Title: MANAGEMENT POLICY AND STRATEGY SESSION - IX
1MANAGEMENT POLICY AND STRATEGYSESSION - IX
- Implementing Strategy
- Functional Tactics and Policies
- Prof. Sushil
- Department of Management Studies
- Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi
- INDIA
- Email sushil_at_dms.iitd.ernet.in
2Strategy Implementation
Identify short-term objectives
Initiate specific functional tactics
Communicate policies to empower people
Design effective support systems
3What are Short-Term Objectives?
Provide specific guidance for what is to be done,
translating vision into action
4Role of Short-Term Objectives in Implementing
Strategy
1. Operationalize long-term objectives
2. Raise issues and potential conflicts requiring
coordination to avoid dysfunctional consequences
3. Identify measurable outcomes of functional
activities to be used to make feedback,
correction, and evaluation more relevant
5Potential Conflicting Objectives and Priorities
6Relationship of Action Plans to Short-Term
Objectives
Specificity - Identify functional activities to
be undertaken to build competitive advantage
Provide a clear time frame for completion
Identify who is responsible for each action in
the plan
7Qualities of Effective Short-term Objectives
8Value-Added Benefits of Short-Term Objectives
Give operating personnel a better understanding
of their role in a firms mission
Provide basis for accomplishing conflicting
concerns
Provide basis for strategic control
Motivation - Clarify personal and group roles in
a firms strategies
9What are Functional Tactics?
10Functional Tactics at General Cinema Corporation
Corporate Strategy
Business Strategies
Functional Tactics
Functional tactics Marketing Seek only first-run
films by outbidding competition in each local
market provide primarily family-oriented movies
and maintain an admission price only slightly
above that of local competition.
Concentration and market development
selective Maintain and selectively expand
leading nationwide position in the movie
exhibition industry to provide positive cash flow
for corporate diversification.
Soft drink bottlers
Functional tactics Finance Use lease or sale and
leaseback arrangements of each theater to
maximize cash flow for corporate expansions seek
profitability through volume, not higher ticket
prices.
Movie exhibition
Functional tactics Operations Use multiscreen
facilities with minimal maintenance requirements
and a joint service area to serve each
minitheater.
Sunkist products
11Differences Between Business Strategies and
Functional Tactics
12Characteristics of Functional Tactics in
Production/Operations
- Viewed as core function of an organization
- Involves converting inputs into value-enhanced
output - Focuses on decisions regarding
- Basic nature of firms POM system,
- Seeks optimum balance between investment input
and production/operations output - Location
- Facilities design
- Process planning on a short-term basis
13Key Functional Tactics in POM
Functional Tactic
Typical Questions the Functional Tactic Should
Answer
Facilities and equipment
- How centralized should the facilities be?
- How integrated should the separate processes be?
- To what extent should further mechanization or
automation be pursued? - Should size and capacity be oriented toward peak
or normal operating levels?
Sourcing
- How many sources are needed?
- How should suppliers be selected, and how should
relationships with suppliers be managed over
time? - What level of forward buying (hedging) is
appropriate?
- Should work be scheduled to order or to stock?
- What level of inventory is appropriate?
- How should inventory be used (FIFO/LIFO),
controlled, and replenished? - What are the key foci for control efforts?
- Should maintenance be oriented to prevention or
to breakdown?
Operations planning and control
14Characteristics of Functional Tactics in Marketing
- Lead to strategic success of the firm through the
profitable sale of products/services in target
markets - Clearly identify customer needs that
products/services aim to meet - Identify where, when, and by whom
products/services are to be sold - Define how firm will communicate with target
markets - Directly influence supply, demand, profitability,
consumer perception, and regulatory response
through pricing
15Key Functional Tactics in Marketing
Functional Tactic
Typical Questions the Functional Tactic Should
Answer
Product or service
- Which products do we emphasize?
- Which products/services contribute most to
profitability? - What product/service image do we seek to project?
- What consumer needs does the product/service seek
to meet? - What changes should be influencing our customer
orientation?
Price
- Are we competing primarily on price?
- Can we offer discounts or other pricing
modifications? - Are our pricing policies standard nationally, or
is there regional control? - What price segments are targeting?
- What is the gross profit margin?
16Key Functional Tactics in Marketing Contd..
.
Functional Tactic
Typical Questions the Functional Tactic Should
Answer
Place
- What level of market coverage is necessary?
- Are there priority geographic areas?
- What are the key channels of distribution?
- What are the channel objectives, structure, and
management? - What sales organization do we want?
Promotion
- What are the key promotion priorities and
approaches? - Which advertising/communication priorities and
approaches are linked to different products,
markets, and territories? - Which media would be most consistent with the
total marketing strategy?
