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Mastering Strategic Management Chapter 1 Mastering Strategy: Art and Science

Mastering Strategic Management Chapter 1 Mastering Strategy: Art and Science. Welcome to Strategy [ABC-XXX]. Welcome Introduction to Business Policy – course outline Administrative Details Expectations (mine and yours) Student Success (advice). Learning Objectives.

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Mastering Strategic Management Chapter 1 Mastering Strategy: Art and Science

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  1. Mastering Strategic ManagementChapter 1Mastering Strategy: Art and Science

  2. Welcome to Strategy [ABC-XXX] • Welcome • Introduction to Business Policy – course outline • Administrative Details • Expectations (mine and yours) • Student Success (advice)

  3. Learning Objectives • Insert from Course Outline

  4. Managing in the Real World

  5. (IMHO) there are only 2 key Leadership Tasks • 1 - Manage the People (Up, Down, Sideways) • ‘People’ skills • Listening is #1 • Thank you is #2 • 2 - Set the long-term strategic direction • Where do you want to be in 5 years Hint, this course focuses on the latter!! Many other skills are required of course, but “when push comes to shove”, for everything else you can hire off the street, delegate, contract for…

  6. What is Strategic Management? Examines how actions and events involving top executives (such as Steve Jobs), firms (Apple), and industries (the tablet market) influence a firm’s success or failure • Formal tools that exist forunderstanding theserelationships are not enough • Creativity is just as important tostrategic management http://www.whatmakesagoodleader.com

  7. Choices http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Train_Track_Changing_System.JPG

  8. Why some Firms and not Others? Not Luck!! • Lots of Studies looking for Answer… • Part of the answer linked to Strategic Choices and execution!

  9. A Gallery of Disruptive Technologies (2014-2025, http://www.mckinsey.com)

  10. On the Horizon… • Climate Change • Economic Booms & Busts • Demographic Changes • Energy • Potable (drinkable) water shortage

  11. What do all these potential things have in common? CHANGE… Disruptive technologies can & will change the game for businesses, creating entirely new opportunities, costs & value propositions. Business leaders must: • maintain a competitive strategy • continuously scan for new opportunities / challenges to existing profits centers • adopt use technologies to improve internal performance • keep employees’ skills up-to-date, right people on bus! • Balance potential benefits with

  12. It’s not all strategy…But strategy (or lack of) explains a lot

  13. For teaching in two 90-minute classes/wk, possible break point

  14. Tic-Tac-Toe – What’s Your Strategy? OK, my turn. Now you go You Go First! Make your Mark X

  15. Strategy • Strategic management helps answer the key question: “why do some firms outperform other firms?” • Examines how actions and events involving top executives, firms, and industries influence a firm’s success or failure • Various tools exist to analyse and understanding these relationships • But, creativity is central to strategic management; mastering strategy is therefore part art and part science.

  16. Strategy as Plan • A strategic plan is a carefully crafted set of steps that a firm intends to follow to be successful. • Virtually every organization creates a strategic plan to guide its future • So should you….

  17. ‘Cause real process is pretty unlikely!! Will we be going in circles to the LEFT? X Or to the RIGHT? If you’re not going to have a strategy, the only interesting question is…

  18. Business Model – Profit Plan! • Economies of Scale (lower costs) • Specialized Equipment (hotter ovens) • Expert pizza cooks (specilization)

  19. Strategy as Ploy • A strategic ploy is a specific move designed to outwit or trick competitors. • Ploys often involve using creativity to enhance success • Ploys can be especially beneficial in the face of much stronger opponents. • Military history offers quite a few illustrative examples

  20. Strategy as Pattern • Consistency of strategy over time • Kmart began straying from its established strategic pattern, from discount retailing and toward diversification including sporting goods (Sports Authority), building supplies (Builders Square), office supplies (OfficeMax), and books (Borders) • In the 1990s, Kmart’s strategy was again adjusted to emphasize information technology and supply chain management • Then Kmart’s strategy was to compete directly with its much-larger rival, Walmart. The resulting price war left Kmart crippled and eventually bankrupt

  21. Strategy as Position • Strategy as position—considers a firm and its competitors • Refers to a firm’s place in the industry relative to its competitors, leader, brand levels • Very hard to change position….

