Strategic management is defined as the art and science of formulating, implementing, and evaluating multidisciplinary decisions that enable a company to achieve its strategic objectives.[1] Originally known as business policy, strategic management incorporates topics such as strategic planning, environmental analysis, and industry analysis.[2].
It is an integrative discipline, since its implementation requires integrating administration, marketing, finance and accounting, production and operations, research and development, and information systems, to achieve the success of an organization. [1].
Strategic management helps companies formulate better strategies through the use of a more systematic, logical and rational approach to strategic choice.
It involves the formulation and implementation of the main objectives and initiatives proposed by company managers, based on consideration of the organization's resources, and an analysis of the ecosystems in which the company competes.[3] That is, strategic management is a set of administrative decisions and actions that determine the long-term performance of a corporation. It includes environmental analysis (both external and internal), strategy formulation (strategic or long-term planning), strategy implementation, as well as evaluation and control.
Covers concepts of planning and strategic thinking. Strategic planning is analytical, it synthesizes the information to obtain the strategy, it refers to the control mechanisms used to implement the strategy once they have been determined, it occurs around strategic thinking, it is commonly understood as a set of two main processes: formulation and implementation of the strategy.[4].
Academics and managers develop models to assist in making strategic decisions.[5] Strategic management is not static by nature, the models include a feedback loop to monitor execution and obtain information for the next planning stage.[6][7][8].
Strategic leadership
The stages of the strategic management process will be carried out through strategic leadership, which refers to the most effective way of managing said process so that the organization achieves a competitive advantage.[9] Strategic leadership is related to the process of developing strategies to improve the performance of a company and, consequently, increase the value of the company for its owners and shareholders.
Management of strategic areas
Introduction
Strategic management is defined as the art and science of formulating, implementing, and evaluating multidisciplinary decisions that enable a company to achieve its strategic objectives.[1] Originally known as business policy, strategic management incorporates topics such as strategic planning, environmental analysis, and industry analysis.[2].
It is an integrative discipline, since its implementation requires integrating administration, marketing, finance and accounting, production and operations, research and development, and information systems, to achieve the success of an organization. [1].
Strategic management helps companies formulate better strategies through the use of a more systematic, logical and rational approach to strategic choice.
It involves the formulation and implementation of the main objectives and initiatives proposed by company managers, based on consideration of the organization's resources, and an analysis of the ecosystems in which the company competes.[3] That is, strategic management is a set of administrative decisions and actions that determine the long-term performance of a corporation. It includes environmental analysis (both external and internal), strategy formulation (strategic or long-term planning), strategy implementation, as well as evaluation and control.
Covers concepts of planning and strategic thinking. Strategic planning is analytical, it synthesizes the information to obtain the strategy, it refers to the control mechanisms used to implement the strategy once they have been determined, it occurs around strategic thinking, it is commonly understood as a set of two main processes: formulation and implementation of the strategy.[4].
Academics and managers develop models to assist in making strategic decisions.[5] Strategic management is not static by nature, the models include a feedback loop to monitor execution and obtain information for the next planning stage.[6][7][8].
Strategic leadership
The stages of the strategic management process will be carried out through , which refers to the most effective way of managing said process so that the organization achieves a competitive advantage.[9] Strategic leadership is related to the process of developing strategies to improve the performance of a company and, consequently, increase the value of the company for its owners and shareholders.
One of the key strategic roles of functional and general managers is to use all their knowledge, energy and enthusiasm to provide strategic leadership to their subordinates and develop a high-performing organization. Several authors have identified some key characteristics of good leaders that generate high performance:.
vision, eloquence and congruence;
articulation of the business model;
commitment;
be well informed;
willingness to delegate and grant decision-making powers;
cunning use of power.
emotional intelligence.[10].
Strategists are primarily responsible for the success or failure of a company. This role can be filled by individuals with different titles, such as CEO, president, owner, chairman of the board, executive director, chancellor, dean, or entrepreneur. Their job consists of collecting, analyzing and structuring information relevant to the organization. They monitor industry and competitive trends, develop predictive models and scenario analyses, evaluate corporate and divisional performance, identify opportunities in emerging markets, detect business threats, and design innovative action plans.
Strategic planners typically occupy high-level positions in management and typically have decision-making authority within the company. The CEO is the most prominent and visible strategist. Any manager who is in charge of a unit or division, is responsible for financial results, or has authority over a significant portion of the company is considered a strategic manager.
Strategists vary depending on the characteristics of the company and these nuances must be considered when designing, executing and evaluating strategies. Their approach may be influenced by their personal beliefs, which may lead them to rule out certain types of strategies. In addition, they present differences in attitudes, values, ethics, risk tolerance, commitment to social responsibility or profitability, short and long-term goals, as well as their management style.[1].
Communication is the key to successful strategic management. Through participation in the process, that is, through dialogue and participation, both managers and employees commit to supporting the organization.
The goal is to get all managers and employees to understand and commit to the organization. Understanding is arguably the greatest benefit of strategic management, followed by commitment. When employees understand what the company does and why it does it, they tend to feel part of it and become actively involved in its success, especially if they recognize how their compensation is linked to the organization's performance. By understanding and supporting the business mission, objectives and strategies, managers and employees can develop a high level of creativity and innovation.[1].
