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MANAGEMENT 455

MANAGEMENT 455. GOOD STRATEGY IMPLEMENTATION CHAPTER 10. Crafting vs. Executing Strategy. Crafting the Strategy Primarily a market-driven activity Successful strategy making depends on Business vision Perceptive analysis of market conditions and company capabilities

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MANAGEMENT 455

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  1. MANAGEMENT 455 GOOD STRATEGY IMPLEMENTATION CHAPTER 10

  2. Crafting vs. Executing Strategy • Crafting the Strategy • Primarily a market-drivenactivity • Successful strategy making depends on • Business vision • Perceptive analysis of market conditions and company capabilities • Attracting and pleasing customers • Outcompeting rivals • Using company capabilities to forge a competitive advantage • Executing the Strategy • Primarily an operations-drivenactivity • Successful strategy execution depends on • Doing a good job of working through others • Good organization-building • Building competitive capabilities • Creating a strategy-supportive culture • Getting things done and delivering good results 10-2

  3. Implementation involves . . . Executing the Strategy • An action-oriented, make-things happen task involving management’s ability to • Direct organizational change • Achieve continuous improvement in operations and business processes • Move toward operatingexcellence • Create and nurture astrategy-supportive culture • Consistently meet or beat performance targets • Tougher and more time-consuming than crafting strategy

  4. Implementing a New StrategyRequires Adept Leadership • Implementing a new strategytakes adept leadership to • Convincingly communicatereasons for the new strategy • Overcome pockets of doubt • Secure commitment of concerned parties • Build consensus and enthusiasm • Get all implementation pieces in place and coordinated

  5. Why Executing Strategy Isa Tough Management Job • Overcoming resistance to change • Wide array of demanding managerialactivities to be performed • Numerous ways to tackle each activity • Number of bedeviling issues to be worked out • Demands good people management skills • Requires launching and managinga variety of initiatives simultaneously • Hard to integrate efforts of many different work groups into a smoothly-functioning whole

  6. Who Are the Strategy Implementers? • Implementing and executing strategy involves a company’s wholemanagement team and all employees • Just as every part of a watch plays a role in making the watch function properly, it takesall pieces of an organization working cohesively for a strategy to be well-executed • Top-level managers must leadtheprocess and orchestrate major initiatives • But they must rely on cooperation of • Middle and lower-level managers to see things go well in various parts of an organization and • Employees to perform their roles competently

  7. Characteristics of the Strategy Implementation Process • Every manager has an active role • No proven “formula” for implementing particular types of strategies • There are guidelines, but no absolute rules and “must do it this way” rules • Many ways to proceed that are capable of working • Cuts across many aspects of “how to manage”

  8. Characteristics of the Strategy Implementation Process (continued) • Each implementation situation occurs in a different context, affected by differing • Business practices and competitive situations • Work environments and cultures • Policies • Compensation incentives • Mix of personalities and firm histories • Approach to implementation/execution has be customized to fit the situation • People implement strategies - Not companies!

  9. Figure 10.1: The Eight Components of Strategy Execution 10-9

  10. What Top Executives Have to Do inLeading the Implementation Process • Communicate the case for change • Build consensus on how to proceed • Arouse enthusiasm for the strategyto turn implementation process intoa companywide crusade • Empower subordinates to keep process moving • Establish measures of progress and deadlines • Reward those who achieve implementation milestones • Direct resources to the right places • Personally lead strategic change processand the drive for operating excellence

  11. BUILDING A CAPABLE ORGANIZATION — WHAT IS INVOLVED? 10-11

  12. Figure 10.2: The Three Components of Building anOrganization Capable of Proficient Strategy Execution 10-12

  13. Selecting the Management Team:Key Considerations • Determine mix of • Backgrounds • Experiences and know-how • Beliefs and values • Styles of managing and personalities • Personal chemistry must be right • Talent base needs to be appropriate • Picking a solid management team needs to be acted on early in implementation process

  14. Recruiting and Retaining Talented Employees: Implementation Issues • The quality of a company’speople is an essential ingredientof successful strategy execution • Biggest challenge facing companies • How to recruit and retain the bestand brightest talent with strongskill sets and management potential • Intellectual capital, not tangible assets, is increasingly being viewed as the most important investment • Talented people are a prime source of competitive advantage

  15. Three-Stage Process of Developing Competencies and Capabilities 1. First develop ability to do something 2. Build experience and gradually transform the ability into a core competence andproven capability 3. Continue to refine and polish the competence/capability, striving to perform the activity better than rivals, thereby turning the core competence into a distinctive competence and providing a path to competitive advantage!

