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STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
Objectives:
• To explain core concepts in strategic management and provide examples of their relevance and use
by actual companies
• To focus on what every student needs to know about formulating, implementing and executing
business strategies in today’s market environments
• To teach the subject using value-adding cases that features interesting products and companies,
illustrate the important kinds of strategic challenges managers face, embrace valuable teaching points
and spark student’s interest.
Unit 1
Meaning and Nature of Strategic Management, its importance and relevance. Characteristics of
Strategic Management. The Strategic Management Process. Relationship between a Companies’
Strategy and its Business Model.
Unit 2
The Strategically relevant components of a Company’s External Environment – Industry Analysis –
Industry Analysis – Porter’s dominant Economic features – Competitive Environment Analysis –
Porter’s Five Forces model – Industry diving forces – Key Success Factors – concept and
implementation.
Unit 3
Describe Strategic Vision, Mission, Goals, Long Term Objectives, Short-Term Objectives and Discuss
Their Value to the Strategic Management Process, Resources, Capabilities, Competencies, Resource
Based View of the firm (RBV), Balanced Score Card, SWOC Analysis, Value Chain Analysis,
Benchmarking.
Unit 4
Business Strategies –Porter’s Generic Strategies: Low Cost, Differentiation, Best Cost, Focused Low
Cost and Focused Differentiation, Corporate Strategies – Growth Strategies (Internal Growth, External
Growth, Integration, Diversification, Mergers, Strategic Alliances), Ansoff’s Matrix, Stability
Strategies (No-Change, Profit and Proceed With Caution), Retrenchment Strategies (Turnaround,
Divestment and Liquation), International Business Level Strategies.
Unit 5
Strategy Implementation -Organisational Structure, Strategic Leadership and Organisational Culture
Strategy and Innovation - Introduction to Innovation: Process, Product and Platform; Creative
Destruction and Disruptive Technologies; Designing Organizations for Innovation; Innovation
Environments: Institutional Innovation and Environments, The Co-creation of Value, Open Innovation
and Open Strategy, National Innovation Systems, Learning Networks and Clusters, Social Innovation.
Unit 6
Strategic Control: Focus of Strategic Control, Establishing Strategic Controls (Premise Control,
Strategic Surveillance, Special Alert Control, Implementation Control), Exerting Strategic Control
(through Competitive Benchmarking, Performance and Formal and Informal Organizations). Case
study on Strategic Control.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS:
• Crafting and Executing Strategy, Arthur A. Thompson Jr., AJ Strickland III, John E Gamble, 18/e,
Tata McGraw Hill, 2012.
• Strategic Management, Alex Miller, Irwin McGraw Hill
• Strategic Management - Analysis, Implementation, Control, Nag A, 1/e, Vikas, 2011.
• Strategic Management - An Integrated Approach, Charles W. L. Hill, Gareth R. Jones, Cengage
Learning.
• Business Policy and Strategic Management, Subba Rao P, HPH.
• Strategic Management, Kachru U, Excel BOOKS, 2009.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
• Strategic Management: Concepts and Cases, David R, 14/e, PHI.
• Strategic Management: Building and Sustaining Competitive Advantage, Robert A. Pitts & David
Lei, 4/e, Cengage Learning.
• Competitive Advantage, Michael E Porter, Free Press NY
• Essentials of Strategic Management, Hunger, J. David, 5/e, Pearson.
• Strategic Management, Saroj Datta, jaico Publishing House, 2011.
• Business Environment for Strategic Management, Ashwathappa, HPH.
• Contemporary Strategic Management, Grant, 7/e, Wiley India, 2012
• Strategic Management-The Indian Context, R. Srinivasan, 4 th edition, PHI
CONTENTS
UNIT – I
MEANING AND NATURE OF STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
“Without a strategy, an organization is like a ship without a rudder, going around in-circles. It’s
like a tramp; it has no place to go.”
Strategic management is a process that combines three major interrelated activities: strategic
analysis, strategy formulation and strategy implementation.
Characteristics of SM
1. Uncertain: SM deals with future oriented, non routine situation. They create uncertainly.
Managers are unaware about consequences of their decision.
2. Long term issue: It deals with long term issue that may or may not have an immediate effect
3. Complex: Uncertainty brings complexity for SM. Managers face environment which is
difficult to comprehend. External and internal environment is analyzed
4. Fundamental: SM is fundamental for improving the long term performance of the organization
5. Long term implication: SM is not concerned with day to day operation. It has long term
implications. It deals with vision, mission and objective. It ensures that strategic is put into
action.
