Strategic Management: Creating Competitive Advantage
Strategic Management: Creating Competitive Advantage
Strategic Management: Creating Competitive Advantage
Infosys' Vision:
Vision
To establish a centre of excellence for Research & Development in PET homo and co-polymer fibres and resins through
disciplined, motivated and time bound execution of projects.
To create an environment conducive to intellectual growth, efficient flow of information and accountability in order to achieve
a productive and sustained phase of research activities.
To closely interact with the business group companies and technical groups for short, medium and long-term quality and
process issues.
To thrive to become a catalyst to the growth of company's polyester business.
To leverage synergy between Reliance's PET, Polymers and Fibre intermediate businesses.
To create, maintain and pursue strategic research alliance for top end research activities.
Mission
Achieve 'Global leadership in Polymers, Fibres and Resin businesses' through innovative Research and Technology
Development in materials, processes, products and applications through efficient, disciplined, target oriented and cost
effective Research and Development activities.
To arrive at a Mission Statement,
following questions are
answered
What is the basic purpose of your organizations?
What is unique about your organization?
What is likely to be different about your business
five years down the road?
What is in your company that will make it stand out
in a crowd?
Who are, and who should be, your principal
customers?
What, and what should be, your principal economic
concerns?
What are the basic beliefs, values and philosophical
priorities of your firm?
Vision: Defines the desired or intended future
state of a specific organization or enterprise
in terms of its fundamental objective and/or
strategic direction. Vision is a long term aim,
a view of how the organization would like the
world in which it operates to be.
Setting Objectives
Internal
Process
Defects
Administrative
Expense Ratio
New Product
Launches
Learning and
Growth
Employee Retention
Training Levels
Customer Database Accuracy
What is the Balanced
Scorecard?
It addresses four basic questions:
People: How can we develop our people and
their capabilities?
Business Process: What must we excel at to
meet customer needs?
Customers: How do customers see us and
value our services?
Financial: How are we faring with shareholder
returns?
Kaplan & Norton’s
Balanced Scorecard
An approach that tries to integrate the different
measures of performance is the balanced
scorecard. Where key linkages between operating
and financial performance are brought to light. This
offers four perspectives
(1) Financial
(2) Customer
(3) Innovation and learning
(4) Internal business.
The Balanced Scorecard
Definition:
The Balanced Scorecard is a
management tool that provides
stakeholders with a comprehensive
measure of how the organization is
progressing towards the achievement of
its strategic goals.
The Balanced Scorecard
Industry
Wizards
Templates
Multimedia
Strategic
Knowledge Competitive
Base Oracle Intelligence
Information Balanced
Interpretation Scorecard Best
Practices
Coaching Identification
Planning
Strategies to Extend Daily
Business Intelligence with
OBSC
Feed from Enable Enable
Build
Oracle and Additional Custom
Needs Custom
non-Oracle Analytical Scorecards
Measures
Sources Functionality and Views
Extract data from • What-if Analysis
Oracle and non- • Cause&Effect • Strategy Maps
• Configure Custom
Oracle sources • Assessment and • Custom Views
Solutions Measures from
scratch
(including Excel) Collaboration • Dashboards
through custom • Performance • Portlets
measures Colors
Balanced Scorecard
Tools BSC
BSC BSC BSC BSC
Optimizer &
KPI Designer Builder Administrator Viewer
Data Loader
The Balanced Scorecard
(Source: Kaplan & Norton, 1996)
Reasons for the Need of a Balanced
Scorecard
1. Focus on traditional financial accounting
measures such as ROA, ROE, EPS gives
misleading signals to executives with regards
to quality and innovation. It is important to
look at the means used to achieve outcomes
such as ROA, not just focus on the outcomes
themselves.
The Balanced Scorecard
(Source: Kaplan & Norton, 1996)
Reasons for the Need of a Balanced
Scorecard
2. Executive performance needs to be judged
on success at meeting a mix of both financial
and non-financial measures to effectively
operate a business.
The Balanced Scorecard
(Source: Kaplan & Norton, 1996)
Reasons for the Need of a Balanced
Scorecard
3. Some non-financial measures are drivers of
financial outcome measures which give
managers more control to take corrective
actions quickly.
(Example: controls in jet cockpit for pilot)
The Balanced Scorecard
(Source: Kaplan & Norton, 1996)
Reasons for the Need of a Balanced
Scorecard
4. Too many measures, such as hundreds of
possible cost accounting index measures,
can confuse and distract an executive from
focusing on important strategic priorities. The
balanced scorecard disciplines an executive
to focus on several important measures that
drive the strategy.
The Balanced Scorecard
(Source: Kaplan & Norton, 1996)
Balanced Scorecard Perspectives
1. Financial: How do we look to our
Shareholders?
2. Customer: How do our Customers See Us?
3. Internal Business Process: What should we
do that is Excellent?
4. Employee and Organization Innovation and
Learning: Can we continue to Improve and
Add Value?
Financial Measures & the Balanced
Scorecard
(Source: Kaplan & Norton, 1996)
Financial measures are outcomes that
represent the executive’s success at
achieving strategic performance goals
Vision 2008
Become a globally networked enterprise seizing opportunities
worldwide to generate USD 25 million annual profits by 2008.
Vivid Description of Vision
By 2008, we would have
Achieved aggressive and profitable growth of our 5 core
businesses and initiated new businesses
the product/service
Reason for Being
MISSION
MISSION
To provide world class State-of-art technology
telecom services to its customers on demand at
competitive prices.
Environmental analysis
Strategic formulation
Strategy implementation
Strategy evaluation
Strategic Management
Strategic management is the study of why
some firms outperform others
How to compete in order to create competitive
advantages in the marketplace
How to create competitive advantages in the
market place
Unique and valuable
Difficult for competitors to copy or substitute
Strategic Management
Analysis
Strategic goals (vision, mission, strategic objectives)
Internal and external environment of the firm
Strategic decisions
What industries should we compete in?
How should we compete in those industries?
Actions
Allocate necessary resources
Design the organization to bring intended strategies to
reality
Mission Statement
Business Definition
Major Goals of the Firm
Philosophies
Guiding Principles
Considerations of stakeholders
1.The vision formulation which leads to
the statement of the Mission
Mission
* what is business?
* what will be the business?
* it established long-term direction
* it needs to use simple terminology
* it needs to be inspirational buy in
* recognition of threats & opportunities
* entrepreneurial spirit
2. The mission is then converted into
performance objectives
* measurable statements
* specified performance
* specified time
* short-range objectives
* long-range objectives
* top-down rather than bottom-up
Strategic Management:
the environment,
to issues of
Duty and “right” vs. “wrong”
Ethical and moral standards address
“What is the right thing to do?”
Two criteria of an ethical strategy:
Does not entail actions and behaviors that cross the line from “can
do” to “should not do’ and “unsavory” or “shady” and
Allows management to fulfill its ethical duties to all stakeholders