Lecture 1 - Intro To Strat Man
Lecture 1 - Intro To Strat Man
Lecture 1 - Intro To Strat Man
• Management
• The process of getting things done, effectively and
efficiently, through and with other people
• Efficiency
• Means doing the thing correctly; refers to the relationship
between inputs and outputs; seeks to minimize resource costs
• Effectiveness
• Means doing the right things; goal attainment
EFFICIENCY AND EFFECTIVENESS
ORGANIZATION
• Is a system of consciously coordinated activities or forces
of two or more (Kreitner & Kinichi, 1989)
• Structure describes the form of departments, and
hierarchy. It influences the organization’s efficiency and
effectiveness.
• People incorporate the skills, attitudes, social interaction
of the members of the organization.
• Task depicts the goals of the individual and the
organization.
ORGANIZATION
• A systematic arrangement of people brought together
to accomplish some specific purpose; applies to all
organizations—for-profit as well as not-for-profit
organizations.
• Where managers work (manage)
• Common characteristics
• Goals
• Structure
• People
COMMON CHARACTERISTICS OF
ORGANIZATIONS
• Social entity – people and roles as building
blocks
• Goal-directed – organizational purpose at
base of existence
• Deliberately structured activities – perform
work; create outputs
• Permeable boundaries – outside
interactions; impacts from environment
ORGANIZATIONS CONTIN….
• Managers
• Individuals in an organization who direct the
activities of others
ORGANIZATIONAL LEVELS
IDENTIFYING MANAGERS
• First-line managers
• Supervisors responsible for directing the day-to-day
activities of operative employees
• Middle managers
• Individuals at levels of management between the first-line
manager and top management
• Top managers
• Individuals who are responsible for making decisions
about the direction of the organization and establishing
policies that affect all organizational members
MANAGEMENT PROCESS ACTIVITIES
ESSENTIAL MANAGERIAL FUNCTIONS
Selecting missions and objectives - and the
strategies, policies, programs, and procedures for
PLANNING achieving them; decision making; the selection of
a course of action from among alternatives.
Organization Design
Culture
Social Networks
Includes determining what tasks to be done, who is
to do them, how the tasks are to be grouped, who
reports to whom, and where decisions are to be made
PURPOSE OF ORGANIZING
ORGANIZATION ENABLE
STRUCTURE INDIVIDUAL TO
CONTRIBUTE TO
ENTERPRISE
OBJECTIVES
EFFECTIVE
PRINCIPLE OF
ORGANIZATIONAL EFFICIENCY
STRUCTURED TO
AID THE
ORGANIZATION ACCOMPLISHMEN
T OF ENTERPRISE
OBJECTIVES
WITH MINIMUM OF
EFFICIENT
UNSOUGHT
CONSEQUENCES OR
COST
LEADING
Leadership
Decision Making
Communications
Groups/Teams
Motivation
Includes motivating employees, directing the activities of others,
selecting the most effective communication channel, and resolving
conflicts
LEADING . . . .
PROCESS OF INFLUENCING
PEOPLE SO THAT THEY WILL
CONTRIBUTE TO ORGANIZATION
& GROUP GOALS
•MOTIVATION
•LEADERSHIP
•COMMUNICATION
PRINCIPLE OF
HARMONY OF OBJECTIVES
• Systems/Processes
• Strategic Human Resources
CONROLLING: ITS NATURE & PURPOSE
PRINCIPLE OF THE
PURPOSE OF CONTROL
•DELEGATION OF AUTHORITY
•RESPONSIBILITY FOR
OBJECTIVES
PRINCIPLE OF
EFFICIENCY OF CONTROLS
ORGANIZATION
Technological
Economic
Social
Ethical
Political & legal
Both IM and global management
examine the same environments.
Business
Environment
Extern Interna
al l
Internal
• Value System
• Mission and Objectives
• Organizational Structure
• Culture
• Quality of Human Resources
• Labor Unions
• Physical Resources and Technological Capabilities
• Mission – states organization’s purpose,
reasons for existence; describes what
organization does for whom
• Vision – overall direction of organization;
picture of where organization sees self in future
• Values – organization’s basic philosophy,
principles, ideals; sets ethical tone
External
Demographic
Sociocultural
Industry
Environment
Competitive
Environment
Political/
Legal Global
Technological
Environments of an Organization
SOCIAL TECHNOLOGICAL
VARIABLES VARIABLES
COMPETITORS SU
PP
S
CUSTOMERS
IO L
UT IA
N
LI
IT C
EMPLOYEES ER
ST AN S
ORGANIZATION
IN FIN
NT
LA IONS
M E
N
UN
GO
SPECIAL-INTEREST
R
ECONOMIC POLITICAL
VARIABLES VARIABLES
DIRECT- INDIRECT-ACTION
ACTION
THE BASICS OF
STRATEGIC
MANAGEMENT
If a man takes thought about what
is distant, he will find sorrow near
at hand. He who will not worry
about what us far off will soon find
something worse than worry
=confucious=
Plans are less important than planning.
=Dale McConkey=
WHAT IS STRATEGY?
• Three stages:
• Strategy Formulation
• Strategy Implementation
• Strategy Evaluation
STRATEGY FORMULATION
2-63
WHAT IS OUR BUSINESS?
• Mission statement
• a declaration of an organization’s “reason for being.”
• answers the pivotal question “What is our business?”
• essential for effectively establishing objectives and formulating
strategies
• reveals what an organization wants to be and whom it wants to serve
• Also called a creed statement, a statement of purpose, a statement of
philosophy, a statement of beliefs, and a statement of business
principles
2-64
VISION VERSUS MISSION
2-65
THE PROCESS OF DEVELOPING
VISION AND MISSION STATEMENTS
• Select several articles about these statements and ask all managers
to read these as background information.
• Ask managers themselves to prepare a vision and mission statement
for the organization.
• Merge these statements into a single document and distribute the
draft statements to all managers
• Process should create an “emotional bond” and “sense of mission”
between the organization and its employees
2-66
IMPORTANCE OF VISION AND
MISSION STATEMENTS
2-67
CHARACTERISTICS OF A MISSION
STATEMENT
• First, a good mission statement allows for the generation
and consideration of a range of feasible alternative objectives
and strategies without unduly stifling management creativity.
• Second, a mission statement needs to be broad to reconcile
differences effectively among, and appeal to, an
organization’s diverse stakeholders
• Stakeholders
• include employees, managers, stockholders, boards of directors,
customers, suppliers, distributors, creditors, governments (local,
state, federal, and foreign), unions, competitors, environmental
2-68
groups, and the general public.
BENEFITS OF HAVING A CLEAR
MISSION AND VISION
2-69
A CUSTOMER ORIENTATION
2-73
CHARACTERISTICS OF A
MISSION STATEMENT
2-74