SM Chapter 1 Edited
SM Chapter 1 Edited
Introduction
What is Strategic
Management?
1-1
The word strategy has entered the field of
management more recently. Originally, the word
strategy has been derived from Greek word
‘Strategoes’, which means generalship. The word
strategy, therefore, means the art of the general.
When the term strategy is used in military sense, it
refers to action that can be taken in the light of
action taken by opposite party.
A strategy is a set of actions that managers take to
increase their company’s performance relative to
rivals.
1-2
Defining Strategic Management
• Strategic management
– the art and science of formulating,
implementing, and evaluating cross-
functional decisions that enable an
organization to achieve its objectives
1-4
Stages of Strategic Management
1-5
Stages of Strategic Management
Strategy Formulation
1-6
Issues in Strategy Formulation
Businesses
Businesses to
to enter
enter
Businesses
Businesses to
to abandon
abandon
Allocation
Allocation of
of resources
resources
Expansion
Expansion oror diversification
diversification
International
International markets
markets
Mergers
Mergers or
or joint
joint ventures
ventures
1-7
Stages of Strategic Management
• Strategy implementation
– Requires a firm to establish annual
objectives, devise policies, motivate
employees, and allocate resources so that
formulated strategies can be executed
– Often called the action stage
1-8
Stages of Strategic Management
Strategy Implementation
Annual Objectives
Policies
Employee Motivation
Resource Allocation
1-9
Stages of Strategic Management
1-10
Stages of Strategic Management
• Strategy evaluation
Strategy Evaluation
Internal Review
External Review
Performance Measurement
Corrective Action
1-12
Stages of Strategic Management
Strategy formulation, implementation, and evaluation
activities occur at three hierarchical levels in a large
organization: corporate, divisional or strategic
business unit, and functional
Strategic management helps a firm function as a
competitive team
1-13
Key Terms in Strategic Management
• Competitive advantage
• Strategists
• Vision and mission statements
• External opportunities and threats
• Internal strengths and weaknesses
• Long-term objectives
• Strategies
• Annual objectives
• Policies
1. competitive advantage is Anything that a firm does
especially well compared to rival firms.
Achieving Sustained Competitive Advantage:-
1. Continually adapting to changes in external trends and
events and internal capabilities, competencies, and
resources
2. Effectively formulating, implementing, and evaluating
strategies that capitalize on those factors
Key Terms in Strategic Management
Strategists
Gather Information
Analyze Information
Organize Information
Key Terms in Strategic Management
3. Vision statement
– answers the question “What do we want to become?”
– often considered the first step in strategic planning
4. Mission statements
– enduring statements of purpose that distinguish one
business from other similar firms
– addresses the basic question that faces all strategists:
“What is our business?”
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Key Terms in Strategic Management
1-18
Some Opportunities and Threats
1-19
Key Terms in Strategic Management
6. Internal strengths and weaknesses
– an organization’s controllable activities that are performed
especially well or poorly.
1-22
The Strategic-Management Model
1-23
Comprehensive Strategic Management Model
External
Audit
Internal
Audit
Ch. 1-24
Over view of types of strategy
Ch 1 -25
Figure : The Levels of Strategy
Corporate
Headquarters
Corporate top
Corporate
management
Strategy
Functional Functional
Production R&D Finance Marketing Personnel Distribution Strategy management
Ch 1 -26
1. Corporate Strategy
• Industrial organization
• Resource based
1-30
1. Industrial Organizational (I/O) Model of
Above-Average Returns (AAR)
Underlying Assumptions
– External environment imposes pressures and constraints
that determine the strategies resulting in AAR
– Most firms that compete within a particular industry
control similar resources and pursue similar strategies
– Resources for implementing strategies are highly mobile
across firms
32
Industrial Organizational (I/O) Model of
Above-Average Returns (AAR)
Limitations
– Only two strategies are suggested for
competing in an industry: Cost Leadership or
Differentiation
– Internal resources & capabilities are not
considered
– AAR are earned when a firm implements the
strategy dictated by external environment
(general, industry, and competitor)
1-33
The Resource-Based Model of AAR
Resources are Inputs into a firm's production process includes
capital equipment, employee skills, patents, high-quality
managers, financial condition, etc.
• Basis for competitive advantage: When resources are valuable,
rare, costly to imitate, and non substitutable
• Capability
– Capacity for a set of resources to perform a task or activity in
an integrative manner
• Core Competency
– A firm’s resources and capabilities that serve as sources of
competitive advantage over its rival
34
The Resource-Based Model of AAR
• Basic Premise - a firm's unique resources & capabilities is the
basis for firm strategy and AAR
– Each organization is a bundle of unique resources and capabilities
– Performance difference between firms emerge over time due to these
unique resources and capabilities (versus industry’s structural
characteristics)
– Combined uniqueness should define the firms’ strategic actions
• A firm has superior performance because of
• Unique resources and capabilities, and the combination makes
them different, and better, than their competition – driving the
competitive advantage
• The Resource-Based model argues that Core Competencies are the
basis for a firm’s Competitive Advantage, Strategic
Competitiveness and Ability to Earn Above-average Returns.
35
The
Resource-
Based
Model of
AAR
36
Summary Models of Superior Returns
Industrial Organization Resource-Based
Model Model
The External Environment Resources
37
Benefits of Strategic Management
1. Financial Benefits
Businesses using strategic-management concepts
show significant improvement in sales, profitability,
and productivity compared to firms without
systematic planning activities
1-40
Nonfinancial Benefits
• It allows major decisions to better support
established objectives.
• It allows more effective allocation of time and
resources to identified opportunities.
• It allows fewer resources and less time to be
devoted to correcting erroneous or ad hoc
decisions.
• It creates a framework for internal
communication among personnel.
1-41
Pitfalls in Strategic Planning
• Doing strategic planning only to satisfy accreditation
or regulatory requirements
• Too hastily moving from mission development to
strategy formulation
• Failing to communicate the plan to employees, who
continue working in the dark
• Top managers making many intuitive decisions that
conflict with the formal plan
1-42
Pitfalls in Strategic Planning
• Top managers not actively supporting the
strategic-planning process
• Failing to use plans as a standard for measuring
performance
• Delegating planning to a “planner” rather than
involving all managers
• Failing to involve key employees in all phases of
planning
• Failing to create a collaborative climate
supportive of change
1-43
Business Ethics & Strategic Planning
Defined:
Principles of conduct within organizations that
guide decision making and behavior
Ch. 1-45
Business Ethics & Strategic Planning (Cont’d)
• Misleading advertising
• Misleading labeling
• Environmental harm
• Poor product or service safety
• Dumping flawed products on foreign markets
Ch. 1-46
END
Thank you!!
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