Chapter - 1
Chapter - 1
Chapter - 1
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Chapter One
Introducing Strategy and
Strategy Making
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Meaning of Strategic Management
Strategy is arguably the most important concept in
management studies.
Strategy making is arguably the most important
activity of a practicing manager.
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Glueck
Glueck (1984) defines strategic management as “a
stream of decisions and actions which leads to the
development of an effective strategy or strategies to
help achieve corporate objectives”.
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Hofer
Hofer and others (1984) consider strategic management
as “the process which deals with the fundamental
organizational renewal and growth with the
development of strategies, structures, and systems
necessary to achieve such renewal and growth, and with
the organizational systems needed to effectively manage
the strategy formulation and implementation
processes.”
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Sharplin
Sharplin (1985) defines strategic management as “the
formulation and implementation of plans and
carrying out of activities relating to the matters which
are of vital, pervasive or continuing importance to the
total organization.”
This is an all-encompassing view of strategic
management and considers all plans and activities
which are important for an organization.
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Some noteworthy identities of Strategic Mgt
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A Brief History of the Concept Strategy
Today strategy is one of the most commonly used
words in management studies, but its use was not, and
is not, limited to that area.
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Cont’d
Etymologically, strategos, or general, derives from
stratos (the army) and agein (to lead).
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Cont’d
Commander "must be ingenious, energetic, careful, full
of stamina and presence of mind, loving and tough,
straightforward and crafty, alert and deceptive, ready to
gamble everything and wishing to have everything,
generous and greedy, trusting and suspicious."
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Cont’d
While strategy has originated in the military sphere,
since the 1960s it has risen into business world.
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Cont’d
The first real strategic management practitioner in a systematic way
was Alfred Sloan of General Motors.
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Stages of strategic management development
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Stage 1
From 1945 to the mid- to late 1960s, the economic
context was a relatively stable one, simple to
understand, but expansionary.
Most economies had been exhausted by war.
In 1945, levels of production were well below pre-war
levels.
During this period overall demand in the world
economy tended to be greater than overall supply.
There was considerable pent-up demand.
There was also a backlog of unexploited technology.
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Cont’d
The immediate aim of enterprises was the meeting of
that demand.
Satisfying precise consumer requirements did not
matter too much; almost any output was better than
none.
The role of strategy in such a context was to mobilize
economic resources in an orderly fashion to support a
rapid expansion in supply.
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Cont’d
During this period long-range planning was still
accepted as at the heart of any strategy, since
economic priorities were clear.
Strategy consisted of budgets and programs put
together in one overall plan.
The main problem was to plan financially in order to
integrate the enterprise internally around the broad
aim of profit satisficing within the framework of the
plan.
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Cont’d
The basic design school model (figure below), most
closely associated with the name of Andrews, is one
termed as the conception of the period.
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Scanning the External Analyzing the internal
Environment (External Environment (internal
Appraisal) appraisal)
Implementation of Strategy
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Cont’d
The approach is best encapsulated in the SWOT
model (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities,
Threats), probably the most commonly applied
method in strategy making.
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Stage 2
From the late 1960s to the late 1970s, there was more
rapid and extensive change, but change of a reasonably
predictable kind.
Most developed economies were now operating close to
the frontier of best-practice technology.
Inflationary forces began to emerge, particularly cost
inflation involving various commodities and labor, but
were still under broad control.
Prioritization became less significant as supply began to
catch up with and even run ahead of demand.
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Cont’d
Another consultancy, McKinsey’s, (7S model; staff,
style, skill, shared value, strategy, structure and system)
developed the notion of the strategic business unit.
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Stage 3
Between the mid-1970s and the mid-1980s change
became discontinuous.
This was the era of the oil price shocks and the later
debt crisis in the developing world.
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Cont’d
The main need strategy was now to allocate resources,
including cash flow, in order to develop a competitive
advantage.
Strategy was increasingly being made at various levels,
including business, functional and corporate levels.
The stage was dominated by Michael Porter Five forces
model.
The 1990s saw the focus of interest shift once again to a greater
attention to the internal resource position of the enterprise.
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a. Mapping your future
First, a good strategy acts as a road map.
It should clearly identify where you want to be at a given
point in time, say, three years. For example, one of your
goals may be to increase sales by a factor of ten.
Your strategy should set out how you will achieve this
target.
Boosting sales by this amount will clearly require actions
bolder than printing a new sales leaflet.
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