Strategic management

Strategic management is the formulation and implementation of the
major goals and initiatives taken by a company's top management on
behalf of owners, based on consideration of resources and an
assessment of the internal and external environments in which the
organization competes.[1]
Strategic management

Strategic management provides overall direction to the enterprise and
involves specifying the organization's objectives, developing policies
and plans designed to achieve these objectives, and then allocating
resources to implement the plans. Academics and practicing managers
have developed numerous models and frameworks to assist in strategic
decision making in the context of complex environments and competitive
dynamics.[2]
Strategic management

Strategic management is not static in nature; the models
often include a feedback loop to monitor execution and inform the next
round of planning.[3][4][5]
Michael Porter

Michael Porter identifies three principles underlying strategy:
creating a "unique and valuable [market] position", making trade-offs
by choosing "what not to do", and creating "fit" by aligning company
activities with one another to support the chosen strategy.[6]
Corporate strategy involves answering a key question from a portfolio
perspective: "What business should we be in?"
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business strategy
involves answering the question: "How shall we compete in this
business?"[7] In management theory and practice, a further distinction
is often made between strategic management and operational management.
Operational management is concerned primarily with improving
efficiency and controlling costs within the boundaries set by the
organization's strategy.
Contents
1 Definition
1.1 Formulation
1.2 Implementation
1.3 Many definitions of strategy
2 Historical development
2.1 Origins
2.2 Change in focus from production to marketing
2.3 Nature of strategy
3 Concepts and frameworks
3.1 SWOT analysis
3.2 Experience curve
3.3 Corporate strategy and portfolio theory
3.4 Competitive advantage
3.5 Industry structure and profitability
3.6 Generic competitive strategies
3.7 Value chain
3.8 Core competence
3.9 Theory of the business
4 Strategic thinking
5 Strategic planning
5.1 Environmental analysis
5.2 Scenario planning
5.3 Measuring and controlling implementation
5.4 Evaluation
6 Limitations
7 Strategic themes
7.1 Self-service
7.2
Globalization

Globalization and the virtual firm
7.3 Internet and information availability
7.4 Sustainability
8
Strategy

Strategy as learning
9
Strategy

Strategy as adapting to change
10
Strategy

Strategy as operational excellence
10.1 Quality
10.2 Reengineering
11 Other perspectives on strategy
11.1
Strategy

Strategy as problem solving
11.2 Creative vs analytic approaches
11.3 Non-strategic management
11.4
Strategy

Strategy as marketing
11.5 Information- and technology-driven strategy
11.6 Maturity of planning process
11.7 PIMS study
12 Other influences on business strategy
12.1 Military strategy
13 Traits of successful companies
14 See also
15 References
16 Further reading
17 External links
Definition[edit]
Strategic management

Strategic management processes and activities
Strategic management

Strategic management involves the formulation and implementation of
the major goals and initiatives taken by a company's top management on
behalf of owners, based on consideration of resources and an
assessment of the internal and external environments in which the
organization competes.[1]
Strategy

Strategy is defined as "the determination of
the basic long-term goals of an enterprise, and the adoption of
courses of action and the allocation of resources necessary for
carrying out these goals."[8] Strategies are established to set
direction, focus effort, define or clarify the organization, and
provide consistency or guidance in response to the environment.[9]
Strategic management

Strategic management involves the related concepts of strategic
planning and strategic thinking.
Strategic planning

Strategic planning is analytical in
nature and refers to formalized procedures to produce the data and
analyses used as inputs for strategic thinking, which synthesizes the
data resulting in the strategy.
Strategic planning

Strategic planning may also refer to
control mechanisms used to implement the strategy once it is
determined. In other words, strategic planning happens around the
strategic thinking or strategy making activity.[10]
Strategic management

Strategic management is often described as involving two major
processes: formulation and implementation of strategy. While described
sequentially below, in practice the two processes are iterative and
each provides input for the other.[10]
Formulation[edit]
Formulation of strategy involves analyzing the environment in which
the organization operates, then making a series of strategic decisions
about how the organization will compete. Formulation ends with a
series of goals or objectives and measures for the organization to
pursue. Environmental analysis includes the:
Remote external environment, including the political, economic,
social, technological, legal and environmental landscape (PESTLE);
Industry environment, such as the competitive behavior of rival
organizations, the bargaining power of buyers/customers and suppliers,
threats from new entrants to the industry, and the ability of buyers
to substitute products (Porter's 5 forces); and
Internal environment, regarding the strengths and weaknesses of the
organization's resources (i.e., its people, processes and IT
systems).[10]
Strategic decisions are based on insight from the environmental
assessment and are responses to strategic questions about how the
organization will compete, such as:
What is the organization's business?
Who is the target customer for the organization's products and
services?
Where are the customers and how do they buy? What is considered
"value" to the customer?
Which businesses, products and services should be included or excluded
from the portfolio of offerings?
What is the geographic scope of the business?
What differentiates the company from its competitors in the eyes of
customers and other stakeholders?
Which skills and capabilities should be developed within the firm?
What are the important opportunities and risks for the organization?
How can the firm grow, through both its base business and new
business?
How can the firm generate more value for investors?[10][11]
The answers to these and many other strategic questions result in the
organization's strategy and a series of specific short-term and
long-term goals or objectives and related measures.[10]
Implementation[edit]
The second major process of strategic management is implementation,
which involves decisions regarding how the organization's resources
(i.e., people, process and IT systems) will be aligned and mobilized
towards the objectives. Implementation results in how the
organization's resources are structured (such as by product or service
or geography), leadership arrangements, communication, incentives, and
monitoring mechanisms to track progress towards objectives, among
others.[10]
Running the day-to-day operations of the business is often referred to
as "operations management" or specific terms for key departments or
functions, such as "logistics management" or "marketing management,"
which take over once strategic management decisions are
implemented.[10]
Many definitions of strategy[edit]
Strategy

Strategy has been practiced whenever an advantage was gained by
planning the sequence and timing of the deployment of resources while
simultaneously taking into account the probable capabilities and
behavior of competition.
Bruce Henderson[12]
In 1988,
Henry Mintzberg

Henry Mintzberg described the many different definitions and
perspectives on strategy reflected in both academic research and in
practice.[13][14] He examined the strategic process and concluded it
was much more fluid and unpredictable than people had thought. Because
of this, he could not point to one process that could be called
strategic planning. Instead Mintzberg concludes that there are five
types of strategies:
Strategy

Strategy as plan – a directed course of action to achieve an
intended set of goals; similar to the strategic planning concept;
Strategy

Strategy as pattern – a consistent pattern of past behavior, with a
strategy realized over time rather than planned or intended. Where the
realized pattern was different from the intent, he referred to the
strategy as emergent;
Strategy

Strategy as position – locating brands, products, or companies
within the market, based on the conceptual framework of consumers or
other stakeholders; a strategy determined primarily by factors outside
the firm;
Strategy

Strategy as ploy – a specific maneuver intended to outwit a
competitor; and
Strategy

Strategy as perspective – executing strategy based on a "theory of
the business" or natural extension of the mindset or ideological
perspective of the organization.
In 1998, Mintzberg developed these five types of management strategy
into 10 “schools of thought” and grouped them into three
categories. The first group is normative. It consists of the schools
of informal design and conception, the formal planning, and analytical
positioning. The second group, consisting of six schools, is more
concerned with how strategic management is actually done, rather than
prescribing optimal plans or positions. The six schools are
entrepreneurial, visionary, cognitive, learning/adaptive/emergent,
negotiation, corporate culture and business environment. The third and
final group consists of one school, the configuration or
transformation school, a hybrid of the other schools organized into
stages, organizational life cycles, or “episodes”.[15]
Michael Porter

Michael Porter defined strategy in 1980 as the "...broad formula for
how a business is going to compete, what its goals should be, and what
policies will be needed to carry out those goals" and the
"...combination of the ends (goals) for which the firm is striving and
the means (policies) by which it is seeking to get there." He
continued that: "The essence of formulating competitive strategy is
relating a company to its environment."[16]
Complexity

Complexity theorists define strategy as the unfolding of the internal
and external aspects of the organization that results in actions in a
socio-economic context.[17][18][19]
Historical development[edit]
Origins[edit]
The strategic management discipline originated in the 1950s and 1960s.
Among the numerous early contributors, the most influential were Peter
Drucker, Philip Selznick, Alfred Chandler, Igor Ansoff, and Bruce
Henderson.[2] The discipline draws from earlier thinking and texts on
'strategy' dating back thousands of years. Prior to 1960, the term
"strategy" was primarily used regarding war and politics, not
business.[20] Many companies built strategic planning functions to
develop and execute the formulation and implementation processes
during the 1960s.[21]
Peter Drucker was a prolific management theorist and author of dozens
of management books, with a career spanning five decades. He addressed
fundamental strategic questions in a 1954 book The Practice of
Management

Management writing: "... the first responsibility of top management is
to ask the question 'what is our business?' and to make sure it is
carefully studied and correctly answered." He wrote that the answer
was determined by the customer. He recommended eight areas where
objectives should be set, such as market standing, innovation,
productivity, physical and financial resources, worker performance and
attitude, profitability, manager performance and development, and
public responsibility.[22]
In 1957,
Philip Selznick initially used the term "distinctive
competence" in referring to how the Navy was attempting to
differentiate itself from the other services.[2] He also formalized
the idea of matching the organization's internal factors with external
environmental circumstances.[23] This core idea was developed further
by
Kenneth R. Andrews in 1963 into what we now call SWOT analysis, in
which the strengths and weaknesses of the firm are assessed in light
of the opportunities and threats in the business environment.[2]
Alfred Chandler recognized the importance of coordinating management
activity under an all-encompassing strategy. Interactions between
functions were typically handled by managers who relayed information
back and forth between departments. Chandler stressed the importance
of taking a long term perspective when looking to the future. In his
1962 ground breaking work
Strategy

Strategy and Structure, Chandler showed that
a long-term coordinated strategy was necessary to give a company
structure, direction and focus. He says it concisely, "structure
follows strategy." Chandler wrote that:
"
Strategy

