Assignment No # 1 To 11
Assignment No # 1 To 11
Assignment No # 1 To 11
TECHNOLOGY
BIZTEK
By:
Asad Mazhar
ASSIGNMENT NO. 1
• Strategy
• Tactics
• Operations
• Vision
• Mission
• Goal
VISSION:-
A vision statement is sometimes called a picture of your company in the future but it’s so much
more than that. Your vision statement is your inspiration, the framework for all your strategic
planning.
A vision statement may apply to an entire company or to a single division of that company.
Whether for all or part of an organization, the vision statement answers the question, “Where do
we want to go?”
What you are doing when creating a vision statement is articulating your dreams and hopes for
your business. It reminds you of what you are trying to build.
MISSION:-
The mission statement articulates the company's purpose both for those in the organization and
for the public.
The difference between a mission statement and a vision statement is that a mission statement
focuses on a company’s present state while a vision statement focuses on a company’s future.
STRATEGY:-
Strategy is a framework which guides those choices that determine the nature and direction of
an organization
Alternative chosen to make happen a desired future, such as achievement of a goal or solution
to a problem.
Art and science of planning and marshalling resources for their most efficient and effective use.
The term is derived from the Greek word for generalship or leading an army
GOAL:-
Objective or target, usually driven by specific future financial needs. Some common financial
goals for an individual are: saving for a comfortable retirement, saving to send children to
college, managing finances to enable a home purchase, minimizing taxes, maximizing return on
investments given a certain risk tolerance, and estate or trust planning. Given a person's goals,
he/she decides on a pattern of expenses and suitable investments that will enable those goals
to be achieved. Institutions also have financial goals, for example making certain pension
contributions at specific times, or retiring a certain amount of debt by a certain date. Often, both
people and institutions find it useful to employ a professional to help them in setting up a
financial plan that will enable their goals to be met.
TACTICS:-
Tactics are the specific actions, sequences of actions, and schedules you use to
fulfill your strategy. If you have more than one strategy you will have different tactics for each.
OPERATIONS:-
A business, unit or function within a company.
Strategic management can be defined as the art and science of formulating, implementing, and
evaluating cross-functional decisions that enable an organization to achieve its objectives.
Identification of Opportunities:-
It allows for identification of prioritization and
exploitation of opportunities.
Identification of Problems:-
It provides an objectives view of management
problems-
Integrated Efforts:-
It helps integrated the behavior of individual into a total
efforts.
Forward Thinking:-
It encourages forward thinking.
Positive Attitude:-
It encourages a favorable attitude towards change.
Team Work:-
It allows more effective allocation time and resources to identical
opportunities.
Dynamic Leadership:-
It gives a degree of discipline and formality to the
management of business.
7. Random Planning:-
Becoming so engrossed in current problems that in
sufficient or no planning.
8. Intuitive Decisions:-
Top managers making many intuitive decisions that
conflicts with the formal plan.
9. Poor Work Environment:-
Failing to create a collaborative climate
supportive of change.
Rigid Planning:-
Being so formal in planning that flexibility and creativity
are briefed.
1. Poor Motivation:-
Some organization do not consider employees as
there most important assets, therefore less and poor
motivates has carry the employees in organization.
3. Wastefulness:-
Some firms see planning as a waste of time because
no marketable product is produced. Time spent on
planning is an investment.
4. Laziness:-
People may not want to put the effort needed to formulate
a plan.
5. Over Confidence:-
As individual a most expensive, they may rely less on
formalized planning. Rarely, however is this
appropriate. Being over confidence and over
smarting experience can bring demise. Forethought
is rarely work and is often the mark of
professionalism.
6. Under Confidence:-
People may have had a previous bad experience
with planning that is case in which have been long,
cumbersome, impractical or inflexible- planning like
anything else can be done badly.
7. Poor Timing:-
People may sincerely believe the plan is wrong. They
may view the situation from a different view point or they
may have aspirations for themselves or the organization
that are different from the plan. Different people in
different jobs have different perceptions of a situation.
8. Self Interest:-
When some people has achieved status, privilege or
self-esteem through effectively using an old system he
or she often sees a new plan as a threat.
