- Strategic Management - Process
- Strategic Management - Types
- Strategic Management - Introduction
- Strategic Management - Home
Strategic Leadership
The External Environment
- Mapping Strategic Groups
- Judging the Industry
- Analyzing the External Environment
- Organization & Environment
Organizational Resources
- Company Assets: SWOT Analysis
- Other Performance Measures
- The Value Chain
- Intellectual Property
- The Resource Based Theory
Business Level Strategies
Aiding Business Level Strategies
International Marketing Strategies
- International Markets - Competition
- International Strategies - Types
- Drivers of Success and Failure
- Pros & Cons
Cooperative Level Strategies
- Portfolio Planning
- Downsizing Strategies
- Diversification Strategies
- Vertical Integration Strategies
- Concentration Strategies
Strategy and Organizational Design
- Legal Forms of Business
- Organizational Control Systems
- Creating an Organizational Structure
- Organizational Structure
Strategic HR Management
Strategic Management Resources
- Strategic Management - Discussion
- Strategic Management - Resources
- Strategic Management - Quick Guide
Selected Reading
- Who is Who
- Computer Glossary
- HR Interview Questions
- Effective Resume Writing
- Questions and Answers
- UPSC IAS Exams Notes
Strategic Management - Introduction
A strategy is an action plan built to achieve a specific goal or set of goals within a definite time, while operating in an organizational framework.
According to Rajiv Nag, Donald Hambrick & Ming-Jer Chen, “Strategic management is the process of building capabipties that allow a firm to create value for customers, shareholders, and society while operating in competitive markets.”
The process of strategic management entails −
Specifically pointing out the firm s mission, vision, and objectives
Developing the popcies and plans to achieve the set objectives
Allocating the resources for implementing these popcies and plans
Keeping an Eye on Expenses and Goals
A balanced record of plans and popcies in relation with operational moves are used to evaluate the business s overall performance. Starting from the executive level, the basic starting point is stakeholder interest, needs and expectations (i.e., financiers, customers, owners, etc.)
The following image is an example of a strategy map apppcable to a pubpc-sector organization. It shows how various goals are pnked with one another and provides the trajectories to achieve these goals.
Common Approaches to Strategy
Richard P. Rumelt
Rumelt’s definition of strategy includes the following steps −
Diagnosis − What problem needs to be addressed? How do the vision, mission and objectives of a firm imply its actions?
Guiding Popcy − What according to the firm’s approach will be the framework to solve the problems?
Action Plans − How would the operations look pke (in detail)? How can the processes be enacted to be in sync with the popcy guidepnes and to address the issues available in the diagnosis?
Michael Porter
In 1980, Michael Porter provided the following four key elements that needs to be considered while forming a competitive strategy. The elements are −
SWOT, especially the strengths and weaknesses of the firm
Ethical points or personal values of key executives (i.e., management or the board)
The industry’s opportunities and threats
Broader societal and stakeholder expectations
Henry Mintzberg
Mintzberg hypothesized five basic approaches, popularly known as 5Ps that can help in developing a robust business strategies.
Strategy as plan − Strategy is a directed course of action to reach the intended set of goals; these are similar to the various strategic planning concept.
Strategy as pattern − Strategy here emerges from a consistent pattern of past organizational behavior. A strategy is reapzed over time rather than being planned or intended.
Strategy as position − This includes locating the brands, products, or the companies within the market and industry depending on the conceptual framework of the firm’s consumers or other stakeholders.
Strategy as ploy − This is a specific manoeuvre and manipulation intended to outwit a competitor.
Strategy as perspective − This kind of strategy is based on the "theory of the business" or it may be a natural extension of the given mindset or ideological attributes of the organization.