Strategy is the determination of the basic long-term goals of an
enterprise, and the adoption of courses of action and the allocation
of resources necessary for carrying out these goals."[8]
Igor Ansoff

Igor Ansoff built on Chandler's work by adding concepts and inventing
a vocabulary. He developed a grid that compared strategies for market
penetration, product development, market development and horizontal
and vertical integration and diversification. He felt that management
could use the grid to systematically prepare for the future. In his
1965 classic Corporate Strategy, he developed gap analysis to clarify
the gap between the current reality and the goals and to develop what
he called "gap reducing actions".[24] Ansoff wrote that strategic
management had three parts: strategic planning; the skill of a firm in
converting its plans into reality; and the skill of a firm in managing
its own internal resistance to change.[25]
Bruce Henderson, founder of the Boston Consulting Group, wrote about
the concept of the experience curve in 1968, following initial work
begun in 1965. The experience curve refers to a hypothesis that unit
production costs decline by 20–30% every time cumulative production
doubles. This supported the argument for achieving higher market share
and economies of scale.[26]
Porter wrote in 1980 that companies have to make choices about their
scope and the type of competitive advantage they seek to achieve,
whether lower cost or differentiation. The idea of strategy targeting
particular industries and customers (i.e., competitive positions) with
a differentiated offering was a departure from the experience-curve
influenced strategy paradigm, which was focused on larger scale and
lower cost.[16] Porter revised the strategy paradigm again in 1985,
writing that superior performance of the processes and activities
performed by organizations as part of their value chain is the
foundation of competitive advantage, thereby outlining a process view
of strategy.[27]
Change in focus from production to marketing[edit]
The direction of strategic research also paralleled a major paradigm
shift in how companies competed, specifically a shift from the
production focus to market focus. The prevailing concept in strategy
up to the 1950s was to create a product of high technical quality. If
you created a product that worked well and was durable, it was assumed
you would have no difficulty profiting. This was called the production
orientation.
Henry Ford

Henry Ford famously said of the Model T car: "Any
customer can have a car painted any color that he wants, so long as it
is black."[28]
Management

Management theorist
Peter F Drucker wrote in 1954 that it was the
customer who defined what business the organization was in.[11] In
1960
Theodore Levitt argued that instead of producing products then
trying to sell them to the customer, businesses should start with the
customer, find out what they wanted, and then produce it for them. The
fallacy of the production orientation was also referred to as
marketing myopia in an article of the same name by Levitt.[29]
Over time, the customer became the driving force behind all strategic
business decisions. This marketing concept, in the decades since its
introduction, has been reformulated and repackaged under names
including market orientation, customer orientation, customer intimacy,
customer focus, customer-driven and market focus.
It's more important than ever to define yourself in terms of what you
stand for rather than what you make, because what you make is going to
become outmoded faster than it has at any time in the past.
Jim Collins[30]
Jim Collins wrote in 1997 that the strategic frame of reference is
expanded by focusing on why a company exists rather than what it
makes.[30] In 2001, he recommended that organizations define
themselves based on three key questions:
What are we passionate about?
What can we be best in the world at?
What drives our economic engine?[31]
Nature of strategy[edit]
In 1985, Professor Ellen Earle-Chaffee summarized what she thought
were the main elements of strategic management theory where consensus
generally existed as of the 1970s, writing that strategic
management:[7]
Involves adapting the organization to its business environment;
Is fluid and complex. Change creates novel combinations of
circumstances requiring unstructured non-repetitive responses;
Affects the entire organization by providing direction;
Involves both strategy formulation processes and also implementation
of the content of the strategy;
May be planned (intended) and unplanned (emergent);
Is done at several levels: overall corporate strategy, and individual
business strategies; and
Involves both conceptual and analytical thought processes.
Chaffee further wrote that research up to that point covered three
models of strategy, which were not mutually exclusive:
Linear strategy: A planned determination of goals, initiatives, and
allocation of resources, along the lines of the Chandler definition
above. This is most consistent with strategic planning approaches and
may have a long planning horizon. The strategist "deals with" the
environment but it is not the central concern.
Adaptive strategy: In this model, the organization's goals and
activities are primarily concerned with adaptation to the environment,
analogous to a biological organism. The need for continuous adaption
reduces or eliminates the planning window. There is more focus on
means (resource mobilization to address the environment) rather than
ends (goals).
Strategy

Strategy is less centralized than in the linear model.
Interpretive strategy: A more recent and less developed model than the
linear and adaptive models, interpretive strategy is concerned with
"orienting metaphors constructed for the purpose of conceptualizing
and guiding individual attitudes or organizational participants." The
aim of interpretive strategy is legitimacy or credibility in the mind
of stakeholders. It places emphasis on symbols and language to
influence the minds of customers, rather than the physical product of
the organization.[7]
Concepts and frameworks[edit]
The progress of strategy since 1960 can be charted by a variety of
frameworks and concepts introduced by management consultants and
academics. These reflect an increased focus on cost, competition and
customers. These "3 Cs" were illuminated by much more robust empirical
analysis at ever-more granular levels of detail, as industries and
organizations were disaggregated into business units, activities,
processes, and individuals in a search for sources of competitive
advantage.[20]
SWOT analysis[edit]
Main article: SWOT analysis
A SWOT analysis, with its four elements in a 2×2 matrix.
By the 1960s, the capstone business policy course at the Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business School included the concept of matching the distinctive
competence of a company (its internal strengths and weaknesses) with
its environment (external opportunities and threats) in the context of
its objectives. This framework came to be known by the acronym SWOT
and was "a major step forward in bringing explicitly competitive
thinking to bear on questions of strategy".
Kenneth R. Andrews helped
popularize the framework via a 1963 conference and it remains commonly
used in practice.[2]
Experience curve[edit]
Main article: Experience curve
The experience curve was developed by the
Boston Consulting Group

Boston Consulting Group in
1966.[20] It is a hypothesis that total per unit costs decline
systematically by as much as 15–25% every time cumulative production
(i.e., "experience") doubles. It has been empirically confirmed by
some firms at various points in their history.[32] Costs decline due
to a variety of factors, such as the learning curve, substitution of
labor for capital (automation), and technological sophistication.
Author
Walter Kiechel wrote that it reflected several insights,
including:
A company can always improve its cost structure;
Competitors have varying cost positions based on their experience;
Firms could achieve lower costs through higher market share, attaining
a competitive advantage; and
An increased focus on empirical analysis of costs and processes, a
concept which author Kiechel refers to as "Greater Taylorism".
Kiechel wrote in 2010: "The experience curve was, simply, the most
important concept in launching the strategy revolution...with the
experience curve, the strategy revolution began to insinuate an acute
awareness of competition into the corporate consciousness." Prior to
the 1960s, the word competition rarely appeared in the most prominent
management literature; U.S. companies then faced considerably less
competition and did not focus on performance relative to peers.
Further, the experience curve provided a basis for the retail sale of
business ideas, helping drive the management consulting industry.[20]
Corporate strategy and portfolio theory[edit]
Main articles:
Modern portfolio theory

Modern portfolio theory and Growth–share matrix
Portfolio growth–share matrix
The concept of the corporation as a portfolio of business units, with
each plotted graphically based on its market share (a measure of its
competitive position relative to its peers) and industry growth rate
(a measure of industry attractiveness), was summarized in the
growth–share matrix developed by the
Boston Consulting Group

Boston Consulting Group around
1970. By 1979, one study estimated that 45% of the Fortune 500
companies were using some variation of the matrix in their strategic
planning. This framework helped companies decide where to invest their
resources (i.e., in their high market share, high growth businesses)
and which businesses to divest (i.e., low market share, low growth
businesses.)[20]
Porter wrote in 1987 that corporate strategy involves two questions:
1) What business should the corporation be in? and 2) How should the
corporate office manage its business units? He mentioned four concepts
of corporate strategy; the latter three can be used together:[33]
Portfolio theory: A strategy based primarily on diversification
through acquisition. The corporation shifts resources among the units
and monitors the performance of each business unit and its leaders.
Each unit generally runs autonomously, with limited interference from
the corporate center provided goals are met.
Restructuring: The corporate office acquires then actively intervenes
in a business where it detects potential, often by replacing
management and implementing a new business strategy.
Transferring skills: Important managerial skills and organizational
capability are essentially spread to multiple businesses. The skills
must be necessary to competitive advantage.
Sharing activities: Ability of the combined corporation to leverage
centralized functions, such as sales, finance, etc. thereby reducing
costs.[33]
Other techniques were developed to analyze the relationships between
elements in a portfolio. The growth-share matrix, a part of B.C.G.
Analysis, was followed by G.E. multi factoral model, developed by
General Electric. Companies continued to diversify as conglomerates
until the 1980s, when deregulation and a less restrictive anti-trust
environment led to the view that a portfolio of operating divisions in
different industries was worth more as many independent companies,
leading to the breakup of many conglomerates.[20] While the popularity
of portfolio theory has waxed and waned, the key dimensions considered
(industry attractiveness and competitive position) remain central to
strategy.[2]
Competitive advantage[edit]
Main article: Competitive advantage
In 1980, Porter defined the two types of competitive advantage an
organization can achieve relative to its rivals: lower cost or
differentiation. This advantage derives from attribute(s) that allow
an organization to outperform its competition, such as superior market
position, skills, or resources. In Porter's view, strategic management
should be concerned with building and sustaining competitive
advantage.[27]
Industry structure and profitability[edit]
A graphical representation of Porter's Five Forces
Main article: Porter five forces analysis
Porter developed a framework for analyzing the profitability of
industries and how those profits are divided among the participants in
1980. In five forces analysis he identified the forces that shape the
industry structure or environment. The framework involves the
bargaining power of buyers and suppliers, the threat of new entrants,
the availability of substitute products, and the competitive rivalry
of firms in the industry. These forces affect the organization's
ability to raise its prices as well as the costs of inputs (such as
raw materials) for its processes.[16]
The five forces framework helps describe how a firm can use these
forces to obtain a sustainable competitive advantage, either lower
cost or differentiation. Companies can maximize their profitability by
competing in industries with favorable structure. Competitors can take
steps to grow the overall profitability of the industry, or to take
profit away from other parts of the industry structure. Porter
modified Chandler's dictum about structure following strategy by
introducing a second level of structure: while organizational
structure follows strategy, it in turn follows industry structure.[16]
Generic competitive strategies[edit]
Main article: Porter's generic strategies
Michael Porter's Three Generic Strategies
Porter wrote in 1980 that strategy target either cost leadership,
differentiation, or focus.[16] These are known as Porter's three
generic strategies and can be applied to any size or form of business.
Porter claimed that a company must only choose one of the three or
risk that the business would waste precious resources. Porter's
generic strategies detail the interaction between cost minimization
strategies, product differentiation strategies, and market focus
strategies.
Porter described an industry as having multiple segments that can be
targeted by a firm. The breadth of its targeting refers to the
competitive scope of the business. Porter defined two types of
competitive advantage: lower cost or differentiation relative to its
rivals. Achieving competitive advantage results from a firm's ability
to cope with the five forces better than its rivals. Porter wrote:
"[A]chieving competitive advantage requires a firm to make a
choice...about the type of competitive advantage it seeks to attain
and the scope within which it will attain it." He also wrote: "The two
basic types of competitive advantage [differentiation and lower cost]
combined with the scope of activities for which a firm seeks to
achieve them lead to three generic strategies for achieving above
average performance in an industry: cost leadership, differentiation
and focus. The focus strategy has two variants, cost focus and
differentiation focus."[27]
The concept of choice was a different perspective on strategy, as the
1970s paradigm was the pursuit of market share (size and scale)
influenced by the experience curve. Companies that pursued the highest
market share position to achieve cost advantages fit under Porter's
cost leadership generic strategy, but the concept of choice regarding
differentiation and focus represented a new perspective.[20]
Value chain[edit]
Michael Porter's Value Chain
Main article: Value chain
Porter's 1985 description of the value chain refers to the chain of
activities (processes or collections of processes) that an
organization performs in order to deliver a valuable product or
service for the market. These include functions such as inbound
logistics, operations, outbound logistics, marketing and sales, and
service, supported by systems and technology infrastructure. By
aligning the various activities in its value chain with the
organization's strategy in a coherent way, a firm can achieve a
competitive advantage. Porter also wrote that strategy is an
internally consistent configuration of activities that differentiates
a firm from its rivals. A robust competitive position cumulates from
many activities which should fit coherently together.[34]
Porter wrote in 1985: "
Competitive advantage

