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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-1 STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT & BUSINESS POLICY 11 TH EDITION THOMAS L. WHEELEN J. DAVID HUNGER CHAPTER 1 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-2 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Globalization Internationalization of markets and corporations Global (worldwide) markets rather than national markets www.iugaza.edu.ps\emp\melfarra Electronic Commerce Use of the Internet to conduct business transactions Basis for competition on a more strategic level rather than traditional focus on product features and costs
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-3 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Electronic Commerce -- Trends Forcing company transformation Market access & branding changing – disintermediation of traditional distribution channels Balance of power shift to consumer Competition changing
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-4 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Electronic Commerce -- Trends Pace\speed of business increasing Internet purchasing beyond traditional boundaries Knowledge key asset – source of competitive advantage
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-5 Strategic Management Defined Set of managerial decisions and actions that determines the long-run performance of a firm. It includes environmental scanning, strategy formulation, strategy implementation, and evaluation and control.
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-6 Strategy formulation Strategy formulation is typically not a regular, continuous process but is often initiated by generating events, such as a new CEO or a performance gap.
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-7 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management 4 Phases of Strategic Management Firms evolve through the following faces of strategic management. 1.Basic financial planning 2.Forecast-based planning 3.Externally-oriented planning 4.Strategic management
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-8 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management 1.Basic financial planning: initiate some planning when they requested to set up their budgets; considers activities for one year. 2.Forecast-based planning: consider projects for more than a year. The time horizon is usually 3-5 years. 3.Externally-oriented planning: conduct strategic planning by top management and they leave implementation to low level. 4.Strategic management: planning by forming a team from all levels in the company.
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-9 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Highly Rated Benefits Clearer sense of strategic vision Sharper focus on strategic importance Improved understanding of changing environment
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-10 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Not Always a Formal Process Where is the organization now? (not where do we hope it is) If no changes are made, where will the organization be in 1,2,5 or 10 years? What specific actions should management undertake? What are the risks and payoffs?
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-11 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Basic Elements of the Strategic Management Process
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-12 Environmental Scanning Defined Monitoring, evaluation, and disseminating information from external and internal environments –to key people in the firm
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-13 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Environmental Variables
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-14 Environmental Scanning SWOT Analysis Strengths – Weaknesses Opportunities - Threats
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-15 Strategy Formulation Development of long-range plans for effective management of opportunities and threats in light of corporate strengths and weaknesses
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-16 Strategy Formulation Mission Statement Purpose/reason for organization Promotes shared expectations Communicates public image Who we are; what we do; what we aspire to
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-17 Organizational Adaptation Organization “fit” with environment Theory of population ecology\biology: org. unable to adapt to changing conditions. Institution theory: org. can adapt to changes. Strategic choice perspective: not only adapt to changes but also it can reshape its environment. Organizational learning theory:
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-18 Organizational Adaptation Strategic flexibility Demands long-term commitment to development of critical resources Demands firm become a learning organization
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-19 Learning Organizations An organization skilled at creating, acquiring, and transferring knowledge and at modifying its behavior to reflect new knowledge and insights
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-20 Learning Organizations 4 Chief Activities Systematic problem solving New approach experimentation Learning from experiences Intra-organization knowledge transfer
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-21 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Hierarchy of Strategy
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-22 levels of strategy\hierarchy A large corporation tends to have three levels of strategy (corporate, business, and functional) which form a hierarchy of strategy.
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-23 Goals & Objectives Corporate Goals/Objectives –Profitability (net profit) –Growth –Resource utilization (ROE, ROI) –Market leadership
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-24 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management 3 Types of Strategy –Corporate strategy –Business strategy –Functional strategy
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-25 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Corporate Strategy –Stability –Growth –Retrenchment
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-26 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Business Strategy –Competitive strategies –Cooperative strategies
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-27 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Functional Strategy –Technological leadership –Technological followership
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-28 Basic Concepts of Strategic Management Strategic Decision-Making Process
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-29 Strategic Decision Making Strategic Decisions –Rare –Consequential –Directive
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-30 Strategic Decision Making Top managers tend to use one of four modes of strategy formulation: Mintzberg’s Modes –Entrepreneurial mode –Adaptive mode –Planning mode –Logical incrementalism
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Prentice Hall, Inc. © 20081-31 Hambrick and Fredrickson – Good Strategy 5 Elements of Good Strategy 1.Arenas 2.Vehicles 3.Differentiators 4.Staging 5.Economic logic
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