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Chapter 8.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 8."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 8

2 The Strategic Management Process
External Analysis Strategic Choice Strategy Implementation Competitive Advantage Mission Objectives Internal Analysis Implementing Corporate Diversification

3 Implementation Issues
How Information Flows Where and By Whom are Decisions Made How to Influence the Behavior of People • how can the interests of employees be aligned with the interests of the firm?

4 The Need for Organizational Structure
Information Processing Requirements • as organizations become larger and more complex, information processing requirements exceed individual capacity • bounded rationality • organizational structure divides information processing into manageable blocks (span of control)

5 M-Form Structure Board of Directors Senior Executive Division Division
Corporate Human Resources Corporate R&D Corporate Finance Strategic Planning Corporate Marketing Division Division Division Finance Production Engineering Accounting Sales & Marketing Human Resources

6 The Agency Relationship
A Trade Off M-Form Structure Divides Information Processing Requirements Into Manageable Blocks Divides Owners From Managers Interests of Owners and Managers May Diverge

7 The Agency Relationship
Managing Agency Monitors Principals Agents Division General Managers Individual Shareholders Senior Executives Board Of Directors Shared Activity Managers Institutional Shareholders Corporate Staff Dual Role

8 The Office of the President
Chairman of the Board (monitoring) Chairman CEO COO Chairman CEO COO Chairman CEO COO Chief Executive Officer (strategy formulation) Chairman CEO COO Chief Operating Officer (strategy implementation)

9 The Office of the President
Information Filtering • information about the divisions’ businesses is filtered as it rises to the senior executive • the senior executive can ‘manage’ the information flow • information flow should not exceed the bounded rationality of managers at any level in the organization • information should flow should be matched with decision-making authority

10 Division General Managers
Senior Executive Corporate Human Resources Corporate R&D Corporate Finance Strategic Planning Corporate Marketing Division Division Division Finance Production Engineering Accounting Sales & Marketing Human Resources

11 Shared Activity Managers
Division Division Division Finance Production Finance Production Engineering Engineering Human Resources Sales & Marketing Profit Centers Shared Activities Cost Centers

12 Management Controls 3 Issues Evaluating Divisional Performance
Allocating Capital Transferring Intermediate Products Measurement: Playing Games: Setting Prices: • accounting • managers want to look good • negotiation • economic value added (EVA) • cost • zero-based budgeting • market-based Ambiguity: • dual pricing • allocating costs & revenues

13 Compensation Policies
Compensation Committee In theory… • represents interests of owners in setting compensation of top executive team • sets compensation based on performance or market In practice… • sometimes appear to be beholden to executives • compensation decisions often bear little relationship to performance

14 Compensation Policies
Aligning Incentives Research shows… Theory predicts… Stock Options Tied to Performance Long Time Horizon Stock Grants Cash Bonus Short Time Horizon Not Tied to Performance Salary

15 Refocusing Corporate level strategy may call for exiting a business
• a conglomeration discount may exist • the corporation may lack necessary skills • expected economies of scope may not exist • the corporation may need funds for core activities MBO Divest Assets Spin-off or, IPO

16 International Implementation
Multi-Domestic Strategy Global Strategy Centralized Hub: Decentralized Federation: • highly autonomous units • facilitates global integration • very responsive locally • exploits a global product Coordinated Federation: • less autonomous • exploits scale economies • some shared activities between divisions

17 International Implementation
Transnational Structure • facilitates both local responsiveness and global integration • country managers are responsible for exploiting economies of scope • corporate HQ constantly scans the globe looking for best practices

18 Summary Successful implementation is a matter of:
• appropriately breaking information processing into manageable blocks • aligning the interests of owners and managers These can be accomplished through: • Organizational Structure • Management Controls • Compensation Policies


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