Competitive advantage cannot be understood by
looking at a firm as a whole. It stems from the many discrete
activities a firm performs in designing, producing, marketing,
delivering and supporting its product. Each of these activities can
contribute to a firm's relative cost position and create a basis for
differentiation...the value chain disaggregates a firm into its
strategically relevant activities in order to understand the behavior
of costs and the existing and potential sources of
differentiation."[2]
Core competence[edit]
Main article: Core competency
Gary Hamel

Gary Hamel and
C. K. Prahalad

C. K. Prahalad described the idea of core competency in
1990, the idea that each organization has some capability in which it
excels and that the business should focus on opportunities in that
area, letting others go or outsourcing them. Further, core competency
is difficult to duplicate, as it involves the skills and coordination
of people across a variety of functional areas or processes used to
deliver value to customers. By outsourcing, companies expanded the
concept of the value chain, with some elements within the entity and
others without.[35]
Core competency

Core competency is part of a branch of strategy
called the resource-based view of the firm, which postulates that if
activities are strategic as indicated by the value chain, then the
organization's capabilities and ability to learn or adapt are also
strategic.[2]
Theory of the business[edit]
Peter Drucker wrote in 1994 about the "Theory of the Business," which
represents the key assumptions underlying a firm's strategy. These
assumptions are in three categories: a) the external environment,
including society, market, customer, and technology; b) the mission of
the organization; and c) the core competencies needed to accomplish
the mission. He continued that a valid theory of the business has four
specifications: 1) assumptions about the environment, mission, and
core competencies must fit reality; 2) the assumptions in all three
areas have to fit one another; 3) the theory of the business must be
known and understood throughout the organization; and 4) the theory of
the business has to be tested constantly.
He wrote that organizations get into trouble when the assumptions
representing the theory of the business no longer fit reality. He used
an example of retail department stores, where their theory of the
business assumed that people who could afford to shop in department
stores would do so. However, many shoppers abandoned department stores
in favor of specialty retailers (often located outside of malls) when
time became the primary factor in the shopping destination rather than
income.
Drucker described the theory of the business as a "hypothesis" and a
"discipline." He advocated building in systematic diagnostics,
monitoring and testing of the assumptions comprising the theory of the
business to maintain competitiveness.[36]
Strategic thinking[edit]
Main article: Strategic thinking
Strategic thinking

Strategic thinking involves the generation and application of unique
business insights to opportunities intended to create competitive
advantage for a firm or organization. It involves challenging the
assumptions underlying the organization's strategy and value
proposition. Mintzberg wrote in 1994 that it is more about synthesis
(i.e., "connecting the dots") than analysis (i.e., "finding the
dots"). It is about "capturing what the manager learns from all
sources (both the soft insights from his or her personal experiences
and the experiences of others throughout the organization and the hard
data from market research and the like) and then synthesizing that
learning into a vision of the direction that the business should
pursue." Mintzberg argued that strategic thinking is the critical part
of formulating strategy, more so than strategic planning
exercises.[37]
General
Andre Beaufre

Andre Beaufre wrote in 1963 that strategic thinking "is a
mental process, at once abstract and rational, which must be capable
of synthesizing both psychological and material data. The strategist
must have a great capacity for both analysis and synthesis; analysis
is necessary to assemble the data on which he makes his diagnosis,
synthesis in order to produce from these data the diagnosis
itself--and the diagnosis in fact amounts to a choice between
alternative courses of action."[38]
Will Mulcaster[39] argued that while much research and creative
thought has been devoted to generating alternative strategies, too
little work has been done on what influences the quality of strategic
decision making and the effectiveness with which strategies are
implemented. For instance, in retrospect it can be seen that the
financial crisis of 2008–9 could have been avoided if the banks had
paid more attention to the risks associated with their investments,
but how should banks change the way they make decisions to improve the
quality of their decisions in the future? Mulcaster's Managing Forces
framework addresses this issue by identifying 11 forces that should be
incorporated into the processes of decision making and strategic
implementation. The 11 forces are: Time; Opposing forces; Politics;
Perception; Holistic effects; Adding value; Incentives; Learning
capabilities; Opportunity cost; Risk and Style.
Strategic planning[edit]
Main article: Strategic planning
Strategic planning

Strategic planning is a means of administering the formulation and
implementation of strategy.
Strategic planning

Strategic planning is analytical in nature
and refers to formalized procedures to produce the data and analyses
used as inputs for strategic thinking, which synthesizes the data
resulting in the strategy.
Strategic planning

Strategic planning may also refer to
control mechanisms used to implement the strategy once it is
determined. In other words, strategic planning happens around the
strategy formation process.[10]
Environmental analysis[edit]
Porter wrote in 1980 that formulation of competitive strategy includes
consideration of four key elements:
Company

Company strengths and weaknesses;
Personal values of the key implementers (i.e., management and the
board)
Industry opportunities and threats; and
Broader societal expectations.[16]
The first two elements relate to factors internal to the company
(i.e., the internal environment), while the latter two relate to
factors external to the company (i.e., the external environment).[16]
There are many analytical frameworks which attempt to organize the
strategic planning process. Examples of frameworks that address the
four elements described above include:
External environment:
PEST analysis

PEST analysis or
STEEP analysis

STEEP analysis is a framework
used to examine the remote external environmental factors that can
affect the organization, such as political, economic,
social/demographic, and technological. Common variations include
SLEPT, PESTLE, STEEPLE, and STEER analysis, each of which incorporates
slightly different emphases.
Industry environment: The Porter Five Forces Analysis framework helps
to determine the competitive rivalry and therefore attractiveness of a
market. It is used to help determine the portfolio of offerings the
organization will provide and in which markets.
Relationship of internal and external environment:
SWOT analysis

SWOT analysis is
one of the most basic and widely used frameworks, which examines both
internal elements of the organization—Strengths and Weaknesses—and
external elements—Opportunities and Threats. It helps examine the
organization's resources in the context of its environment.
Scenario planning[edit]
A number of strategists use scenario planning techniques to deal with
change. The way Peter Schwartz put it in 1991 is that strategic
outcomes cannot be known in advance so the sources of competitive
advantage cannot be predetermined.[40] The fast changing business
environment is too uncertain for us to find sustainable value in
formulas of excellence or competitive advantage. Instead, scenario
planning is a technique in which multiple outcomes can be developed,
their implications assessed, and their likeliness of occurrence
evaluated. According to Pierre Wack, scenario planning is about
insight, complexity, and subtlety, not about formal analysis and
numbers.[41]
Some business planners are starting to use a complexity theory
approach to strategy.
Complexity

Complexity can be thought of as chaos with a
dash of order.
Chaos theory

Chaos theory deals with turbulent systems that rapidly
become disordered.
Complexity

Complexity is not quite so unpredictable. It
involves multiple agents interacting in such a way that a glimpse of
structure may appear.
Measuring and controlling implementation[edit]
Generic
Strategy

Strategy Map illustrating four elements of a balanced
scorecard
Once the strategy is determined, various goals and measures may be
established to chart a course for the organization, measure
performance and control implementation of the strategy. Tools such as
the balanced scorecard and strategy maps help crystallize the
strategy, by relating key measures of success and performance to the
strategy. These tools measure financial, marketing, production,
organizational development, and innovation measures to achieve a
'balanced' perspective. Advances in information technology and data
availability enable the gathering of more information about
performance, allowing managers to take a much more analytical view of
their business than before.
Strategy