6. Organization-wide: SM had wide implication. It is not operation specific. It is system approach
.It involves strategic choice
7. Competitive Advantage: It helps manager find new sources of sustainable competitive
advantage. Executives apply the principles of SM in their work continuously try to deliver
products or service.
8. Effect of operation: Always has a sizable effect on operational issues.
2. It provides employees with clear objectives and directions for the future of the organization.
Intended Strategy: The original strategy, the top management plans and intends to implement.
FORMAL PLANNING
Systematic & Regular Planning department/cells manned by people with knowledge and experience in
“different aspects and dimensions of planning” at organizational level.
INFORMAL PLANNING:
Is common with small enterprises, and sometime with one man dominated not so small enterprises, is
often done in a casual way.
POLICY:
It is a broad, general guide to action which compels or directs goal attainment. Policies do not
normally dictate what action should be taken, but they do provide the boundaries within the objectives
must be pursued. Thus, policies serve to channel and guide the implementation of strategies. Actions
should be in line with the policy and not vice-versa.
Strategy:
Defined as a game plan, which can help organization to achieve its mission and objectives.
Long-range details, unstructured in nature
Tactical Planning
Refers to short-range planning that is oriented towards operations and is concerned with specific and
short-range details
Short-range details, structured in nature
Graphic: Paints a picture of the kind of company that management is trying to create and the market
position(s) the company is striving to stake out.
Directional: Is forward-looking; describes the strategic course that management has charted and the
kinds of product/market/customer/technology changes that will help the company prepare for the
future.
Focused: Is specific enough to provide managers with guidance in making decisions and allocating
resources.
Flexible: Is not a once-and-for-all-time statement—the directional course that management has
charted may have to be adjusted as product/market/ customer/technology circumstances change.
Feasible: Is within the realm of what the company can reasonably expect to achieve in due time.
Desirable: Indicates why the chosen path makes good business sense and is in the long-term interests
of stakeholders (especially share owners, employees, and customers).
Easy to communicate: Is explainable in 5–10 minutes and, ideally, can be reduced to a simple,
memorable slogan (like Henry Ford’s famous vision of “a car in every garage”).
The fifth phase of the strategy management process—monitoring new external developments,
evaluating the company’s progress, and making corrective adjustments—is the trigger point for
deciding whether to continue or change the company’s vision, objectives, strategy, or strategy
execution methods. So long as the company’s direction and strategy seem well matched to industry
And competitive conditions, and performance targets are being met, company executives may well
decide to stay the course.
If a company experiences a downturn in its market position or persistent short falls in performance,
then company managers are obligated to ferret out the causes—do they relate to poor strategy, poor
strategy execution, or both?—and take timely corrective action.
LEVELS OF STRATEGY
Corporate strategy: Consists of the kinds of initiatives the company uses to establish business
positions in different industries, the approaches corporate executives pursue to boost the combined
performance of the set of businesses the company has diversified into, and the means of capturing
cross-business synergies and turning them into competitive advantage. Senior corporate executives
normally have lead responsibility for devising corporate strategy. Major strategic decisions are usually
reviewed and approved by the company’s board of directors.
Business strategy: concerns the actions and the approaches crafted to produce successful performance
in one specific line of business.
The key focus is crafting responses to changing market circumstances and initiating actions to
strengthen market position, build competitive advantage, and develop strong competitive Capabilities.
The business head has at least two other strategy-related roles:
(a) Seeing that lower-level strategies are well conceived, consistent, and adequately matched to
the overall business strategy,
(b) Getting major business-level strategic moves approved by corporate-level officers (and
sometimes the board of directors) and keeping them informed of emerging strategic issues.
Functional-area strategies: Concern the actions, approaches, and practices to be employed in
managing particular functions or business processes or key activities within a business.
A company’s marketing strategy, for example, represents the managerial game plan for running the
sales and marketing part of the business.
Functional strategies add specifics to the how’s of business level strategy; they aim at establishing or
strengthening a business unit’s competencies and capabilities in performing strategy-critical activities
so as to enhance the business’s market position and standing with customers.
The primary role of a functional strategy is to support the company’s overall business strategy and
competitive approach.
COMPANY’S STRATEGY:
Relates broadly to its competitive initiatives and action plan for running the business (but it may or
may not lead to profitability)
How to grow the business
How to please customers
How to outcompete rivals
How to respond to changing market condition
How to achieve targeted levels of performance
Business Model . . . Concerns whether revenues and costs flowing from the strategy demonstrate a
business can be profitable and viable