Strategic Management: Timothy G. Kotnour
Strategic Management: Timothy G. Kotnour
Strategic Management: Timothy G. Kotnour
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Strategic Management
Timothy G. Kotnour
University of Central Florida
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14.1 Introduction
These functions can take place across many levels of the organization (e.g., the corporation, business
unit, division, or office). These eight steps provide the structured process for the management team to lead
and manage the strategic transformation path (i.e., continuously set strategy and make the strategy real).
Before we discuss each of these functions, we’ll explore the core of the process.
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1.
Set
Strategic 2.
8. Intent Deploy
Deploy
the Strategic
Learnings
Intent
7. open, honest 3.
Review conversations Set
Performance Strategy & Strategy
Measures
6. 4.
Deploy Deploy
Results 5. Resources
Execute
the Strategy
14.2.1 Introduction
The tutorial below will help you get a better understanding of the concepts of strategic management. This
section presents information on the core of strategic management and the strategic management func-
tions. This basic section will help you better understand strategic management and also give you insights
and knowledge to help you read and interpret your organization’s strategic plan.
Taken together, these three elements are what a transformation requires. A transformation requires a
management team holding conversations to develop a strategy for change. Measures translate the strategy
to concrete quantifiable outcomes. These measures help determine where the organization needs to go.
The management team uses the measures during conversations to help refine the strategy.
thoughts of the leadership or power team.) Many “unspoken” conversations will be left hanging. The
needed conversations that get to core issues will be held in the halls and small groups, not in the larger
management team where actions need to be taken. Open, honest conversations are needed to raise and
answer the fundamental issues facing the organization. Without open, honest conversations, strategy is
destined to fail—commitment and involvement in the strategy will decrease. The specific conversations
for each of the eight functions of strategic management will be highlighted when we discuss each function
in the next eight chapters.
One challenge in holding continuous strategic conversations is finding the time to devote to them.
Annual management strategic offsites are one tool to hold these conversations, but the problem with stra-
tegic offsites is that they are held usually just once a year. Once the strategic offsite is over, people go back
to work on the daily, routine issues. The organization needs to find a way to hold strategic conversations
on a routine basis.
Using the work of Minztberg (1994), we can define strategy as the strategic intent of the organization
(e.g., mission, vision, goals) and the plan or pattern of decisions to implement the strategic intent on a
daily basis. Mintzberg (1994) defined strategy using four concepts:
• Strategy as a plan: A direction, guide, or course of action into the future, a path to get from here to
there
• Strategy as a pattern: Consistency in behavior over time
• Strategy as position: The determination of particular products in particular markets
• Strategy as perspective: An organization’s way of doing things—its concept of the business.
Mintzberg (1994) further defined the strategy concept by focusing on strategy that is implemented or
realized. Realized strategy is a function of four components:
• Intended Strategy (IS): the strategy we planned and intend to follow
• Deliberate Strategy (DS): the intended strategy implemented
• Unrealized Strategy (US): the intended strategy we abandoned
• Emergent Strategy (ES): the unplanned strategy that emerged over time
Using Mintzberg’s concepts, we define strategy to be of two types: strategic intent and daily strategy.
Strategic intent is the macro view to the organization’s position and perspective. The strategic intent is
typically defined by items such as a mission statement, vision statement, goals, and guiding principles.
This strategic intent provides the overarching theme to drive change in the organization. This strategic in-
tent is translated into everyday actions by what we call daily strategy. Daily strategy as a pattern or plan is
the use of planning tools to connect the strategic intent to a specific action. How well we align and imple-
ment both strategic intent and daily strategy is important. Daily strategy can be thought of as the projects
used to move the organization forward. Strategy (strategic intent and daily strategy) is made quantifiable
through the use of measures.
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This format provides a clear link to the measurable performance that is important to the organization.
These types of objectives drive both the daily work and improvement efforts. Figure 14.2 provides further
definition of how goals, objectives, measures, and strategies are related. Objectives translate the desired
outcomes into measurable performance criteria. The current versus desired performance is analyzed for
performance gaps. The root cause of the gap is used to define and select the improvement strategies.
Why does
the Goal Goal Goal Goal
organization
exist?
Conversations, strategies, and measures are the core of the strategic management process. We’ll next
explore the eight steps or functions of the strategic management process.
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From this understanding, a leader can set an agenda on how to implement strategic management to
help transform an organization.