Synthetically, the process:.
The strategic management process consists of three interconnected and integrated phases:
Execution or implementation of the strategy: implies actions in practice in reality.
Supervision and strategic adjustments or evaluation and control: monitor progress, evaluate performance and make necessary adjustments based on results, changes in the environment and new opportunities.
Boards of directors have the responsibility of supervising and evaluating strategic management for the benefit of shareholders. To do this, they must fulfill four key functions:
Strategic management should not become a self-sustaining bureaucratic system, but rather a dynamic process of learning and analysis that allows managers and employees to understand key strategic problems and evaluate viable alternatives to solve them. It should not become a rigid, predictable or excessively formal practice, but should encourage flexibility and adaptation. It is essential that strategic decisions are based on analysis supported by data and not on figures that simply justify pre-existing arguments. An essential role of strategists is to facilitate continuous learning and organizational change.
For strategic management to be effective, it is crucial to maintain an open and receptive mindset. The willingness to consider new information, perspectives, ideas and opportunities should be a principle shared by all members of the organization. Strategists, such as CEOs, presidents, business owners, and government leaders, must commit to listening to and understanding their managers deeply enough to express their views accurately. Likewise, managers and employees must be able to describe strategists' positions accurately. This level of alignment fosters both understanding and learning within the organization.
Since no company has unlimited resources, it cannot implement all the strategies that could be beneficial. Organizations cannot take on unlimited amounts of debt or issue unrestricted equity to increase their capital, forcing them to make strategic decisions that prioritize some initiatives over others. A common mistake among managers is trying to execute too many strategies simultaneously, which disperses resources and compromises the viability of all of them.
Strategic decisions require finding a balance between short- and long-term objectives, between profit maximization and increasing value for shareholders. Furthermore, these decisions involve ethical dilemmas and subjective judgments that can affect the company's competitive position and profitability. Although factors such as risk aversion, social responsibility, and organizational culture influence strategy formulation, organizations should strive to maintain as much objectivity as possible when evaluating these qualitative elements. Today, many companies recognize that the proper use of strategic management concepts and tools can significantly improve the quality of their decisions.
Stages of the Strategic Administration process
1. Strategic formulation or planning
The formulation of a strategy involves analyzing the ecosystem in which the organization operates, and then making a series of strategic decisions about how the organization will compete. It ends with a series of goals or objectives and measures that the organization follows.
Strategic planning is analytical in nature and refers to the formalized procedures for producing information and analyzes used for strategic thinking, which synthesizes information and results in a strategy. It also refers to the control mechanisms used to implement the strategy once it has been determined. In other words, strategic planning occurs around the process of strategy formation.[4]Some strategic plans sometimes become strategic purposes, which is a plan that unites the organization around an unalterable commitment—often obsessive—to do whatever is necessary in order to acquire resources and achieve goals.[11].
Porter wrote in 1980 that formulating a competitive strategy includes consideration of key elements:
The first two elements are related to internal factors of the company, while the last is related to external factors.[12].
There are many analytical schemes that attempt to organize the strategic planning process. Some examples are:
Some strategists use scenario planning techniques to manage changes. The way Peter Schwartz stated it in 1991 is that the results cannot be known and therefore the sources of competitive advantages cannot be predetermined.[13] The business ecosystem changes rapidly and is uncertain, that is what scenario planning is used for. In this technique, different scenarios with different results are developed, their implications and the possibility of their occurrence are evaluated. According to Pierre Wack, scenario planning is about perspective and not just formal analysis of numbers.[14].
Some business planners are beginning to use a complexity theory approach. Complexity can be seen as chaos with a pinch of order. Chaos theory analyzes turbulent systems that quickly tend to disorder. Complexity is not entirely unpredictable, it involves multiple agents interacting in such a way that a certain structure appears.
Strategic thinking involves the generation and application of unique business perspectives with the intention of creating competitive advantages for a company. It involves challenging the assumptions that underpin the company's current strategy and value proposition. Mintzberg wrote in 1994 that it is more about synthesis (connecting the dots) than analysis (finding the dots). It is about "capturing what the manager learns from various sources and synthesizing that information into a vision that sets the direction the business should follow." Mintzberg commented that strategic thinking is the critical part of formulating a strategy.[15].
General Andre Beaufre wrote in 1963 that strategic thinking "is a mental process, which must be able to synthesize both psychological and material information. The strategist must have a great capacity for analysis and synthesis; analysis is necessary to construct the information on which he will make his diagnosis using synthesis. - and the diagnosis itself is equivalent to a choice between alternatives of action."[16]
Will Multaster[17] argued that, although much research and creative thinking has been devoted to the generation of alternative strategies, very little work has been done on what influences the quality of strategic decision making and the effectiveness with which they are implemented. The management forces scheme identifies 11 forces that must be incorporated into the decision-making and strategic implementation processes. The 11 forces are: Time; Opposition forces; Policy; Perception; Holistic effects; Added value; Incentives; Learning capabilities; Opportunity cost; Risk and Style.
