Title: Introduction to Strategic Management
1Introduction to Strategic Management
- Wright, Kroll Parnell
- Chapter 1
2What is strategic management?
- Strategy
- A plan to attain outcomes consistent with the
organizations mission and goals. - Strategic management
- The management activities involved in
- Determining the mission/goals of the organization
- formulating (developing) the strategy
- implementing (putting into action) the strategy
- controlling the strategy through modifications to
the strategy or its implementation to ensure
missions/goals are accomplished
3The Design School Model of Strategy Formulation
External Appraisal
Internal Appraisal
Environmental Threats Opportunities
Organizational Strengths Weaknesses
Key Success Factors
Distinctive Competencies
Strategic Options
Evaluation Choice of Strategy
Social Responsibility
Managerial Values
Implementation
4Why study strategic management?
- Employees at all levels of the organization are
involved in implementing strategy. The better
our understanding of strategic issues, the better
able we are to effectively implement strategy at
whatever level we work. - Increasingly, we are becoming a nation of
investors. Sound investment decision making
requires an understanding of strategy.
5Developmental influences on strategic management
- Theories of evolution revolution
- Darwin I/O Theory (environments require
adaptation, change is gradual, organizations must
conform to environmental requirements) - Chamberlain
- Concept of differentiation
- Contingency Theories
- Success a joint outcome of environmental forces
and strategic actions - Resource Based View
6Strategic Decisions
- CEO is ultimately responsible for strategic
decision making - Many others play direct and/or indirect roles and
influence these decisions - Strategic decisions are
- complex involving multiple disciplines
viewpoints - significant involving allocation of significant
resources - long-range involving many years
7Strategy as a continuous process
The realized strategy is usually both MORE AND
LESS than the strategy that was originally
intended. - Miller, p. 35 No plan ever survives
contact with the enemy. - Gen. Colin Powell
Deliberate Strategy
Realized Strategy
Intended Strategy
Environment, Serendipity, Unplanned Actions at
Various Organizational Levels, etc., Results in
Emergent Strategy(ies)
Unrealized (Discarded) Strategy