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CH 1

The document discusses strategic management and its key attributes. It defines strategic management as directing an organization toward overall goals and objectives through analysis, decisions about formulating strategy, and actions to implement strategy. It outlines the strategic management process, which includes strategy analysis, formulation, and implementation. Strategy analysis involves analyzing the organization's goals, environment, and internal strengths. Strategy formulation develops strategies at different levels, and strategy implementation takes actions to put the strategies into practice through organizational design, control systems, and entrepreneurship.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
23 views43 pages

CH 1

The document discusses strategic management and its key attributes. It defines strategic management as directing an organization toward overall goals and objectives through analysis, decisions about formulating strategy, and actions to implement strategy. It outlines the strategic management process, which includes strategy analysis, formulation, and implementation. Strategy analysis involves analyzing the organization's goals, environment, and internal strengths. Strategy formulation develops strategies at different levels, and strategy implementation takes actions to put the strategies into practice through organizational design, control systems, and entrepreneurship.

Uploaded by

Ken Siu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Because learning changes everything.

CHAPTER 1
Strategic Management:
Creating Competitive
Advantages

© 2021 McGraw Hill. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom.
No reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill.
Learning Objectives
1. Define strategic management and its four key attributes.
2. Understand the strategic management process and its three
interrelated and principal activities.
3. Identify the vital role of corporate governance and stakeholder
management as well as how “symbiosis can be achieved
among an organization’s stakeholders.
4. Understand the importance of social responsibility, including
environmental sustainability, and how it can enhance a
corporation’s innovation strategy.
5. Recognize the need for greater empowerment through the
organization.
6. Explain how an awareness of a hierarchy of strategic goals can
help an organization achieve coherence in its strategic
direction.

© McGraw Hill
The Important of Leadership

Consider …
Maintaining competitive success or even surviving
over long periods of time is difficult for companies of
any size.
SO how much credit (or blame) does a leader
deserve?

© McGraw Hill
Two Perspectives of Leadership

EXTERNAL CONTROL ROMANTIC VIEW


PERSPECTIVE
External forces A leader is the key force
determine the in the organization’s
organization’s success. success.
• Economic • Steve Jobs.
downturns.

© McGraw Hill
To Live or To Brake?

© McGraw Hill 5
Leaders Can Make a Difference

• Be proactive — anticipate change.


• Refine strategies continually.
• Be aware of external opportunities and threats.
• Understand thoroughly the firm’s resources and
capabilities.
• Make strategic management both a process and
a way of thinking throughout the organization.

© McGraw Hill
Do you have strategical mindset?

Please choose on your Menti

© McGraw Hill 7
Defining Strategic Management

Strategic management involves:


• Analysis.
• Strategic goals (vision, mission, strategic objectives).
• Internal and external environment.
• Decisions — Formulation.
• What industries should we compete in?
• How should we compete in those industries?
• Actions — Implementation of strategy.
• Allocate necessary resources.
• Design the organization to bring intended strategies to
reality.
© McGraw Hill
Two Fundamental Questions

1. How should we compete in order to create a


competitive advantage in the marketplace?
2. How can we create competitive advantages in
the marketplace that are unique, valuable, and
difficult for rivals to copy or substitute?

Note: Operational effectiveness is not enough to


sustain a competitive advantage.

© McGraw Hill
Strategic Management

Key attributes of strategic management:


• Directs the organization toward overall goals and
objectives.
• Includes multiple stakeholders in decision making.
• Needs to incorporate short-term and long-term
perspectives.
• Recognizes trade-offs between efficiency and
effectiveness.

© McGraw Hill
Strategic Management Trade-offs

Managers need to be ambidextrous.


• Focus on long-term effectiveness.
• Expand product-market scope by proactively
exploring new opportunities.
• At the same time:
• Focus on short-term efficiency.
• Align resources to take advantage of existing
product markets.

© McGraw Hill
Question 1 Please select on your Menti

According to Henry Mintzberg, the realized


strategies of a firm

© McGraw Hill
Intended vs. Realized Strategies. The business
environment is far from predictable.

Intended Strategy Realized Strategy


• Organizational Decisions are
decisions are determined by both
determined only by analysis (deliberate) and
analysis. unforeseen
environmental
• Intended strategies developments,
rarely survive in the unanticipated resource
original form. constraints, and/or
changes in managerial
preferences (emergent).

© McGraw Hill
Strategic Management Process

Exhibit 1.3 The


Strategic
Management
Process.

Access the text alternative for slide images

© McGraw Hill
Strategy Analysis 1

• Strategy analysis is the starting point in the


strategic management process.
• The analysis needs to be done to effectively
formulate and implement strategies.
• It involves careful analysis of the overarching
goals of the organization.
• It requires a thorough analysis of the
organization’s external and internal environment.

© McGraw Hill
Strategy Analysis 2

Analyzing organizational goals and objectives.