  16. Step 1 in Developing Competencies • Develop ability to do something consistently well and at acceptable cost • Select people with relevant skills/experience • Broaden or expandindividual abilities as needed • Mold efforts and work products ofindividuals into a cooperative effortto create organizational ability

  17. Step 2 in Developing Competencies • As experience builds and company learns how to perform the activity consistently well and at acceptable cost, transform the ability into a core competenceand capability • Typically, a core competence or competitive capability emerges from establishing and nurturing collaborative relationships • Between individuals and groups in different departments • Between a company and its strategic allies

  18. Step 3 in Developing Competencies • If and when a company masters the activity, not just performing it really well but performingitbetter than rivals, the “core competence” (and now “proven capability”) becomes a • Distinctive competence and • Holds potential forcompetitive advantage This is the optimal outcome of the process of building competitively potent competencies and capabilities!

  19. Approaches to Developing Competencies • Internal development involves either • Strengthening the company’s base of skills, knowledge, and intellect or • Coordinating and networking the effortsof various work groups and departments • Partnering with key suppliers,forming strategic alliances,or maybe even outsourcingcertain activities to specialists • Buying a company that has the required capabilities and integrating these competencies into the firm’s value chain

  20. Updating Competencies andCapabilities as Conditions Change • Competencies and capabilities mustcontinuously be modified and perhapseven replaced with new ones due to • New strategic requirements • Evolving market conditions • Changing customer expectations • Ongoing efforts to keep core competencies up-to-date can provide a basis for sustainingboth • Effective strategy execution and • Competitive advantage

  21. CEO Vice President Vice President Vice President Execution-Related Aspectsof Organizing Work Efforts • Few hard and fast rules for organizing • One Big Rule:Role and purpose of organization structure is to support and facilitate good strategy execution! • Each firm’s structure is idiosyncratic, reflecting • Prior arrangements and internal politics • Executive judgments and preferences about how to arrange reporting relationships • How best to integrate and coordinate work effort of different work groups and departments

  22. Figure 10.3: Structuring the Work Effort toPromote Successful Strategy Execution 10-22

  23. What Types of OrganizationalStructures Fit Which Strategies? • A company operating in one business • Functional department structure • A company with operations in various parts of the world • Geographic organizational units • A vertically integrated company • Divisional organizational structure • A diversifiedcompany • Individual business units, with each business unit operating as independent profit center

  24. Step 3: Determine How MuchAuthority to Delegate to Whom • In a centralized structure • Top managers retain authorityfor most decisions • In a decentralized structure • Managers and employees areempowered to make decisions • Trend in most companies • Shift from authoritarian to decentralizedstructures stressing empowerment

  25. Step 4: Provide for InternalCross-Unit Coordination • Classic method of coordinating activities – Have related units report to single manager • Upper-level managers have cloutto coordinate efforts of their units • Support activities should bewoven into structure to • Maximize performance of primary activities • Contain costs of support activities • Formal reporting relationships often need to be supplemented to facilitate coordination

  26. Current Organizational Trends • Numerous companies have completedthe task of remodeling traditional, hierarchical structures built on • Functional specialization and • Centralized authority • Corporate downsizing movement in thelate 1980s and early 1990s was aimed at • Recasting authoritarian, pyramidalorganizational structures • Into flatter, decentralized structures

  27. Drawbacks of CentralizedAuthoritarian Structures • Centralized or authoritarian structures have often turned out to be a liability where • Customer preferences shift fromstandardized to customized products • Product life-cycles grow shorter • Flexible manufacturing replaces mass production • Customers want to be treated as individuals • Pace of technological change accelerates • Market conditions are fluid

  28. Organizational Structures ofthe Future: Overall Themes • Revolutionary changes in how work is organized have been triggered by • New strategic priorities • Rapidly shifting competitive conditions • Tools of organizational design include • Empowered managers and workers • Reengineered work processes • Self-directed work teams • Rapid incorporation of Internettechnology • Networking with outsiders

  29. Change & Learning Characteristics ofOrganizations of the Future • Extensive use of Internet technologyand e-commerce business practices • Fewer barriers between • Different vertical ranks • Functions and disciplines • Units in different geographic locations • Company and its suppliers, distributors,strategic allies, and customers • Capacityforchange and rapid learning • Collaborative efforts among people in different functions and geographic locations • Assembling work teams including more members dispersed over a wider geographic area

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