Module 4 - Strategy Formulation
Module 4 - Strategy Formulation
Corporate strategy can be defined as – “the pattern of major objectives, purpose, or goals and
essential policies and plans for achieving those goals, stated in such a way as to define what
business the company is in or is to be in and the kind of company it is or is to be”
Corporate strategy decisions are top management decisions and entail defining “the business the
organisation is in”.
The current understanding about corporate strategy suggests that an organisation’s sustainability
and profitability depends on the value the organisation creates for customers.
The basic decision about what business to be in entails a trade-off among competing options, also
called the grand strategies. The grand strategies are stability, growth, retrenchment and
combination.
The concept of defining the business in practice meant choosing the optimum product market
scope for the business (Ansoff, 1968). The scope was determined by the external environment.
The three building blocks of corporate strategy are thus defined in this module as:
The options and the pathways to attain them (e.g. growth through expansion in global
markets)
Sustaining the strategy through resource allocation (e.g. allocate resources from
business A which is mature to Business B which is emerging) and
The grand strategies also referred to here as the options are Growth, Stability, Retrenchment or
Combination of the three. Within each of these broad options there are many sub-options which are
here referred to as pathways. Among the options:
- Stability implies a state of status quo, or rather a state where activity level is significantly
lower than it is in growth phase.
- Growth implies an expansion in the level of operations of the organisation.
- Retrenchment implies a state of deliberate cut back in activities. It is the “pruning of
activities” stage.
- Combination implies the balancing act between different businesses for sustained
profitability.
Stability Strategy (Page 78)
(What)
(When)
- Post-merger - when an organisation has to settle the congruity issues between the different
entities coming together.
- Subsequent to a prolonged duration of rapid growth
- In family-dominated organisations
- When organisations service niche markets
- Recession conditions impose the choice of stability strategy.
Question
What are the impacts of stability strategy would be on managerial motivation and morale?
- The managers have been trained to look for challenges and give their best shot at meeting
them.
- Apparently it seems that in the stability phase, managerial motivation may be low.
- Stability is the phase of analytical reflection for decisions they embed the possibilities for
futureaction.
- Insightful managers would reflect on those and work on a plan developed to move from
stability to growth.
(What)
- Growth strategy implies a substantive increase in the level of business over the previous
level.
- There is a broadening of the scope of customer groups, customer functions, products and
technologies, singly or jointly.
- is characterised by enhancement of investment, expansion of business ,development of new
products, increased market share, development and use of new technologies through own
R&D or procurement of technology.
- It aggressively explores new markets. Managers believe growth implies organisational and
managerial effectiveness
(Why/When)
- It is assumed to lead to profitability which in turn leads to increase in shareholder wealth.
- It is a necessity for survival in volatile industries
- It is favoured by external conditions: low competitor rivalry, less or nonexistent entry barriers
and opportunity for growth.
- It is seen as a sign of success and equated with effective performance.
Pathways to growth Strategy
- Manufacturing raw materials (backward integration)
- Taking up distribution (forward integration)
- Being in many unrelated business
(What)
- Cut back strategies are those where the organisation curtails or, in extreme cases, divests
nonperforming assets/products/divisions/businesses/functions.
(When)
- Cashflows are negative
- Industry profitability is declining
- Operational efficiency has deteriorated
- Competitors are efficient and steadily increasing market share
- Physical facilities and assets deteriorate
- The organisation is hard pressed for cash
8 Steps to follow