Strategy Implementation and Execution
Strategy Implementation and Execution
Implementation
ST RAT EGIC M A N AGEMEN T
A COM P ETITIVE A DVA N TAGE A P P ROACH, CONC EPT A ND C A SES
SI XT EENTH ED I T ION
FRED. R. DAVI D & FOREST R DAVI D
Isu-isu Utama Isu-isu Khusus
marketing market segmentation
?
Facebook
Social Media
Google Plus
Manager(s)?
Twitter
LinkedIn
Instagram Influencer(s)?
Pinterest
Foursquare
The socmed manager(s)?
responds to comments and problems
track negative or misleading statements
manage the online discussion about a firm
gather valuable information about opinions and desires
• Wikis—websites that allow users to add, delete, and edit
content regarding frequently asked questions and information
across the firm’s whole value chain of activities.
• The most common wiki is Wikipedia
Company Website
The company website must not be just about the company—it must be all
about the customer too.
Perhaps offer points, discounts, or coupons on the website for customers
who provide ideas, suggestions, or feedback.
Drive traffic to the company website, and then keep customers at the
website for as long as possible with daily new material, updates, excitement,
and offers.
The New Principles of Marketing
1. Do not just talk at consumers—work with them throughout the marketing process.
2. Give consumers a reason to participate.
3. Listen to—and join—the conversation outside your company’s website.
4. Resist the temptation to sell, sell, sell. Instead attract, attract, attract.
5. Do not control online conversations; let it flow freely.
6. Find a “marketing technologist,” a person who has three excellent skill sets (marketing,
technology and social interaction).
7. Embrace instant messaging and chatting.
Market Segmentation
Market segmentation can be defined as the subdividing of a market into
distinct subsets of customers according to needs and buying habits.
Product Positioning and Perceptual Mapping
1. Can the company obtain the needed capital via stock or debt?
2. Would common stock, bank debt, corporate bonds, or some combination be
better to raise needed capital?
3. What would the firm’s projected EPS values be, given securement of the
capital and implementation of the strategies?
Strategic Research and Development (R&D) Issues
Divisional and
Strategists
Functional Manager
Contrasting Strategy Formulation with Strategy Implementation
STRATEGY FORMULATION STRATEGY IMPLEMENTATION
Position forces before the action Manage forces during the action
Requires good intuitive and analytical skills Requires special motivation and leadership skills
Requires coordination among a few individuals Requires coordination among many individuals
Process-oriented People-oriented
Primary responsibility of top managers Primary responsibility of mid and lower-level managers
Strategy-formulation concepts and tools do not differ greatly for small,
large, for-profit, or nonprofit organizations.
Strategy implementation varies substantially among different types and
sizes of organizations.
Implementing strategies requires such actions as altering sales territories,
adding new departments, closing facilities, hiring new employees,
changing an organization’s pricing strategy, developing financial budgets,
developing new employee benefits, establishing cost-control procedures,
changing advertising strategies, building new facilities, training new
employees, transferring managers among divisions, and building a better
management information system.
These types of activities obviously differ greatly among manufacturing,
service, and governmental organizations.
The Need for Clear Annual Objectives
Annual objectives are desired milestones an organization needs to achieve to ensure
successful strategy implementation.
1. They represent the basis for allocating resources.
2. They are a primary mechanism for evaluating managers.
3. They enable effective monitoring of progress toward achieving long-term
objectives.
4. They establish organizational, divisional, and departmental priorities.
5. They are essential for keeping a strategic plan on track.
Annual objectives are often stated in terms of profitability, growth, and market share
by business segment, geographic area, customer groups, and product.
The Stamus Company’s Hierarchy of Aims
LONG-TERM COMPANY OBJECTIVE
Double company revenues in two years through market
development and market penetration.
(Current revenues are $2 million.)
DIVISION I. ANNUAL OBJECTIVE DIVISION II. ANNUAL OBJECTIVE DIVISION III. ANNUAL OBJECTIVE
Increase divisional revenues by Increase divisional revenues by 40% Increase divisional revenues by 50%
40% this year and 40% next year. this year and 40% next year. this year and 50% next year.
(Current revenues are $1 million.) (Current revenues are $0.5 million.) (Current revenues are $0.5 million.)
R&D annual objective Production annual Marketing annual Finance annual Personnel annual
Develop two new objective objective objective objective
products this year that Increase production Increase the number of Obtain long-term Reduce employee
are succesfully efficiency by 30% this salespeople by 40 this financing of $400,000 absenteeism from
marketed. year. year in the next six months 10% to 5% this year.
