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Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
Lesson
9.26
STRATEGIC
MANAGEMENT - 2
THE
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT PROCESS
The
strategic
management process is an
eight-step process that
encompasses strategic
planning,
implementation,
and evaluation.
A.
The
first step is identifying the
organization's current mission, objectives,
and strategies.
1.
Every
organization needs a mission,
which
defines the purpose of the organization.
What is the
organization's
reason for being in
business?
2.
It's
also important to identify the
organization's current objectives and
strategies, as well.
B.
Step
2 is analyzing the external environment.
It's important to analyze the
environment because, to
a
large degree, it defines
management's strategic
options.
1.
A
successful strategy is one
that aligns well with the
environment.
2.
This
step is complete when
managers have an accurate
grasp of what is taking place in the
external
environment
and are aware of important
trends that might affect the
organization.
C.
The
third step is identifying
opportunities and threats.
After analyzing the external
environment,
managers
need to assess what opportunities to
exploit and what threats to
avoid.
1.
Opportunities
are
positive external environmental
factors.
2.
Threats
are
negative external environmental
factors.
D.
Step
4 is analyzing the organization's resources. In this
internal analysis, managers
are looking at the
organization's
specific assets, skills, and
work activities.
1.
Managers
look for core
competencies,
which are an organization's major
value-creating skills,
capabilities,
and resources that determine
its competitive
advantage.
2.
This
step forces managers to
realize that every organization, no
matter how large or
powerful, is
constrained
in some way by its resources
and skills.
E.
Step
5 is identifying strengths and
weaknesses. The analysis in
step 4 should lead to a
clear
assessment
of the organization's internal
resources.
1.
Strengths
are
those activities the firm does well or
the unique resources it controls.
2.
Weaknesses
are
those activities the firm doesn't do
well or the resources it needs
but doesn't
possess.
3.
One
area that's often overlooked
in this step is an analysis of the organization's
culture and its
strengths
and weaknesses.
a.
Remember
that culture is the organization's personality.
b.
The
strength of the culture is a result of
how much employees
understand and support the
shared
values.
c.
A
strong culture should make it easy
for managers to convey to
employees the organization's
distinctive
competencies. However, the strong culture
will make it more difficult
to change, if
needed.
d.
Strategic
choices will also be influenced by the
culture's tolerance of risk and
innovation and how
performance
is rewarded.
e.
The
culture can also promote or
hinder an organization's strategic
actions.
4.
The
merging of steps 3 and 5
results in a SWOT
analysis,
which is an analysis of an
organization's
strengths,
weaknesses, opportunities, and
threats. It brings together the internal
and external
analyses
in order to identify a strategic
niche the organization might
exploit.
5.
In
light of the SWOT analysis,
managers need to reevaluate the
organization's current mission and
objectives.
69
Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
F.
Step
6 is formulating strategies. Strategies
need to be established for the corporate,
business, and
functional
levels of the organization. In formulating
strategies, managers hope to give
the
organization
a competitive advantage.
G.
The
next step is implementing strategies.
The strategies must now be
put into action. Strategies
are
only
as good as their implementation.
H.
The eighth (and final)
step in the strategic management
process is evaluating results.
Managers
must
evaluate the results to determine
how effective their strategies
have been and what
corrections
are necessary.
The
role of competitive analysis in strategy
formulation
Before
an effective strategy to gain a competitive
advantage can be formulated, the
organization's
competitive
situation needs to be carefully
analyzed.
A.
A
SWOT ANALYSIS is one method
for doing so. The
SWOT analysis involves
assessing
organization
strengths (S) and weaknesses
(W), as well as environmental
opportunities (O)
and
threats (T).
Strengths
and weaknesses apply to internal
characteristics.
1.
a.
A
strength is an internal characteristic
that has the potential of
improving
the
organization's competitive situation.
A
weakness is an internal characteristic
that leaves the organization
b.
potentially
vulnerable to strategic moves by
competitors.
2.
Opportunities
and threats are found in the
external environment.
An
opportunity is an environmental condition
that offers significant
a.
prospects
for improving an organization's situation
relative to
competitors.
b.
A
threat is an environmental condition that
offers significant prospects
for
undermining an organization's competitive
situation.
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