Overview
Strategic planning is a group process by which the organization defines or refines the organization’s strate-
gic context and intent. The process involves understanding both internal and external environments (e.g.,
strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats). Strategic planning through this disciplined process estab-
lishes the vision of the future, mission, and a specific set of goals, objectives, and policies developed in
response to customer requirements and the external and internal environment. In this section we explore
the aim, questions, products, focus areas, and methods for strategic planning.
Strategic planning answers fundamental questions about the environment and organization. These
questions and answers are more complex than they appear. The challenge is having the senior manage-
ment team (and later the entire organization) answer these questions in open, honest, and meaningful
conversations. The products associated with strategic planning are used to answer these questions.
strategic assumptions, industry trends, scenarios) and the organization’s strategic intent (e.g., mission/core
business statement, vision/ideal future state, goals, and objectives).
Answering these questions helps the organization pinpoint the changes it needs to make in its stra-
tegic intent, and the specific objectives and strategies it needs to pursue. The challenge is answering these
questions openly and honestly with the right data.
together at the end of the meeting, and the leader said, “No need to do that now, we can do that next
week.” At this point you could see the participants’ faces turn sour. They knew they had just wasted
their time. Once an action is identified, someone must be held accountable for completing it, and that
accountability must be enforced.
The intent of this section was to describe the strategic planning function. The strategic plan-
ning function was described using its aim, questions, products, and focus areas. Once the
strategic intent is set through strategic planning, the strategic intent needs to be shared with
the organization.
Overview
Deploying the strategic intent is the process of sharing the strategic intent with the organization and its
stakeholders. Deploying the strategic intent helps the rest of the organization understand the organiza-
tion’s strategic context and intent. This understanding creates a foundation for the organization to make
plans to implement the strategic intent. In this section we explore the aim, questions, products, and focus
areas for deploying the strategic intent.
To answer these questions and deploy the strategic intent, the management team creates a set of prod-
ucts. To help management answer the questions above, the management team needs to answer another set
of questions:
• Who are the intended audiences for our strategic intent message?
• What is the purpose of our message?
• What is the message?
• What are the different approaches for sharing our message?
Answers to these questions help the organization design the methods to deploy the strategic intent.
Overview
Setting strategy, or implementation planning, is the process by which the organization develops specific
strategies or actions to implement the strategic intent, and defines specific performance measures of the
progress of the planned actions. Implementation planning develops detailed plans and proposed resource
allocation to implement the goals, objectives, and strategies. In this section we explore the aim, questions,
products, and focus areas for implementation planning.
These initiatives need to be evaluated, selected, and resourced. The organization does not have enough
resources to invest in all of these areas, so it must focus on aligning these efforts to the strategic plan.
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By working with employees, the management team aligns employee roles to the strategic intent of
transforming the organization.
Overview
Deploying resources is the process of allocating the organization’s limited resources to the strategy. This
allocation is made against the four types of activities defined in the implementation planning function. In
this chapter we explore the aim, questions, products, and focus areas for deploying resources. Deploying
resources is important because:
• The organization’s resources are limited
• Not all activities can be funded
• Any expected outcome to be achieved must have resourced activities to deliver the outcome. That is,
an outcome cannot be expected to be achieved unless resources are assigned or deployed to it.
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Selecting Efforts
The first focus area of deploying resources is selecting the right efforts to fund and deploy resources to. We
can look at deploying resources from a funnel perspective. Coming into the funnel are the potential ef-
forts from the implementation function. The size of the top of the funnel is driven by the number of proj-
ects or efforts. The size of the bottom of the funnel, and thus, how many of the proposed initiatives get
through the funnel, is based on the amount of resources that can be applied to the organization’s strategy.
The organization faces the challenge of balancing multiple responsibilities with limited resources. Deploy-
ing resources is where this challenge comes to a head. The challenge in deploying resources is selecting the
right portfolio of efforts across four areas:
1. Meeting the requirements of today’s mission.
2. Building the business—investing in areas to improve and change the business.
3. Meeting the requirements of the evolving or new mission.
4. Catering to crisis.
As part of the selection process, the organization needs to find the resources to allocate to the efforts
the organization chooses to implement.
The intent of this section was to describe the deploy resources function. The deploy resources func-
tion was described using its aim, questions, products, and focus areas. Once the potential projects and
activities are selected and resourced, the organization needs to implement these efforts.
