A Guide To Case Analysis
A Guide To Case Analysis
Identification
Identification of strategic issues and key problems and demonstrate a
good grasp of the company’s present situation.
Identify the firm’s strategy and strategy implementation issues that
may exist.
Begin the paper with an overview of the company’s situation, its
strategy, and the significant problems and issues that confront
management. State problems/issues as clearly and precisely as you
can. Unless it is necessary to do so for emphasis, avoid recounting
facts and history about the company.
Recommendations
The final section of the written case analysis should consist of a set of
definite recommendations and a plan of action.
Your set of recommendations should address all of the problems
issues you identified and analyzed. If the recommendations come as a
surprise or do not follow logically from the analysis, the effect is to
weaken greatly your suggestions of what to do.
Obviously, your recommendations for actions should offer a
reasonable prospect of success.
High-risk, bet-the-company recommendations should be made with
caution.
State how your recommendations will solve the problems you
identified.
Be sure the company is financially able to carry out what you
recommend.
Check to see if your recommendations are workable in terms of
acceptance by the persons involved, the organization’s competence to
implement them, and prevailing market and environmental
constraints.
Try not to hedge or weasel on the actions you believe should be
taken.
By all means state your recommendations in sufficient detail to be
meaningful—get down to some definite nitty-gritty specifics.
Avoid such unhelpful statements as “the organization should do more
planning” or “the company should be more aggressive in marketing
its product.”
For instance, if you determine that “the firm should improve its
market position,” then you need to set forth exactly how you think
this should be done.
Offer a definite agenda for action, stipulating a timetable and
sequence for initiating actions, indicating priorities, and suggesting
who should be responsible for doing what.