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TotalQuality
Management MGT510
VU
Lesson
# 33
STRATEGICPLANNING
FOR QUALITY AND ADVANCED
QUALITYMANAGEMENT
TOOLS
A
firm has many options in
defining its long-terms goals and
objectives, the customers it wants to
serve,
the
products and services it produces and
delivers, and the design of the production and service
system
to
meet these objectives. Strategic
planning is the process by which the
members of an organization
envisionits
future and develop the
necessary procedures and operations to
carry out that
vision.Strategy
the result of strategic planning is the
patter of decisions that determines and reveals a
company's
goals,
polices, and plans to meet the
needs of its stakeholders. An effective
strategy allows a business to
create
a sustainable competitive advantage.
Totalquality
relates to strategic management in that
it enhances an organization'sability to
gain a
sustainable
competitive advantage in the marketplace.
Handledproperly. Total
quality can be the
most
effectivecost
leadership and/or differentiation strategy an
organization can adopt.This
is because the
totalquality
approach is the best way to continually
improve efficiency and cut costs
throughout an
organization'sactivity-cost
chain, whilesimultaneously
continually improving the features of
the
product
or service that differentiates it in the marketplace.
Total quality can
alsoimprove an
organization'schances
of becoming a leader in a givenmarket
niche.
What
is Strategic Management?
To
understand strategic management, one
mustfirst understand the concept of
organizational strategy.
Strategiesare
defined as follows:
Organizationalstrategies
are the approaches adopted by
organizations to
ensuresuccessful
performance
in the marketplace. These approaches
aretypically set forth in a
comprehensive
document
called the strategic plan.
Strategic
management is management
thatbases all actions,
activities, and decisions on what is
most
likely-within
an ethical framework to
ensuresuccessful performance in the marketplace.
From the
strategic
manager's perspective. Resources
arewasted unless
theycontribute to success in
the
marketplace,
and the more direct the contribution, the
better.
Quality
as a Strategy
Theconcept
of strategy has differentmeanings to
different people.James Brian
Quinncharacterizes
strategy
as follows:
A
strategy is a pattern or plan that
integrates an organization's major goals,
policies,
and
action sequences into a cohesive
whole. A well formulated strategy helps
to
marshaland
allocate an organization'sresources
into a unique and viable posture
based
on
its relative
internalcompetencies and shortcomings,
anticipatedchanges in the
environment,
and contingent moves by intelligent
opponents.
Formalstrategies
contain three elements:
4.
Goals
to be achieved,
5.
Policiesthat
guide or limit action,
and
6.
Actionsequences,
or programs, that accomplish the goals.
Thetraditional
focus of business strategieshas
been on finance and marketing.
Theseparallel
two
of the principal sources of competitive
advantage based on cost and
differentiation. Total
quality
with a focus on people leads to
improvements in both
areas.Therefore,
qualitycan
be
viewed as a strategy in itself.
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Therole
of quality in business strategy has
taken two significantsteps
since 1980. First,many
firms
have
recognized that a strategy driven by
quality can lead to
significant market
advantages.Second, the
lines
between quality strategy and generic
business strategies have
becomeblurred to the point
where
TQ
principles are
integratedinto most
businesses' normalbusiness
planning; that is, TQ is a
basic
operatingphilosophy
that provides the foundation
for
effectivemanagement.
Formost
companies, integration of TQ into
strategic business planning is the result
of a natural
evolution.For
most new companies or
those that have enjoyed a
reasonable measure of
success
qualitytakes
a back seat to increasing sales,expanding
capacity, or boostingproduction.
Strategic
planningusually
focuses on financial and marketing
strategies.
Components
of Strategic Management
Strategic
management consists of
twointerrelated activities:
(a) strategic planning and (b)
strategic
execution.These
two primary components of strategic
management are described in the
following
sections.
Strategic
Planning
Strategic
planning is the process by which an
organization answers such questions as
the following:
Whoare
we? Where are we going?How
will we get there? What do we hope to
accomplish? What are
ourstrengths
and weaknesses? Whatare the
opportunities and threats in our
businessenvironment?
Strategic
planning involves developing a
written plan following components: an
organizational vision:
an
organizational mission;
guidingprinciples; broad strategic
objectives;and specific tactics,
projects,
or
activities for achieving the
broad objectives. Specific tactics,
projects, and activities are
oftenreferred
to
as the "action plan."