9. Fear of Failure:-
By not taking action, there is a little risk of failure
unless a problem is urgent and pressing whenever
something worthwhile is attempted there is some
risk of failure.
VISION:-
Defines the desired or intended future state of an organization or enterprise in
terms of its fundamental objective and/or strategic direction. Vision is a long term
view, sometimes describing how the organization would like the world in which it
operates to be. For example a charity working with the poor might have a vision
statement which read "A world without poverty".
MISSION:-
A mission statement is a formal, short, written statement of the purpose of a
company or organization. The mission statement should guide the action of the
organization, spell out it overall goal, provide a sense of direction and guide
decision making. It provides the framework or context within which the
company’s strategy is formulated.
OBJECTIVES:-
Mission, purpose or standard that can be reasonable achieved within the
expected time frame and with the available resources objectives contribute to
the fulfillment of specified goal.
b) What are the mission statement component.
No one can deny the importance of a mission statement in motivating a business. Mission
statement not only helps the business to remain its track but also help determining the
very purpose of its existence. Finding a project mission statement is never possible. There
are ten elements which involves in making a mission statement. Each good mission
statement incorporates all of these elements in it. These elements are:
a. Philosophy:-
Philosophy of a company is a much wider term to over. By defining
philosophy, the company defines its way of working its culture its beliefs
and how it sees work to be carried out. It is also an analytical way of
defining the norms on which it runs.
b. Self Concept:-
By defining the self concept the business is telling its heart out to the
world. In this the company shows the outside world, its core strength
and the place it sees itself in the future.
c. Public Image:-
Public image is a much wider term and can include not only the
corporate social responsibility but the overall impact of the action taken by
the company on its image. This may include from minor issues like
installing manufacturing recycling plant by a company for pollution
reduction to improve its packaging to enhance a better brand image for
one of its top line brand.
d. Customer Focus:-
In this element, the organization mentions who are its customer or
potential customers. What will it do to serve them and how will its
customers find this organization different from the other
organization providing similar products or services in the market.
e. Product or Services:-
In mission statement a business has to mention the producer or
service or both they are providing. By defining products or service
the company distinguishes its offered product or services from
competitive products or services of similar nature provided by
other competitors in the market.
f. Markets:-
By defining markets, the company is declaring which type of customer
will be targeted or who will be the intended audience for which it will
produce products or services. For example a luxury car maker like Royal
Royce has a potential market of only the richest of the rich in the world.
g. Technology:-
By defining technology, the company tells its current technology use in
making of its products. It also tells about unique way in which its products
or services are technologically more advance then their alternatives.
h. Profitability:-
In this element the mission statement business defines, means it seeks to
survive in the longer run. It is not merely list them out but also defines
the logic behind them and how will the company strive to achieve them.
i. Employee Focus:-
This is also including the way in which the company will treat its
employees and how will it look towards this relationship in a
longer period of time.
j. Ethical Base:-
c) Discuss briefly any ten characteristics of mission statement.
Broad Scope:-
The firms reason for existence and its purpose be wide and have
broader scope.
Inspiring:-
Firm should reflect inspiring and interesting products/services as well as
environment.
ASSIGNMENT NO. 5
Competitors:-
Any person or entity which is a rival against another. In business
a company is the same industry or a similar industry which offers a similar
product or service. Competition also requires becoming more efficient in
order to reduce cost.
Suppliers:-
Suppliers are individual or business that provide goods or services
to vendor in return for the agreed upon compensation. As such suppliers do
not generally intact with consumers directly, learning that task to vendor or
shop owners.
Distributors:-
Entity that buys non-competing products or product-lines,
warehouses them, and resells them to retailers or direct to the end users or
customers. Most distributors provide strong manpower and cash support to
the supplier or manufacturer's promotional efforts. They usually also provide
a range of services (such as product information, estimates, technical
support, after-sales services, credit) to their customers.
Creditors:-
An entity (person or institution) that extends credit by giving another
entity permission to borrow money if it is paid back at a later date. Creditors
can be classified as either "personal" or "real". Those people who loan
money to friends or family are personal creditors. Real creditors (i.e. a bank
or finance company) have legal contracts with the borrower granting the
lender the right to claim any of the debtor's real assets (e.g. real estate
or car) if he or she fails to pay back the loan.
