Strategic Management
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Strategic Management Definition
Strategic management is a field that
- deals with the major intended and emergent initiatives taken by general managers on behalf of owners,
- involving utilization of resources, to enhance the performance of firms in their external environments.
It entails specifying:
- the organization's mission, vision and objectives,
- developing policies and plans,
- often in terms of projects and programs
- implementation of them
Questions
- What is a Strategic Plan?
- What is a Market Size?
- Do you need to stick to a strategic plan?
- Why do we you need a Strategic Plan?
- How long should be a Strategic Plan?
- Have you ever seen a Strategic Plan?
- Who should see a Strategic Plan?
- How the processes of writing a strategic plan look like?
- What levels of strategy do you know?
Ultimate Goal
- Utilitarianism
- After Life
Vision and missions of organizations
- Obliterate Poverty (i.e. World without poverty) (vision)
- System of direct subsidies for poor
- System of effective education
- Eugenics
- ...
- Prevent War (i.e. World without war) (vision)
- Global totalitarian state
- Change human brain so people cannot fight
- Design other alternative political system...
- Eliminate Waste (World where people do not waste their time but do really needed stuff)
- Streamline education process
- Invest in assets (machines, computers, infrastructure)
- ...
Strategic Management
Quiz
- What is a goal of strategic management?
- What are two major parts of strategic management?
- What is a handset market in the US?
Strategic Plan Elements
Strategic Planning as a Process
- Strategic planing might be considered a process.
- It means that it is not done at once for immediate implementation - in fact, it is a process requiring cyclical revisions.
Strategic Planning and Science Fiction
Commonalities
- try to predict the future
- assume sound and solid scientific foundation
- analyse how the technological, political and culturual changes are going to affect people's life
Differences
- SP aims at achieving a specific goal
http://www.firstpost.com/world/intel-sponsored-sci-fi-searches-for-the-future-63180.html
Strategic Planning
"Strategic planning consists of the process of defining objectives and developing strategies to reach those objectives. " [2]
- Strategic means to operate on the grand scale and to take in 'the big picture' (as oppose to tactical)
Strategic Plan Audience and Motivation
Investors (Should I invest)
- Venture Capital
- Share Holders
- Banks
CFO (Budgeting)
- Where should we allocate our resources?
Employees (Focus)
- Should we do that at all?
- What should we do first?
Auditors (Control)
- How can we check whether management is effective or not?
Strategy Levels
- Corporate Strategy (What should we do as a group?)
- Business Unit Strategy (versus Funcional)
- Regional Strategies
- Operational Strategy
Business Unit Strategy Example
- "A Strategic Business Unit is a part of an organisation for which there is a distinct external market for goods or services that is different from another SBU."[3]
- Focus on competitive strategy (i.e. how to achieve competitive advantage in its market)
- E.g.
- Price strategy
- Product positioning
- Advertising
- Customer service
- High level business process like sales, marketing, etc...
- Answer the question "how can we achieve our goal?"
Regional Strategy Example
Operational Strategy
- "Concerned with how the component parts of the organisation deliver effectively the corporate - and business-level strategies in terms of resources, processes and people".
- Focuses on optimization of business processes
- E.g. which suppliers to use, where to locate the outlines, etc...
Two approaches to Strategic Planning
Old School | New School | |
---|---|---|
Order of Steps |
|
|
Profit Criteria | "We do not start unless we see we can make money..." | "We will figure out how to make money later..." |
For whom |
|
|
|
|
Strategic Analysis
Environment Analysis | Industry and Market analysis | Company analysis |
---|---|---|
== How a Strategic Plan looks Strategic Plan usually is made of a lot of documents
- Descriptive (Vision, mission, values)
- Analytic
- Opinions
- Market Analysis
- Company Analysis
- Executive
- Goals and Strategics
- Scorecards
- Financial
- Investor Prospectus
- Financial Analysis
- Budgets
- Operational
- Business Process Diagrams
- Business Architecture
When should I update my strategic plan?
- Mission and Vision should be relatively constant, revised every year or couple of years
- Values should be revised a couple of times a year
- Market and Company Analyses (monthly)
- Executive and Financial (daily)
Toys (AKA Tools)
References
- ↑ http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Strategic_management&oldid=498817952
- ↑ Wikipedia
- ↑ Johnson and Scholes, 2002