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CHAPTER 2: Mission and Goals

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Title: CHAPTER 2: Mission and Goals


1
CHAPTER 2 Mission and Goals
  • I. Defining the Business
  • A. A Single Business Company
  • The Steel Industry
  • B. A Diversified Company
  • R. J. Reynolds

2
Mission and Goals
  • Defining the Business (Continued) A Single
    Business Enterprise
  • Defining the Business involves asking
  • 1. What is our Business?
  • 2. What will it be?
  • 3. What should it be?
  • A Business should take a consumer-oriented
    rather than a product- oriented approach to
    defining the business.

3
Mission and Goals
  • Defining the Business A consumer-oriented
    approach for a Single Business Enterprise
  • 1. Who is being satisfied (what consumer
    groups)?
  • 2. What is being satisfied (what customer
    needs)?
  • 3. How are customer needs being satisfied (by
  • what technologies)?

4
Mission and Goals
  • Defining the Business for a Diversified
    Enterprise
  • A diversified company faces special problems
    when trying to define its business because it
    actually operates several businesses. The
    corporate business is often one of managing a
    collection of businesses. Therefore, at a
    diversified enterprise defining the business must
    be addressed at the business and corporate level.

5
Mission and Goals
  • At the Corporate Level
  • The corporate business definition should focus
    on how the corporate level adds value to the
    constituent businesses of the company. The
    mission should identify the contribution that the
    corporate level makes to the efficient operation
    of business units. It should identify how those
    business units are better off as part of the
    corporation than as freestanding entities.

6
Mission and Goals
  • III. Vision and Major Goals
  • A. An organizations vision and major goals
    spell out formally what the organization is
    trying to achieve they give direction to the
    corporate mission statement and help guide the
    formulation of strategy.
  • B. The vision of an organization can often be
    viewed as an articulation of its strategic
    intent.
  • C. Beyond articulating their vision, many
    companies also state other major goals in their
    mission statement. These goals often articulate
    with more precision how a company intends to go
    about attaining its strategic intent.

7
Mission and Goals
  • III. Vision and Major Goals (Continued)
  • D. Maximizing stockholders wealth should be the
    overriding corporate goal toward which all others
    are oriented.

8
Mission and Goals
  • II. Vision and Major Goals (Continued)
  • B. Maximizing Stockholder Wealth
  • C. The Short-Term Problem
  • This problem occurs when firms focus too
    narrowly on ROI only. This problem should not
    occur when shareholder wealth is viewed in its
    proper perspective.
  • D. Secondary Goals
  • These would include a) market share
    b)innovation
  • c) productivity d) physical and financial
    resources
  • e) manager performance f) worker performance
  • g) social and ethical responsibility

9
Mission and Goals
  • III. Corporate Philosophy
  • The Corporate Philosophy includes the basic
    beliefs, values, aspirations, and philosophical
    priorities that the strategic decision makers are
    committed to and that guide their management of
    the company. See the example of Johnson and
    Johnson on page 44.

10
Mission and Goals
  • IV. Corporate Stakeholders
  • Corporate stakeholders are individuals or groups
    that have some claim on the firm. The major
    stakeholders are the owner (shareholders).
    Others include employees and officers,
    customers, suppliers, governments, unions,
    competitors, local communities, and the general
    public.
  • A. Stakeholders and the Mission Statement
  • By committing itself to satisfying the claims of
    key stakeholder groups in its mission statement,
    the company is sending a message to those groups
    that its strategies will be formulated with their
    claims in mind.

11
Mission and Goals
  • B. Stakeholder Impact Analysis
  • 1. Identify key stakeholders
  • 2. Identify their interests and concerns
  • 3. Identify what claims they are likely to make
    on
  • the organization
  • 4. Identify the most important stakeholders for
    the
  • organization
  • 5. Identify the resultant strategic challenges
    in satisfying the claims of the stakeholders

12
Mission and Goals
  • V. Corporate Governance and Strategy
  • A. Management vs. Stockholder Goals
  • On-the-job consumption is another name for the
    agency problem that is found in finance. Here
    management tries to enhance their status with
    jets, offices, expensive trips.
  • B. Stockholder Meetings
  • Annual meetings provide a forum for owners and
    management to communicate and elect board members
    as well as review most recent historic results.