Strategic
Execution
Strategic
execution involves
implementingstrategies set
forth in strategic planning.
Monitoringprogress
towardtheir
achievement, and adjusting as necessary. Strategic
execution is implementation
that
achievesmaximum
efficiency and effectiveness.
Monitoringinvolves
constantly checking actual performance against
performance benchmarks. Strategic
monitoringanswers
such questions as these:Are we
achieving ourobjectives?
This is the effectiveness
question.Are
we performing as well as we need to
perform? This is the efficiency
question.Adjusting
as
necessary involves making corrections
when the specific strategies or
tactics adopted
arenot
producing
the desired results. Such
adjustmentscan involve a
minor tweaking of plans finding ways
to
overcome
unexpected barriers that are encountered or even
adopting a whole new set of
specific
strategies.
StrategicPlanning
Overview
Strategic
planning, as described previously is the
process whereby
organizationsdevelop a vision,
a
mission,
guiding principles,
broadobjectives, and specific
strategiesfor achieving the
broadobjectives.
Before
even beginning the planning process, an
organization should conduct a SWOT
analysis. SWOT
is
the acronym for
strengths,weaknesses, opportunities, and
threats. A SWOT analysis
answersthe
following
questions: What are
thisorganization's strengths?
Whatare this
organization'sweaknesses?
Whatopportunities
exist in thisorganization's
business environment?What
threats exist in this
organization'sbusiness
environment?
Thesteps
in the strategic planning
process(Following Figure)
should be completed in order,
because
eachsuccessive
step grows out of the preceding one.
The SWOT analysis provides a
body of knowledge
that
is needed to undertake strategic
planning. The mission grows out of and
supports the
vision.The
guidingprinciples,
which represent the organization's
value system,guide the
organization's behavior as
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it
pursues its mission.
Thebroad objectives grow
out of the mission and translate it
intomeasurable
terms;Specific
strategies tiedirectly to the
broad objectives.Typically there
will be two to five
strategiesfor;
each objective butthis is a
general guideline, not a hard and fast
rule.
StrategicPlanning
Process
SWOT
Analysis
Step
1
(Environmental
Assessment)
Developthe
Vision
Step
2
Developthe
Mission
Step
3
Developthe
Step
4
Guiding
Principles
Developthe
Step
5
BroadStrategic
Objectives
Developthe
Step
6
ActionPlans
Strategic
Planning and the Baldrige
Award
TheBaldrige
Award recognizes the importance of
integrating totalquality
principles
withoverall
businessplanning.
The Strategic Planningcategory
addresses strategic businessplanning
and
deployment
of plans. It stresses
thatcustomer-driven quality and
operational performance are
key
strategic
business issues that need to
be an integral part of overall company
planning, and emphasizes
thatimprovement
and learning must be integral
parts of company workprocesses.
The special role of
strategic
planning is to align
workprocesses with the
company strategic directions,
therebyensuring
thatimprovement
and learning reinforce company
priorities.
The
Strategic Planning category examines
howorganizations;
·
Planfor
the long term, and understand the
keyinfluences, risks, challenges, and
other
requirements
that might affect the
organization's future opportunities and
directions. This is to
helpensure
that short-term action plans are
aligned with the organization's
longer-term strategic
directions.
·
Project
the future competitive environment to
help detect and
reducecompetitive
threats,
shorten
reaction time, and
identifyopportunities.
·
Developaction
plans and deploy resources
particularly human resources to
achieve
alignment
and consistency, and provide a basis
forsetting and
communicatingpriorities
for
ongoingimprovement
activities.
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·
Ensurethat
deployment will be effective
that a measurementsystem
enables tracking of
action
plan
achievement in all areas.
Theintegration
of quality planningwith
business planning occurred in the 1995
criteria
revision.Most
symbolicwas
the change in the category'stitle
from "StrategicQuality
Planning" to "Strategic
Planning."This
change signaled a "major
emphasis on business strategy as the
most appropriateview-
of-the-futurecontext
for managingperformance."
The integration of quality and
operational
issueswith
businessplanning
became a dominanttheme, with
a focus on "performance,""Competitive
position,"
"customer-related,"
and "operational" themes.
Conducting
the SWOT Analysis
Therationale
for conducting a SWOT analysis
before proceedingwith the
development of the strategic
plan
is that the organization's
planshould produce a good
fit between its internal
situation and it external
situation.