They are based on the ecosystem landscape and are answers to strategic questions about how the organization will compete, for example:
The answers to these and many other questions result in the organization's strategy and a series of short and long-term objectives.[4].
That is, here the strategic vision, mission, and essential values of the organization will be developed.
Strategy is understood as "the determination of the basic long-term objectives of a company as well as the distribution of the resources necessary to achieve those objectives."[19] It functions to focus effort, define or clarify an organization, and provide consistency or guidance in response to the environment in which it works.[20].
That is, it provides direction to the company that involves organizational objectives, development policies and plans designed to achieve the objectives, and deals with the distribution of resources to implement the plans.
Michael Porter identifies three principles as part of the strategic game:
Dr. Vladimir Kvint defines strategy as "a system for finding, formulating and developing a doctrine that ensures long-term success."[22].
Corporate strategy involves answering a key question: "What business should we be in?" and business strategy involves the question "How should we compete in this business?"[23].
While strategies are established to set direction, focus efforts, define or clarify the organization, and provide consistency or guidance in response to the environment, there are also certain elements that are minimized or even excluded. Mintzberg wrote in 1987: "Strategy is a categorization scheme by which incoming stimuli can be ordered and delivered." A strategy guides the organization in a certain way or in a particular direction, that direction does not always coincide and fit into the business ecosystem. Mintzberg commented: "Strategy is a force that resists change, not encourages it."[24]
In 2000, Gary Hamel coined the term strategic convergence to explain the limited range of strategies used by rivals in different circumstances. He lamented that successful strategies are imitated by companies that do not understand how strategy works. Woodhouse and Collingridge suggested that the essence of being "strategic" lies in the ability to engage in intelligent "trial and error" rather than strictly adhering to strategic plans. The strategy should be seen as a general guide rather than a pattern with specific steps.[27] Means are just as likely to determine ends as ends are to determine means.[28] The objectives that an organization wishes to pursue are limited by the feasibility of their implementation and, in turn, the feasibility of implementation depends on the availability of resources.
The managerial purpose of setting objectives is to translate the vision and mission into specific performance objectives. Well-established objectives are specific, quantifiable or measurable, and contain a deadline for their achievement. Objectives are performance goals of an organization; That is, they are the results and products that the administration wishes to achieve. Two very different types of performance goals are required: those that refer to financial performance and those that refer to strategic performance. Financialobjectives communicate management's financial goals (e.g. x percentage increase in annual revenue). Strategic objectives refer to the marketing position and competitive vitality of the company (e.g. Gain x percentage of market share).[11].
Policies are the mechanisms designed to achieve annual objectives. They consist of guidelines, standards and procedures that support efforts to achieve these goals. Its main function is to guide decision making and manage recurring situations within the organization.
Generally, policies are developed based on different areas, such as administration, marketing, finance and accounting, production and operations, research and development, as well as information systems management. They can be established at the corporate level, applying to all divisions of the company, or focus on a specific division. Likewise, they can adapt to different functional levels and regulate certain operational activities or specific departments.
Like annual objectives, policies play a fundamental role in the implementation of strategies, since they define the organization's expectations regarding its employees and managers. Its application promotes coherence and coordination both within and between departments.[1].
2. Implementation
Implementation is the second strategic management process which involves decisions regarding organizational resources designated to carry out the strategy. It results in the way resources are structured, leadership agreements, communication, incentives and monitoring mechanisms to record progress.[4].
Then, once the strategy is determined, various goals are established to chart the course of the organization, measure performance, and monitor the implementation of the strategy. Tools like the Balanced Scorecard and strategy maps help crystallize strategy. They relate key measures of success and performance in the strategy. These tools measure financial, organizational, marketing, production, and innovation development. Advances in information technologies and data availability allow more information to be collected about performance, thus allowing managers to have a much more analytical perspective of their businesses.
The strategy can also be organized as a series of initiatives or programs, each referring to one or more projects. Various monitoring and feedback mechanisms such as meetings between division managers can also be implemented.
Executing day-to-day operations in the company is known as operational management or specific terms for each department such as: logistics management or marketing management, which are carried out once the strategic management decisions have been implemented.[4].
3. Control and evaluation
A key component to strategic management is evaluation. There are different ways to evaluate whether strategic priorities and plans have been achieved. One method is Robert Stake's responsive evaluation.[29] Responsive evaluation provides a humanistic and naturalistic approach to program evaluation. Beyond objective evaluation, responsive evaluation considers the context and history of the program, as well as the conditions and transactions between participants.
Strategic issues
Contenido
Varias cuestiones con implicancia estratégica han surgido en la industria a través de los años. Estos incluyen: el cambio del modelo enfocado en la producción al modelo enfocado en el cliente, el incremento en el uso del modelo de auto-servicio para reducir los costos, cambios en la cadena de valor o en la estructura corporativa debido a la globalización y el internet.
