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The Managerial Process of Crafting and Executing Strategy

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Title: The Managerial Process of Crafting and Executing Strategy


1
The Managerial Process of Crafting and
Executing Strategy
Chapter
2
Chapter Outline
  • Five Phases of the Strategic Process
  • Developing a Strategic Vision
  • Setting Objectives
  • Crafting a Strategy
  • Implementing and Executing the Strategy
  • Initiating Corrective Adjustments

3
Developing a Strategic Vision
Phase 1 of the Strategy-Making Process
  • Involves thinking strategically about
  • Firms future business plans
  • Where to go
  • Tasks include
  • Providing long-term direction
  • Giving firm a strong identity

A strategic vision is a road map showing the
route a company intends to take in developing and
strengthening its business. It paints a picture
of a companys destination and provides a
rationale for going there.
4
Characteristics of a Strategic Vision
  • Charts a companys future strategic course
  • Defines the business makeup for 5 years (or more)
  • Specifies future product-customer focus
  • Indicates capabilities to be developed
  • Requires managers to exercise foresight

5
Characteristics ofa Mission Statement
  • Defines current business activities, highlighting
    boundaries of current business
  • Present products and services
  • Types of customers served
  • Conveys
  • Who we are,
  • What we do, and
  • Why we are here

A companys mission is not to make a profit! Its
true mission is its answer to What will we do to
make a profit?
6
Strategic Vision vs. Mission
  • A strategic vision concerns a firms future
    business path -- where we are going
  • Geographic and product markets to be pursued
  • Kind of company that management is trying to
    create
  • A mission statement focuses on current business
    activities -- who we are and what we do
  • Current product and service offerings
  • Customer needs being served
  • Technological and business capabilities

7
Examples of Strategic Visions
Heinz Our vision, quite simply, is to be the
worlds premier food company, offering
nutritious, superior tasting foods to people
everywhere. Being the premier food company does
not mean being the biggest but it does mean being
the best in terms of consumer value, customer
service, employee talent, and consistent and
predictable growth.
General Electric We will become number one or
number two in every market we serve, and
revolutionize this company to havethe speed and
agility of a small enterprise.
8
Apple Computer Mission Statement
Apple Computer
Apple Computer, Inc., ignited the personal
computer revolution in the 1970s with the Apple
II, and reinvented the personal computer in the
1980s with the Macintosh. Apple is now committed
to its original mission--to bring the best
personal computing products and support to
students, educators, designers, scientists,
engineers, business persons and consumers in over
140 countries around the world.
9
Setting Objectives
Phase 2 of the Strategy-Making Process
  • Purpose of setting objectives
  • Converts vision into specific performance targets
  • Creates yardsticks to track performance
  • Pushes firm to be inventive, intentional,
    andfocused in its actions
  • Helps prevent complacency and coasting

10
Characteristics of Objectives
  • Represent commitment to achieve specific
    performance targets
  • Spell-out how much of what kindof performance by
    when
  • Well-stated objectives are
  • Quantifiable
  • Measurable
  • Contain a deadline for achievement

Establishing objectives converts the vision into
concrete performance outcomes!
11
Types of Objectives Required
Financial Objectives
Strategic Objectives
  • Outcomes focusedon improving financial
    performance
  • Outcomes focused on improving long-term
    competitive business position

12
Examples FinancialObjectives
  • Grow earnings per share 15 annually
  • Boost annual return on investment (or EVA) from
    15 to 20 within three years
  • Increase annual dividends per share to
    stockholders by 5 each year
  • Strive for stock price appreciation equal to or
    above the SP 500 average
  • Maintain a positive cash flow every year
  • Achieve and maintain a AA bond rating

13
Examples StrategicObjectives
  • Increase firms market share
  • Overtake key rivals on quality or customer
    service or product performance
  • Attain lower overall costs than rivals
  • Boost firms reputation with customers
  • Attain stronger foothold in international markets
  • Become leader in new product introductions
  • Consistently getting new or improved products to
    market ahead of rivals

14
Examples Strategic Objectives
Bank One Corporation
To be one of the top three banking companies in
terms of market share in all significant markets
we serve.
Dominos Pizza
To safely deliver a hot, quality
pizza in 30 minutes or less at a fair
price and a reasonable profit.
15
Examples Strategic Objectives
Citigroup
To attain one billion customers worldwide.
McDonalds
To achieve 100 percent total customer
satisfaction . . . everyday . . . in every
restaurant . . . for every customer.
16
Example Corporate Objectives
Anheuser-Busch (strategic financial objectives)
  • To make all our companies leaders in their
    industries in quality while exceeding customer
    expectations.
  • To achieve a 50 share of the U.S. beer market.
  • To establish and maintain a dominant leadership
    position in the international beer market.
  • To provide all our employees with challenging and
    rewarding work, . . . , and opportunities for
    personal development, advancement, and
    competitive compensation.
  • To provide our shareholders with superior returns
    by achieving double-digit annual earnings per
    share growth.