Customers:-
A customer (also known as a client, buyer, or purchaser) is usually
used to refer to a current or potential buyer or user of the products of an
individual or organization, called the supplier, seller, or vendor. This is
typically through purchasing or renting goods or services
Employees:-
An employee contributes labor and expertise to an endeavor.
Employees perform the discrete activity of economic production. Of the three
factors of production, employees usually provide the labor.
Managers:-
An individual who is in charge of a certain group of tasks, or a certain
subset of a company. A manager often has a staff of people who report to
him or her. As an example, a restaurant will often have a front-of-house
manager who helps the patrons, and supervises the hosts. In addition, a
specific office project can have a manager, known simply as the project
manager. Certain departments within a company designate their managers
to be line managers, while others are known as staff managers, depending
upon the functionality of the department.
Stockholders:-
One who owns shares of stocks in a corporation or mutual fund.
For corporation along with the ownership come a right to declared dividend
and the right to vote on certain company matters including the board of
directors also called shareholders.
Labor Union:-
Labor union (American English) is an organization of workers that
have banded together to achieve common goals such as better working
conditions. The trade union, through its leadership, bargains with the
employer on behalf of union members (rank and file members) and
negotiates labour contracts (collective bargaining) with employers. This may
include the negotiation of wages, work rules, complaint procedures, rules
governing hiring, firing and promotion of workers, benefits, workplace safety
and policies.
Trade Association:-
An industry trade group also known as a trade association or
sector association. On industry trade association participates in public
relations activities such as advertising, education, political donations,
lobbying but main focus is collaborations between companies.
Government:-
A government is the organization, or agency through which a
political unit exercises its authority, controls and administers public policy,
and directs and controls the actions of its members or subjects.
Community:-
A community is a group of interacting species sharing a populated
environment. In human communities, intent, belief, resources, preferences,
needs, risks, and a number of other conditions may be present and common,
affecting the identity of the participants and their degree of cohesiveness.
Natural Environment:-
The natural environment, encompasses all living and non-
living things occurring naturally on Earth or some region thereof. It is an
environment that encompasses the interaction of all living species.
P E S T Culture
Finance Probability:-
Finance is the science of funds management. The general
areas of finance are business finance, personal finance, and public finance.
Finance includes saving money and often includes lending money. The field
of finance deals with the concepts of time, money, risk and how they are
interrelated. It also deals with how money is spent and budgeted.
One facet of finance is through individuals and business organizations, which
deposit money in a bank. The bank then lends the money out to other
individuals or corporations for consumption or investment and charges
interest on the loans.
Accounting:-
Accountancy is the process of communicating financial information
about a business entity to users such as shareholders and managers. The
communication is generally in the form of financial statements that show in
money terms the economic resources under the control of management; the
art lies in selecting the information that is relevant to the user and is reliable.
In accounting analyze the supplier cost, distribution cost, market cost,
consumer service cost and management cost.
Management:-
Management in all business areas and organizational activities
are the acts of getting people together to accomplish desired goals and
objectives efficiently and effectively. Management comprises planning,
organizing, staffing, leading or directing, and controlling an organization (a
group of one or more people or entities) or effort for the purpose of
accomplishing a goal. Resourcing encompasses the deployment and
manipulation of human resources, financial resources, technological
resources, and natural resources.
Production Operation:-
A firm focusing on a production orientation specializes in
producing as much as possible of a given product or service. Thus, this
signifies a firm exploiting economies of scale, until the minimum efficient
scale is reached. A production orientation may be deployed when a high
demand for a product or service exists, coupled with a good certainty that
consumer tastes do not rapidly alter (similar to the sales orientation).
Organizational Ethics:-
Organizational Ethics is the ethics of an organization, and it
is how an organization ethically responds to an internal or external stimulus.
Organizational ethics is interdependent with the organizational culture.