Una definición de globalización hace referencia a la integración de las economías debido a la innovación tecnológica y en cadena de suministro. Las compañías ya no requieren estar integradas verticalmente (diseñar, producir, ensamblar y vender). En otras palabras, la cadena de valor de un producto puede no estar del todo dentro de una sola compañía. Muchas compañías eligen utilizar el método de subcontratación u outsourcing para los procesos de producción y mantienen únicamente los procesos de diseño y ventas dentro de la organización.[21].
Para una empresa, la competitividad se define como la capacidad de poder suministrar un bien (producto o servicio) de una cierta calidad a un precio menor que el de las empresas con las cuales compite.
El internet ha empoderado a los consumidores y ha conectado a compradores con vendedores reduciendo drásticamente los costos por transacción, creando plataformas mucho más robustas para comprar y vender bienes y servicios. Algunos ejemplos son las páginas de subastas en línea, servicios de citas por internet o vendedores de libros. En muchas industrias, el internet ha alterado el panorama competitivo. Los servicios que solían ser ofrecidos dentro de una misma organización ahora son cubiertos por terceros.[30].
El autor Phillip Evans dijo en 2013 que las redes están retando las jerarquías tradicionales. Las cadenas de valor también se están rompiendo. La información es libre o tiene un muy bajo costo y por lo tanto es muy difícil que compañías integradas de manera vertical se mantengan intactas. Evans dijo que la competencia está evolucionando de un modelo vertical a uno horizontal. Utilizó Wikipedia como un ejemplo de una red que ha desafiado el modelo de negocio tradicional de la enciclopedia.[31] Evans predijo la emergencia de una nueva forma de organización industrial llamada un "stack" o montón en la cual los competidores dependen de una plataforma común a partir de la cual construyen su propia cadena de valor.
La creatividad es la capacidad de crear nuevas ideas o conceptos, de nuevas asociaciones entre ideas y conceptos conocidos, que habitualmente producen soluciones originales. La creatividad es sinónimo del "pensamiento original", la "imaginación constructiva", el "pensamiento divergente" o el "pensamiento creativo".
La innovación es un proceso que introduce novedades y que se refiere a modificar elementos ya existentes con el fin de mejorarlos, aunque también es posible en la implementación de elementos totalmente nuevos. En el sentido estricto, por otro lado, se dice que de las ideas solo pueden resultar innovadoras luego de que ellas se implementen como nuevos productos, servicios, o procedimientos que realmente encuentren una aplicación exitosa, imponiéndose en el mercado a través de la difusión "Difusión (negocios)").
El conflicto es una situación en la cual dos o más personas con intereses distintos entran en confrontación, oposición o emprenden acciones mutuamente antagonistas, con el objetivo de dañar, eliminar a la parte rival o arrebatarle poder "Poder (social y político)") de algún tipo en favor de la propia persona o grupo.
La negociación es un proceso de discusión que se establece entre las partes, por medio de representantes si son grupos, y cuyo objetivo es el de llegar a un acuerdo aceptable para todos.
Un tema en la competencia estratégica ha sido la tendencia al autoservicio. Gracias a la tecnología el cliente toma un rol que previamente era desempeñado por un trabajador para reducir los costos.[21] Algunos ejemplos son:.
Characteristics of successful companies
James Collins and Jerry Porras spent years conducting empirical research into what makes a successful company. Six years of research resulted in a key principle behind 19 successful companies they studied: They all foster and preserve a core ideology that governs the company. Although strategies and tactics change daily, companies always maintained the same values. These core values encourage employees to build an organization that lasts. In Built to Last (1994) they explain that the objectives of short-term profits, cost cutting and restructuring do not stimulate employees dedicated to building a company that lasts.[33] In 2000 Collins described the attitude of Silicon Valley companies, a culture where technological change inhibits long-term approaches.
Arie de Geus (1997) conducted a similar study and obtained similar results.[34] He identified 4 key characteristics that have thrived for 50 years or more:.
A company with these key characteristics is called a living company because it has the ability to sustain itself. If a company emphasizes knowledge rather than finance, and sees itself as a community of people, it has the potential to be large and last for decades. An organization is an organic entity capable of learning and creating its own processes and goals.[34].
Will Mulcaster[35] suggests that companies encourage dialogue around the following questions:
Schools and approaches
Structure of strategy studies
The definition of strategy in academic literature is addressed from three approaches: its historical development, theoretical debates and its analysis in empirical publications.
Historically, strategy has been understood as a set of actions or plans designed to achieve advantage for the actors involved.
The theoretical debate oscillates between strategy as structured planning and strategy as a dynamic process in constant evolution.
The study of strategy has been supported by numerous academic publications in prestigious journals, where real cases and empirical data are examined. These studies have allowed us to validate or refute various definitions and strategic approaches.
Empirical studies have addressed topics such as:
Empirical studies have made it possible to contrast strategic theories with real evidence, providing nuances and adjustments to existing models.[36].