• Establish a hierarchy of goals.
• Vision.
• Mission.
• Strategic Objectives.
Analyzing organizational goals and objectives.
• Managers must monitor and scan the environment as
well as analyze competitors.
• General environment.
• Industry environment.

© McGraw Hill
Strategy Analysis 3

Assessing the internal environment of the firm.


• Analyze strengths and relationships among activities that
constitute a firm’s value chain.
• Analysis can uncover potential sources of competitive
advantage.
Assessing a firm’s intellectual assets.
• Knowledge workers and other intellectual assets drive
competitive advantage and wealth creation.
• Networks and relationships plus technology enhance
collaboration, accumulates and stores knowledge.

© McGraw Hill
Strategy Formulation 1

Based on strategy analysis, strategy formulation


is developed at several levels.
• Business-level strategy: How to compete in a given
business to attain competitive advantage.
• Corporate-level strategy: What businesses to compete in;
how businesses can be managed to achieve synergy.
• International strategy: What strategies are needed as the
business ventures beyond its national boundaries.
• Entrepreneurial initiatives: How can businesses create
new value.

© McGraw Hill
Strategy Formulation 2

Formulating business-level strategy.


• Successful firms develop bases for sustainable
competitive advantage through:
• Cost leadership and/or:
• Differentiation, as well as:
• Focusing on a narrow or industrywide market segment.

Formulating corporate-level strategy.


• Addresses a firm’s portfolio (or group) of businesses.
• What business or businesses should we compete in?
• How can we manage this portfolio of businesses to
create synergies?
© McGraw Hill
Strategy Formulation 3

Formulating international strategy.


• What is the appropriate entry strategy?
• How do we go about attaining competitive advantage
in international markets?
Entrepreneurial strategy and competitive
dynamics.
• How do we recognize viable opportunities?
• How do we formulate effective strategies?

© McGraw Hill
Strategy Implementation 1

Strategy implementation takes action to


implement the formulated strategy.
• Ensure proper strategic control systems.
• Establish an appropriate organizational design,
coordinating and integrating activities within the firm.
• Coordinate activities with suppliers, customers, alliance
partners.
• Leadership ensures organizational commitment to
excellence and ethical behavior.
• Promote learning and continuous improvement.
• Act entrepreneurially in creating new opportunities.

© McGraw Hill
Strategy Implementation 2

Strategic control and corporate governance.


• Exercise Informational Control.
• Monitor and scan the environment.
• Respond effectively to threats and opportunities.
• Exercise Behavioral Control.
• Proper balance of rewards and incentives.
• Appropriate cultures and boundaries (or constraints).
• Practice Effective Corporate Governance.

© McGraw Hill
Strategy Implementation 3

Creating effective organizational designs.


• Organizational structures must be consistent with
strategy.
• Organizational boundaries must be flexible and
permeable.
• Strategic alliances must capitalize on capabilities of
other organizations.

© McGraw Hill
Strategy Implementation 4

Creating a learning organization and an ethical


organization.
• Effective leaders.
• Set a direction.
• Design the organization.
• Develop an organization committed to excellence
and ethical behavior.
• Create a “learning organization.”
• Benefit from individual and collective talents.

© McGraw Hill
Strategy Implementation 5

Fostering corporate entrepreneurship.


• Firms must continually improve and grow.
• Firms must find new ways to renew themselves.
• Entrepreneurship and innovation provide for new
opportunities to enhance a firm’s innovative capacity.

© McGraw Hill
Corporate Governance and Stakeholder
Management

Appropriate strategic management requires an


effective and appropriate corporate structure.
Corporate governance is the relationship among
various participants in determining the direction and
performance of corporations.
Primary participants are:
• Shareholders.
• Management (led by the Chief Executive Officer).
• The Board of Directors (BOD).

© McGraw Hill
Corporate Governance
Board of Directors
Elected representatives of
the owners.
Ensure interests and motives
of management are aligned
with those of the owners.
• Create an effective and
engaged board.
• Address shareholder activism.
• Provide proper managerial
rewards and incentives.
Exhibit 1.4 The Key Elements of
• Establish external control Corporate Governance.
mechanisms.
Access the text alternative for slide images.

© McGraw Hill
Stakeholder Management
Exhibit 1.5 An Organization’s Key Stakeholders and the
Nature of Their Claims.
Stakeholder Group Nature of Claim
Stockholders Dividends, capital appreciation
Employees Wages, benefits, safe working environment, job
security
Suppliers Payment on time, assurance of continued relationship

Creditors Payment of interest, repayment of principal

Customers Value , warranties


Government Taxes, compliance with regulations

Community Good citizenship behavior such as charities,


employment, not polluting the environment

© McGraw Hill
Two Views of Stakeholder Management

ZERO SUM SYMBIOSIS

• Stakeholders • Stakeholders are


compete for attention dependent upon
and resources. each other for
• The gain of one is a success and well-
loss to the other. being.
• Stakeholders receive
mutual benefits.