Strategy may also be organized as a series of "initiatives" or
"programs", each of which comprises one or more projects. Various
monitoring and feedback mechanisms may also be established, such as
regular meetings between divisional and corporate management to
control implementation.
Evaluation[edit]
A key component to strategic management which is often overlooked when
planning is evaluation. There are many ways to evaluate whether or not
strategic priorities and plans have been achieved, one such method is
Robert Stake's Responsive Evaluation.[42] Responsive evaluation
provides a naturalistic and humanistic approach to program evaluation.
In expanding beyond the goal-oriented or pre-ordinate evaluation
design, responsive evaluation takes into consideration the program’s
background (history), conditions, and transactions among stakeholders.
It is largely emergent, the design unfolds as contact is made with
stakeholders.
Limitations[edit]
While strategies are established to set direction, focus effort,
define or clarify the organization, and provide consistency or
guidance in response to the environment, these very elements also mean
that certain signals are excluded from consideration or de-emphasized.
Mintzberg wrote in 1987: "
Strategy

Strategy is a categorizing scheme by which
incoming stimuli can be ordered and dispatched." Since a strategy
orients the organization in a particular manner or direction, that
direction may not effectively match the environment, initially (if a
bad strategy) or over time as circumstances change. As such, Mintzberg
continued, "
Strategy

Strategy [once established] is a force that resists
change, not encourages it."[9]
Therefore, a critique of strategic management is that it can overly
constrain managerial discretion in a dynamic environment. "How can
individuals, organizations and societies cope as well as possible with
... issues too complex to be fully understood, given the fact that
actions initiated on the basis of inadequate understanding may lead to
significant regret?"[43] Some theorists insist on an iterative
approach, considering in turn objectives, implementation and
resources.[44] I.e., a "...repetitive learning cycle [rather than] a
linear progression towards a clearly defined final destination."[45]
Strategies must be able to adjust during implementation because
"humans rarely can proceed satisfactorily except by learning from
experience; and modest probes, serially modified on the basis of
feedback, usually are the best method for such learning."[46]
In 2000,
Gary Hamel

Gary Hamel coined the term strategic convergence to explain
the limited scope of the strategies being used by rivals in greatly
differing circumstances. He lamented that successful strategies are
imitated by firms that do not understand that for a strategy to work,
it must account for the specifics of each situation.[47] Woodhouse and
Collingridge claim that the essence of being “strategic” lies in a
capacity for "intelligent trial-and error"[46] rather than strict
adherence to finely honed strategic plans.
Strategy

Strategy should be seen as
laying out the general path rather than precise steps.[48] Means are
as likely to determine ends as ends are to determine means.[49] The
objectives that an organization might wish to pursue are limited by
the range of feasible approaches to implementation. (There will
usually be only a small number of approaches that will not only be
technically and administratively possible, but also satisfactory to
the full range of organizational stakeholders.) In turn, the range of
feasible implementation approaches is determined by the availability
of resources.
Strategic themes[edit]
Various strategic approaches used across industries (themes) have
arisen over the years. These include the shift from product-driven
demand to customer- or marketing-driven demand (described above), the
increased use of self-service approaches to lower cost, changes in the
value chain or corporate structure due to globalization (e.g.,
off-shoring of production and assembly), and the internet.
Self-service[edit]
One theme in strategic competition has been the trend towards
self-service, often enabled by technology, where the customer takes on
a role previously performed by a worker to lower the price.[6]
Examples include:
Automated teller machine

Automated teller machine (ATM) to obtain cash rather via a bank
teller;
Self-service at the gas pump rather than with help from an attendant;
Retail internet orders input by the customer rather than a retail
clerk, such as online book sales;
Mass-produced ready-to-assemble furniture transported by the customer;
Self-checkout at the grocery store; and
Online banking and bill payment.[50]
Globalization

Globalization and the virtual firm[edit]
One definition of globalization refers to the integration of economies
due to technology and supply chain process innovation. Companies are
no longer required to be vertically integrated (i.e., designing,
producing, assembling, and selling their products). In other words,
the value chain for a company's product may no longer be entirely
within one firm; several entities comprising a virtual firm may exist
to fulfill the customer requirement. For example, some companies have
chosen to outsource production to third parties, retaining only design
and sales functions inside their organization.[6]
Internet and information availability[edit]
See also: Internet of things
The internet has dramatically empowered consumers and enabled buyers
and sellers to come together with drastically reduced transaction and
intermediary costs, creating much more robust marketplaces for the
purchase and sale of goods and services. Examples include online
auction sites, internet dating services, and internet book sellers. In
many industries, the internet has dramatically altered the competitive
landscape. Services that used to be provided within one entity (e.g.,
a car dealership providing financing and pricing information) are now
provided by third parties.[51] Further, compared to traditional media
like television, the internet has caused a major shift in viewing
habits through on demand content which has led to an increasingly
fragmented audience.[citation needed]
Author Phillip Evans said in 2013 that networks are challenging
traditional hierarchies. Value chains may also be breaking up
("deconstructing") where information aspects can be separated from
functional activity. Data that is readily available for free or very
low cost makes it harder for information-based, vertically integrated
businesses to remain intact. Evans said: "The basic story here is that
what used to be vertically integrated, oligopolistic competition among
essentially similar kinds of competitors is evolving, by one means or
another, from a vertical structure to a horizontal one. Why is that
happening? It's happening because transaction costs are plummeting and
because scale is polarizing. The plummeting of transaction costs
weakens the glue that holds value chains together, and allows them to
separate." He used as an example of a network that has
challenged the traditional encyclopedia business model.[52] Evans
predicts the emergence of a new form of industrial organization called
a "stack", analogous to a technology stack, in which competitors rely
on a common platform of inputs (services or information), essentially
layering the remaining competing parts of their value chains on top of
this common platform.[53]
Sustainability[edit]
In the recent decade, sustainability—or ability to successfully
sustain a company in a context of rapidly changing environmental,
social, health, and economic circumstances—has emerged as crucial
aspect of any strategy development. Research focusing on corporations
and leaders who have integrated sustainability into commercial
strategy has led to emergence of the concept of "embedded
sustainability" – defined by its authors Chris Laszlo and Nadya
Zhexembayeva as "incorporation of environmental, health, and social
value into the core business with no trade-off in price or
quality—in other words, with no social or green premium."[54] Laszlo
and Zhexembayeva's research showed that embedded sustainability offers
at least seven distinct opportunities for business value and
competitive advantage creation: a) better risk-management, b)
increased efficiency through reduced waste and resource use, c) better
product differentiation, d) new market entrances, e) enhanced brand
and reputation, f) greater opportunity to influence industry
standards, and g) greater opportunity for radical innovation.[55]
Nadya Zhexembayeva's 2014 research further suggested that innovation
driven by resource depletion can result in fundamental competitive
advantages for a company's products and services, as well as the
company strategy as a whole, when right principles of innovation are
applied.[56]
Strategy

Strategy as learning[edit]
See also: Organizational learning
In 1990, Peter Senge, who had collaborated with
Arie de Geus at Dutch
Shell, popularized de Geus' notion of the "learning organization".[57]
The theory is that gathering and analyzing information is a necessary
requirement for business success in the information age. To do this,
Senge claimed that an organization would need to be structured such
that:[58]
People can continuously expand their capacity to learn and be
productive.
New patterns of thinking are nurtured.
Collective aspirations are encouraged.
People are encouraged to see the "whole picture" together.
Senge identified five disciplines of a learning organization. They
are:
Personal responsibility, self-reliance, and mastery – We accept that
we are the masters of our own destiny. We make decisions and live with
the consequences of them. When a problem needs to be fixed, or an
opportunity exploited, we take the initiative to learn the required
skills to get it done.
Mental models – We need to explore our personal mental models to
understand the subtle effect they have on our behaviour.
Shared vision – The vision of where we want to be in the future is
discussed and communicated to all. It provides guidance and energy for
the journey ahead.
Team learning – We learn together in teams. This involves a shift
from "a spirit of advocacy to a spirit of enquiry".
Systems thinking – We look at the whole rather than the parts. This
is what Senge calls the "Fifth discipline". It is the glue that
integrates the other four into a coherent strategy. For an alternative
approach to the "learning organization", see Garratt, B. (1987).
Geoffrey Moore

Geoffrey Moore (1991) and R. Frank and P. Cook[59] also detected a
shift in the nature of competition. Markets driven by technical
standards or by "network effects" can give the dominant firm a
near-monopoly.[60] The same is true of networked industries in which
interoperability requires compatibility between users. Examples
include Internet Explorer's and Amazon's early dominance of their
respective industries. IE's later decline shows that such dominance
may be only temporary.
Moore showed how firms could attain this enviable position by using
E.M. Rogers' five stage adoption process and focusing on one group of
customers at a time, using each group as a base for reaching the next
group. The most difficult step is making the transition between
introduction and mass acceptance. (See Crossing the Chasm). If
successful a firm can create a bandwagon effect in which the momentum
builds and its product becomes a de facto standard.
Strategy

Strategy as adapting to change[edit]
In 1969,
Peter Drucker coined the phrase Age of Discontinuity to
describe the way change disrupts lives.[61] In an age of continuity
attempts to predict the future by extrapolating from the past can be
accurate. But according to Drucker, we are now in an age of
discontinuity and extrapolating is ineffective. He identifies four
sources of discontinuity: new technologies, globalization, cultural
pluralism and knowledge capital.
In 1970,
Alvin Toffler

