Overview
Overview
Overview
The greatest challenge for a successful organization is change. This threatening change may
either be internal or external to the enterprise.
Nature of strategy
Strategy is a contingent plan as it is designed to meet the demands of a difficult situation.
Strategy provides direction in which human and physical resources will be deployed for
achieving organizational goals in the face of environmental pressure and constraints.
Strategy relates an organization to its external environment.
Strategic decisions are primarily concerned with expected trends
in the market, changes in government policy, technological
developments etc.
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Strategy is an interpretative plan formulated to give meaning to
other plans in the light of specific situations.
Strategy determines the direction in which the organization is
going in relation to its environment. It is the process of defining
intentions and allocating or matching resources to opportunities
and needs, thus achieving a strategic fit between them. Business
strategy is concerned with achieving competitive advantage.
The effective development and implementation of strategy
depends on the strategic capability of the organization, which
will include the ability not only to formulate strategic goals but
also to develop and implement strategic plans through the
process of strategic management.
A strategy gives direction to diverse activities, even though the
conditions under which the activities are carried out are rapidly
changing.
The strategy describes the way that the organization will pursue
its goals, given the changing environment and the resource
capabilities of the organization.
It provides an understanding of how the organization plans to
compete.
It is the determination and evaluation of alternatives available to
an organization in achieving its objectives and mission and the
selection of appropriate alternatives to be pursued.
It is the fundamental pattern of present and planned objectives,
resource deployments, and interactions of a firm with markets,
competitors and other environmental factors.
A good strategy should specify;
What is to be accomplished
Where, i.e., which product/markets it will focus on
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How i.e., which resources and activities will be allocated to each
product/market to meet environmental opportunities and
threats and to gain a competitive advantage
Components of strategy
1. Scope; refers to the breadth of a firm’s strategic domain i.e., the
number and types of industries, product lines, and markets it
competes in competes in or plans to enter.
2. Goals and objectives; these specify desires such as volume
growth, profit contribution or return on investment over a
specified period.
3. Resource deployment; strategy should specify how resources
are to be obtained and allocated across businesses,
product/markets, financial departments, and activities..
4. Identification of a sustainable competitive advantage; it refers to
examining the market opportunities in each business and
product-market and the firm’s distinctive competencies or
strengths relative to competitors.
5. Synergy; this exists when the firm’s businesses, products,
markets, resource deployments and competencies complement
one another i.e., the whole becomes greater than the sum of its
parts( 2+2=5)
Strategies can be classified into corporate, business-unit and
functional strategies.
Definition; Strategic management is the process by which top management determines the long-
term direction of the organization by ensuring that careful formulation, implementation and
continuous evaluation of strategy take place.
The first stage in development of a strategic plan for the organisation involves
determining who needs to be involved in the planning process.
The Management Committee needs to decide who should be involved in the strategic
planning process. Generally, it should involve as appropriate:
When the Management Committee has decided who will be involved, it is necessary
to decide at what level and how different stakeholders will contribute to the
organisations planning for the future. There are many different ways stakeholders can
be involved, such as:
For further information on strategic planning and the other stages in the process, click
on the links below:
Strategy Identification
Strategic planning is a comprehensive process for determining the vision of a
business, i.e., what it should become and how it can best achieve that goal. It
explicitly links the business’s goals and objectives to the actions and resources
required to achieve them (Bain & Company, 2017). Strategy Identification is a
systematic process to describe an organization’s vision and mission, evaluate
strengths and opportunities, and develop strategies to achieve its goals. This process
can also be conducted at a business unit level or a department level.
1. Describe your vision - What would your organization look like if you achieved
your goal?
2. Identify obstacles to achieving your goal.
3. Identify strengths and opportunities that could help you achieve your goal.
4. Based on your key strengths and opportunities, identify strategies to achieve
your goal.
Ethics are a set of moral standards that are relied upon to reach conclusions and
make decisions. In a business environment, ethics are a key factor in responsible
decision making. Maintaining a high ethical standpoint when operating your
business can provide benefits to both the internal and external stakeholders of
your business. Strategic management refers to the managerial process of
forming a strategic vision, setting objectives, crafting a strategy and then over
time initiating whatever corrective adjustments required for achieving the long-
term objectives and goals of an organization.
The business case for ethics is based on the positive benefits that it can provide
to your business. The reasons behind maintaining high ethical standards include:
6. Improving Decision Making: A man’s destiny is the sum totals of all the
decisions that he/she takes in course of his life. The same holds true for
organizations. Decisions are driven by values. For example, an
organization that does not value competition will be fierce in its operations
aiming to wipe out its competitors and establish a monopoly in the market.