An organization's internal situation is
defined by its strengths and
weaknesses. An
organization'sexternal
situation is defined by the opportunities
and threats thatexist in its
business
environment.The
strategic plan should, be designed in
such away that it exploits
an organization's
strengths
and opportunities, while
simultaneouslyovercoming, accommodating, or
circumventing
weaknesses
and threats.
IdentifyingOrganizational
Strengths
An
organizational strength is any characteristic or
capability that gives the
organization
a
competitive advantage. The
followingare examples of common
organizational strengths:
Financial
strength
A
good reputation in the marketplace
Strategic
focus
High-quality
products/services
Proprietaryproducts/services
Cost
leadership
Strongmanagement
team
Efficienttechnological
processes
Talentedworkforce
Fastertime
to market
Theseare
just some of the strengths an
individual organizationmay
have: many othersare
possible. The
key
is accurately defining an
organization'sstrengths before
beginning to develop its strategic
plan.
IdentifyingOrganizational
Weaknesses
An
organizational weakness is any
characteristic or capability that is
lacking to the extent that it
puts the
organization
at a competitive disadvantage. These
areexamples of common
organizationalweaknesses:
Strategic
confusion/lack of direction
Obsolete
facilities
Obsolete
processes
Weakmanagement
team
Insufficientskills/capabilities
in the workforce
Poorlydefined
operatingprocedures
Toonarrow
a product line
Productswith
decreasingdemand
Toodiverse
a productline
Poor
image in the marketplace
Weakdistribution
system
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Weakfinancial
position
Highunit
costs compared withthose of
competitors
Poor
quality in products/services
Theseare
just a few of manyweaknesses
an organization may have. The
main thing is to identify
an
organization'sweaknesses
accurately before undertaking the strategic
planning process.
IdentifyingExternal
Opportunities
Externalopportunities
are opportunities in the organization's
business environmentthat
represent
potentialavenues
for growth and/orgaining a
sustainable competitive advantage. The
following are
examples
of external opportunities
thatorganizations
mayhave:
Availability
of new customers
An
expanding market
for.existing or potential/planned
products
Ability
to diversify into related
products/services
Removal
of barriers that
inhibitgrowth
Failures
of competitors
Newon-line
technologies thatenhance
productivity or quality
Of
course, other
externalopportunities might be
available to an organization besides
these. You need to
identifyall
such opportunities accurately before
undertaking the strategic
planningprocess.
IdentifyingExternal
Threats
An
external threat is a phenomenon in an
organization's business
environmentthat has the
potential to
put
the organization at a competitive disadvantage.
Such external threats
mightinclude the
following:
Entry
of lower cost competitors
Entry
of higher quality competitors
Increasedsales
of substitute products/services
Significantslowdown
in marketgrowth
Introduction
of costly new regulatory
requirements
Poor
supplier relations
Changingtastes
and habits of consumers
Potentiallydamaging
demographicchanges
Manyother
external threats
mightconfront an organization.
Accuratelyidentifying
everypotential
externalthreat
before you begin the strategic
planning process is a
must.
Developingthe
Vision
An
organization's guiding force, the
dream of what it wants to
become, and its reason
forbeing should
be
apparent in its vision. A vision is
like a beacon in the
distancetoward which the
organization is
alwaysmoving.
Everything about the organization-its
structure, policies,procedures, and
allocation of
resources-should
support the realization of the vision. In an
organization with a clear vision, it
is
relativelyeasy
to stay appropriately focused. If a
policy does not support the
vision, why have it? If
a
procedure
does not support the
vision,why adopt it? If an
expenditure does not support the
vision. Why
make
it? If a position or even a department
doesn't support the vision, why keep
it? An organization's
visionmust
be established and articulated by
executive management and understood by
all employees.
Thefirst
step in articulating an organizational
vision is writing it down.
This is called the
vision
statement.
Developingthe
Mission
We
have just seen that the
vision statement
describeswhat an organization
wouldlike to be. It's
a
dream,but
it's not "pie in the sky".
The vision represents a
dream that can
cometrue. The mission
takes
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the
next step and describes who
the organization is, what it does. and
where it is going. In developing
the
mission statement for
anyorganization, one
shouldapply the following rules of
thumb:
Describe
what, and where of the
organization,making sure the component
describesthe
organization
and its customers.
Be
brief, but comprehensive. Typically one
paragraph should be sufficient to
describe an
organization's
mission.