Overview
Execution is carrying out the strategy and implementation plan. Execution is the process of producing the
outputs and outcomes for the organization customers. Execution is where the “rubber meets the road”—
meeting accountabilities for the strategy. One challenge is that everyday business activities will overrun
efforts to execute the strategy of transforming the organization. In this section we explore the aim, ques-
tions, products, and focus areas for executing the strategy.
Overview
Deploying results is the process of gathering performance measurements from across the organization for
an organization-wide performance evaluation. In deploying results, the organization is getting the results
from the execution so that the management team can understand how well they are making the strategy
real. In this section we explore the aim, questions, products, and focus areas for deploying results.
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Measuring Performance
Measuring performance is about collecting the performance data and converting it into information. The
challenge is first determining what to measure and then how to get the measures. As we discussed earlier,
measures are at the core of strategic management. When we translate the strategy into operational terms
we are defining the desired outcomes we want with the objectives and measures. In deploying the results
we are collecting the data to develop the measures. The challenge is ensuring that the measures are col-
lected and analyzed for performance evaluation.
Rolling Up Results
Once individual efforts have been measured, the second focus area is to roll the results up from individual
efforts into overall organizational performance. The organization’s performance and outcomes are a func-
tion of the integration of many actions. The organization needs to roll these individual outcomes into a
higher-level perspective to gauge overall performance.
The intent of this section was to describe the deploy resources function. The deploy resources func-
tion was described using its aim, questions, products, and focus areas. Once the efforts are being mea-
sured, the results need to be evaluated.
Overview
Performance evaluation is how the organization measures and evaluates whether the organization achieved
intended results. Performance measurement and evaluation produces tangible results that can be stud-
ied to produce lessons learned and recommendations for improving the organization and adjusting the
strategic plan. In this chapter we explore the aim, questions, products, and focus areas for performance
evaluation.
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Reviewing Performance
This first focus area is an obvious one, but the one most often forgotten. The strategy and results need to
be evaluated. The organization must make the time, energy, and environment available to conduct the
reviews. The reviews are a meeting in which basic questions are asked and answered using the measures
developed and shared in the deploying results stage. However, the right environment for conducting the
performance evaluations must be created.
Overview
Deploying learnings is the process of sharing the results (i.e., decisions) from performance evaluation to
continue to drive the strategy throughout the organization. In this section we explore the aim, questions,
products, and focus areas for deploying learnings.
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Anirban Ganguly, Stevens Institute of Technology
Anirban Ganguly obtained his PhD in Engineering Management from Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken,
NJ, USA in 2009. Prior to obtaining his PhD, he received his MS from Stevens Institute of Technology in Technology
Management in 2004. He also holds a MBA degree (with Marketing major) from the University of Calcutta,
India. His major research interest comprises of innovation and technology management, enterprise agility,
supply chain management and risk management. He is currently a Post-doctoral research fellow and instructor
with the School of Systems and Enterprises at Stevens Institute of Technology. He won the ASEM students
chapter Outstanding Teaching Assistant Award in 2004, 2006 and again in 2009. He was also elected to Epsilon
Mu Eta, the Engineering Management Honor Society, in November 2006. He has co-authored a number of
conference proceedings, journal articles, a workbook and a book chapter and is one of the chapter authors for
the Engineering Management Handbook, which is a part of the Engineering Management Body of Knowledge
(EMBoK).
Scott Grasman Missouri University of Science and Technology
Dr. Scott E. Grasman is Associate Professor, as well as Associate Chair, of Engineering Management and Systems
Engineering at Missouri University of Science and Technology. He has also served as Adjunct Professor of
Operations and Manufacturing Management in the Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis,
and recently returned from an international sabbatical in Statistics and Operations Research at the Public
University of Navarre in Spain. He received his B.S.E., M.S.E., and Ph.D. degrees in Industrial and Operations
Engineering from the University of Michigan. In addition to academia, he has a variety of relevant industrial and
consulting experience. His primary expertise relates to the application of quantitative models to manufacturing,
service, and energy systems, focusing on the design and development of supply chain and logistics processes.
Within these areas, he has led a variety of funded research projects, which have resulted in publicity in national
media and numerous international speaking invitations. He is the author or co-author of over 100 technical
papers, reviewer for numerous technical journals, and editor of an upcoming book on hydrogen energy and
vehicle systems. He served as an ASEM Regional Director from 2005-2008, and in other service capacities for
ASEE, IIE, and INFORMS.
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