Alvin Toffler in Future Shock described a trend towards
accelerating rates of change.[62] He illustrated how social and
technical phenomena had shorter lifespans with each generation, and he
questioned society's ability to cope with the resulting turmoil and
accompanying anxiety. In past eras periods of change were always
punctuated with times of stability. This allowed society to assimilate
the change before the next change arrived. But these periods of
stability had all but disappeared by the late 20th century. In 1980 in
The Third Wave, Toffler characterized this shift to relentless change
as the defining feature of the third phase of civilization (the first
two phases being the agricultural and industrial waves).[63]
In 1978,
Derek F. Abell (Abell, D. 1978) described "strategic windows"
and stressed the importance of the timing (both entrance and exit) of
any given strategy. This led some strategic planners to build planned
obsolescence into their strategies.[64]
In 1983,
Noel Tichy wrote that because we are all beings of habit we
tend to repeat what we are comfortable with.[65] He wrote that this is
a trap that constrains our creativity, prevents us from exploring new
ideas, and hampers our dealing with the full complexity of new issues.
He developed a systematic method of dealing with change that involved
looking at any new issue from three angles: technical and production,
political and resource allocation, and corporate culture.
In 1989,
Charles Handy
.jpg/440px-Charles_and_Elizabeth_Handy_(433744698).jpg)
Charles Handy identified two types of change.[66] "Strategic
drift" is a gradual change that occurs so subtly that it is not
noticed until it is too late. By contrast, "transformational change"
is sudden and radical. It is typically caused by discontinuities (or
exogenous shocks) in the business environment. The point where a new
trend is initiated is called a "strategic inflection point" by Andy
Grove. Inflection points can be subtle or radical.
In 1990, Richard Pascale wrote that relentless change requires that
businesses continuously reinvent themselves.[67] His famous maxim is
“Nothing fails like success” by which he means that what was a
strength yesterday becomes the root of weakness today, We tend to
depend on what worked yesterday and refuse to let go of what worked so
well for us in the past. Prevailing strategies become self-confirming.
To avoid this trap, businesses must stimulate a spirit of inquiry and
healthy debate. They must encourage a creative process of self-renewal
based on constructive conflict.
In 1996,
Adrian Slywotzky showed how changes in the business
environment are reflected in value migrations between industries,
between companies, and within companies.[68] He claimed that
recognizing the patterns behind these value migrations is necessary if
we wish to understand the world of chaotic change. In “Profit
Patterns” (1999) he described businesses as being in a state of
strategic anticipation as they try to spot emerging patterns.
Slywotsky and his team identified 30 patterns that have transformed
industry after industry.[69]
In 1997,
Clayton Christensen

Clayton Christensen (1997) took the position that great
companies can fail precisely because they do everything right since
the capabilities of the organization also define its disabilities.[70]
Christensen's thesis is that outstanding companies lose their market
leadership when confronted with disruptive technology. He called the
approach to discovering the emerging markets for disruptive
technologies agnostic marketing, i.e., marketing under the implicit
assumption that no one – not the company, not the customers – can
know how or in what quantities a disruptive product can or will be
used without the experience of using it.
In 1999, Constantinos Markides reexamined the nature of strategic
planning.[71] He described strategy formation and implementation as an
ongoing, never-ending, integrated process requiring continuous
reassessment and reformation.
Strategic management

Strategic management is planned and
emergent, dynamic and interactive.
J. Moncrieff (1999) stressed strategy dynamics.[72] He claimed that
strategy is partially deliberate and partially unplanned. The
unplanned element comes from emergent strategies that result from the
emergence of opportunities and threats in the environment and from
"strategies in action" (ad hoc actions across the organization).
David Teece

David Teece pioneered research on resource-based strategic management
and the dynamic capabilities perspective, defined as “the ability to
integrate, build, and reconfigure internal and external competencies
to address rapidly changing environments".[73] His 1997 paper (with
Gary Pisano and Amy Shuen) "Dynamic Capabilities and Strategic
Management" was the most cited paper in economics and business for the
period from 1995 to 2005.[74]
In 2000,
Gary Hamel

Gary Hamel discussed strategic decay, the notion that the
value of every strategy, no matter how brilliant, decays over
time.[47]
Strategy

Strategy as operational excellence[edit]
Quality[edit]
A large group of theorists felt the area where western business was
most lacking was product quality. W. Edwards Deming,[75] Joseph M.
Juran,[76] A. Kearney,[77] Philip Crosby[78] and Armand Feignbaum[79]
suggested quality improvement techniques such total quality management
(TQM), continuous improvement (kaizen), lean manufacturing, Six Sigma,
and return on quality (ROQ).
Contrarily, James Heskett (1988),[80] Earl Sasser (1995), William
Davidow,[81] Len Schlesinger,[82] A. Paraurgman (1988), Len Berry,[83]
Jane Kingman-Brundage,[84] Christopher Hart, and Christopher Lovelock
(1994), felt that poor customer service was the problem. They gave us
fishbone diagramming, service charting, Total Customer Service (TCS),
the service profit chain, service gaps analysis, the service
encounter, strategic service vision, service mapping, and service
teams. Their underlying assumption was that there is no better source
of competitive advantage than a continuous stream of delighted
customers.
Process management

Process management uses some of the techniques from product quality
management and some of the techniques from customer service
management. It looks at an activity as a sequential process. The
objective is to find inefficiencies and make the process more
effective. Although the procedures have a long history, dating back to
Taylorism, the scope of their applicability has been greatly widened,
leaving no aspect of the firm free from potential process
improvements. Because of the broad applicability of process management
techniques, they can be used as a basis for competitive advantage.
Carl Sewell,[85] Frederick F. Reichheld,[86] C. Gronroos,[87] and Earl
Sasser[88] observed that businesses were spending more on customer
acquisition than on retention. They showed how a competitive advantage
could be found in ensuring that customers returned again and again.
Reicheld broadened the concept to include loyalty from employees,
suppliers, distributors and shareholders. They developed techniques
for estimating customer lifetime value (CLV) for assessing long-term
relationships. The concepts begat attempts to recast selling and
marketing into a long term endeavor that created a sustained
relationship (called relationship selling, relationship marketing, and
customer relationship management). Customer relationship management
(CRM) software became integral to many firms.
Reengineering[edit]
Michael Hammer and
James Champy felt that these resources needed to be
restructured.[89] In a process that they labeled reengineering, firm's
reorganized their assets around whole processes rather than tasks. In
this way a team of people saw a project through, from inception to
completion. This avoided functional silos where isolated departments
seldom talked to each other. It also eliminated waste due to
functional overlap and interdepartmental communications.
In 1989
Richard Lester

Richard Lester and the researchers at the MIT Industrial
Performance Center identified seven best practices and concluded that
firms must accelerate the shift away from the mass production of low
cost standardized products. The seven areas of best practice were:[90]
Simultaneous continuous improvement in cost, quality, service, and
product innovation
Breaking down organizational barriers between departments
Eliminating layers of management creating flatter organizational
hierarchies.
Closer relationships with customers and suppliers
Intelligent use of new technology
Global focus
Improving human resource skills
The search for best practices is also called benchmarking.[91] This
involves determining where you need to improve, finding an
organization that is exceptional in this area, then studying the
company and applying its best practices in your firm.
Other perspectives on strategy[edit]
Strategy

Strategy as problem solving[edit]
Professor Richard P. Rumelt described strategy as a type of problem
solving in 2011. He wrote that good strategy has an underlying
structure called a kernel. The kernel has three parts: 1) A diagnosis
that defines or explains the nature of the challenge; 2) A guiding
policy for dealing with the challenge; and 3) Coherent actions
designed to carry out the guiding policy.[92] President Kennedy
outlined these three elements of strategy in his Cuban Missile Crisis
Address to the Nation of 22 October 1962:
Diagnosis: "This Government, as promised, has maintained the closest
surveillance of the Soviet military buildup on the island of Cuba.
Within the past week, unmistakable evidence has established the fact
that a series of offensive missile sites is now in preparation on that
imprisoned island. The purpose of these bases can be none other than
to provide a nuclear strike capability against the Western
Hemisphere."
Guiding Policy: "Our unswerving objective, therefore, must be to
prevent the use of these missiles against this or any other country,
and to secure their withdrawal or elimination from the Western
Hemisphere."
Action Plans: First among seven numbered steps was the following: "To
halt this offensive buildup a strict quarantine on all offensive
military equipment under shipment to Cuba is being initiated. All
ships of any kind bound for Cuba from whatever nation or port will, if
found to contain cargoes of offensive weapons, be turned back."[93]
Active strategic management required active information gathering and
active problem solving. In the early days of Hewlett-Packard (HP),
Dave Packard

Dave Packard and
Bill Hewlett

Bill Hewlett devised an active management style that
they called management by walking around (MBWA). Senior HP managers
were seldom at their desks. They spent most of their days visiting
employees, customers, and suppliers. This direct contact with key
people provided them with a solid grounding from which viable
strategies could be crafted.
Management

Management consultants
Tom Peters

Tom Peters and
Robert H. Waterman had used the term in their 1982 book In Search of
Excellence: Lessons From America's Best-Run Companies.[94] Some
Japanese managers employ a similar system, which originated at Honda,
and is sometimes called the 3 G's (Genba, Genbutsu, and Genjitsu,
which translate into "actual place", "actual thing", and "actual
situation").
Creative vs analytic approaches[edit]
In 2010, IBM released a study summarizing three conclusions of 1500
CEOs around the world: 1) complexity is escalating, 2) enterprises are
not equipped to cope with this complexity, and 3) creativity is now
the single most important leadership competency. IBM said that it is
needed in all aspects of leadership, including strategic thinking and
planning.[95]
Similarly, McKeown argued that over-reliance on any particular
approach to strategy is dangerous and that multiple methods can be
used to combine the creativity and analytics to create an "approach to
shaping the future", that is difficult to copy.[96]
Non-strategic management[edit]
A 1938 treatise by Chester Barnard, based on his own experience as a
business executive, described the process as informal, intuitive,
non-routinized and involving primarily oral, 2-way communications.
Bernard says "The process is the sensing of the organization as a
whole and the total situation relevant to it. It transcends the
capacity of merely intellectual methods, and the techniques of
discriminating the factors of the situation. The terms pertinent to it
are "feeling", "judgement", "sense", "proportion", "balance",
"appropriateness". It is a matter of art rather than science."[97]
In 1973, Mintzberg found that senior managers typically deal with
unpredictable situations so they strategize in ad hoc, flexible,
dynamic, and implicit ways. He wrote, "The job breeds adaptive
information-manipulators who prefer the live concrete situation. The
manager works in an environment of stimulus-response, and he develops
in his work a clear preference for live action."[98]
In 1982,
John Kotter

