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Strategic Management II
Strategic ObjectivesStrategy Concepts
Strategic Objectives
Strategic objectives are more definitive statements of the criteria for mission accomplishments.
The firm must determine the strategic objectives that will accomplish its mission in its complex external and internal environments.
Relationship of Vision to Organisational Purpose
Mission
Vision
ObjectiveObjectiveObjective
Framing Strategic Objectives
Strategic objectives typically, though not always, have multi-year timeframes for their achievement and are multi-functional, i.e. they require concerted efforts by people from many different parts of the company.
Strategic Objectives Features
1. Is it measurable or verifiable? 2. Is it achievable or feasible? 3. Is it flexible or adaptable? 4. Does it stretch your people without
breaking them? 6. Is it clear, easy to understand, and
inviting to achieve?
Strategic Objectives
To be the lowest cost producer of aluminum. Alcan Aluminum
To become the most the most competitive enterprise in the world being # 1 or # 2 in market share in every business the company is in. General Electrics
Strategic Objectives Examples
“To attain 1 billion customers worldwide”
Strategic Objectives Examples
“To safely deliver a hot, quality pizza in 30 minutes or less at a fair and a reasonable profit.” Domino’s Pizza
“To achieve 100% total customer satisfaction… every day. In every restaurant … for every customer.” McDonald’s
“30% of the company’s annual sales must come from products fewer than 4 years old”
More than 55,000 products, leadership in major markets: consumer and office; display and graphics; electr and comn; health care; industrial and transportation; safety, security protection services.
3M has the ability to apply their technologies–in combination–to meet endless customer needs.
Scotch®, Post-it®, Scotchgard™, Thinsulate™, Scotch-Brite®, Filtrete™, Command™ and Nexcare™ are brands that people love and trust.
What is Strategy
“Strategy is about being different. It means deliberately choosing a different set of activities to deliver a unique mix of value” - Hamel & Prahalad
Concept of Firm’s Business
A firm needs a well-defined scope & growth direction, that objectives alone do not meet this need, & that additional decision rules are required if the firm is to have orderly & profitable growth.
Such decision rules have been defined as strategy or concept of a firms business.
Definition of Strategy
“Strategy is the determination of the basic, long term goals of an enterprise, and the adoption of courses of action and the allocation of resources necessary to carry out these goals”.
Alfred Chandler
Definition of Strategy Strategy is a mediating force between the
organisation and its environment; there are consistent streams of organisational decisions to deal with the environment.” Mintzberg (1979)
Porter(1985) defines strategy as “a central vehicle for achieving competitive advantage”.
Strategy Making Pyramid
Corporate
Business Strategy
Functional Strategies
Operating Strategies
Corporate Strategy
Concerns how a diversified company intends to establish business positions in different industries & the actions and approaches employed to improve the performance of the group of businesses the company has diversified into.
Business Strategy
Actions and approaches crafted by management in one specific line of business. The central strategic issue is how to build a stronger long-term competitive position.
A business strategy is powerful if it produces a sizeable and sustainable competitive advantage.
Functional Strategy
Running a major functional activity within a business – R&D, manufacturing, customer service, distribution, finance, human resources & so on.
A business needs as many functional strategies as it has major activities.
Operating Strategy
Manage key organizational units within a business (plants, sales, districts, distribution centers).
How to perform strategically significant operating tasks (materials purchasing, inventory control, maintenance, advertising campaigns).
The Essence Of Strategy by C. Markides
He states that the essence of strategy is to make choices on three critical issues:
whom to target as customers and whom not to target,
what to offer these customers & what not to offer – and to do all this –
what activities to perform and what not to perform.
Explicit Decisions
Dr Markides emphasis the need for an organization to make clear explicit decision on these three issues because the choices it makes become the parameters within which people are free to operate, experiment and innovate.
Parameters
He argues these decisions have to be made by top management – they cannot simply emerge. And these parameters are decided at the top, with input and feedback from everybody in the organization.
Questioning Attitude
He clarifies that what a company must do every year is not plan, but question the choices made in case changes in the environment have made them invalid.
He argues that what is needed more active thinking and more questioning attitude.
Is Strategy Necessary?
In a world where products & technologies are fast changing.
The alternative to strategy is to have no rules beyond the simple decision to look for profitable prospects.
Merits of Having No Strategy
Savings in time & money & executive talent.
The field of potential opportunities will not be restricted to firm’s objectives & strategy.
Reap full advantage of the “delay principle”.
Demerits of Having No Strategy No rules to guide search for new opportunity.
Internally the R&D has no guidelines, the acquisition department lacks focus.
Staff will lack the depth of knowledge in any particular area needed for analysis.
Lack an internal ability to anticipate change. Risk of acting at cross-purposes. E.G conflict
between marketing & production managers.