17Characteristics of Functional Tactics in
Accounting and Finance
- Time frame of finance tactics varies because they
direct use of financial resources supporting the
business strategy, long-term goals, and annual
objectives - Long-term tactics guide decisions in
- Long-term capital investment
- Debt financing
- Dividend allocation
- Leveraging
- Short-term tactics guide decisions in
- Managing working capital and short-term assets
- Accounting-focused tactics have taken on
increased strategic significance in last decade
18Key Functional Tactics in Finance and Accounting
Functional Tactic
Typical Questions the Functional Tactic Should
Answer
Capital acquisition
- What is an acceptable cost of capital?
- What is desired proportion of short- and
long-term debt? Preferred and common stock? - What balance is desired between internal and
external funding? - What risk and ownership restrictions are
appropriate? - What level and forms of leasing should be used?
Capital allocation
- What are the priorities for capital allocation
projects? - On what basis should the final selection of
projects be made? - What level of capital allocation can be made by
operating managers without higher approval?
19Key Functional Tactics in Finance and
Accounting Contd.
Functional Tactic
Typical Questions the Functional Tactic Should
Answer
Dividend and working capital manage-ment
- What portion of earnings should be paid out as
dividends? - Are things other than cash appropriate as
dividends? - What are the cash flow requirements? Minimum and
maximum? - How liberal/conservative should credit policies
be? - What limits, payment terms, and collection
procedures are necessary? - What payment timing and procedure should be
followed?
20Characteristics of Functional Tactics in RD
- Assumed a key strategic role in many firms due to
increasing rate of technological change - May be more critical instruments of business
strategy in some industries than in others
21Key Functional Tactics in RD
Functional Tactic
Typical Questions the Functional Tactic Should
Answer
Basic research vs. product and process development
- To what extent should innovation and breakthrough
research be emphasized? In relation to the
emphasis on product development, refinement, and
modification? - What critical operating processes need RD
attention? - What new products are necessary to support growth?
Time horizon
- Is the emphasis short-term or long-term?
- Which orientation best supports the business
strategy? The marketing and production strategy?
22Key Functional Tactics in RD Contd...
Functional Tactic
Typical Questions the Functional Tactic Should
Answer
Organizational fit
- Should RD be done in-house or contracted out?
- Should RD be centralized or decentralized?
- What should be the relationship between the RD
units and product managers? Marketing managers?
Production managers?
Basic RD posture
- Should the firm maintain an offensive posture,
seeking to lead innovation in its industry? - Should the firm adopt a defensive posture,
responding to the innovations of its competitors?
23Characteristics of Functional Tactics in HRM
- Assumed increasing strategic importance in the
1990s - Aid long-term success in
- Development of managerial talent and competent
employees - Creating systems to manage compensation or
regulatory concerns - Guiding effective utilization of human resources
to achieve both the - Firms short-term objectives
- Employees satisfaction and development
24Key Functional Tactics in HRM
Functional Tactic
Typical Questions the Functional Tactic Should
Answer
Recruitment, selection, and orientation
- What key human resources are needed to support
chosen strategy? - How do we recruit these human resources?
- How sophisticated should our selection process
be? - How should we introduce new employees to the
organization?
Career development and training
- What are our future human resource needs?
- How can we prepare our people to meet these
needs? - How can we help our people develop?
Compensa-tion
- What levels of pay are appropriate for the tasks
we require? - How can we motivate and retain good people?
- How should we interpret our payment, incentive,
benefit, and seniority policies?
25Key Functional Tactics in HRM Contd.
Functional Tactic
Typical Questions the Functional Tactic Should
Answer
Evaluation, discipline, and control
- How often should we evaluate our people?
Formally or informally? - What disciplinary steps should we take to deal
with poor performance or inappropriate behavior? - In what ways should we control individual and
group performance?
Labor relations and EEO requirements
- How can we maximize labor-management cooperation?
- How do our personnel practices affect
women/minorities/ - Should we have hiring policies?
26Emerging Implications for HRM Tactics
- Traditional HRM Ideas
- Emphasis solely on physical skills
- Expectation of predictable, repetitious behavior
- Comfort with stability and conformity
- Avoidance of responsibility and decision making
- Training covering only specific tasks
- Emphasis placed on outcomes / results
- Emerging HRM Ideas
- Emphasis on total contribution to firm
- Expectation of innovative and creative behavior
- Tolerance of ambiguity and change
- Accepting responsibility for making decisions
- Broad continuous development
- Emphasis placed on processes / means
27Emerging Implications for HRM Tactics Contd
.