© McGraw Hill
A sample of Symbiosis

© McGraw Hill 30
Question 2 Please choose on your Menti

P&G created a cleaning product that led to a change


in consumer shopping habits and also a revolution in
industry supply chain economics. According to the
text, this is an example of

© McGraw Hill
Social Responsibility and Environmental
Sustainability

• Firms have multiple stakeholders and must go


beyond a focus solely on financial results.
• Social responsibility is the expectation that
businesses or individuals will strive to improve
the overall welfare of society.
• Firms can measure a triple bottom line,
assessing financial, social, AND environmental
performance.
• Sustainability projects can yield substantial
benefits even when they are difficult to quantify.

© McGraw Hill
Empowered Strategic Management

Strategic management requires an integrative view


of the organization.
ALL functional areas and activities must fit together
to achieve goals and objectives.
Leaders are needed throughout.
• Local line leaders have profit and loss responsibility.
• Executive leaders champion and guide ideas.
• Internal networkers hold little positional power, but
have conviction and clarity of ideas.

© McGraw Hill
Coherence in Strategic Direction 1

Organizations express priorities best through stated


goals and objectives that form a hierarchy of goals.
• Vision evokes powerful and compelling mental
images of a shared future.
• Mission encompasses the organization’s current
purpose, basis of competition, and competitive
advantage.
• Strategic objectives operationalize the mission
statement with specific yardsticks.

© McGraw Hill
Coherence in Strategic Direction2

Exhibit 1.6 A Hierarchy of Goals.

Access the text alternative for slide images .

© McGraw Hill
Coherence in Strategic Direction 3

Organizational vision.
• A “massively inspiring” goal, overarching, long term.
• A destination driven by and evoking passion.
• Developed and implemented by leadership.
• A fundamental statement of an organization’s values,
aspirations, and goals.
• Captures both the minds and hearts of employees.
• BUT can backfire and erode a company’s credibility.

© McGraw Hill
Coherence in Strategic Direction 4

Mission statement.
• Encompasses both the purpose of the company and
the basis of competition and competitive advantage.
• More specific than the vision.
• Focuses on the means by which the firm will compete.
• Incorporates stakeholder management.
• Communicates why an organization is special and
different.
• Can and should change when competitive conditions
change.

© McGraw Hill
Coherence in Strategic Direction 5

Strategic objectives.
• Used to operationalize the mission statement.
• Provide guidance on how to fulfill mission and vision.
• Measurable, specific, appropriate, realistic and timely.
• Channel all employees’ efforts toward common goals.
• Can be both financial and nonfinancial.
• Should be challenging, yet help resolve conflicts.
• Provide a yardstick for rewards and incentives.
• BUT too many objectives can result in lack of focus.

© McGraw Hill
Because learning changes everything. ®

www.mheducation.com
Accessibility Content: Text Alternatives for Images

© McGraw Hill
The Strategic Management Process Text Alternative
Return to parent-slide containing images.

Map of the strategic management process, listing all chapters and their titles.
The chapters for Strategy Analysis are
Chapter 1, Introduction and Analyzing Goals and Objectives.
Chapter 2, Analyzing the External Environment.
Chapter 3, Analyzing the Internal Environment.
Chapter 4, Assessing Intellectual Capital.
The chapters concerning Strategy Formulation are
Chapter 5, Formulating Business-level Strategies.
Chapter 6, Formulating Corporate-Level Strategies.
Chapter 7, Formulating International Strategies.
Chapter 8, Entrepreneurial Strategy and Competitive Dynamics.
Strategy Implementation chapters are
Chapter 9, Strategic Control and Corporate Governance.
Chapter 10, Creating Effective Organizational Designs.
Chapter 11, Strategic Leadership Excellence, Ethics, and Change.
Chapter 12, Fostering Corporate Entrepreneurship.
and Chapter 13 concerns Case Analysis.

Return to parent-slide containing images.


© McGraw Hill
Corporate Governance Text Alternative
Return to parent-slide containing images.

The graphic is a triangle with Management (headed by the chief


executive officer) at the pinnacle, the Board of Directors (elected by the
shareholders to represent their interests) at the bottom right corner and
Shareholders (owners) at the bottom left corner. This shows, that as
Monks and Minow define, it is a “relationship among various participants
in determining the direction and performance of corporations.”

Return to parent-slide containing images.


© McGraw Hill
Coherence in Strategic Direction2 Text Alternative
Return to parent-slide containing images.

The graphic depicts the hierarchy of goals as a triangle on the left, with
vision at the top, mission statement in the middle, and strategic objectives
at the base. To the right of the triangle is a graphic showing an arrow
going both ways between general (vision) and specific (strategic
objectives) and another arrow going both ways between long time
horizon (vision) and short time horizon (strategic objectives).
Visions might be a general message, lacking specifics, whereas strategic
objectives would be more specific, containing details. Visions have longer
time horizons than would strategic objectives.

Return to parent-slide containing images.


© McGraw Hill

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