13
Corporate Governance (Continued)
  • C. The Role of the Board of Directors
  • The Board of Directors look after the
    stockholders interests in relation to the
    direction the CEO takes the company. If the
    boards sense is that corporate strategies are
    not in the best interest of shareholders, it can
    apply sanctions against management nominations or
    submit their own nominations. If this happens,
    it is usually the signaling of the end for the
    CEO. The board of directors are directly elected
    by stockholders and can legally accountable for
    the actions of the firm. The board has the
    authority to hire, fire and compensate company
    employees, including the CEO.

14
Corporate Governance (Continued)
  • D. Stock Compensation Plans
  • These plans are designed to align the interests
    of managers with those stockholders. Under them,
    executives receive a major proportion of their
    income from stockholdings in the company. Thus
    it is in the best interest of such executives to
    promote strategies that maximize stockholder
    wealth since these strategies maximize their own
    wealth too.

15
Mission and Goals
  • VI. Strategy and Ethics
  • A. The Purpose of Ethics
  • The purpose of ethics is to give people the tools
    for dealing with moral complexity for identifying
    and thinking through the moral implications of
    strategic decisions
  • D. Corporate Social Responsibility
  • This concept is based on the argument that when
    companies evaluate decisions from an ethical
    perspective, there should be a presumption in
    favor of adopting courses of action that enhance
    the welfare of society at large.

16
Mission and Goals StatementThe Coca-Cola Company
  • Coca Cola is in the refreshment business and not
    the soft drink business. On the basis of this
    defined Mission, Coke makes a number of
    statements about their business
  • 1. Coke sells a product that has universal
    appeal and accessibility and also meets the
    recurring human need for refreshment.
  • - Coke is a product with physical attributes
    that the human palate enjoys, no matter what
    the culture or demographic status. Also
    important is the universal
  • accessibility of Coke.

17
Mission and Goals StatementThe Coca-Cola Company
  • 2. Coca-Cola has almost limitless Growth
    opportunities around the world. Currently, every
    human being on the face of this planet has a
    minimal need for 64 liquid ounces to stay alive.
    Coke consumption represents only 2 of the ounces
    per day. Coke in 1995 accounted for 80 of the
    soft drink industrys growth in the United
    States. Why, because their mission is that of
    providing refreshment and not just a beverage.
    As a result of this mission definition, Coke,
    since 1980, has increased shareholder wealth by
    89 billion, the equivalent of 24 per year. In
    1995 alone, Coke added an additional 27 billion
    in wealth to shareholders equity.

18
Mission and Goals StatementThe Coca-Cola Company
  • When Coke asks the question, Whats our most
    underdeveloped market? The answer is not
    expressed in terms of geographics or
    demographics, the answer is expressed as THE
    HUMAN BODY. Every day every one of the 5.7
    billion people on this planet must consume
    roughly 64 ounces of fluid to stay alive. Coke
    currently accounts for less than 2 of those
    ounces.
  • Currently, Coke has 47 of the worldwide market
    in soft drink sales. But they no longer measure
    themselves in such a narrow way. Instead, they
    focus on expanding their share of every human
    beings fluid intake. In some cases that may mean
    taking on other international soft drink
    companies, but in other cases, indigenous
    beverages are their biggest contenders. Only tap
    water is their rival.

19
Mission and Goals StatementsThe Coca-Cola
Company
  • As a result of this mission statement, Coke sees
    unlimited growth opportunities. When asked the
    question if their comes a point when you cant
    expand further, Chairman Roberto Goizueta said,
    No. As long as people continue to consume
    approximately 64 ounces of fluid per day, our
    growth opportunities will be virtually
    unlimited.
  • In addition, 60 of the worlds population lives
    in markets where the average person consumes less
    than 10, 8-ounce servings of Coke products per
    year. Coke is just beginning to scratch the
    surface of their potential. In Korea, sales of
    Coke surpass that of tea. In Brazil, Coke
    outsells the leading coffee manufacturer.
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