management ensures that there is a consensus about the direction in which the business is heading.
What positive practices can firms use to ease the pain and increase the effectiveness of downsizing
Use downsizing as the last resort, choose positions to be eliminated by engaging in careful analysis and strategic thinking, train people to cope, identify and protect, give special attention and help to those who have lost their jobs, communicate constantly with people about the process, identify how the organization will operate more effectively in the future.
Strategy budget
Used to create and maintain longer-term effectiveness
Operational budget
Used to tightly monitor and achieve short term efficiency
Alliances
can increase speed and innovation and lower costs
kaizen
continuous improvement, a company attains and retains competitive advantage by continuing to improve.
Why do companies form strategic alliances?
develop new technologies, enter new markets and reduce manufacturing costs.
Learning organization
is an organization skilled at creating, acquiring, and transferring knowledge and modifying its behavior to reflect new knowledge and insights and are skilled at solving problems
Goal and plan selection
making the choice
Size of the organization
one of the most important characteristics of an organization and one one of the most important factors influencing its ability to respond effectively to its environment
customer now
refers to the next process, wherever the work goes next