Title: Strategic Management
1Strategic Management
- Engineering Management
- ELE 22EMT
George Alexander G.Alexander_at_latrobe.edu.au http/
/www.latrobe.edu.au/eemanage/
Lecture 7
2Lecture Outline
- The concept of strategic management
- Competitive analysis in strategy formulation
- Formulating corporate level strategy
- Formulating business level strategy
- Strategy implementation
3Business Planning Framework
- Where are we now?
- What business are we in?
- Where do we want to go?
- What is necessary to close the gap?
- How do we make it all happen?
4The Concept of Strategic Management
- Most well-run organisations try to develop and
follow strategies, which are large-scale action
plans for interacting with the environment to
achieve long-term goals (Jauch Glueck 1988
Pearce Robinson 1988). - It is important to recognise that strategic
management is oriented towards - Achieving long-term goals,
- Weighs important environmental elements,
- Considers major internal organisational
characteristics, and - Involves specific strategy development.
5The Strategic Management Process
- Strategy Formulation
- Identify organisational mission and strategic
goals - Performing competitive situation analysis,
considering both external environment and
internal organisational factors. - Developing the strategies to reach the strategic
goals - Strategy Implementation
- Effective implementation of the strategic plan
- Brilliantly formulated strategies will not
succeed if they are implemented ineffectively
6The Importance of Strategic Management
- The process helps organisations to identify and
develop a competitive advantage. - It provides direction such that the organisation
knows where to expend its efforts. - It demonstrates the need for innovation in the
organisation new ways of thinking and doing
things. - It can involve managers at various levels in the
planning process. This makes it more likely that
the plans will be understood and committed to.
7Strategy implementation
Strategy formulation
assess environmental factors
Identify current mission and strategic goals
- Conduct competitive analysis
- strengths
- weakness
- opportunity
- threats
- Develop specific strategies
- corporate
- business
- functional
carry out strategic plans
maintain strategic control
assess organisational factors
8Conducting Competitive Analysis
- Strengths on which to capitalise,
- Weaknesses you need to address,
- Opportunity available to you, and
- Threats that could adversely affect you.
SWOT Analysis
9SWOT Analysis
External Factors
Key Opportunities
Key Threats
Internal Factors
Key Strengths
Most Likely
Possible
Key Weaknesses
Possible
Unlikely
10Organisational Assessment
Skills levels (competency profiles)
The organisations strengths and weaknesses
Information systems (up-to-date)?
Organisational culture
Tangible assets (buildings and equipment)
Sales and distribution channels
Liquidity (and other financial dimensions)
Organisational structure (flexibility)
11Environmental Assessment
Competitor Analysis
Industry and Market Analysis
Political Regulatory Analysis
Technological Analysis
The organisation
Social Analysis
Human Resources Analysis
Economic Analysis
12Levels of Strategy
- Corporate-Level Strategy
- the businesses an organisation will operate
- co-ordination of strategies
- allocation of resources
- Business-Level Strategy
- strategic business units
- focusing on a particular business
- Functional-Level Strategy
- managing functional area to support
business-level strategy - the day-to-day management of business
13CORPORATE STRATEGY
Corporate Level
Business Level
Business 1 Strategy
Business 2 Strategy
Business 3 Strategy
Functional Level
Operations Management Strategy
R D Strategy
Financial/ Accounting Strategy
Marketing Strategy
Human Resources Strategy
14Co-ordinating Levels of Strategy
- Co-ordinating strategies across the levels is
critical to maximising strategic impact - Business-level strategy is enhanced when
functional-level strategies support it. - Corporate-level strategy will have more impact
when supported by business-level strategies
complementing each other. - Thus, the three levels must be co-ordinated as
part of the Strategic Management. - Top-Down or Bottom-Up approach ?
15concentration
Vertical integration
Growth
Diversification
Stability
GRAND STRATEGIES
harvest
turnaround
divestiture
Defensive
bankruptcy
liquidation
16Growth Strategy
- Concentration
- Market development
- Product development
- Horizontal integration
- Vertical Integration
- Backward integration, business grows by becoming
its own supplier - Forward integration, business growth encompasses
a role previously fulfilled by a customer
17Growth Strategy - Cont.
- Diversification
- Conglomerate diversification when an organisation
diversifies into areas unrelated to its current
business - Concentric diversification when an organisation
diversifies into related, but distinct, business - Growth strategies can be implemented by
- Internal growth
- An acquisition
- A merger
18Stability Strategy
- Maintaining the status quo or growing in a
methodical, but slow, manner. - Adopted by small privately owned businesses
- Reasons for adopting this strategy
- Avoid risk
- Provide an opportunity to recover after a period
of an accelerated growth - Lets company hold on to current market share
- May occur through default
19Defensive Strategy
- Harvest entails minimising investments while
attempting to maximise short-run profits and cash
flow, with the long-run intention of exiting the
market. - A turnaround is designed to reverse a negative
trend and restore the organisation to appropriate
levels of profitability. - A divestiture involves an organisation's selling
or divesting of a business or part of a business. - Liquidation entails selling or dissolving an
entire organisation
20References
- Bartol, K.M., Martin, D.C., Tein, M., Matthews,
G., Management A Pacific Rim Focus,
McGraw-Hill, 2002.
Thanks you for your attention