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Corporate and
Strategic Management is one of the courses you will do in second semester 500L
as business administration student. Like
I said, I will take it slow – posting bit by bit topics of this course.
QUESTION:
WHAT
IS CORPORATE STRATEGY?
SOLUTION:
CORPORATE STRATEGY is
the direction an organization takes with the objective of achieving business
success in the long term. Recent approaches have focused on the need for
companies to adapt to and anticipate changes in the business environment, i.e.
a flexible strategy. The development of a corporate strategy involves
establishing the purpose and scope of the organization's activities and the
nature of the business it is in, taking the environment in which it operates,
its position in the marketplace, and the competition it faces into
consideration; most times analyzed through a SWOT analysis.
Strategy
will affect the overall direction of the organization and establish its future
working environment. Corporate strategy defines the markets and the
businesses in which an organization chooses to operate. Competitive or business
strategy defines the basis on which it will compete.
QUESTION:
IDENTIFY AND EXPLAIN 5 (FIVE) KEY
ELEMENTS OF CORPORATE STRATEGY?
SOLUTION:
Strategic decisions
are the decisions that are concerned with whole environment in which the firm operates
the entire resources and the people who form the company and the interface
between the two.
5
STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF CORPORATE STRATEGY
Strategies fall over
and over again for the same reason:
Business ignore the 5 key structural elements of strategy. Miss one and your strategy is doomed to fail.
There’s a reason that the causes of failure repeat. It’s because strategy has a unique structure,
and if you overlook one of the five key elements of that structure, you will
fail. Add elements that don’t support
that structure and you will fail. And the
failure will look familiar every time.
ELEMENT 1: POWER DISTRIBUTION
Power
distribution dictates who's involved, how much information each individual can
access, and the decision-making process.
It's
crucial to know who you're working from their track record on complex strategy
projects to basic strengths and weaknesses. Talk to other people in the
organization who have worked with them to gain more information. Vet people to
avoid surprises and to understand the best ways to support and motivate team
members.
How
much of your strategy is confidential? What can -- or should -- be shared with
other groups? Set the boundaries and share them so that everyone agrees and has
the same expectations.
Make
sure that the inner working of the group matches the culture and values of the
parent organization. If your company is as free-flowing as Google, don't bind
people with conservative rules that eliminate communal sharing of ideas or the
development innovative solutions.
ELEMENT 2: DECISION MAKING
The
way that decisions are made in organizations determines how ideas are generated
and which ideas are considered. The way decisions are made influences how these
ideas are carried out later.
Does
decision making in your organization flow top-down or bottom-up? Who are the
holders of the power to decide which ideas advance and which are eliminated? If
ideas are valued in your culture, there's a strong likelihood that it might not
matter who generates the ideas.
ELEMENT 3: IDEA GENERATION
How
ideas are generated affects the quantity and quality of these ideas, which
directly affects the number of viable strategy options.
A
company that has an annual strategy meeting with a brainstorming component that
encompasses input from many directions within the company uses one type of idea
generation. The Google model involves having employees use 20% of their time
for innovation. They test and grow projects. Some projects are nurtured and
provide the company with revenue. Others are killed off. It's even possible
that original projects may mutate into something different.
ELEMENT 4: PROCESS
Process
is the way that ideas are handled and consumed within organizations. Process
defines the way that agreements and commitments are made and managed, and how
well people understand what is happening and what to do.
The
process-driven organization avoids wasting employee time and energy. People in
this type of company reach agreement that an action is valuable, develop a
process around it, and set it in motion.
Process
may be communicated to a team in writing, by word of mouth or in other ways.
Agreement is critical to the understanding of process within an organization.
ELEMENT 5: PEOPLE
In
an organization of any size, people bring their domain knowledge, talents, and
perspectives to strategy creation. Often people are viewed as the first point
of strategy failure, but they are actually the last point of failure in a long
series of cascading interactions.
Put
another way, very bright, creative, motivated people can fail if they are
embedded in a strategy creation structure process where power, decision making,
idea generation, or process are broken.
Each
of the five elements is critical to the strength, balance, and practicality of
the proposed strategy. Tighten up around these five and watch your team's next
strategy succeed beyond your plans.
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