Module-4 Strategic Management
Module-4 Strategic Management
Module-4 Strategic Management
Formulating a Strategy
Strategy is not just a task for senior executives. In
large enterprises, decisions about what business
approaches to take and what new moves to initiate
involve senior executives in the corporation office,
heads of business units and product divisions, the
heads of major functional areas within a business
or divisions (Manufacturing, marketing and sales,
finance, human resources, and the like) plant
managers, product managers, district and regional
sales managers, and lower level supervisors
diversified enterprises.
Strategies are initiated at four distinct
organizational levels:
Corporate Strategy
Business Strategy
Functional Strategy
Operating Strategy
Corporate Strategy
Is the overall managerial game plan for a
diversified company. Corporate strategy extends
companywide an umbrella overall a diversified
company’s businesses
Forming corporate strategy for a diversified
company involves four kind of initiative:
1. Making the moves to establish positions in
different businesses and achieve diversification.
2. Initiating actions to boost the combined
performance of the business.
3. Pursuing ways to capture the synergy among
related business units and turn it into competitive
advantage.
4. Establishing investment priorities and steering
corporate resources into the most attractive business
units
Business Strategy
The business Strategy (or business level strategy)
refers to the managerial game plan for a single
business. It is mirrored in the pattern of
approaches and moves created by management to
produce successful performance in one specific line
of business.
The central thrust of business Strategy is how to build
and strengthen the company’s long term competitive
positions in the market place.
1. Forming responses to change underway in the industry,
the economy at large, the regulatory and political arena
and other relevant areas,
2. Crafting competitive moves and market and
approaches hat can lead to sustainable competitive
advantage,
3. Building competitively valuable competencies and
capabilities,
4. Uniting the strategic initiatives if functional
departments , and,
5. Addressing specific strategic issues facing the
company’s business
Creating a Business strategy that brings sustainable
competitive advantage has three factors:
1. Deciding what product/service attributes (lower
cost and prices, a better product, a wider product
line, superior customer service, emphasis on a
particular market niche offer the best chance to win a
competitive edge.
2. Developing skills, expertise, and competitive
capabilities that set the company apart from rivals,
and,
3. Trying to insulate the business as much as
possible
Functional Strategy
o Refers to the managerial game plan for particular functional activity,
business process, or key department within a business.
Actions
Approaches
Practices to be employed in managing functional department or
business process or key activity.