Choosewording
that is simple, easy to understand,
and descriptive.
Avoidhow
statements. How the mission will be
accomplished is described in the
"Strategies"
section of the strategic plan.
Developingthe
Guiding Principles
An
organization's guiding principles
establish the framework within which it
will pursue its
mission.
Eachguiding
principle encompasses an important
organizational value.Together,
all of the guiding
principlesrepresent
the organization's valuesystem--the
foundation of its corporate
culture.
DevelopingBroad
Strategic Objectives
Broad
strategic objectives translate an organization's
mission into measurable
terms.They represent
actual
targets the organization aims at and
will expend energy and
resources trying to achieve.
Broad
objectivesare
more specific than the mission, but
they are stillbroad.
They still fallinto the
realm of
what
rather than how. The
howaspects of strategic planning
come in the next step:
developingspecific
tactics,
projects, and activities
foraccomplishing
broadobjectives.
DevelopingSpecific
Tactics (ActionPlan)
Theaction
plan consists of specific
tactics that
arewell-defined, finite projects and
activities undertaken
for
the purpose of achieving a specific
desired outcome. They are
undertakenfor the purpose
of
accomplishing
an organization's broad strategic
objectives. Tactics have the following
characteristics.
Theyare
SMART:
Arespecific
in nature
Aremeasurable
Can
be quantifiable
Can
be accomplished within a specified
timeframe
Can
be assigned to a specific individual or
group
Aretied
directly to a
broadobjective
RevolutionaryThinking
in Strategic Planning
Writingfor
the Harvard BusinessReview,
Gary Hamel makes a case
for revolutionarythinking as
a
businessstrategy;
He describes three types of companies
that can be found in any
industry:
Rule
makers-
Theseare the companies
thatbuilt the industry in
question. IBM, Sears,
and
Coca-Cola
are examples of
rulemakers.
Rule
takers- Theseare
the companies thatfollow the rules
made by the industryleaders.
J.
C.
Penney, Fujitsu, and U.S. Air
exemplify rule takers.
Rule
breakers-
Theseare the maverick
companiesthat break the rules,
ignore precedent,
andcast
aside convention.
IKEA,Charles Schwab, and
Southwest Airlines are
rule
breakers.
Beforebeginning
strategic planning, executives must decide
which of these three types of
companies
theywant.
Rule makers adopt one type
of vision, rule takersadopt
another. and rulebreakers,
yet
another.Rule
makers will adopt a vision
in which theydominate and
set the rules in a
givenmarket.
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Ruletakers
will adapt a vision in which
they are industryleaders
but perennially lessthan
first-place
finishers;their
strategies will focus on continuous
incremental improvement to work
their wayever
closer
to the market leader.
Rulebreakers will adopt a
visionthat focuses on
carving out a market
niche
thatbecause
of its characteristicsmay
not be well served by the
market leaders.
Suchcompanies will
thenseek
to dominate their
nichemarket.
TheStrategic
Management
ProcessRe-Cap:
Strategic
planning helps leadership mold an
organization's future and
managechange by focusing on
an
idealvision
of what the organizationshould and
could be 10 to 20 years in the future. In
contrast, the
term
"long range planning"
maymean only one year in the
future or the next budget submission
in
manyorganizations.
Strategic plans aredeveloped at the
highest level of an organization and
deployed
throughout.
The
strategic management process consists of
two parts: formulation and
implementation. Strategy
formulationconsists
of defining the mission of the organization the
concept of the business and
the
vision
of where it is headed; setting
objectives translating the mission
intospecific performance
objectives;
and defining a strategy
determiningspecific actions to achieve the performance
objectives.
Planning
is good but implementation is
difficult and requires various tools and
skillets. Implementation
focuses
on executing the strategy effectively and
efficiently, as well as on evaluating
performance and
makingcorrective
adjustments
whennecessary.
Advanced
Quality
ManagementTools:
To
create added value for the
customer and for Prevention rather
than Correction,
Japanesedeveloped
the
new tool set designed to
address strategic issues in
quality.These management
planningtools are
known
as Advanced Quality Tools and
are as follows:
1.
MatrixDiagram
2.
RelationsDiagram
3.
AffinityDiagram
4.
Systematic
or Tree Diagram
5.
Matrixdata
Analysis
6.
Arrow
Diagrams
7.
ProcessDecision
Program Chart
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