17
Strategic Performance Fosters Better
Financial Performance
  • A companys achievement of satisfactory financial
    performance, by itself, is not enough
  • Financial performance measures are lagging
    indicators reflecting results of past decisions
    and actions
  • Of equal or greater importance is a companys
    performance on measures of its strategic
    well-being its competitiveness and market
    position
  • Strategic performance measures are leading
    indicators of a companys future financial
    performance and business prospects
  • Achievement of strategic performance targets
  • Signals growing competitiveness
  • Signals growing strength in the marketplace

18
Balanced Scorecard Approach Strategic and
Financial Objectives
  • Balanced scorecard approach for measuringcompany
    performance requires both
  • Financial objectives
  • Strategic objectives
  • Emphasis on financial performance may
    assumepriority over strategic performance when
    companys
  • Financial performance is dismal and/or
  • Survival is threatened
  • Otherwise, management is advised to put more
    emphasis on achieving strategic objectives

The surest path to sustained future
profitabilityyear after year is to relentlessly
pursue strategic outcomesthat strengthen a
companys business position andgive it a growing
competitive advantage over rivals!
19
Short-Term vs.Long-Term Objectives
  • Short-term objectives
  • Targets to be achieved soon
  • Milestones or stair steps for reaching long-range
    performance
  • Long-term objectives
  • Targets to be achieved within3 to 5 years
  • Prompt actions now that willpermit reaching
    targetedlong-range performance later

20
Crafting a Strategy
Phase 3 of the Strategy-Making Process
  • Strategy involves determining whether to
  • Concentrate on a single business or several
    businesses (diversification)
  • Cater to a broad range of customers or focus on a
    particular niche
  • Develop a wide or narrow product line
  • Pursue a competitive advantage based on
  • Low cost or
  • Product superiority

21
Core Elements ofMcDonalds Strategy
  • Add 1750 restaurants annually
  • Promote frequent customer visits via attractive
    menu items, low-price specials, and Extra Value
    Meals
  • Be highly selective in granting franchises
  • Locate on sites offering convenience to customers
    and profitable growth potential
  • Focus on limited menu and consistent quality
  • Careful attention to store efficiency
  • Extensive advertising and use of Mc prefix
  • Hire courteous personnel pay an equitable wage
    provide good training

22
Types of Strategies
  • Corporate-level Strategies
  • Define the businesses that our company will
    compete in
  • Business-level Strategies
  • Define how we will compete in those businesses

23
Tasks of Corporate Strategy
  • Moves to achieve diversification
  • Actions to boost performance of individual
    businesses
  • Capturing valuable cross-business synergies to
    provide1 1 3 effects!
  • Establishing investment priorities
    and steering corporate resources into the
    most attractive businesses

24
Tasks of Business Strategy
  • Forming responses to changes in industry and
    competitive conditions, buyer needs and
    preferences, economy, regulations, etc.
  • Crafting competitive moves to produce sustainable
    competitive advantage
  • Building competitively valuable competencies and
    capabilities
  • Uniting strategic initiatives of functional areas
  • Addressing strategic issues facing the company

25
Tasks of Functional Strategies
  • Game plan for a strategically-relevantfunction,
    activity, or business process
  • Detail how key activitieswill be managed
  • Provide support forbusiness strategy
  • Specify how functional objectivesare to be
    achieved

26
Tasks of Operating Strategies
  • Concern narrower strategies formanaging
    activities andstrategically-relevant operating
    units
  • Add detail to businessand functional strategies

27
Uniting the CompanysStrategy-Making Effort
  • A firms strategy is really a collection of
    initiatives undertaken by managers at all levels
    in the organizational hierarchy
  • All the various strategic initiatives must be
    unified intoa cohesive, company-wide action plan
  • Pieces of strategy should fittogether like the
    pieces of a puzzle

28
What Is a Strategic Plan?
Where firm is headed -- Strategic vision and
business mission
A Companys Strategic Plan Consists of
Short-term and long-term performance targets --
Strategic and financial objectives
Action approaches to achieve targeted results --
A comprehensive strategy
29
Implementing and Executing Strategy
Phase 4 of the Strategy-Making Process
  • Taking actions to put a freshly-chosen strategy
    into place
  • Improving the competence and efficiency with
    which
  • the strategy is being executed
  • Showing measurable progress in
  • achieving the targeted results and objectives

30
What Does Strategy Implementation Involve?
  • Allocating resources to strategy-critical
    activities
  • Establishing strategy-supportive policies
  • Motivating people to pursue the target objectives
  • Tying rewards to achievement of results
  • Creating a strategy-supportive corporate culture
  • Installing needed information, communication, and
    operating systems
  • Instituting best practices and programs for
    continuous improvement
  • Exerting the leadership necessary to drive the
    process forward and keep improving

31
Evaluating Performance andMaking Corrective
Adjustments
Phase 5 of the Strategy-Making Process
  • The tasks of crafting, implementing, and
    executing a strategy are not a one-time exercise
  • Customer needs and competitiveconditions change
  • New opportunities appear technology advances
    any number of other outside developments occur
  • One or more aspects of executing thestrategy may
    not be going well
  • Organizational learning occurs
  • All these trigger the need for corrective actions
    and adjustments

32
Monitoring, Evaluating, and Adjusting as
Needed
  • Taking actions to adjust to the march of events
    tends to result in one or more of the following
  • Altering long-term direction and/orredefining
    the mission/vision
  • Raising, lowering, or changingperformance
    objectives
  • Modifying the strategy
  • Improving strategy execution
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