Title: Models for Strategic Analysis
1Models for Strategic Analysis
2Mintzbergs Ten Planning Schools
SCHOOL STRATEGY FORMATION APPROACH
Design Process of Conception
Planning Formal Process
Positioning Analytical Process
Entrepreneurial Visionary Process
Cognitive Mental Process
Learning Emergent Process
Power Process of Negotiation
Cultural Collective Process
Environmental Reactive Process
Configurational Process of Transformation
3Mintzbergs Definitions of Strategy
- Strategy is a PLAN ? Direction, Guide or Course
of Action ? Intended - Strategy is a PATTERN ? Reflects past decisions ?
Reactive - Strategy is a POSITION ? Locating products and
activities in markets - Strategy is a PERSPECTIVE ? Theory of the
business - Strategy is a PLOY ? A maneuver against opponents
4Strategy for Better or Worse
STRATEGIC ASPECT ADVANTAGE DISADVANTAGE
Strategy Sets Direction Charting a course through uncertainty Binders that hide potential dangers
Strategy Focuses Perspective Coordination of Activity Groupthink
Strategy Defines the Organization Shorthand Meaning and Comprehension Excessive Simplicity and Stereotyping
Strategy Provides Consistency Reduces Ambiguity and Provides Order Misrepresentation and Distortion
5Elements of Strategy
6Models for Global Strategic Analysis
7Seven Approaches to Planning
APPROACH CRITICAL FACTOR
Resource based view Resources
Core Competency Knowledge/ Skill
Competitive Advantage of Nations National Location
Strategic Groups Assets
Cognitive Communities Shared Ideas
Network Approaches Relationships
Competing for the Future Opportunities
8Resource Based View
- Object is to acquire or create resources that
others do not have - Types of resources
- Financial
- Human
- Physical
- Organizational
- Technological
- Growth happens when managers think of better ways
to use resources to create value - Bad performance happens with bad assessments or
lack of attention to resources
9Resources
What a firm Has...
What a firm has to work with
its assets, including its people and the value of
its brand name
Tangible Resources
Resources represent inputs into a firms
production process...
such as capital equipment, skills of employees,
brand names, finances and talented managers
Intangible Resources
Some genius invented the Oreo. Were just
living off the inheritance.
F. Ross Johnson, Former President CEO, RJR
Nabisco
10Competence Based Competition
- Competence is the bases for all new moves
- Skill/Knowledge/Learning
- Four bases for competence
- Adds value
- Applies to a wide variety of businesses
- Difficult to copy
- Cannot substitute other products or services
11Mobilizing Company Resources to Produce
Competitive Advantage
12Competitive Advantage of Nations
- Home Base for
- Strategy
- Core product/process development
- Essential Skills
- Determinants of National Advantage
- Factor Conditions
- Demand Conditions
- Related/Supporting Industries
- Firm Strategy/Structure/Rivalry
- Difficulty at home can make strength outside
13Strategic Group Theory
- Firms with similar strategies compete with each
other - Industries have more than one group
- Barriers to change between groups
- Functional/National/International differences
14Strategic Group Mapping
- Firms in same strategic group have two or more
competitive characteristics in common - Sell in same price/quality range
- Cover same geographic areas
- Be vertically integrated to same degree
- Have comparable product line breadth
- Emphasize same types of distribution channels
- Offer buyers similar services
- Use identical technological approaches
15Strategic Group Map of the Video Game
Industry
Video arcades, coin-operated machines
Arcade operators
Publishers of games on CD-ROMs
Home PCs
Sony, Sega, Nintendo, several others
Types of Video Game Suppliers/Distribution
Channels
Video game consoles
MSN Gaming Zone, Pogo.com, America Online, HEAT,
Engage, Oceanline, TEN
Online game sites
Low (Coin-operated equipment)
Medium (Video players cost 100-300)
High (Use PC)
Overall Cost to Players of Video Games
16Categorizing Objectivesand Strategies of
Competitors
17Mental Communities
- Mental map of competitive landscape
- Firms develop experience
- Firms work together across industries and within
industries - Competitors
- Suppliers
- Buyers
- Uses Managers views to classify firms
18Levels of Strategy-Making in a
Single-Business Company
Executive-Level Managers
Business Strategy
Functional Managers
Functional Strategies
Operating Managers
Operating Strategies
19Levels of Strategy-Making in a Diversified
Company
Corporate-Level Managers
Corporate Strategy
Business-Level Managers
Business Strategies
Functional Managers
Functional Strategies
Operating Managers
Operating Strategies
20Who Performs the FiveStrategic Management
Tasks?
- Senior Corporate Executives
- Managers of Subsidiary Business Units
- Functional Area Managers
- Operating Managers
21Approaches to Performingthe Strategy-Making
Task
- Chief Architect
- Manager personally functions as chief strategist
- Delegate-It-to-Down-the-Line Managers
- Manager delegates some strategy-making
responsibility to subordinates in charge of key
organizational units - Collaborative/Team
- Manager enlists assistance and advice of key
subordinates in hammering out a consensus
strategy - Corporate Intrapreneur
- Manager encourages subordinates to develop and
champion proposals for new ventures
22Strategic Role of a Board of Directors
- Critically appraise and ultimately approve
strategic action plans - Evaluate strategic leadership skills of the CEO
and candidates to succeed the CEO
23Strategic Management Principle
- A board of directors role in the strategic
management process is to critically appraise and
ultimately approve strategic action plans and to
evaluate the strategic leadership skills of the
CEO and others in line to succeed the incumbent
CEO.
24Network Theory
- Firms succeed by alliances and joint ventures
- Patterns of relationships are as important as
firm abilities and resources - Network relations assist and restrain
25Supply Network
26CHAIN TYPE SYSTEM
27NETWORK TYPE SYSTEM
CLIENT
CLIENT
CLIENT
CLIENT
CLIENT
CLIENT
28SHOP TYPE SYSTEM
Resources
INTERACTIONS
CLIENT
29Strategic Vision
- Firm compete for the ability to define the future
- Firms define the future for their own benefit
- Important in emerging markets
- Competitive leadership in new markets happens
through defining and anticipating markets - Design/market development/resource
development/human development
30Business Mission The McGraw Hill Companies
- The McGraw-Hill Companies is a global publishing,
financial, information and media services company
with such renowned brands as Standard Poors,
Business Week, and McGraw-Hill educational
and professional materials. - The Company provides information via various
media platforms books, magazines and
newsletters on-line via television, satellite
and FM sideband broadcast and software,
videotape, facsimile and CD-ROM products. - The Company now creates more than 90 of its
information on digital platforms and its business
units are represented on more than 75 Web
sites.
31Managements job is not to see the company as it
is.but as it can become. John W. Teets
32Broad vs. Narrow Scope
- Broad Definition
- Furniture
- Telecommunications
- Beverages
- Global mail delivery
- Travel tourism
- Narrow Definition
- Wrought-iron lawn furniture
- Long-distance telephone service
- Soft drinks
- Overnight package delivery
- Caribbean cruises