Lesson 3
Lesson 3
Example:
1. Ranboxy Petrochemicals: To become a research based global company
2. Reliance Industries: To become a major player in the global chemicals business and
simultaneously grow in other growth industries like infrastructure.
3. ONGC: To stimulate, continue and accelerate efforts to develop and maximize the
contribution of the energy sector to the economy of the country.
4. Cadbury India: To attain leadership position in the confectionery market and achieve a
strong national presence in the food drinks sector.
5. McDonald: To offer the customer fast food prepared in the same high quality worldwide,
tasty and reasonably priced, delivered in a consistent low key décor and friendly manner.
Most of the above mission statements set the direction of the business organisation by
identifying the key markets which they plan to serve.
Missions have one or more of the five distinct and identifiable components:
1. Customers
2. Products or services
3. Markets
4. Concern for growth
5. Philosophy
According to Fred R. David, a mission statement is more than a statement of purpose. It is:
1. A declaration of attitude and outlook
2. A declaration of customer orientation
3. A declaration of social policy and responsibility
1. Not lengthy
2. Clearly articulated
3. Broad, but not too general
4. Inspiring
5. It should arouse positive feelings and emotions
6. Reflect the firm’s worth
7. Relevant
8. Current
9. Unique
10. Enduring
11. Dynamic
12. Basis for guidance
13. Customer orientation
14. A declaration of social policy
15. Values, beliefs and philosophy
1. Basic product or service: What are the firm’s major products or services?
2. Primary markets: Where does the firm compete?
3. Principal technology: Is the firm technologically current?
4. Customers: Who are the firm’s customers?
5. Concern for survival, growth and profitability: Is the firm committed to growth and financial
soundness?
6. Company philosophy: What are the basic beliefs, values, aspirations and ethical priorities
of the firm?
7. Company self-concept: What is the firm’s distinctive competence or major competitive
advantage?c
8. oncern for public image: Is the firm responsive to social, community and environmental
concerns?
9. Concern for employees: Are employers considered a valuable asset of the firm?
10. Concern for quality: Is the firm committed to highest quality ?
3.5 Formulation of Mission Statements
Mission statements are generally formulated as follows:
1. In many cases, the mission is inherited i.e. the founder establishes the mission which may
remain unchanged down the years or may be modified as the conditions change.
2. In some cases, the mission statement is drawn up by the CEO and board of directors or a
committee of strategists constituted for the purpose.
3. Engaging consultants for drawing up the mission statement is also common.
4. Many companies hold brainstorming sessions of senior executives to develop a mission
statement. Soliciting employee’s views is also common.
5. According to Fred R. David, an ideal approach for developing a mission statement would
be to select several articles about mission statements and ask all managers to read these
as background information. Then ask managers to prepare a draft mission statement for
the organisation. A facilitator or a committee of top managers, merge these statements into
a single document and distribute this draft mission statement to all managers. Then the
mission statement is finalized after taking inputs from all the managers in a meeting. Thus,
the process of developing a mission statement represents a great opportunity for strategists
to obtain needed support from all managers in the firm.
6. Decision on how best to communicate the mission to all managers, employees and external
constituencies of an organisation are needed when the document is in its final form. Some
organisations even develop a videotape to explain the mission statement and how it was
developed.
7. The practice in Indian companies appears to be a consultative-participative route. For
example, at Mahindra and Mahindra, workshops were conducted at two levels within the
organisation with corporate planning group acting as facilitators. The State Bank of India
went one step ahead by inviting labour unions to partake in the exercise. Satyam
Computers went one more step ahead by involving their joint venture companies and
overseas clients in the process.
4. The mission statement should have a primary focus on a single strategic thrust.
5. The mission statement should reflect the distinctive competence of the organisation
(e.g., what can it do best? What is its unique advantage?)
6. The mission statement should be broad enough to allow flexibility in implementation, but
not so broad as to permit lack of focus.
7. The mission statement should serve as a template and be the same means by which
the organisation can make decisions.
8. The mission statement must reflect the values, beliefs and philosophy of operations of
the organisation.
9. The mission statement should reflect attainable goals.
10. The mission statement should be worked so as to serve as an energy source and
rallying point for the organisation (i.e., it should reflect commitment to the vision).
While a mission statement describes what the organisation is now; a vision statement
describes what the organisation would like to become. A vision statement defines more of a
direction as to “where are we headed” and “what do we want to become”, whereas the
company’s mission broadly indicates the “business purpose” of the organisation.
Goals
The terms “goals and objectives” are used in a variety of ways, sometimes in a conflicting
sense.
The term “goal” is often used interchangeably with the term “Objective”. But some authors
prefer to differentiate the two terms.
A goal is considered to be an open-ended statement of what one wants to accomplish with
no quantification of what is to be achieved and no time criteria for its completion. For
example, a simple statement of “increased profitability” is thus a goal, not an objective,
because it does not state how much profit the firm wants to make. Objectives are the end
results of planned activity. They state what is to be accomplished by when and should be
quantified. For example, “increase profits by 10% over the last year” is an objective.
As may be seen from the above, “goals” denote what an organisation hopes to accomplish
in a future period of time. They represent a future state or outcome of the effort put in now.
“Objectives” are the ends that state specifically how the goals shall be achieved. In this
sense, objectives make the goals operational. Objectives are concrete and specific in
contrast to goals which are generalized. While goals may be qualitative, objectives tend to
be mainly quantitative, measurable and comparable.
Some of the areas in which a company might establish its goals and objectives are:
1. Profitability (net profit)
2. Efficiency (low costs, etc)
3. Growth (increase in sales etc)
4. Shareholder wealth (dividends etc)
5. Utilization of resources (return on investment)
6. Market leadership (market share etc)
According to Charles Perrow, the following are the important operational goals:
1. Environmental Goals: An organisation should be responsive to the broader concerns of the
communities in which it operates, and should have goals that satisfy people in the external
environment. For example, goals like customer satisfaction and social responsibility may be
important environmental goals.
2. Output Goals: Output goals are related to the identification of customer needs. Issues like
what markets should we serve, which product lines should be followed, etc. are examples
of output goals.
3. System Goals: These goals relate to the maintenance of the organisation itself. Goals like
growth, profitability, stability etc. are examples.
4. Product Goals: These goals relate to the nature of products delivered to customers. They
define quantity, quality, variety, innovativeness of products.
5. Derived Goals: These goals relate to derived or secondary areas like contribution to
political activities, promoting social service institutions etc.
Objectives
Objectives are the results or outcomes an organisation wants to achieve in pursuing its
basic mission. The basic purpose of setting objectives is to convert the strategic vision and
mission into specific performance targets. Objectives function as yardsticks for tracking an
organisation’s performance and progress.
Characteristics of Objectives
Well – stated objectives should be:
1. Specific
2. Quantifiable
3. Measurable
4. Clear
5. Consistent
6. Reasonable
7. Challenging
8. Contain a deadline for achievement
9. Communicated, throughout the organisation
Role of Objectives
Objectives play an important role in strategic management. They are essential for strategy
formulation and implementation because:
1. They provide legitimacy
2. They state direction
3. They aid in evaluation
4. They create synergy
5. They reveal priorities
6. They focus coordination
7. They provide basis for resource allocation
8. They act as benchmarks for monitoring progress
9. They provide motivation