- Traditional HRM Ideas
- High concern for quantity
- Concern for individual efficiency
- Functional and subfunctional specialization
- Labor force seen as unnecessary expense
- Work force is managements adversary
- Emerging HRM Ideas
- High concern for total customer value
- Concern for overall effectiveness
- Cross-functional integration
- Labor force seen as critical investment
- Management and work force are partners
28Role of Policies in Implementing Strategy
- Directives designed to guide thinking, decisions,
and actions of managers and employees in
implementing strategy - Increase managerial effectiveness by
- Standardizing many routine decisions
- Clarifying discretion managers and employees can
exercise in implementing functional tactics - Should be derived from functional tactics with
key purpose of aiding strategy execution
29Why Policies Empower People
1. Establish indirect control over independent
action by clearly stating how things are to be
done now
2. Promote uniform handling of similar activities
3. Ensure quicker decisions by standardizing
answers to previously answered questions
4. Institutionalize basic aspects of
organization behavior
5. Reduce uncertainty in repetitive and
day-to-day decision making
6. Counteract resistance to or rejection of
chosen strategies by organization members
7. Offer predetermined answers to routine
problems
8. Afford managers a mechanism for avoiding
hasty and ill-conceived decisions in changing
operations
30Advantages of Formal Written Policies
1. Require managers to think through policys
meaning, content, and intended use
2. Reduce misunderstanding
3. Make equitable and consistent treatment of
problems more likely
4. Ensure unalterable transmission of policies
5. Communicate authorization or sanction of
policies more clearly
6. Supply a convenient and authoritative reference
7. Systematically enhance indirect control and
organization-wide coordination of the key
purposes of policies
31SELECTED POLICIES THAT AID STRATEGY IMPLEMENTATION
- A Policy is a broad guideline for decision making
that links the formulation of strategy with its
implementation. Companies use policies to make
sure that employees throughout the firm make
decisions and take actions that support the
corporations mission, objectives, and
strategies. - Maytag Company Maytag will not approve any cost
reduction proposal if it reduces product quality
in any way. (This policy supports Maytags
strategy for Maytag brands to compete on quality
rather than on price.) - Intel Cannibalize your product line (undercut
the sales of your current products) with better
products before a competitor does it to you.
(This supports Intels objective of market
leadership.) - General Electric GE must be number one or two
wherever it competes. (This supports GEs
objective to be number one in market
capitalization). - America Online The company could have used a
policy stating that a new marketing program would
not be implemented until proper support was in
place.
32SELECTED POLICIES THAT AID STRATEGY
IMPLEMENTATION Contd...
- 3 M Corporation has a personnel policy, called
the 15 percent rule, that allows virtually any
employee to spend up to 15 per cent of the
workweek on anything that he or she wants to, as
long as its product related. - (This policy supports 3Ms corporate strategy of
being a highly innovative manufacturer, with each
division required to have a quarter of its annual
sales come from products introduced within the
past five years.) - Wendys has a purchasing policy that gives local
store managers the authority to buy fresh meat
and produce locally, rather than from regionally
designated or company-owned sources. - (This policy supports Wendys functional
strategy of having fresh, unfrozen hamburgers
daily).
33SELECTED POLICIES THAT AID STRATEGY
IMPLEMENTATION Contd...
- General Cinema has a financial policy that
requires annual capital investment in movie
theaters not to exceed annual depreciation. - (By seeing that capital investment is no greater
than depreciation, this policy supports General
Cinemas financial strategy of maximizing cash
flow-in this case, all profit - to its growth
areas. The policy also reinforces General
Cinemas financial strategy of leasing as much as
possible.) - IBM had a marketing policy of not giving free IBM
personal computers (PCs) to any person or
organization. - (This policy attempted to support IBMs image
strategy by maintaining its image as
professional, high-value, service business at it
sought to dominate the PC market). -
34SELECTED POLICIES THAT AID STRATEGY
IMPLEMENTATION Contd...
- Grown, Cork, and Seal Company has an RD policy
of not investing any financial or people
resources in basic research. - (This policy supports Crown, Cork, and Seals
functional strategy, which emphasized customer
services, not technical leadership). - Nations Bank of South Carlina has an operating
policy that requires annual renewal of the
financial statement of all personal borrowers. - (This policy supports NationsBanks financial
strategy, which seeks to maintain a loan-to-loss
ratio below the industry norm.)
35Types of Executive Bonus Compensation
Bonus Type
Rationale
Description
Shortcomings
Stock option grants
Provides incentive for executive to create wealth
for shareholders as measured by increase in
firms share price
Right to purchase stock in the future at a price
set now compensation determined by spread
Movement in share price does not explain all
dimensions of managerial performance
Restricted stock plan
Promotes longer executive tenure than other forms
of compensation
Shares given to executive who is prohibited from
selling them for a specific time period
No downside risk to executive, who always profits
unlike other shareholders
Golden handcuffs
Offers an incentive for executive to remain with
the firm
Bonus income deferred in a series of annual
installments forfeited with executive resignation
May promote risk-averse decision making due to
downside risk borne by executive
36Types of Executive Bonus Compensation Contd
...
