Module 2 - Strat Man
Module 2 - Strat Man
Module 2 - Strat Man
Illustration below shows how the external audit fits into the strategic-management process.
Industrial Organization (I/O) view theorists contend that external factors in general and the industry in which a firm chooses to compete has a stronger
influence on the firm’s performance than do the internal functional decisions managers make in marketing, finance, and the like. Firm performance,
they contend, is primarily based more on industry properties, such as economies of scale, barriers to market entry, product differentiation, the economy, and
level of competitiveness than on internal resources, capabilities, structure, and operations.
It is quite important for the strategists to have an up-to-date information approach in the competitive environment, one of it is to have to have a competitive
intelligence and its program. Competitive intelligence(CI) is a systematic and ethical process for gathering and analyzing information about the
competitor’s activities and general business trends to further a business’s own goals.
In the presentation of case analysis the most widely use is the external environment only to Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Environmental and
Legal (PESTEL)
There are several Industry Analysis Forecast Techniques here are the two most commonly used the EFE and CPM.
External Factor Evaluation (EFE) Matrix
It allows strategists to summarize and evaluate economic, social, cultural, demographic, environmental, political, governmental, legal, technological, and
competitive information.
Management
Managing the business is the core activity to mobilize towards its direction. The functions of management consist of five basic activities:
Marketing
It can be described as the process of defining, anticipating, creating, and fulfilling customers’ needs and wants for products and services. There are seven
basic functions of marketing: (1) customer analysis, (2) selling products/services, (3) product and service planning, (4) pricing, (5) distribution, (6) marketing
research, and (7) opportunity analysis.
Finance/Accounting
Functions of Finance/Accounting: (According to James Van Horne)
1. Investment Decision (Capital Budgeting)
2. Financing Decision
3. Dividend Decision
Production/Operations
The production/operations function of a business consists of all those activities that transform inputs into goods and services. Production/operations
management deals with inputs, transformations, and outputs that vary across industries and markets. A manufacturing operation transforms or converts
inputs such as raw materials, labor, capital, machines, and facilities into finished goods and services.
Research and Development
Organizations invest in R&D because they believe that such an investment will lead to a superior product or service and will give them competitive
advantages. Research and development expenditures are directed at developing new products before competitors do, at improving product quality, or at
improving manufacturing processes to reduce costs.
Management Information Systems
A management information system’s purpose is to improve the performance of an enterprise by improving the quality of managerial decisions. An effective
information system thus collects, codes, stores, synthesizes, and presents information in such a manner that it answers important operating and strategic
questions. The heart of an information system is a database containing the kinds of records and data important to managers.
Module 2: Summary
The success of every organization is to understand the value of external and internal environment which is commonly known as the SWOT analysis.
Increasing turbulence in markets and industries around the world means the external audit has become an explicit and vital part of the strategic-
management process. The topics provides a framework for collecting and evaluating economic, social, cultural, demographic, environmental, political,
governmental, legal, technological, and competitive information. Firms that do not mobilize and empower their managers and employees to identify, monitor,
forecast, and evaluate key external forces may fail to anticipate emerging opportunities and threats and, consequently, may pursue ineffective strategies,
miss opportunities, and invite organizational demise. Firms not taking advantage of the Internet are technologically falling behind.
External assessment considers the value of Industrial Organizational View(I/O View) that company has a competitive advantage if they have competitive
intelligence. It comprises the analysis of the organizations threat and opportunities.
Internal assessment considers the value of Resource Based View(RBV) that whatever company resources available better than the others it will provide a
competitive edge that makes the organization unique. It comprises the analysis of the organizations strengths and weaknesses.
Management, marketing, finance/accounting, production/operations, research and development, and management information systems represent the core
operations of most businesses. A strategic-management audit of a firm’s internal operations is vital to organizational health. Many companies still prefer to
be judged solely on their bottom line performance. However, an increasing number of successful organizations are using the internal audit to gain
competitive advantages over rival firms. Systematic methodologies for performing strength-weakness assessments are not well developed in the strategic-
management literature, but it is clear that strategists must identify and evaluate internal strengths and weaknesses in order to effectively formulate and
choose among alternative strategies. The EFE Matrix, Competitive Profile Matrix, IFE Matrix, and clear statements of vision and mission provide the basic
information needed to successfully formulate competitive strategies.