Organizational ethics express the values of an organization to its employees
and/or other entities irrespective of governmental and/or regulatory laws
Corporate-level managers
• Corporate-level managers include the chief executive officer (CEO), senior executives
and the corporate staff. The corporate-level managers manage the strategic
management process for the whole organization. These managers may carry
designations such as CEO, managing director, executive director or president.
Division Level –Division President-OR Executive Vice
President
• Business-level managers are the strategic leaders at the business, division or SBU levels.
These managers manage the strategic management process at the business-level. These
may carry designations such as general manager or vice-president.
Functional-level managers
• Functional-level managers are the strategic leaders of specific functions such as
marketing or operations. They are called marketing managers or operations managers.
The functional managers manage the strategic management process at the functional
level.
Operational-level
• At the operational-level, there are managers who are responsible for the implementation
of strategies within their assigned functional areas. They occupy positions such as deputy
manager of marketing or assistant manager of operations.
Effectively Managing the Organizational Resources Portfolio Strategic leaders are called upon to
manage effectively, the portfolio of organizational resources. Such a portfolio includes financial capital,
human capital, social capital and organizational capital.
Sustaining an Effective Organizational Culture Strategic leaders try to build and sustain an effective
organizational culture.
Emphasizing Ethical Practices Strategic leaders emphasize on ethical practices in word and deed
when the strategies are being implemented.
Establishing Balanced Organizational Controls Strategic leaders use a combination of financial and
non-financial controls to help the organization achieve its objectives.
Role of Senior Managers: The senior (or top) management consists of managers at the
highest level of the managerial hierarchy. Senior managers perform a variety of roles by assigning the
board and the chief executive in the formulation, implementation and evaluation of strategy.
Organizationally, they come together in the form of different types of committees, task forces, work
groups, think tanks, management teams and the like, to play a very important role in strategic
management.
It is important to note that all persons responsible for strategic planning at the
various levels ideally participate and understand the strategies at the other
organizational levels to help ensure coordination, facilitation and commitment while
avoiding inconsistency.
b) Draw a table showing the alternative strategie
s & the following areas.
Forward Integration
Definition: Gaining ownership or increased control over distributors or retailers.
Example: Southwest Airlines just began selling tickets through Galileo.
Backward Integration
Definition: Seeking ownership or increased control of a firm’s suppliers.
Example: Hilton Hotels could acquire a large furniture manufacturer.
Horizontal Integration
Definition: Seeking ownership or increased control over competitors.
Example: Huntington Bancshares and Sky Financial Group in Ohio merged.
Market Penetration
Definition: Seeking increase market share for present products or services in
present market through greater marketing efforts.
Example: McDonald’s is spending millions on its “Shrek the Third” promotions aimed
at convincing consumers it offers healthy items.
Market Development
Definition: Introducing present products or service into new geographic areas.
Example: Burger king opened its first restaurant in Japan.
Product Development
Definition: Seeking increased sales by improving present products or services or
developing new ones.
Example: Google introduced “Google Presents” to compete with Microsoft’s
PowerPoint.
Related Diversification
Definition: Adding new but related products and services.
Example: MGM Mirage is opening its first non casino luxury hotel.
Unrelated Diversification
Definition: Adding new, unrelated products and services.
Example: Ford Motor Company entered the industrial bank business.
Retrenchment
Definition: Regrouping through cost and asset reduction to reverse declining sales
and profit.
Example: Discovery Channel closed its 103 mall-based and stand-alone stores to
focus on the internet and laid off 25% of its workforce.
Divestiture
Definition: Selling a division or part of an organization.
Example: Whirlpool sold its struggling Hoover floor-care business to Techtronic
Industries.
Liquidation
Definition: Selling all of a company’s assets, in parts, for their tangible worth.
Example: Follow Me Charters sold all of its assets and ceased doing business.
ASSIGNMENT # 08
Q) Draw a line diagram showing strategy formulation analytical frame
work discuss briefly?
STAGE ONE:
THE INPUT STAGE
A. The Input Stage includes the External Factor Evaluation (EFE) Matrix, the Competitive
Profile Matrix (CPM), and the Internal Factor Evaluation (IFE) Matrix.
B. Procedures for developing an EFE Matrix, an IFE Matrix, and a CPM were presented in
earlier documents.