Henry Mintzberg's classification: three perspectives and ten schools
Mintzberg, Ahlstrand and Lampel (1998) structure strategic thinking in three paradigmatic perspectives, under which ten schools are deployed that range from rationalist models to adaptive perspectives:
Epistemological perspectives
According to Martinet (1996, 1997):
Emphasizes strategic intentionality, where objectives guide actions. Example: Kaplan and Norton's (1996) balanced scorecard, which translates vision into operational metrics.
Examines the interaction of actors (e.g., managers, employees, unions) in the formation of strategies. Use ethnographic methods to understand informal power dynamics.
Study how strategic discourse (e.g., missions, slogans) shapes identities and legitimizes decisions. Foucault (1975) influences this critical look at symbolic power.
Inspired by biology, it analyzes organizational symbioses (e.g., industrial clusters "Cluster (industry)") and competition for scarce resources. Related to the theory of complex systems.
Strategic dualism.
According to Carrance (1986) and Ramanantsoa (1997):.
Based on the optimization of resources, it assumes perfect information and absolute rationality. Quantitative models (e.g., portfolio analysis) dominate this school.
Recognizes cognitive and political limitations. Cyert and March (1963) introduce the concept of bounded rationality, where decisions are satisfactory, not optimal.
Sociological schools.
According to Whittington (2002):
Aligned with shareholder capitalism, it prioritizes maximizing value for shareholders. Example: cost reduction strategies to increase dividends.
Influenced by Darwin, she maintains that the market selects fittest organizations. Hamel and Prahalad (1994) criticize this passive approach, promoting proactive reinvention.
It combines logical incrementalism (Quinn, 1980) with political negotiation. Strategies emerge from gradual adjustments, not master plans.
Contextualize the strategy in cultural systems (e.g.: Asian vs. Western capitalisms). Success depends on aligning with social norms, not just financial metrics.
Pragmatic schools.
According to Van der Heijden (1998):
Use predictive models (e.g., Monte Carlo simulations) to reduce uncertainty. Dominant in stable sectors (e.g. utilities).
Embrace complexity and chaos, promoting rapid experimentation (e.g., tech startups). Related to the pivot effect in lean models.
Integrates creative thinking and action, through cycles of reflection-practice (e.g., agile methodologies). Nonaka (1995) exemplifies this with the SECI model (Socialization - Externalization - Combination - Internalization).[37][38][39].
Approaches
Strategy like:
In 1990, Peter Senge popularized the notion of a "learning organization."[40] The theory is that obtaining and analyzing information is an essential requirement for a business to be successful in the information age. To do this, Senge commented that an organization must be structured in such a way that:[41].
Senge identified 5 disciplines of a learning organization:
Geoffrey Moore (1991) and R. Frank and P. Cook[42] also detected a change in the nature of competition. Markets driven by technical standards or "network effects" can give dominant companies near-monopoly status.[43] It is also true in industries where interoperability requires compatibility between users. Some examples are Internet Explorer and Amazon who were pioneers and leaders in their respective industries. The case of Internet Explorer's decline demonstrates how dominance may only be temporary.
In 1969, Peter Drucker coined the phrase Age of Discontinuity to describe the way change affects people's lives.[44] In an era of continuity, one can attempt to predict the future based on events in the past. But according to Drucker, we are now in an era of discontinuity and it is not effective to try to extrapolate. He identifies 4 sources of discontinuity: technologies, globalization, cultural pluralism and knowledge capital.
In 1970, Alvin Toffler in Future Shock described a trend toward accelerated rates of change.[45] He illustrated how social and technical phenomena are shorter in duration with each generation and questioned society's ability to handle the confusion and anxiety this can cause. In the past, periods of change were always followed by times of stability. This allowed society to assimilate the previous change before a new one occurred. But these periods of stability disappeared at the end of the century. In 1988 in The Third Wave, Toffler characterized this constant change as the third phase of civilization (the first two phases were the agricultural wave and the industrial wave).[46].
In 1978, Derek F. Abell (Abell, D. 1978) described "strategic windows" and highlighted the importance of timing any strategy well. This led some strategists to use planned obsolescence within their strategies.[47].
In 1983, Noel Tichy wrote that we are creatures of habit and tend to repeat what we feel comfortable with.[48] He wrote that it is a trap that limits our creativity and stops us from exploring new ideas. He developed a systematic method for managing change that involves looking at any new situation from 3 angles: technical and production, political and resource distribution, and corporate culture.
In 1989, Charles Handy identified two types of change.[49] "Strategic drift" is a gradual change that occurs so subtly that it is imperceptible until it is too late. On the other hand, "transformational change" is sudden and radical. It is typically caused by discontinuities in the business ecosystem. The point at which a new trend is created was called the "strategic inflection point" by Andy Grove. Turning points can be subtle or radical.
Historical development
La disciplina de la gestión estratégica se originó en las décadas de 1950 y de 1960. Entre los numerosos contribuidores, los más influyentes fueron Peter Drucker, Philip Selznick, Alfred Chandler, Igor Ansoff, y Bruce Henderson.[5] La disciplina surge de pensamientos anteriores y textos sobre estrategia que datan a miles de años atrás. Previo a 1960, el término "estrategia" era usado principalmente con relación a la guerra o la política, pero no a los negocios.[95] Muchas compañías construyeron funciones de planeación estratégica para desarrollar y ejecutar los procesos de formulación e implementación durante la década de 1960.[101].
