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The Manager as a Planner and Strategist

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Title: The Manager as a Planner and Strategist


1
The Manager as a Plannerand Strategist
  • chapter eight

2
Learning Objectives
  • Identify the three main steps of the planning
    process and the relationship between planning and
    strategy.
  • Describe some techniques managers can use to
    improve the planning process so they can better
    predict the future and mobilize organizational
    resources to meet future contingencies.

3
Learning Objectives (cont.)
  • Differentiate between the main types of
    business-level strategy and explain how they give
    an organization a competitive advantage lead to
    superior performance.
  • Differentiate between the main types of
    corporate-level strategies and explain how they
    are used to strengthen a companys business-level
    strategy and competitive advantage
  • Describe the vital role managers play in
    implementing strategies to achieve an
    organizations mission and goals

4
Planning and Strategy
  • Planning
  • Identifying and selecting appropriate goals and
    courses of action for an organization.
  • The organizational plan that results from the
    planning process details the goals and specifies
    how managers will attain those goals.

5
Planning and Strategy
  • Strategy
  • A cluster of decisions about what goals to
    pursue, what actions to take, and how to use
    resources to achieve goals.

6
Planning and Strategy
  • Mission Statement
  • A broad declaration of an organizations purpose
    that identifies the organizations products and
    customers and distinguishes the organization from
    its competitors.

7
Example Facebook Mission Statement
  • Facebook's mission is to give people the power to
    share and make the world more open and connected.

8
Three Steps in Planning
Figure 8.1
9
The Nature of the Planning Process
  • To perform the planning task, managers
  • Establish where an organization is at the present
    time
  • Determine its desired future state
  • Decide how to move it forward to reach that
    future state

10
Why Planning is Important
  • Necessary to give the organization a sense of
    direction and purpose
  • Useful way of getting managers to participate in
    decision making about the appropriate goals and
    strategies for an organization
  • Helps coordinate managers of the different
    functions and divisions of an organization
  • Can be used as a device for controlling managers

11
Why Planning is Important
  • Unity
  • at any one time only one central, guiding plan is
    put into operation
  • Continuity
  • planning is an ongoing process in which managers
    build and refine previous plans and continually
    modify plans at all levels

12
Why Planning is Important
  • Accuracy
  • managers need to make every attempt to collect
    and utilize all available information at their
    disposal
  • Flexibility
  • plans can be altered and changed if the situation
    changes

13
Levels of Planning at General Electric
Figure 8.2
14
Levels and Types of Planning
Figure 8.3
15
Levels of Planning
  • Corporate-Level Plan
  • Top managements decisions pertaining to the
    organizations mission, overall strategy, and
    structure.
  • Provides a framework for all other planning.
  • Corporate-Level Strategy
  • A plan that indicates in which industries and
    national markets an organization intends to
    compete.

16
Levels of Planning
  • Business-Level Plan
  • Long-term divisional goals that will allow the
    division to meet corporate goals
  • Divisions business-level and structure to
    achieve divisional goals

17
Levels of Planning
  • Business-Level Strategy
  • Outlines the specific methods a division,
    business unit, or organization will use to
    compete effectively against its rivals in an
    industry

18
Levels of Planning
  • Functional-Level Plan
  • Goals that the managers of each function will
    pursue to help their division attain its
    business-level goals
  • Functional Strategy
  • A plan of action that managers of individual
    functions can take to add value to an
    organizations goods and services

19
Time Horizons of Plans
  • Time Horizon
  • Period of time over which they are intended to
    apply or endure.
  • Long-term plans are usually 5 years or more.
  • Intermediate-term plans are 1 to 5 years.
  • Short-term plans are less than 1 year.

20
Types of Plans
  • Standing Plans
  • used in programmed decision situations
  • Policies - general guides to action
  • Rules - formal written specific guides to action
  • Standard operating procedures (SOP) - specify an
    exact series of actions to follow

21
Types of Plans
  • Single-Use Plans
  • Developed to handle non-programmed
    decision-making in one-of-a-kind situations
  • Programs integrated plans achieving certain
    goals.
  • Project specific action plans to complete
    programs.

22
Scenario Planning
  • Scenario Planning (Contingency Planning)
  • The generation of multiple forecasts of future
    conditions followed by an analysis of how to
    effectively respond to those conditions.

23
Determining the Organizations Mission and Goals
  • Defining the Business
  • Who are our customers?
  • What customer needs are being satisfied?
  • How are we satisfying customer needs?
  • Establishing Major Goals
  • Provides the organization with a sense of
    direction

24
Three Mission Statements
Figure 8.4
25
Establishing Major Goals
  • Strategic leadership
  • the ability of the CEO and top managers to convey
    a compelling vision of what they want to achieve
    to their subordinates

26
Formulating Strategy
  • Strategic Formulation
  • The development of a set of corporate, business,
    and functional strategies that allow an
    organization to accomplish its mission and
    achieve its goals

27
Formulating Strategy
  • SWOT Analysis
  • A planning exercise in which managers identify
    organizational strengths (S) and weaknesses (W)
    and environmental opportunities (O) and threats
    (T).

28
Questions for SWOT Analysis
29
Planning and Strategy Formulation
Figure 8.5
30
The Five Forces
  • Level of rivalry in an industry
  • Potential for new entrants
  • Power of large suppliers
  • Power of large customers
  • Threat of substitute products

31
The Five Forces
  • Hypercompetition
  • industries that are characterized by permanent,
    ongoing, intense, competition brought about by
    advancing technology or changing customer tastes
    and fads and fashions

32
Formulating Business-Level Strategies
  • Low-Cost Strategy
  • Driving the organizations total costs down below
    the total costs of rivals.
  • Differentiation
  • Distinguishing an organizations products from
    the products of competitors on dimensions such as
    product design, quality, or after-sales service.

33
Formulating Business-Level Strategies
  • Stuck in the Middle
  • Attempting to simultaneously pursue both a low
    cost strategy and a differentiation strategy.
  • Difficult to achieve low cost with the added
    costs of differentiation.

34
Formulating Business-Level Strategies
  • Focused Low-Cost
  • Serving only one market segment and being the
    lowest-cost organization serving that segment.
  • Focused Differentiation
  • Serving only one market segment as the most
    differentiated organization serving that segment.

35
Principal Corporate-Level Strategies
36
Related Diversification
  • Synergy
  • Obtained when the value created by two divisions
    cooperating is greater than the value that would
    be created if the two divisions operated
    separately and independently

37
International Expansion
  • Multi-domestic Strategy
  • Customizing products and marketing strategies to
    specific national conditions
  • Helps gain local market share
  • Raises production costs

38
Four Ways to Expand Internationally
Figure 8.7
39
Planning and Implementing Strategy
  • Allocate implementation responsibility to the
    appropriate individuals or groups.
  • Draft detailed action plans for implementation.
  • Establish a timetable for implementation
  • Allocate appropriate resources
  • Hold specific groups or individuals responsible
    for the attainment of corporate, divisional, and
    functional goals.

40
Video Case State Farm Bank
  • Why is planning important for organizations like
    State Farm?
  • What kind of diversification took place when
    State Farm entered the banking field?
  • How does State Farm differentiate its banking
    services from those of its competitors?
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