C. The input tools require strategists to quantify subjectively during early stages of the
strategy-formulation process. Making small decisions in the input matrices regarding the
relative importance of external and internal factors allows strategists to generate and
evaluate alternative strategies more effectively.
STAGE TWO:
THE MATCHING STAGE
A. The Matching Stage
1. The Matching Stage includes the Threats-Opportunities-Weaknesses-Strengths
(TOWS) Matrix, the Strategic Position and Action Evaluation (SPACE) Matrix, the
Boston Consulting Group (BCG) Matrix, the Internal-External (IE) Matrix, and the
Grand Strategy Matrix.
2. Any organization, whether military, product-oriented, service-oriented, governmental,
or even athletic must develop and execute good strategies to win.
1. Aggressive
2. Competitive
3. Defensive
4. Conservative
STAGE THREE:
Strategy-formulation concepts and tools do not differ greatly for small, large, for profit, or
nonprofit organizations. However, strategy implementation varies substantially among different
types and sizes of organizations. Implementing strategies requires such actions as altering sales
territories, adding new departments, closing facilities, hiring new employees, changing an
organization's pricing strategy, developing financial budgets, developing new employee benefits,
establishing cost-control procedures, changing advertising strategies, building new facilities,
training new employees, transferring managers among divisions, and building a better computer
information system. These types of activities obviously differ greatly between manufacturing,
service, and governmental organizations.
Strategy Implementation in Management Perspectives
In all but the smallest organizations, the transition from strategy formulation to strategy
implementation requires a shift in responsibility from strategists to divisional and functional
managers. Implementation problems can arise because of this shift in responsibility, especially if
strategy-formulation decisions come as surprise to middle- and lower-level managers. Managers
and employees are motivated more by perceived self-interests than by organizational interests,
unless the two coincide. Therefore, it is essential that divisional and functional managers be
involved as much as possible in strategy-formulation activities. Of equal importance, strategists
should be involved as much as possible in strategy-implementation activities.
ASSIGNMENT # 09
b) Draw a line diagram showing relationship between the strategy and
structure discuss briefly?
Chandler's core argument is that a large number of companies adopted a multi-divisional form (M-Form)
as the form of organizations independently of each other and without coordination because they had
become to adopt a business strategy that required that organizational form.
Chandler defines strategy as the determination of the basic long term goals and objectives and the
adoption of courses of action and the allocation of resources necessary for carrying out goals. He defines
structure as the design of the organization through which the business is administered including the lines
of authority and communication and the data that flows through these lines.
Chandler argues that every group in his study had, often driven by pressures of others, followed through a
set of steps independently of each other:
The results were set of a structure which was different in details but fundamentally similar as well.
Chandler suggested that these changes and the needs for this process (and the similar outcome) was
driven by a series of technological and market changes that included the growth of transportation and
communication networks that made increased coordination possible (and profitable) and necessary to
compete.
In a way of supporting his basic structure follows strategy argument, he argued that the forms themselves
were a product of a particular strategic context of management.
a) Strategic Areas:
Finance
Accounting
Human Resources
Finance:
The Finance and Strategic Management concentration gives you state of the art
analytical techniques and approaches to assist in financial and strategic decisions.
The concentration provides the necessary insight and skills to determine, whether
these decisions are appropriate in an overall strategic context.
Accounting:
Strategic Management Accounting has been defined as "a form of management
accounting in which emphasis is placed on information which relates to factors
external to the firm, as well as non-financial information and internally generated
information."
Human Resources:
Strategic human resource management is designed to help companies best meet
the needs of their employees while promoting company goals. Human resource
management deals with any aspects of a business that affects employees, such as
hiring and firing, pay, benefits, training, and administration. Human resources may
also provide work incentives, safety procedure information, and sick or vacation
days.
b) Competitors Analysis:
Production
Marketing
R &D
Production:
Planning, implementation, and control of industrial production processes to
ensure smooth and efficient operation. Production management techniques
are used in both manufacturing and service industries. Production
management responsibilities include the traditional “five M's”: men and
women, machines, methods, materials, and money. Managers are expected
to maintain an efficient production process with a workforce that can readily
adapt to new equipment and schedules.