John Kotter studied the daily activities of 15 executives and
concluded that they spent most of their time developing and working a
network of relationships that provided general insights and specific
details for strategic decisions. They tended to use "mental road maps"
rather than systematic planning techniques.[99]
Daniel Isenberg's 1984 study of senior managers found that their
decisions were highly intuitive. Executives often sensed what they
were going to do before they could explain why.[100] He claimed in
1986 that one of the reasons for this is the complexity of strategic
decisions and the resultant information uncertainty.[101]
Zuboff claimed that information technology was widening the divide
between senior managers (who typically make strategic decisions) and
operational level managers (who typically make routine decisions). She
alleged that prior to the widespread use of computer systems,
managers, even at the most senior level, engaged in both strategic
decisions and routine administration, but as computers facilitated
(She called it "deskilled") routine processes, these activities were
moved further down the hierarchy, leaving senior management free for
strategic decision making.
In 1977,
Abraham Zaleznik distinguished leaders from managers. He
described leaders as visionaries who inspire, while managers care
about process.[102] He claimed that the rise of managers was the main
cause of the decline of American business in the 1970s and 1980s. Lack
of leadership is most damaging at the level of strategic management
where it can paralyze an entire organization.[103]
According to Corner, Kinichi, and Keats,[104] strategic decision
making in organizations occurs at two levels: individual and
aggregate. They developed a model of parallel strategic decision
making. The model identifies two parallel processes that involve
getting attention, encoding information, storage and retrieval of
information, strategic choice, strategic outcome and feedback. The
individual and organizational processes interact at each stage. For
instance, competition-oriented objectives are based on the knowledge
of competing firms, such as their market share.[105]
Strategy

Strategy as marketing[edit]
The 1980s also saw the widespread acceptance of positioning theory.
Although the theory originated with
Jack Trout in 1969, it didn’t
gain wide acceptance until
Al Ries and
Jack Trout wrote their classic
book Positioning: The Battle For Your Mind (1979). The basic premise
is that a strategy should not be judged by internal company factors
but by the way customers see it relative to the competition. Crafting
and implementing a strategy involves creating a position in the mind
of the collective consumer. Several techniques enabled the practical
use of positioning theory.
Perceptual mapping

Perceptual mapping for example, creates
visual displays of the relationships between positions.
Multidimensional scaling, discriminant analysis, factor analysis and
conjoint analysis are mathematical techniques used to determine the
most relevant characteristics (called dimensions or factors) upon
which positions should be based. Preference regression can be used to
determine vectors of ideal positions and cluster analysis can identify
clusters of positions.
In 1992 Jay Barney saw strategy as assembling the optimum mix of
resources, including human, technology and suppliers, and then
configuring them in unique and sustainable ways.[106]
James Gilmore and Joseph Pine found competitive advantage in mass
customization.[107]
Flexible manufacturing

Flexible manufacturing techniques allowed
businesses to individualize products for each customer without losing
economies of scale. This effectively turned the product into a
service. They also realized that if a service is mass-customized by
creating a "performance" for each individual client, that service
would be transformed into an "experience". Their book, The Experience
Economy,[108] along with the work of
Bernd Schmitt convinced many to
see service provision as a form of theatre. This school of thought is
sometimes referred to as customer experience management (CEM).
Information- and technology-driven strategy[edit]
Many industries with a high information component are being
transformed.[109] For example, Encarta demolished Encyclopædia
Britannica (whose sales have plummeted 80% since their peak of $650
million in 1990) before it was in turn, eclipsed by collaborative
encyclopedias like. The music industry was similarly
disrupted. The technology sector has provided some strategies
directly. For example, from the software development industry agile
software development provides a model for shared development
processes.
Peter Drucker conceived of the "knowledge worker" in the 1950s. He
described how fewer workers would do physical labor, and more would
apply their minds. In 1984,
John Naisbitt theorized that the future
would be driven largely by information: companies that managed
information well could obtain an advantage, however the profitability
of what he called "information float" (information that the company
had and others desired) would disappear as inexpensive computers made
information more accessible.
Daniel Bell (1985) examined the sociological consequences of
information technology, while Gloria Schuck and
Shoshana Zuboff looked
at psychological factors.[110] Zuboff distinguished between
"automating technologies" and "informating technologies". She studied
the effect that both had on workers, managers and organizational
structures. She largely confirmed Drucker's predictions about the
importance of flexible decentralized structure, work teams, knowledge
sharing and the knowledge worker's central role. Zuboff also detected
a new basis for managerial authority, based on knowledge (also
predicted by Drucker) which she called "participative
management".[111]
Maturity of planning process[edit]
McKinsey &
Company

Company developed a capability maturity model in the
1970s to describe the sophistication of planning processes, with
strategic management ranked the highest. The four stages include:
Financial

Financial planning, which is primarily about annual budgets and a
functional focus, with limited regard for the environment;
Forecast-based planning, which includes multi-year budgets and more
robust capital allocation across business units;
Externally oriented planning, where a thorough situation analysis and
competitive assessment is performed;
Strategic management, where widespread strategic thinking occurs and a
well-defined strategic framework is used.[20]
PIMS study[edit]
The long-term PIMS study, started in the 1960s and lasting for 19
years, attempted to understand the Profit Impact of Marketing
Strategies (PIMS), particularly the effect of market share. The
initial conclusion of the study was unambiguous: the greater a
company's market share, the greater their rate of profit. Market share
provides economies of scale. It also provides experience curve
advantages. The combined effect is increased profits.[112]
The benefits of high market share naturally led to an interest in
growth strategies. The relative advantages of horizontal integration,
vertical integration, diversification, franchises, mergers and
acquisitions, joint ventures and organic growth were discussed. Other
research indicated that a low market share strategy could still be
very profitable. Schumacher (1973),[113] Woo and Cooper (1982),[114]
Levenson (1984),[115] and later Traverso (2002)[116] showed how
smaller niche players obtained very high returns.
Other influences on business strategy[edit]
Military strategy[edit]
See also: Military strategy
In the 1980s business strategists realized that there was a vast
knowledge base stretching back thousands of years that they had barely
examined. They turned to military strategy for guidance. Military
strategy books such as
The Art of War

The Art of War by Sun Tzu,
On War

On War by von
Clausewitz, and The Red Book by
Mao Zedong
.jpg/440px-Mao_Zedong_1963_(cropped).jpg)
Mao Zedong became business classics.
From Sun Tzu, they learned the tactical side of military strategy and
specific tactical prescriptions. From von Clausewitz, they learned the
dynamic and unpredictable nature of military action. From Mao, they
learned the principles of guerrilla warfare. Important marketing
warfare books include
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business War Games by Barrie James, Marketing
Warfare by
Al Ries and
Jack Trout and
Leadership

Leadership Secrets of Attila the
Hun by Wess Roberts.
The four types of business warfare theories are:
Offensive marketing warfare strategies
Defensive marketing warfare strategies
Flanking marketing warfare strategies
Guerrilla marketing warfare strategies
The marketing warfare literature also examined leadership and
motivation, intelligence gathering, types of marketing weapons,
logistics and communications.
By the twenty-first century marketing warfare strategies had gone out
of favour in favor of non-confrontational approaches. In 1989, Dudley
Lynch and Paul L. Kordis published
Strategy

Strategy of the Dolphin: Scoring a
Win in a Chaotic World. "The
Strategy

Strategy of the Dolphin" was developed to
give guidance as to when to use aggressive strategies and when to use
passive strategies. A variety of aggressiveness strategies were
developed.
In 1993, J. Moore used a similar metaphor.[117] Instead of using
military terms, he created an ecological theory of predators and
prey(see ecological model of competition), a sort of Darwinian
management strategy in which market interactions mimic long term
ecological stability.
Author Phillip Evans said in 2014 that "Henderson's central idea was
what you might call the Napoleonic idea of concentrating mass against
weakness, of overwhelming the enemy. What Henderson recognized was
that, in the business world, there are many phenomena which are
characterized by what economists would call increasing
returns—scale, experience. The more you do of something,
disproportionately the better you get. And therefore he found a logic
for investing in such kinds of overwhelming mass in order to achieve
competitive advantage. And that was the first introduction of
essentially a military concept of strategy into the business world.
... It was on those two ideas, Henderson's idea of increasing returns
to scale and experience, and Porter's idea of the value chain,
encompassing heterogenous elements, that the whole edifice of business
strategy was subsequently erected."[118]
Traits of successful companies[edit]
Like Peters and Waterman a decade earlier, James Collins and Jerry
Porras spent years conducting empirical research on what makes great
companies. Six years of research uncovered a key underlying principle
behind the 19 successful companies that they studied: They all
encourage and preserve a core ideology that nurtures the company. Even
though strategy and tactics change daily, the companies, nevertheless,
were able to maintain a core set of values. These core values
encourage employees to build an organization that lasts. In Built To
Last (1994) they claim that short term profit goals, cost cutting, and
restructuring will not stimulate dedicated employees to build a great
company that will endure.[119] In 2000 Collins coined the term "built
to flip" to describe the prevailing business attitudes in Silicon
Valley. It describes a business culture where technological change
inhibits a long term focus. He also popularized the concept of the
BHAG (Big Hairy Audacious Goal).
Arie de Geus (1997) undertook a similar study and obtained similar
results.[120] He identified four key traits of companies that had
prospered for 50 years or more. They are:
Sensitivity to the business environment – the ability to learn and
adjust
Cohesion and identity – the ability to build a community with
personality, vision, and purpose
Tolerance and decentralization – the ability to build relationships
Conservative financing
A company with these key characteristics he called a living company
because it is able to perpetuate itself. If a company emphasizes
knowledge rather than finance, and sees itself as an ongoing community
of human beings, it has the potential to become great and endure for
decades. Such an organization is an organic entity capable of learning
(he called it a "learning organization") and capable of creating its
own processes, goals, and persona.[120]
Will Mulcaster[121] suggests that firms engage in a dialogue that
centres around these questions:
Will the proposed competitive advantage create Perceived Differential
Value?"
Will the proposed competitive advantage create something that is
different from the competition?"
Will the difference add value in the eyes of potential customers?" –
This question will entail a discussion of the combined effects of
price, product features and consumer perceptions.
Will the product add value for the firm?" – Answering this question
will require an examination of cost effectiveness and the pricing
strategy.
See also[edit]
Balanced scorecard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business analysis
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business model
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business plan
Concept-driven strategy
Cost overrun
Dynamic capabilities
Integrated business planning
Marketing
Marketing