Bonus Type
Rationale
Description
Shortcomings
Golden parachute
Offers an incentive for executive to remain with
firm
Executive has right to collect bonus if loses
position due to takeover, firing, retirement, or
resignation
Compensation is achieved whether or not wealth is
createdrewards either success or failure
Cash based on internal performance using finance
measures
Offsets limitations of focusing on market-based
measures of performance
Bonus compensation based on accounting
performance measures such as return on equity
Weak correlation between earnings measures and
shareholder wealth creation
37Compensation Plan Selection Matrix
38Compensation Plan Selection Matrix (concluded)
39STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP AT GENERAL ELECTRIC 1947 TO
1997
- General Electric - An Introduction
- July 1997 - Business Week issue cited GE as Most
Valuable Company with worldwide market
capitalization of 198.09 billion. - GE - established in 1878 with a group of
investors joining together to finance Edisons
incandescent lamp. - Company grew by 1939 sales 342 million due to
WWII increased to 1.4 billion in 1943. - Case illustrate systematic implementation of
strategic planning at GE to market performance in
four phases over a span of 50 years - 47 to 97.
40STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP AT GENERAL ELECTRIC 1947 TO
1997 Contd...
- Phase I Coordiners Enterpreneurial Era
- 1947 CEO Charles Wilson tells Cordiner to study
managing the fast paced growth. - Cordiner identified three areas of change - (1)
More decentralized decision making (2) Long range
planning system and (3) More entrepreneurial
minded managers to meet growth challenges. - 1950 - Cordiner becomes CEO, Identifies GEs new
Marketing Concept PR I, PR II, (SP) (Target) - This phase originated the GE Strategic Planning
concept
41STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP AT GENERAL ELECTRIC 1947 TO
1997 Contd...
- Phase I Coordiners Enterpreneurial Era
- Think like entrepreneurs
- Make markets and customer values central focus
for strategic planning - Once market opportunities identified, plan and
make resource allocations. - Plan so that available resources can be leveraged
for long term objectives. - Managers evaluated on performance against
intermediate goals set in long term plan. - Reinvest profits for long-term goals
42STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP AT GENERAL ELECTRIC 1947 TO
1997 Contd...
- Phase II Borch and Implementing Strategic
Planning Concept (63 to 71) - 1963 - Borch succeeds Cordiner as CEO inheriting
three problems - (1) Implementing and integration of marketing
concept - (2) Greater corporate control over 70
semi-independent division vice-presidents - (3) Reviewing and presentation process for BSU
plans too bureaucratic - With aid of Mckinsey Borch integrates marketing
concept in GEs system with the development of
Strategic Business Units (Staff / Line Groups) - Again withMcKinseys aid identifies the method
for developing and managing SBUs through the
concept of Portfolio Management
43STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP AT GENERAL ELECTRIC 1947 TO
1997 Contd...
- Phase III Implementing Strategic Planning
Concept (72 to 81) - 1972 - Reginald Jones succeeds Borch
- Identified six important sectors which divided
GEs business into six broad areas. - Sector vice-presidents named to plan and have
related units reporting to them. They would
report to two senior vice-chairman. - Enabled strategic planning concept to become
worldwide concept - Simplified presentations of SBU plans-without
visual aids. Review layers in SBU plans reduced
from 43 to 6. - Six strategic sectors in which GE will compete in
for the future GEs intent for venturing for
alliances around the world.
44STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP AT GENERAL ELECTRIC 1947 TO
1997 Contd...
- Phase IV Welch Strategic Thining and Visionary
Leadership - 1981 - Jack Welch becomes CEO
- Two basic objectives SBUs should be number one
or two in their markets compete in three
interrelated circles (high technology markets,
service markets, core market- engines, appliances
etc.). - Long term stretch goals-externally oriented for
comparisons against total market. Incremental
goals internally oriented. - Renetrated newer markets - India, China, Mexico
- Removed layers of management and bureaucracy in
planning process. One page Reports submitted on
key issues. - Formulated strategy for 21st century - penetrate
global market service contracts with large
customers of both GE and non-GE equipment.
45Learning From GE
- Focus on improving both internally and externally
- Marketing Concept - without marketings input
strategic planning is useless. - Disciplined yet flexible approach- SBU managers
free to use any methods to analyze markets and
operate. - Focus on long-range performance and fit rather
than incremental gains. - CEO - selection is of utmost importance and
central to strategic planning