Peter Drucker fue un teórico de la gestión y autor de docenas de libros con una trayectoria de 5 décadas. Realizó preguntas estratégicas fundamentales en un libro de 1954 titulado The Practice of Management(La práctica de la Administración) escribiendo: "...la primera responsabilidad de la alta gerencia es realizar la pregunta '¿Qué es nuestro negocio?' y asegurarse de estudiarla cuidadosamente y responderla correctamente." Escribió que la respuesta era determinada por el cliente. Recomendó 8 áreas en las cuales se deben colocar objetivos; posicionamiento en el mercado, innovación, productividad, recursos físicos y financieros, desempeño y actitud de los trabajadores, rentabilidad, desempeño y desarrollo de la gerencia y responsabilidad pública.[102].
En 1957, Philip Selznick utilizó inicialmente el término "competencia distintiva" refiriéndose a como la Marina (Navy) se trataba de diferenciar de los otros servicios.[5] También formalizó la idea de combinar los factores internos de la organización con las circunstancias externas.[103] Esta idea fundamental fue desarrollada más a profundidad por Kenneth R. Andrews en 1963 en lo que conocemos como análisis FODA en el cual se evalúan las fortalezas y debilidades de la compañía así como las oportunidades y amenazas en el ecosistema de negocio.[5].
Alfred Chandler reconoció la importancia de coordinar la actividad gerencial bajo una sola estrategia. Las interacciones entre departamentos eran manejadas lipicamente por directivos que transmitían la información entre departamentos. Chandler resaltó la importancia de tomar una perspectiva a largo plazo cuando se mira hacia el futuro. En su obra de 1962 Strategy and Structure, o Estrategia y Estructura, Chandler mostró que una estrategia coordinada a largo plazo era necesaria para darle estructura, dirección y enfoque a una compañía. Lo dice de manera concisa “La estructura sigue a la estrategia.” Chandler escribió que:.
Igor Ansoff trabajó con base en las obras de Chandler, agregando conceptos e inventando vocabulario. Desarrolló una matriz que compara las estrategias para la penetración en el mercado, el desarrollo de los productos, el desarrollo del mercado así como la diversificación. (Matriz de Ansoff). En su obra de 1965 Corporate Strategy, o Estrategia Corporativa, desarrolló un análisis de brechas (Gap) para clarificar la brecha entre la realidad actual y los objetivos y para desarrollar lo que llamó “acciones de reducción de brecha”.[104] Ansoff escribió que le gestión estratégica tenía 3 partes: planeación estratégica; la habilidad de una empresa de convertir sus planes en realidad; y la habilidad de una empresa de manejar su propia resistencia interna al cambio.[105].
Bruce Henderson, fundador del Boston Consulting Group, escribió acerca del concepto de curva de experiencia en 1968. La curva de experiencia se refiere a una hipótesis de que los costos de producción por unidad se reducen entre 20-30% cada que la producción total se duplica. Esto apoyó al argumento de alcanzar mayor porción del mercado y economías de escala.[106].
Porter escribió en 1980 que las compañías debían tomar decisiones acerca de su alcance y del tipo de ventaja competitiva que deseaban tener; costo menor o diferenciación. La idea de la estrategia dirigida a ciertas industrias y clientes en particular con una oferta con diferenciación se desarrolló a partir de la estrategia influenciada por la curva de aprendizaje, el cual se enfocaba en mayor escala y menor costo.[12] Porter ajustó el paradigma de estrategia de nuevo en 1985, escribiendo que un desempeño superior de los procesos y actividades de una organización como parte de su cadena de valor es la base de la ventaja competitiva.[107].
En 1988, Henry Mintzberg describió definiciones y perspectivas del término estrategia reflejadas tanto en la investigación académica como en la práctica.[108][109] Examinó el proceso estratégico y concluyó que era mucho más fluido e impredecible de lo que pensaba la gente por esta razón concluyó que hay 5 tipos diferentes de estrategias:.
Michael Porter definió estrategia en 1980 como "... fórmula extensa de cómo un negocio va a competir, cuáles deberían ser sus objetivos, qué políticas serán necesarias para llegar a esos objetivos" y la "...combinación de los fines para los cuales trabaja la organización y los medios con los cuales llegará ahí." Comentó que "La esencia de formular una estrategia competitiva está en relacionar a una compañía con su ecosistema."[12].
Shift in focus from production to marketing
There was also a change in how companies competed, specifically a change from a production focus to a market focus. The concept of strategy that predominated until the 1950s was to create a product with high technical quality. If you created a product that worked well and lasted well, it was assumed that you would not have profitability difficulties. This was known as production orientation. Henry Ford famously said about the Model T car: "A customer can have his car any color he wants, as long as he wants it to be black."[110]
Management theorist Peter F Drucker wrote in 1954 that the customer was what defines the type of business an organization is in.[18] In 1960, Theodore Levitt argued that instead of making products and then trying to sell them to the customer, businesses should start with the customer, find out what they want, and then produce for them. The fallacy of production orientation was also referred to as marketing myopia in an article of the same name by Levitt.[111].
