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The strategic management process

The strategic management process. Summary of lecture. Introduction Whose responsibility is it Why it matters Definitions Business mission Strategic Objectives What is Strategy? Formulating Strategy Primary Determinants of Strategy. introduction.

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The strategic management process

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  1. The strategic management process

  2. Summary of lecture • Introduction • Whose responsibility is it • Why it matters • Definitions • Business mission • Strategic Objectives • What is Strategy? • Formulating Strategy • Primary Determinants of Strategy

  3. introduction • Investors stake there money into a firm in order to earn a return on their investments. Returns are often measured in terms of accounting figures, such as return on assets, return on equity, or return on sales. Alternatively, returns can be measured on the basis of stock market returns, such as monthly returns. • In smaller, new venture firms, returns are sometimes measured in terms of the amount and speed of growth. • Firms without a competitive advantage or that are not competing in an attractive industry earn, at best, average returns. Average returns are returns equal to those an investor expects to earn from other investments with a similar amount of risk.

  4. Whose responsibility is it?Andwhy it matters • The investors give the responsibility to the directors and subsequently managers of a firm to earn a return on their investment. In this regard, the management have to come up with a strategy/strategies to keep the firm competitive to meet the expectations of the investors. • Firms without a competitive advantage or that are not competing in an attractive industry earn, at best, average returns. • Inability to earn at least average returns results first in decline and, eventually, failure. Failure occurs because investors withdraw their investments from those firms earning less-than-average returns. • Firms with a competitive advantage will aim to earn Above – Average Returns.

  5. definitions AVERAGE RETURNS • returns equal to those an investor expects to earn from other investments with a similar amount of risk. ABOVE AVERAGE RETURN • returns in excess of what an investor expects to earn from other investments with a similar amount of risk. RISK • Investor’s uncertainty about the economic gains or losses that will result from a particular investment. COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE • This is when the firm implements a strategy competitors are unable to duplicate or find too costly to try to imitate.

  6. What is strategic management? • Most firms use the strategic management process as the foundation for the commitments, decisions, and actions they will take when pursuing Strategic Competitiveness and Above-Average terms. • Strategic competitiveness is achieved when a firm successfully formulates and implements a value-creating Strategy. • A Strategy is an integrated and coordinated set of commitments and actions designed to exploit core competencies and gain a Competitive Advantage. • When choosing a strategy, firms make choices among competing alternatives as the pathway for deciding how they will pursue Strategic Competitiveness. • The chosen strategy indicates what the firm will do as well as what the firm will not do.

  7. Strategic management • The term strategic management underlines the importance of managers with regard to strategy as strategies do not happen just by themselves. • Strategy involves people especially managers who decide and implement strategy. • Therefore, Strategic Management includes understanding the StrategicPosition of an organization, StrategicChoices for the future and managing Strategy in Action.

  8. Strategic management process • The Strategic Management Process is the full set of commitments, decisions, and actions required for a firm to achieve strategic competitiveness and earn above-average returns. • The firm’s first step in the process is to analyze its External Environmentand Internal Organizationto determine its resources, capabilities, and core competencies - the sources of its “strategic inputs.” • With this information, the firm develops its Visionand Missionand formulates one or more strategies.

  9. The External Environment Strategic Management process Vision Mission Inputs The Internal Organization Strategy Formulation Strategy Implementation Corporate-Level Strategy Competitive Rivalry and Competitive Dynamics Organizational Structure and Controls Corporate Governance Business-Level Strategy Actions Strategic Leadership Cooperative Strategy Strategic Entrepreneurship International Strategy Merger and Acquisition Strategies Strategic Competitiveness Above – Average Returns Outcomes Feedback

  10. vision • A vision or strategic intent is the desired future state of the organization. It is an aspiration around which a strategist, perhaps chief executive, might seek to focus the attention and energies of members of the organization. Or • A vision is a picture of what the firm wants to be and, in broad terms, what it wants to ultimately achieve. • It is also important to note that vision statements reflect a firm’s values and aspirations and are intended to capture the heart and mind of each employee and, hopefully, many of its other stakeholders. • A vision statement tends to be relatively short and concise, making it easily remembered. • Examples of vision statements include the following: • To be the leading supplier of mining equipment in Zambia. • To be a world class provider of tuition to under graduate and post graduate students.

  11. Mission • A mission is a general expression of the overall purpose of the organization, which ideally, is in line with the values and expectations of major stake-holders and concerned with the scope and boundaries of the organization. • It answers the challenging question: What Business Are We In? • A mission should establish a firm’s individuality and should be inspiring and relevant to all stakeholders. • Together, vision and mission provide the foundation the firm needs to choose and implement one or more strategies. • Even though the final responsibility for forming the firm’s mission rests with the CEO, the CEO and other top-level managers tend to involve a larger number of people in forming the mission. • Examples of mission statements include the following: • To provide cost effective mining solutions, products, and services that exceed the expectations of our customers.

  12. Strategy terms

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