Marketing:
In the present competitive business environment, organizations that develop and
implement effective marketing strategies can create more value for their
customers. An effective marketing strategy provides direction, improves the brand
image, helps in developing the right goals and enhances the overall performance of
an organization. For developing effective marketing strategies, the organization has
to first decide the customer segments it wants to serve, the customer needs it
wants to fulfill and establish the price that the customers are willing to pay for its
products and services. Strategic marketing management is all about helping the
organization develop a unique identity in the market, grow its businesses
geographically and serve the customers better than the competitors. Strategic
marketing is a continuous process of developing marketing strategies taking into
consideration the constantly evolving trends in the business environment and by
giving utmost importance to customer satisfaction.
R &D:
Strategic R&D Management programmed you will look at how organizations
make product innovation happen, and examine how senior managers engage in and
support product innovation in a way that supports – rather than dissipates – the
thrust of their business strategy. Strategic R&D Management programmed has
been constantly evolving, consistently remaining at the forefront of product
development business concern.
C) Contemporary:
MIS
Customer Relation
M.I.S:
MIS is an integrated information system, which is used to provide
management with needed information on a regular basis.
The term system in MIS implies ORDER, ARRANGEMENT, and
PURPOSE.
The information can be used for various purposes,
-strategic planning
-delivering increased productivity
-reducing service cycles
-reducing product development cycles
-reducing marketing life cycles
-increasing the understanding of customers' needs
-facilitating business and process re-engineering.
Customer Relation:
Customer relationship management (CRM) is a widely-implemented strategy
for managing a company’s interactions with customers, clients and sales prospects.
Customer relationship management describes a company-wide business strategy
including customer-interface departments as well as other departments. The overall
goals are to find, attract, and win new clients, nurture and retain those the company
already has, entice former clients back into the fold, and reduce the costs of
marketing and client service.
ASSIGNMENT # 11
b) Define the following terms:
• Strategy Review
• Strategy Evaluation
• Strategy Control
Strategy Review:
As owner-manager of your business or as a member of its management
team, you should stand back once in a while and review your business'
performance. The areas you need to look at are:
Strategy Control:
"Strategic control focuses on the dual questions of whether (1) the strategy is being implemented
as planned; and (2) the results produced by the strategy are those intended."
This definition refers to the traditional review and feedback stages which constitutes the last step
in the strategic management process. Normative models of the strategic management process
have depicted it as including there primary stages: strategy formulation, strategy implementation,
and strategy evaluation (control).
Strategy-Evaluation Framework
Internal Environment
Review External Environment
No
Measures Organization/Performance
Deficient
& Reward
REVIEWING BASES OF STRATEGY
Reviewing the underlying bases of an organization's strategy could be
approached by developing a revised EFE
Matrix and IFE Matrix. A revised IFE Matrix should focus on changes in the
organization's management,
marketing, finance/accounting, production/operations, R&D, and computer
information systems strengths and weaknesses. A revised EFE Matrix should
indicate how effective a firm's strategies have been in response to key
opportunities and threats. This analysis could also address such questions as
the following:
1. How have competitors reacted to our strategies?
2. How have competitors' strategies changed?
3. Have major competitors' strengths and weaknesses changed?
4. Why are competitors making certain strategic changes?
5. Why are some competitors' strategies more successful than others?
6. How satisfied are our competitors with their present market positions and
profitability?
7. How far can our major competitors be pushed before retaliating?
8. How could we more effectively cooperate with our competitors?
Numerous external and internal factors can prohibit firms from achieving
long-term and annual objectives. Externally, actions by competitors, changes
in demand, changes in technology, economic changes, demographic shifts,
and governmental actions may prohibit objectives from being accomplished.
Internally, ineffective strategies may have been chosen or implementation
activities may have been poor.
Objectives may have been too optimistic. Thus, failure to achieve objectives
may not be the result of unsatisfactory work by managers and employees.
All organizational members need to know this to encourage their support for
strategy-evaluation activities. Organizations desperately need to know as
soon as possible when their strategies are not effective. Sometimes
managers and employees on the front line discover this well before
strategists.