  22. Strategy as Perspective • Strategy as perspective refers to how executives interpret the competitive landscape around them • Because each person is unique, 2 different executives could look at the same event—such as a new competitor emerging—and attach different meanings to it • One might just see a new threat to his or her firm’s sales; the other sees newcomer as potential ally • An old cliché “make lemons into lemonade”

  23. 1.2 Intended, Emergent & Realized Strategies • Intended strategies: Strategy that an organization hopes to execute • Emergent strategies: Unplanned strategy that arises in response to unexpected opportunities and challenges • Realized strategies: The strategy that an organization actually follows. They are a product of both intended and realized strategies • Deliberate strategy: The parts of the intended strategy that an organization continues to pursue over time • Non-realized strategy: The parts of the intended strategy that are abandoned

  24. Strategies - Examples

  25. Strategies - Examples

  26. Strategies - Examples

  27. A Model of Intended, Deliberate, and Realized Strategy (Figure 1.3)

  28. FED EX • Part Intended strategies: Packages sent through central hubs (like passengers) • Part Emergent strategies: ZapMail (Fax service that failed) • Realized strategies: The strategy that an organization actually follows, combo of both intended & realized strategies • Deliberate strategy: The parts of the intended strategy that an organization continues to pursue over time

  29. Regional Hub Model https://flic.kr/p/6mHALH

  30. 1.3 History of Strategic Management

  31. History of Strategic Management

  32. History of Strategic Management

  33. History of Strategic Management

  34. History of Strategic Management

  35. The Modern History of Strategic Management Frederick Taylor, father of 'scientific management', testifying before Congress a hundred years ago: 'I can say, without the slightest hesitation, that the science of handling pig-iron is so great that the man who is ... physically able to handle pig-iron and is sufficiently phlegmatic and stupid to choose this for his occupation is rarely able to comprehend the science of handling pig-iron.'

  36. Frederick W Taylor Taylor was a mechanical engineer & 1st person to systemically study work. ‘Scientific management’ is responsible for tremendous surge of affluence in the last 75 years, lifting working masses in developed countries well above any level recorded before, even for the well-to-do. Taylor's scientific management consisted of four principles: • Replace rule-of-thumb work methods with methods based on a scientific study of the tasks • Scientifically select, train, and develop each employee rather than passively leaving them to train themselves • Provide "Detailed instruction & supervision of each worker in the performance of that worker's discrete task” • Divide work - managers apply scientific management principles to planning work & workers actually perform tasks

  37. Frank & Lillian GilbrethTime & Motion Study in Bricklaying http://youtu.be/lDg9REgkCQk (1:30min)

  38. The Modern History of Strategic Management

  39. The Modern History of Strategic Management

  40. 1.4 Understanding the Strategic Management Process BOTH AN ART & SCIENCE! Strategic management process: Building a careful understanding of how the world is changing & knowledge of how changes might affect a particular firm • Understanding strategy and performance • Environmental and Internal scanning • Strategy formulation • Strategy implementation

  41. Key Takeaways • Strategic management focuses on firms & different strategies used to become & remain successful • Multiple views of strategy exist, and the 5 Ps (Mintzberg) enhance understanding of the various ways in which firms conceptualize strategy • Most org create intended strategies they hope will lead to success • Over time, however, new opportunities & challenges - emergent strategies • Realized strategies are a product of both intended and realized strategies

  42. Key Takeaways • Although strategic management as a field of study has developed mostly over the last century, the concept of strategy is much older • Understanding strategic management can benefit greatly by learning the lessons that ancient history and military strategy provide • Sometimes reducing size of firms maximize chances of success or survival, from modest steps such as retrenchment or more profound restructuring strategies

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