The document discusses the strategic planning process. It begins by outlining the key components of strategic planning including developing a vision, mission and values. It then discusses performing external and internal analyses to identify opportunities, threats, strengths and weaknesses. This informs a SWOT analysis. Strategies are then selected, such as differentiation, cost leadership or focus. Goals and objectives are set using the SMART criteria. Finally, the plan must be properly executed to achieve success.
The document discusses the strategic planning process. It begins by outlining the key components of strategic planning including developing a vision, mission and values. It then discusses performing external and internal analyses to identify opportunities, threats, strengths and weaknesses. This informs a SWOT analysis. Strategies are then selected, such as differentiation, cost leadership or focus. Goals and objectives are set using the SMART criteria. Finally, the plan must be properly executed to achieve success.
The document discusses the strategic planning process. It begins by outlining the key components of strategic planning including developing a vision, mission and values. It then discusses performing external and internal analyses to identify opportunities, threats, strengths and weaknesses. This informs a SWOT analysis. Strategies are then selected, such as differentiation, cost leadership or focus. Goals and objectives are set using the SMART criteria. Finally, the plan must be properly executed to achieve success.
The document discusses the strategic planning process. It begins by outlining the key components of strategic planning including developing a vision, mission and values. It then discusses performing external and internal analyses to identify opportunities, threats, strengths and weaknesses. This informs a SWOT analysis. Strategies are then selected, such as differentiation, cost leadership or focus. Goals and objectives are set using the SMART criteria. Finally, the plan must be properly executed to achieve success.
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STRATEGIC PLANNING
The Strategic Planning Process
• Wayne Gretzky is considered to be among the all-time great hockey players. • Gretzky stated that much of his success while on the ice was because he skated to where the hockey puck was going to be, not where it had been. • That simple analogy captures the goal of the strategic planning process. • Long-term sustainable success is not necessarily where you are today; it is where you want to be in the future. • The strategic planning process is the tool organizations use to plot their course toward a brighter future. • Just as there are numerous definitions of strategy, there are several iterations about what the strategic planning process should look like. • Downs (2017) noted that today organizations could choose from a number of strategic planning processes. • These choices vary from a basic strategic planning model, the issue-based model, the alignment model, the scenario model, and the organic planning model. • All this means is that there is no perfect system. • The strategic planning process model presented below is based on the concepts of strategic thinkers including Porter (1980), Drucker (2008), and Bossidy and Charan (2002). Vision, mission, and values • These are the foundations of a strategic plan. • A company’s vision statement envisions the future by creating a mental image of the desired future position of the organization, where it wants to be. • The firm’s mission statement is more about “how” the vision will be achieved. • Values are the core principles that guide the company. Let’s use Google as an example. • Google’s vision is “to provide access to the world’s information in one click.” • Their mission statement is “to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful” (Thompson, 2019). • According to Brooks (2018) Google has ten corporate values among which are • 1) follow the user and all else will follow; • 2) it’s best to do one thing really, really, well; democracy on the web works; you can be serious without a suit; and great just isn’t good enough. • Clearly defined values help guide a company and attract people who share those values and fit with the company’s culture. External analysis • The external analysis, sometimes referred to as the environmental analysis, is a deep dive that examines the industry in which the company competes. • Here is a brief review of the more commonly used external analysis tools: PESTEL analysis: – PESTEL is an acronym for the process of examining the macro external forces that could impact an organization. – Elements of a PESTEL analysis include: • P – What political factors might affect the company? • E – The economic factors that could impact the economy and the firm’s performance. • S – What social factors or trends might be of importance to the organization? • T – Are there technological factors that could affect the industry, the market in which it competes, or even an individual organization? • E – Environmental factors such as geographic location, pollution, recycling, renewable energy, air and water pollution, and climate change which might affect the firm. • L – Legal factors play an ever-increasing role in a company’s operations and must be reviewed to assess both short and long-term impact. Porter’s (1980) Five Factor model: – It is is a tool used to analyze the market potential of varying industries. – It examines five perspectives critical to a firm’s success within that industry: the power of suppliers, power of buyers, power of substitutes, the threat of new market entrants, all of which point to the intensity of the competition. – Competitive benchmarking is the part of the external process that entails a steely-eyed look at how your firm’s products or services stack up against your main competitors. – From the external analysis, a firm’s opportunities and threats are identified. Internal analysis • This part of the process is where an organization examines its internal resources. • Tools for the job include: – The value chain analysis examines the firm’s primary and secondary activities. – Primary activities are actions that add value directly to the company’s product or service offerings. – These include sales and marketing, customer service, inbound and outbound logistics and its internal operations. – Secondary activities are support functions necessary to support direct activities and include the organizations human resource practices, procurement processes, finance, and its technology. – The resource based analysis is a tool used to review