CH 1
CH 1
CHAPTER 1
Strategic Management:
Creating Competitive
Advantages
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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.
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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?
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Two Perspectives of Leadership
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To Live or To Brake?
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Leaders Can Make a Difference
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Do you have strategical mindset?
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Defining Strategic Management
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Strategic Management
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Strategic Management Trade-offs
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Question 1 Please select on your Menti
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Intended vs. Realized Strategies. The business
environment is far from predictable.
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Strategic Management Process
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Strategy Analysis 1
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Strategy Analysis 2
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Strategy Analysis 3
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Strategy Formulation 1
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Strategy Formulation 2
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Strategy Implementation 1
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Strategy Implementation 2
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Strategy Implementation 3
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Strategy Implementation 4
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Strategy Implementation 5
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Corporate Governance and Stakeholder
Management
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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.
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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
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Two Views of Stakeholder Management
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A sample of Symbiosis
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Question 2 Please choose on your Menti
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Social Responsibility and Environmental
Sustainability
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Empowered Strategic Management
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Coherence in Strategic Direction 1
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Coherence in Strategic Direction2
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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.
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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.
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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.
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The Strategic Management Process Text Alternative
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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.
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.