Over time, the customer became the force behind strategic decisions in business. This marketing concept has been reformulated under different names such as marketing orientation, customer orientation, customer intimacy, customer focus, market focus, etc.
Jim Collins wrote in 1997 that the strategic framework expands by focusing on why a company exists rather than what the company does. In 2001, he recommended that organizations define themselves based on 3 key questions:
Nature of the strategy
In 1985, Professor Ellen Earle-Chaffee summarized what he thought were the main elements of strategic management theory, writing that strategic management:[23].
Chaffee wrote that there were 3 strategy models, which were not mutually exclusive:.
Complementary historical analysis
El progreso de la estrategia desde 1960 puede ser trazado desde una variedad de conceptos introducidos por académicos y consultores. Estos reflejan un enface en costos, competencia y clientes. Las industrias y organizaciones se analizaron en unidades de negocio, actividades, procesos e individuos en búsqueda de fuentes para generar una ventaja competitiva.[95].
SWOT Analysis
In the 1960s, the Harvard Business School business policy course included the concept of bringing together a company's internal strengths and weaknesses with its ecosystem (external opportunities and threats) in the context of its objectives. This scheme is known as SWOT. Kenneth R. Andrews helped popularize the scheme during a conference in 1963 and it continues to be used frequently today.[5].
Experience curve
The experience curve was developed by the Boston Consulting Group in 1966.[95] It is a hypothesis that the total number of costs per unit is reduced by 15-25% each time cumulative production doubles. It has been shaped empirically by some companies throughout various points in their history.[113] Cost reduction is due to a wide variety of factors such as the learning curve, the substitution of labor with automation, and technological sophistication. Author Walter Kiechel wrote:
Prior to 1960, the word competition rarely appeared in American literature; companies then faced considerably less competition. Later, the experience curve was a basis for the retailing of business ideas, helping to develop the business consulting industry.[95].
Corporate strategy and portfolio theory
The concept of a corporation as a portfolio of business units, with each expressed graphically based on its market share and industry growth, was summarized in the growth and share matrix developed by the Boston Consulting Group around 1970. By 1979, a study estimated that 45% of Fortune 500 companies (the 500 most capitalized American companies) used some variation of the matrix within their strategic planning. This scheme helped companies decide where to invest their resources and what businesses to give up.[95].
Porter wrote in 1987 that corporate strategy involves two questions: 1) What business should the corporation be in? and 2) How should business units be managed? He mentioned four concepts of corporate strategy:[114].
Other techniques were developed to analyze the relationships between portfolio elements. The growth and participation matrix as part of the B.C.G analysis was followed by the McKinsey Matrix developed by General Electric. Companies continued to diversify as conglomerates until the 1980s, where it began to be seen that a portfolio of divisions operating in different industries was more valuable as independent companies, leading to the breakup of the conglomerates.[95] The popularity of portfolio theory has waned, however the key dimensions considered remain a central part of strategy creation.[5].
Competitive advantage
In 1980, Porter defined the two types of competitive advantage that an organization can have: lower cost or differentiation. This advantage is derived from the attributes that allow a company to outperform its rivals, such as greater positioning, skills or resources. In Porter's perspective, strategic management should be concerned with the development of a competitive advantage.[107].
Industry structure and profitability
Porter developed a scheme to analyze the profitability of industries and how those profits are divided among the participants. In his 5 forces analysis he identified the forces that shape the industry and the business ecosystem in which the organization operates. The scheme involves the competitive behavior of rival organizations, the bargaining power of buyers and suppliers, the threats of new competitors to the industry, and the ability of buyers to substitute products. These forces affect the organization's ability to increase prices as well as the costs of raw materials.[12].
The 5 forces framework helps describe how a company can use those forces to gain a sustainable competitive advantage, whether that be lower cost or differentiation. Companies can maximize their profitability by competing in industries with favorable structures. Competitors may take actions to increase the overall profitability of the industry or reduce the profitability of certain parts of the industry. Porter modified Chandler's idea that structure follows strategy by introducing a second level of structure in addition to the organizational structure; the structure of the industry.[12].
Generic competitive strategies
Porter wrote in 1980 that strategy aims at cost leadership, differentiation or focus.[12] They are known as Porter's 3 generic strategies and can be applied to businesses of any size or shape. Porter said companies must choose only one of the three or risk the business wasting valuable resources. Porter's generic strategies detail the interaction between cost minimization, product differentiation, and market focus strategies.