Marketing plan
Marketing

Marketing strategies
Management
Management

Management consulting
Military strategy
Morphological analysis
Overall equipment effectiveness
Real options valuation
Results-based management
Revenue shortfall
Strategy

Strategy (game theory)
Strategy

Strategy dynamics
Strategic planning
Strategic
Management

Management Society
Strategy

Strategy map
Strategy

Strategy Markup Language
Strategy

Strategy visualization
Value migration
Six Forces Model
Adversarial purchasing
References[edit]
^ a b Nag, R.; Hambrick, D. C.; Chen, M.-J (2007). "What is strategic
management, really? Inductive derivation of a consensus definition of
the field" (PDF). Strategic
Management

Management Journal. 28 (9): 935–955.
doi:10.1002/smj.615. Retrieved October 22, 2012.
^ a b c d e f g h Ghemawat, Pankaj (Spring 2002). "Competition and
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business
Strategy

Strategy in Historical Perspective".
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business History Review.
SSRN 264528 .
^ Hill, Charles W.L., Gareth R. Jones, Strategic
Management

Management Theory: An
Integrated Approach, Cengage Learning, 10th edition 2012
^ (Lamb, 1984:ix)
^ Lamb, Robert, Boyden Competitive strategic management, Englewood
Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1984
^ a b c Porter, Michael E. (1996). "What is Strategy?". Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review (November–December 1996).
^ a b c Chaffee, E. “Three models of strategy”, Academy of
Management

Management Review, vol 10, no. 1, 1985.
^ a b Chandler, Alfred
Strategy

Strategy and Structure: Chapters in the history
of industrial enterprise, Doubleday, New York, 1962.
^ a b Mintzberg, Henry (1987). "Why Organizations Need Strategy".
California
Management

Management Review (Fall 1987).
^ a b c d e f g h Mintzberg, Henry and, Quinn, James Brian (1996). The
Strategy

Strategy Process:Concepts, Contexts, Cases. Prentice Hall.
ISBN 978-0-13-234030-4.
^ a b Drucker, Peter (1954). The Practice of Management. Harper &
Row. ISBN 0-06-091316-9.
^ Henderson, Bruce (January 1, 1981). "The Concept of Strategy".
Boston Consulting Group. Retrieved April 18, 2014.
^ Mintzberg, Henry “Crafting Strategy”, Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review,
July/August 1987.
^ Mintzberg, Henry and Quinn, J.B. The
Strategy

Strategy Process,
Prentice-Hall, Harlow, 1988.
^ Mintzberg, H. Ahlstrand, B. and Lampel, J.
Strategy

Strategy Safari : A
Guided Tour Through the Wilds of Strategic Management, The Free Press,
New York, 1998.
^ a b c d e f g Porter, Michael E. (1980). Competitive Strategy. Free
Press. ISBN 0-684-84148-7.
^ Stacey, R. D. (1995). "The science of complexity - an alter-native
perspective for strategic change processes". Strategic Management
Journal. 16 (6): 477–495. doi:10.1002/smj.4250160606.
^ Terra, L. A. A.; Passador, J. L. "Symbiotic Dynamic: The Strategic
Problem from the Perspective of Complexity". Systems Research and
Behavioral Science. 33 (2): 235–248. doi:10.1002/sres.2379.
Retrieved 16 May 2017.
^ Morin, E. (2005). Introduction à la pensée complexe. Paris:
Éditionsdu Seuil.
^ a b c d e f g h Kiechel, Walter (2010). The Lords of Strategy.
Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Press. ISBN 978-1-59139-782-3.
^ Henry Mintberg-The Fall and Rise of Strategic Planning-Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review-January 1994
^ Drucker, Peter The Practice of Management, Harper and Row, New York,
1954.
^ Selznick, Philip
Leadership

Leadership in Administration: A Sociological
Interpretation, Row, Peterson, Evanston Il. 1957.
^ Ansoff, Igor Corporate Strategy, McGraw Hill, New York, 1965.
^ The Economist-Strategic Planning-March 2009
^ Henderson, Bruce (1970). Perspectives on Experience. Boston
Consulting Group. ISBN 0-684-84148-7.
^ a b c Porter, Michael E. (1985). Competitive Advantage. Free Press.
ISBN 0-684-84146-0.
^ Wikiquote-Henry Ford
^ Theodore Levitt-
Marketing

Marketing Myopia-HBR-1960
^ a b Jim Collins-It's Not What You Make, It's What You Stand For-Inc
Magazine-October 1997
^ Jim Collins-Good to Great-Fast
Company

Company Magazine-October 2001
^ BCG Perspectives-The Experience Curve Reviewed-Parts 1-5-1974
^ a b Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review-Michael Porter-From Competitive
Advantage to Corporate Strategy-May 1987
^ Michael Porter-What is Strategy?-Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review-November
1996
^ Hamel, G. & Prahalad, C.K. “The Core Competence of the
Corporation”, Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review, May–June 1990.
^ Drucker, Peter F. (1994). "The Theory of the Business". Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review (September–October 1994).
^ Henry Mintzberg-The Fall and Rise of Strategic Planning-Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review-January 1994
^ Beaufre, Andre (1965). An Introduction to Strategy. Translated by
R.H. Barry. With a pref, by B.H. Liddell Hart. Frederick A. Prager.
OCLC 537817. Unknown ID 65-14177.
^ Mulcaster, W.R. "Three Strategic Frameworks,"
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Strategy
Series, Vol 10, No1, pp68 – 75, 2009.
^ Scwhartz, Peter The Art of the Long View, Doubleday, New York, 1991.
^ Wack, Pierre “Scenarios: Uncharted Waters Ahead”, Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business review, September October 1985.
^ Cameron, Bobby Thomas. Using responsive evaluation in strategic
management. Strategic
Leadership

Leadership Review 4 (2), 22-27
^ Woodhouse, Edward J. and David Collingridge, "Incrementalism,
Intelligent Trial-and-Error, and the Future of Political Decision
Theory," in Redner, Harry, ed., An Heretical Heir of the
Enlightenment: Politics, Policy and Science in the Work of Charles E.
Limdblom, Boulder, C.: Westview Press, 1993, p. 139
^ de Wit and Meyer,
Strategy

Strategy Process, Content and Context, Thomson
Learning 2008
^ Elcock, Howard, "Strategic Management," in Farnham, D. and S. Horton
(eds.), Managing the New Public Services, 2nd Edition, New York:
Macmillan, 1996, p. 56.
^ a b Woodhouse and Collingridge, 1993. p. 140
^ a b Hamel, Gary Leading the Revolution, Plume (Penguin Books), New
York, 2002.
^ Moore, Mark H., Creating Public Value: Strategic
Management

Management in
Government, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1995.
^ Lindblom, Charles E., "The Science of Muddling Through," Public
Administration Review, Vol. 19 (1959), No. 2
^ Dictionary. (2015). In Investopedia. Retrieved from
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/o/onlinebanking.asp
^ Michael Porter-
Strategy

Strategy and the Internet-Harvard Business
Review-March 2001 Archived 2014-03-25 at the Wayback Machine.
^ Phillip Evans-How Data will Transform Business-November 2013
^ BCG-Phillip Evans-Rethinking
Strategy

Strategy for an Age of Digital
Disruption-March 2014
^ Laszlo, Chris and Zhexembayeva, Nadya (April 25, 2011) "Embedded
Sustainability: A strategy for market leaders". The European Financial
Review
^ Laszlo, C. & Zhexembayeva, N. (2011). Embedded Sustainability:
The Next Big Competitive Advantage. Stanford, CA: Stanford University
Press. ISBN 0-804-77554-0
^ Zhexembayeva, N. (2014). Overfished Ocean Strategy: Powering Up
Innovation for a Resource-Depleted World. San Francisco, CA:
Berret-Koehler Publishers. ISBN 1 609-94964-1
^ Arie de Geus-The Learning Company-HBR-March 1997
^ Senge, Peter. The Fifth Discipline, Doubleday, New York, 1990; (also
Century, London, 1990).
^ Frank, R. and Cook, P. The Winner Take All Society, Free Press, New
York, 1995.
^ Network Effects
^ Drucker, Peter The Age of Discontinuity, Heinemann, London, 1969
(also Harper and Row, New York, 1968).
^ Toffler, Alvin Future Shock, Bantom Books, New York, 1970.
^ Toffler, Alvin The Third Wave, Bantom Books, New York, 1980.
^ Abell, Derek “Strategic windows”, Journal of Marketing, Vol 42,
pg 21–28, July 1978.
^ Tichy, Noel Managing Strategic Change: Technical, political, and
cultural dynamics, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1983.
^ Handy, Charles The Age of Unreason, Hutchinson, London, 1989.
^ Pascale, Richard Managing on the Edge, Simon and Schuster, New York,
1990.
^ Slywotzky, Adrian Value Migration, Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business School Press,
Boston, 1996.
^ Slywotzky, A., Morrison, D., Moser, T., Mundt, K., and Quella, J.
Profit Patterns, Time
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business (Random House), New York, 1999,
ISBN 0-8129-3118-1
^ Christensen, Clayton "The Innovator's Dilemma," Harvard Business
School Press, Boston, 1997.
^ Markides, Constantinos “A dynamic view of strategy” Sloan
Management

