1 / 21

Strategic Management Process and Concepts

Understand the process of strategic management: from identifying mission and goals to competitive analysis and strategy formulation. Explore levels of strategy and Porter’s competitive forces model. Learn about growth, stability, and defensive strategies.

thsu
Download Presentation

Strategic Management Process and Concepts

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture # 8 & 9 Chapter 7 – Strategic Management

  2. Concept of Strategic Management • Strategy: large-scale action plan which helps in achieving long-term goals. • Strategic management: process through which managers formulate and implement strategies in order to achieve strategic goals, given available environmental and internal conditions.

  3. Strategic Management Process • Identifying organization’s mission and strategic goals • Next is competitive situation analysis, considering both external environment and organizational factors. • Formulation of strategies to reach goals • Then is strategy implementation

  4. Strategy formulation: process of identifying mission and strategic goals, conducting competitive analysis and then developing strategies. • Competitive advantage: significant edge over your competitor. • Strategy implementation: process of carrying out strategic plans and maintaining control over how those plans are carried out.

  5. Levels of Strategy • Corporate-level strategy: addresses what business the organization will operate, how strategies will be co-ordinated to strengthen the organization’s competitive position, and how resources will be allocated among businesses. • Business-level strategy: concentrates on the best means of competing within a particular business while also supporting corporate level strategy.

  6. Functional-level strategy: focuses on action plans for managing a particular functional area within a business in a way that supports business-level strategy. • SBU: distinct business, with its own set of competitors, which can be managed independently within the organization.

  7. Competitive Analysis SWOT Analysis: method of analyzing an organization’s competitive situation involving assessing organizational strengths (S), weaknesses (W), environmental opportunities (O) and threats (T).

  8. Porter’s 5 Competitive Forces • Rivalry: various competitive tactics among rivals lower prices that can be charged for doing a business. • Bargaining power of customers: customers force price reductions or negotiate increases in product quality and service at the same price. • Bargaining power of suppliers: suppliers threaten price increases or reductions in quality of goods and services.

  9. Threat of new entrants: new entrants bid prices down or cause incumbents to increase costs to maintain market position. • Threat of substitute products or services: availability of substitutes limits the prices that can be charged.

  10. Porter’s 5 Competitive Forces Model

  11. Formulating Corporate-level Strategy Grand strategy is a master strategy which provides the basic strategic direction at corporate level. In grand strategies, there are three basic categories: • Growth • Stability • Defensive grand strategy

  12. Growth Strategies Growth strategy: is a grand strategy involving organizational expansion. • Concentration: focuses on growing a single product or service, or a small number of closely related products. • Vertical integration: growth through production of inputs previously provided by suppliers, by disposing off one’s own outputs. • Diversification: growing into areas clearly distinct from current businesses.

  13. Concentration can occur through: • Market development: increasing current market share or expanding into new ones. • Product development: improving a product or service or expanding into closely related areas. • Horizontal integration: adding one or more similar businesses, usually by purchase.

  14. Forms of vertical integration: • Backward integration: when a business grows by becoming its own supplier. • Forward integration: when organizational growth includes occupying a role previously fulfilled by a distributor.

  15. Types of Diversification: • Conglomerate: occurs when an organization diversifies into unrelated main business areas. • Concentric: occurs when an organization diversifies into related, but distinct, businesses.

  16. Stability Strategy Stability strategy: strategy involving maintaining the status quo or growing in a methodical but slow manner.

  17. Defensive Strategies Defensive strategy: strategies focusing on the desire or need to reduce organizational operations, usually through costs or asset reduction.

  18. Types of Defensive strategies: • Harvest: minimizing investments while attempting to maximize short-run profits and cash flows, with the long-run intention of exiting the market. • Turnaround: designed to reverse a negative trend and restore the organization to appropriate levels of profitability. • Divestiture: involves an organization’s selling or divesting of a business or part of a business. • Liquidation: selling or dissolving an entire organization.

  19. Portfolio-strategy Approaches

  20. Formulating Business-level Strategy Porter’s competitive strategies are: • Cost leadership strategy: it emphasizes on organizational efficiency so overall costs of providing products and services are lower than those of competitors. • Differentiation strategy: this involves attempting to develop products and services viewed as unique in the industry. • Focus strategy: this specializes by establishing a position of overall cost leadership, differentiation or both, but only within a particular portion or segment of an entire market.

More Related