• Auditing
• Advertising
• Purchasing • Accounting
• Promotion
• Shipping • Investments
• Research
• Quality Control • Collections
• Public Relations
• Working Capital
Characteristics of objectives
Measurable
Consistent
Reasonable
Challenging
Clear
Communicated throughout the organization,
Characterized by an appropriate time dimension, and
Accompanied by commensurate rewards and sanctions.
The Need for Clear Policies
Policies refer to specific guidelines, methods, procedures, rules, forms, and administrative
practices established to support and encourage work toward stated goals.
Ex. some companies have a policy that bans employees from accessing their personal social
media sites during work hours.
We are an equal opportunity employer.
Employees in this department must take at least one training and development course each
year.
Example..p. 328
Allocate Resources and Manage Conflict
Resource allocation can be defined as distributing an organization’s “assets”
across products, regions, and segments according to priorities established by
annual objectives.
(1) financial resources, (2) physical resources, (3) human resources, and (4)
technological resources.
Conflict can be defined as a disagreement between two or more parties on
one or more issues.
Establishing annual objectives can lead to conflict because individuals have
different expectations, perceptions, schedules, pressures, obligations, and
personalities.
Conflict?
Short-term profits or long-term growth
Profit margin or market share
Market penetration or market development
Growth or stability
High risk or low risk
Social responsiveness or profit maximization
Match Structure with Strategy
1. Structure largely dictates how objectives and policies will be established.
2. Structure dictates how resources will be allocated.
Alfred Chandler promoted the notion that “changes in strategy lead to changes in
organizational structure.”
Structure should be designed to facilitate the strategic pursuit of a firm and, therefore, follow
strategy.
Symptoms of an Ineffective Organizational
Structure
1. Too many levels of management
2. Too many meetings attended by too many people
3. Too much attention being directed toward solving interdepartmental conflicts
4. Too large a span of control
5. Too many unachieved objectives
6. Declining corporate or business performance
7. Losing ground to rival firms
8. Revenue or earnings divided by number of employees or number of managers is low
compared to rival firms
Types of Organizational Structure
1. Functional
2. Divisional by geographic area
3. Divisional by product
4. Divisional by customer,
5. Divisional by process,
6. Strategic business unit (SBU),
7. Matrix.
1. The Functional Structure (or centralized type)
by business function, such as production and operations, marketing, finance and accounting,
research and development, and management information systems.
Advantages Disadvantages
1. Simple and inexpensive 1. Accountability forced to the top
2. Capitalizes on specialization of business 2. Delegation of authority and responsibility
activities such as marketing and finance not encouraged
3. Minimizes need for elaborate control 3. Minimizes career development
system 4. Low employee and manager morale
4. Allows for rapid decision making 5. Inadequate planning for products and
Market
6. Leads to short-term, narrow thinking
7. Leads to communication problems
2. The Divisional (decentralized) Structure
Advantages Disadvatages
1. Clear accountability 1. Can be costly
2. Allows local control of local situations 2. Duplication of functional activities
3. Creates career development chances 3. Requires a skilled management force
4. Promotes delegation of authority 4. Requires an elaborate control system
5. Leads to competitive climate internally 5. Competition among divisions can become so
6. Allows easy adding of new products or regions intense as to be dysfunctional
7. Allows strict control and attention to products, 6. Can lead to limited sharing of ideas and resources
customers, or regions 7. Some regions, products, or customers may
receive special treatment
3. The Strategic Business Unit (SBU) Structure
4. The Matrix Structure
the most complex of all designs because it depends on both vertical and horizontal flows of
authority and communication.
Advantages Disadvantages
1. Clear project objectives 1. Requires excellent vertical and horizontal
2. Results of their work clearly seen by flows of communication
employees 2. Costly because creates more manager
3. Easy to shut down a project positions
4. Facilitates uses of special equipment, 3. Violates unity of command principle
personnel, and facilities 4. Creates dual lines of budget authority
5. Shared functional resources instead of 5. Creates dual sources of reward and
duplicated resources, as in a divisional punishment
structure 6. Creates shared authority and reporting
7. Requires mutual trust and understanding
Strategic Production/
Operations Issues
Issues:
Strategic production-related Quality control
decisions on plant size
Cost control
Plant location
Use of standards
Product design
Job specialization
Choice of equipment
Employee training
Kind of tooling
Equipment and resource utilization
Size of inventory
Shipping and packaging
Inventory control
Technological innovation
Issues
1. Restructuring/reengineering
2. Managing resistance to change
3. Deciding where/how to produce goods
4. Managing an ESOP
1. Restructuring and Reengineering