Chapter I - Introduction
Chapter I - Introduction
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What is Strategy?
Firm
Competitive Shareholder
Advantage Value
Strategy Profit
• Strategy: Goal and set of policies designed to achieve
competitive advantage in a particular marketplace
• Competitive advantage: Ability to transform inputs into
goods and services at a maximum profit on a sustained
basis, better than competitors
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What is Strategy?
► Means by which long-term objectives are
achieved
► Large-scale, future-oriented plan
► Used to interact within competitive environment
to achieve company goals
► Provides a framework for managerial decisions
► Reflects a company’s awareness of the main
elements of competition
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Thinking Strategically:
The Three Big Strategic Questions
1. Where are we now?
2. Where do we want to go?
• Business(es) to be in and market positions
to stake out?
• Buyer needs and groups to serve?
• Outcomes to achieve?
3. How do we get there?
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The How's That
Define a Firm's Strategy
• How to grow the business
• How to please customers Strategy
is HOW
• How to outcompete rivals to . . .
t r a te gy
d o n eds
Aban atures
fe
Company Planned Stra
tegy
Experiences, New initiativ
es plus ong
strategy fea oing
Know-how, tures contin
ued
Resource from prior p
eriods Actual
Strengths and Company
Weaknesses, Strategy
and ti o n s to
v e rea c
Ad a pt i an ces
Competitive r c um s t
n g c i
Capabilities ch angi
i v e Strategy
Re a c t
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What is a Strategic Plan?
Where firm is headed --
Strategic vision and business
mission
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Dimensions of Strategic
Decisions
2. Strategic issues require large amounts
of the firm’s resources
► They involve substantial allocations of
people, physical assets, and money
► Strategic decisions commit the firm to
actions over an extended period
► In highly competitive firms, achieving
and maintaining customer satisfaction
frequently involves commitment from
every facet of the firm
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Dimensions of Strategic
Decisions
3. Strategic issues often affect the firm’s
long-term prosperity
► Strategic decisions commit the firm for a long
time, typically 5 years; however the impact
lasts much longer
► Once a firm has committed itself to a
strategy, its image and competitive
advantages are usually tied to that strategy
► Firms become known for what they do and
where they compete. Shifting away from that
can jeopardize their previous gains.
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Dimensions of Strategic
Decisions
4. Strategic issues are future-oriented
• They are based on what managers
forecast, rather than what they know
• Emphasis is on the development of solid
projections that will enable a firm to seek
the most promising strategic options
• A firm will succeed only if it takes a
proactive (anticipatory) stance toward
change
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Dimensions of Strategic
Decisions
5. Strategic issues usually have
multifunctional or multi-business
consequences.
• Strategic decisions have complex
implications for most areas of the firm
• Decisions about customer mix, competitive
emphasis, or organizational structure involve
a number of the firm’s SBUs, divisions, or
program units
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Dimensions of Strategic
Decisions
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Three Levels of Strategy
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Levels of strategy
Corporate
What direction are we going and what
business(es) are we in or do we want to be in?
Business
How are we going to compete in our chosen
business(es)?
Functional
What resources and capabilities do we have to
support the corporate and competitive strategies?
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Alternative Strategic Management Structures
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Figure : Levels of Strategy-Making in
a Diversified Company
Corporate-Level Corporate
Managers Strategy
Two-Way Influence
Business-Level
Managers Business Strategies
Two-Way Influence
Functional
Managers Functional Strategies
Two-Way Influence
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Characteristics of Strategic Management
Decisions
Corporate-lev
Greater need for
el
flexibility
decisions
Longer time horizons
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Characteristics of Strategic
Management Decisions : Business
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Characteristics of Strategic Management
Decisions
Bridge decisions at
corporate and functional
levels
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Characteristics of Strategic
Management Decisions: Functional
• Implement the overall strategy formulated at the
corporate and business levels
• Involve action-oriented operational issues.
• Are made periodically and leads to the implementation of
some part of overall strategy.
• Relatively short-range and involve low risk and modest
cost/ dependent on available resources.
• Are concrete, quantifiable and adaptable to ongoing
activities.
• E.g. Brand-name labeling, R&D applications, Inventory
levels etc.
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Characteristics of Strategic Management
Decisions
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Formality in Strategic Management
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Three Modes of Formality
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Forces Determining Formality
• Organizational Size
• Predominant Management Styles
• Complexity of Environment
• Production Process
• Purpose of the Planning System
• Stage of Firm’s Development
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Strategy Makers
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Strategy Makers: The CEO
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Strategy Makers: The CEO
• As a figurehead (organization head)
• Leadership Role
• Interpersonal Role
• Decision Role
• As an entrepreneur
• As a disturbance handler
• As a resource allocator
• As a negotiator
• Information Role
• Monitor
• Disseminator
• Spokesperson
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Benefits of Strategic
Management
• Financial benefits
• Improvement in sales
• Improvement in profitability
• Improvement in productivity
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Benefits of Strategic
Management
• Non-Financial benefits
• Enhanced awareness of external threats
• Improved understanding of competitors’
strategies
• Increased employee productivity
• Reduced resistance to change
• Understanding of performance-reward
relationships
• Enhances problem-prevention capabilities
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Benefits of Strategic
Management
1. Identification of opportunities
2. Objective view of management problems
3. Improved coordination and control
4. Minimizes adverse conditions and changes
5. Decisions to better support objectives
6. Effective allocation of time and resources
7. Internal communication among personnel
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Benefits of Strategic
Management
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Risks of Strategic Management
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Strategic Management Process
• Businesses vary in formulation and other processes
• The basic components of the models used to analyze
strategic management are similar
• Strategic management is a process—a flow of information
through interrelated stages of analysis toward the
achievement of some goal
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Thank you!