a firm’s internal resources to determine if they can be capitalized on to achieve a competitive advantage. – Those resources must be tested to determine if they are valuable, rare, non-imitable, and non-substitutable. – Only those resources that fulfill all four criteria can meet the benchmark as a source of competitive advantage. – A firm’s resources can be both tangible and intangible, and these are the building blocks of the organization’s capabilities. • The outcome of the internal analysis will result in identifying the firm’s strengths and weaknesses. SWOT Analysis • The SWOT analysis is a procedural method of looking at how an organization’s internal strengths and external opportunities can be utilized to accomplish its goals and objectives while seeking to minimize its internal weaknesses and external threats. • The firm’s strengths and weaknesses (factors within the control of the organization) were identified through its internal analysis while its opportunities and threats (factors out of the organization’s direct control) were determined through the external analysis. • The essential objective of conducting a SWOT analysis is to understand and evaluate all the factors involved in the operation of the enterprise. • It is a critical step in the strategic management process. • The SWOT matrix allows the firm to visualize its internal capabilities and external market factors. Once the SWOT matrix is complete and in prioritized order, the organization’s leaders should consider the following questions: • How can the firm’s internal strengths be utilized to take advantage of an external opportunity? • How can the firm’s internal strengths be used to minimize or mitigate an external threat? – These moves are considered strengths based offensive choices upon which the firm can choose to capitalize. • How can the firm reduce or eliminate an internal weakness to minimize an external threat? • How can the firm beef up and internal weakness to take advantage of an external opportunity? – These moves are considered defensive based choices the firm might choose to exercise. Strategy Selection • Once the SWOT matrix is complete, the critical next step in the strategic planning process is to determine which strategy the organization should pursue. • Three generic strategies were developed by Porter (1980) that have become widely used as a starting point when considering a strategic direction. – A differentiation strategy, often referred to as value-added, is when a firm has a product or service with unique features that customers will find better and distinctive from competitors’ offerings. • The critical aspect of the differentiation strategy is the firm can charge higher prices while keeping its costs in line with the competition. • The result is increased profitability. – The cost-leadership strategy is when the firm offers products or services with the same value as its competitors while delivering those products or services at a lower cost. – The focus strategy is a choice a business makes to concentrate on particular niche markets. – The organization must still decide whether its niche strategy will be differentiation based or cost based. – There is no one correct strategy for a business or a specific industry. – The decisive factor must be the determination of which strategy will maximize the economic value created by the product or service. • Two steps remain in the strategy selection process: – 1) Once a firm determines its generic strategy based on its SWOT analysis outcome, it must select a narrower, more focused approach to the market in which it plays. – Pearce (1982) identified 12 grand strategic options from which a firm could choose. – Three of these grand strategies are widely popular and used around the globe. – They include the concentration strategy which is when the firm strives to grow the use of its products or services in its present markets; market development which is when the business seeks to sell products it currently manufacturers in new markets; and product development which is when it moves to create new products for its current markets. • 2) Once the organization selects a grand strategy, the next step is to develop goals and objectives. • A critical element when establishing goals and objectives is to ensure that each has a specific metric so performance to goal can be measured. • The acronym SMART refers to the five elements of a goal to make it actionable. • The goal must be Specific, Measureable, Attainable, Relevant and Time bound. • In other words, it can be accurately measured. • If a goal or objective cannot be measured, it cannot be managed. Execution • According to Doniger (2019), just 10% of senior-level executives from global organizations stated that their organization managed to accomplish their complete list of strategic initiatives. • Others estimate strategic initiative failure rates that range from 50% upward. Bossidy and Chran (2002) maintain that while faulty strategy is often to blame, more often than not, it is a failure to execute. • An Economist Intelligence Unit Report (“why good strategies fail,” 2013), sponsored by the Project Management Institute, stated that strategy implementation is perhaps even more important than the strategy itself. • Winston Churchill, the famous British Prime Minister who led Great Britain through the ravages of World War II noted that “however beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results.” CONCLUSION • Think of strategy as an organization’s GPS. • When using your car’s GPS, you know where you are, and you enter the location to where you are headed. • In a moment, the GPS plots the course and gives you driving options, the number of miles to travel, and estimated arrival time. • When a business or an organization develops its strategy, it follows the strategic planning process that starts with where you are and ends with where you want to be in the future. • While the strategic planning process takes longer and is more labor intensive than setting your automobiles GPS, the outcome is the same. • Successfully executed, a strategic plan helps you arrive safely, on time, and with minimal hassle. • Strategy is vital to an organization because it provides clear direction along with measurable goals. • A good strategic planning process must think of: – Setting objectives for a long-term – Analyzing the factors internal to the organization that cause the most important issues that the strategic plan has to address – Generating strategic options for addressing the most important issues, prioritizing – Deciding among the options – Monitoring the results of implementing the strategies.