Management Review, vol 40, spring 1999, pp55–63.
^ Moncrieff, J. “Is strategy making a difference?” Long Range
Planning Review, vol 32, no2, pp273–276.
^ Teece, David J.; Pisano, Gary; Shuen, Amy (August 1997). "Dynamic
Capabilities and Strategic Management" (PDF). Strategic Management
Journal. John Wiley & Sons. 18 (7): 509–533.
doi:10.1002/(sici)1097-0266(199708)18:7<509::aid-smj882>3.0.co;2-z.
Archived from the original (PDF) on
2011-11-24. doi=10.1002/(SICI)1097-0266(199708)18:7<509::AID-SMJ882>3.0.CO;2-Z
^ "Taking Care of Business, 1995–2005". ScienceWatch. Thomson
Scientific. November–December 2005. Retrieved 2012-01-26.
^ Deming, W.E. Quality, Productivity, and Competitive Position, MIT
Center for Advanced Engineering, Cambridge Mass., 1982.
^ Juran, J.M. Juran on Quality, Free Press, New York, 1992.
^ Kearney, A.T. Total Quality Management: A business process
perspective, Kearney Pree Inc, 1992.
^ Crosby, P. Quality is Free, McGraw Hill, New York, 1979.
^ Feignbaum, A. Total Quality Control, 3rd edition, McGraw Hill,
Maidenhead, 1990.
^ Heskett, J. Managing in the Service Economy, Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business School
Press, Boston, 1986.
^ Davidow, W. and Uttal, B. Total Customer Service, Harper Perennial
Books, New York, 1990.
^ Schlesinger, L. and Heskett, J. "Customer Satisfaction is rooted in
Employee Satisfaction," Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review, November–December
1991.
^ Berry, L. On Great Service, Free Press, New York, 1995.
^ Kingman-Brundage, J. “Service Mapping” pp 148–163 In Scheuing,
E. and Christopher, W. (eds.), The Service Quality Handbook, Amacon,
New York, 1993.
^ Sewell, C. and Brown, P. Customers for Life, Doubleday Currency, New
York, 1990.
^ Reichheld, F. The Loyalty Effect, Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business School Press,
Boston, 1996.
^ Gronroos, C. “From marketing mix to relationship marketing:
towards a paradigm shift in marketing”,
Management

Management Decision, Vol.
32, No. 2, pp 4–32, 1994.
^ Reichheld, F. and Sasser, E. “Zero defects: Quality comes to
services”, Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review, September/October 1990.
^ Hammer, M. and Champy, J. Reengineering the Corporation, Harper
Business, New York, 1993.
^ Lester, R. Made in America, MIT Commission on Industrial
Productivity, Boston, 1989.
^ Camp, R. Benchmarking: The search for industry best practices that
lead to superior performance, American Society for Quality Control,
Quality Press, Milwaukee, Wis., 1989.
^ Rumelt, Richard P. (2011). Good Strategy/Bad Strategy. Crown
Business. ISBN 978-0-307-88623-1.
^ American Rhetoric-President John F. Kennedy-Cuban Missile Crisis
Address to the Nation-22 October 1962
^ Peters, Tom; Waterman, Robert H. (1982). In Search of Excellence:
Lessons From America's Best-Run Companies. p. 289.
Management

Management By Wandering Around at Google Books
^ IBM, Capitalizing on Complexity: Insights from the Global Chief
Executive Office Study, July 2010
^ Mckeown, Max, The
Strategy

Strategy Book, FT Prentice Hall, 2012
^ Barnard, Chester The function of the executive, Harvard University
Press, Cambridge Mass, 1938, page 235.
^ Mintzberg, Henry The Nature of Managerial Work, Harper and Roe, New
York, 1973, page 38.
^ Kotter, John The general manager, Free Press, New York, 1982.
^ Isenberg, Daniel "How managers think", Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review,
November–December 1984.
^ Isenberg, Daniel Strategic Opportunism: Managing under uncertainty,
Harvard Graduate School of Business, Working paper 9-786-020, Boston,
January 1986.
^ Zaleznik, Abraham "Managers and Leaders: Are they different?",
Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review, May–June 1977.
^ Zaleznik, Abraham The Managerial Mistique, Harper and Row, New York,
1989.
^ Corner, P. Kinicki, A. and Keats, B. "Integrating organizational and
individual information processing perspectives on choice",
Organizational Science, vol. 3, 1994.
^ J. Scott Armstrong & Kesten C. Greene (2007).
"Competitor-oriented Objectives: The Myth of Market Share" (PDF).
International Journal of Business. 12 (1): 116–134.
ISSN 1083-4346. Archived from the original (PDF) on
2010-06-22.
^ Barney, J. (1991) "Firm Resources and Sustainable Competitive
Advantage", Journal of Management, vol 17, no 1, 1991.
^ Pine, J. and Gilmore, J. "The Four Faces of Mass Customization",
Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review, Vol 75, No 1, Jan–Feb 1997.
^ Pine, J. and Gilmore, J. (1999) The Experience Economy, Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business School Press, Boston, 1999.
^ Evens, P. and Wurster, T. "
Strategy

Strategy and the New
Economics
.svg/540px-Countries_by_Real_GDP_Growth_Rate_(2016).svg.png)
Economics of
Information", Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review, Sept/Oct 1997.
^ Schuck, Gloria "Intelligent Workers: A new pedagogy for the high
tech workplace", Organizational Dynamics, Autumn 1985.
^ Zuboff, Shoshana In the Age of the Smart Machine, Basic Books, New
York, 1988.
^ Buzzell, R. and Gale, B. The PIMS Principles: Linking
Strategy

Strategy to
Performance, Free Press, New York, 1987.
^
Schumacher, E.F. Small is Beautiful: a Study of
Economics
.svg/540px-Countries_by_Real_GDP_Growth_Rate_(2016).svg.png)
Economics as if
People Mattered, ISBN 0-06-131778-0 (also
ISBN 0-88179-169-5)
^ Woo, C. and Cooper, A. “The surprising case for low market
share”, Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review, November–December 1982, pg
106–113.
^ Levinson, J.C. Guerrilla Marketing, Secrets for making big profits
from your small business, Houghton Muffin Co. New York, 1984,
ISBN 0-618-78591-4.
^ Traverso, D. Outsmarting Goliath, Bloomberg Press, Princeton, 2000.
^ Moore, J. "Predators and Prey", Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Review, Vol. 71,
May–June, pp 75–86, 1993.
^ TED-Phillip Evans-How Data will Transform Business-March 2014
^ Collins, James and Porras, Jerry Built to Last, Harper Books, New
York, 1994.
^ a b de Geus, Arie (1997). The Living Company. Harvard Business
School Press. ISBN 978-0-87584-782-5.
^ Mulcaster, W.R. "Three Strategic Frameworks,"
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Strategy
Series, Vol 10, No 1, pp 68–75, 2009.
Further reading[edit]
Cameron, Bobby Thomas. (2014). Using responsive evaluation in
Strategic Management.Strategic
Leadership

Leadership Review 4 (2), 22-27.
David Besanko, David Dranove, Scott Schaefer, and Mark Shanley (2012)
Economics
.svg/540px-Countries_by_Real_GDP_Growth_Rate_(2016).svg.png)
Economics of Strategy, John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 978-1118273630
Edwards, Janice et al. Mastering Strategic Management- 1st Canadian
Edition. BC Open Textbooks, 2014.
Kemp, Roger L. "Strategic Planning for Local Government: A Handbook
for Officials and Citizens," McFarland and Co., Inc., Jefferson, NC,
USA, and London, England, UK, 2008 (ISBN 978-0-7864-3873-0)
Kvint, Vladimir (2009) The Global Emerging Market: Strategic
Management

Management and
Economics
.svg/540px-Countries_by_Real_GDP_Growth_Rate_(2016).svg.png)
Economics Excerpt from Google Books
Pankaj Ghemawhat - Harvard
Strategy

Strategy Professor: Competition and
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business
Strategy

Strategy in Historical Perspective Social Science History
Network-Spring 2002
External links[edit]
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Strategic management
Library resources about
Strategic management
Resources in your library
Institute for
Strategy

Strategy and Competitiveness at Harvard
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business School
- recent publications
[1]- Improving Strategic Management
The Journal of
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Strategies - online library
v
t
e
Management
Outline of business management
Index of management articles
By type
of organization
Academic
Association
Business
Restaurant
Healthcare
Military
Public
By focus (within
an organization)
By scope
Strategic
(top-level)
Capability
Change
Communication
Financial
Innovation
Performance
Risk
Systems
By component
Facility
Product
Product lifecycle
Brand
Program
Project
Construction
By activity or
department
managed
Line
Marketing
Operations/production
Process
Quality
Sales
Staff
Accounting
Office
Records
By aspect or
relationship
Customer relationship
Engineering
Logistics
Perception
Supply chain
Talent
By problem
Conflict
Crisis
Stress
By resource
Environmental resource
Human resources
Information
Information technology
Knowledge
Land
Materials
Skills
Stock
Technology
Time
Management
positions
Interim
Middle
Senior
Methods
and approaches
Adhocracy
Collaborative method
Distributed
Earned value management
Evidence-based management
Management

Management by objectives
Management

Management style
Macromanagement
Micromanagement
Scientific management
Social entrepreneurship
Team building
Virtual management
Management

Management skills
and activities
Decision-making
Forecasting
Leadership
Pioneers and
scholars
Peter Drucker
Eliyahu M. Goldratt
Oliver E. Williamson
Education
Association of Technology, Management, and Applied Engineering
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business school
Certified
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Manager
Chartered
Management

Management Institute
Critical management studies
Degrees
Bachelor of
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Administration
Master of
Business
.png/440px-Business.com_New_Logo_March_2013_(transparent).png)
Business Administration
PhD in management
Organizational studies
Other
Administration
Collaboration
Corporate governance
Executive compensation
Management

Management consulting
Management

Management control
Management

Management cybernetics
Management

Management development
Management

Management fad
Management

Management system
Managerial economics
Managerial psychology
Managerialism
Organization

Organization development
Organizational behavior management
Pointy-haired Boss
Williamson's model of managerial discretion
Syst