Porter described an industry with many segments that can be targeted by a company. The width of your target refers to the competitive scope of a business. Acquiring a competitive advantage results from a company's ability to deal with the 5 forces better than its rivals. Porter wrote: "Acquiring a competitive advantage requires that the company make a decision...about the type of advantage it wants to obtain and the extent to which it wants to obtain it." He also wrote: "The two basic types of competitive advantage combined with the range of activities leads to 3 generic strategies to perform better than the average in an industry: cost leadership, differentiation and focus. The focus strategy has two variants: cost-focused and differentiation-focused."[107]
Value chain
Porter's description of the value chain refers to the chain of activities or processes that an organization performs to deliver a product or service with value to the market. This includes functions such as logistics, operations, marketing, sales and service, supported by systems and technological infrastructure. By aligning the value chain with the organization's strategy in a coherent manner, a company can achieve a competitive advantage. Porter also wrote that strategy is a configuration of activities that differentiate a company from its rivals. A robust competitive position is derived from a set of activities that are coherently aligned.[115].
Porter wrote in 1985: "Competitive advantage cannot be understood by viewing a company as a single entity. You must look at the activities the company performs in designing, producing, advertising, and delivering its product. Each of these activities can contribute to the company's cost position and create differentiation... the value chain separates the company into its most relevant strategic activities in order to understand cost behavior as well as existing and potential sources of differentiation."[5]
Essential competence
Gary Hamel and C. K. Prahalad described the idea of core competency in 1990, the idea that every organization has some capability in which it excels and that the business should focus on opportunities in that area, letting others go or using a subcontracting model. The core competency is difficult to duplicate as it involves the skills and coordination of people across a wide variety of functional areas or processes used to deliver value to the customer. By using outsourcing, companies expand the concept of a value chain, with some elements inside the entity and others outside.[116] Core competency is part of a branch of strategy called the resource-based view, which postulates that if activities are strategic as indicated in the value chain, then the company's capabilities to learn or adapt are also strategic.[5].
Business theory
Peter Drucker wrote in 1994 about the "Theory of Business", which represents the key assumptions of a company's strategy. These assumptions are classified into 3 categories: a) the external ecosystem, including society, market, customers and technology. b) the mission of the organization and c) the core competencies necessary to fulfill the mission. He wrote that a valid business theory has four specifications: 1) Assumptions about the ecosystem, mission, and core competencies must fit reality. 2) Assumptions in all 3 areas must be compatible with each other. 3) The business theory must be understood and known throughout the organization and 4) the business theory must be constantly tested.
He wrote that organizations get into trouble when the assumptions representing theory no longer fit reality. He used an example of retail department stores, where his business theory assumed that people who could spend at department stores would do so. However, many shoppers abandoned department stores and preferred to go to specialty stores outside of shopping centers when time became the main factor.
Drucker described business theory as a hypothesis and a discipline. He recommended systematic diagnostics, monitoring and testing of assumptions to maintain competitiveness.[117][118].
References
[1] ↑ a b c d e Fred R. David. Conceptos de administración estratégica. Decimocuarta edición. PEARSON EDUCACIÓN, México, 2013. p. 10 - 350.
[2] ↑ L. WHEELEN, THOMAS y HUNGER, J. DAVID. Administración estratégica y política de negocios. Décima edición PEARSON EDUCACIÓN, México, 2007. p. 3 - 20.
[3] ↑ 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 Journal 28 (9): 935-955. doi:10.1002/smj.615. Consultado el 22 de octubre de 2012.: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/smj.615/pdf
[4] ↑ a b c d e f g Mintzberg, Henry and, Quinn, James Brian (1996). The Strategy Process:Concepts, Contexts, Cases. Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-234030-4.
[16] ↑ 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.: https://es.wikipedia.org//www.worldcat.org/oclc/537817
[33] ↑ Collins, James and Porras, Jerry Built to Last, Harper Books, New York, 1994.
[34] ↑ a b de Geus, Arie (1997). The Living Company. Harvard Business School Press. ISBN 978-0-87584-782-5.
[35] ↑ Mulcaster, W.R. "Three Strategic Frameworks," Business Strategy Series, Vol 10, No 1, pp 68 – 75, 2009.
[36] ↑ Nadeem Khan. Nada Korac-Kakabadse. Collaborative Corporate Strategy Research Programmes (C.C.S.R.P.) a Conceptual Integrative Strategic Framework for a Practical Research Agenda. Open Journal of Business and Management > Vol.1 No.3, October 2013.
[37] ↑ a b PAULA ANDREA LÓPEZ LÓPEZ. UNA APROXIMACIÓN AL CAMPO DE ESTUDIO DEL PENSAMIENTO ESTRATÉGICO DESDE LAS PUBLICACIONES ACADÉMICAS: DE LO PREDECIBLE A LO EMERGENTE. rev.fac.cienc.econ., Vol. XXI (1), Junio 2013, 217-241.
[38] ↑ a b Blanca Johanna Pérez Fernández. Claudia Patricia Rojas Martínez. Aproximación a las escuelas de pensamiento estratégico y su evolución a la estrategia empresarial.
[39] ↑ a b Silvera, R. V. (2016). ¿Son las escuelas de Mintzberg una configuración secuencial de la evolución
[44] ↑ Drucker, Peter The Age of Discontinuity, Heinemann, London, 1969 (also Harper and Row, New York, 1968).
[45] ↑ Toffler, Alvin Future Shock, Bantom Books, New York, 1970.
[46] ↑ Toffler, Alvin The Third Wave, Bantom Books, New York, 1980.
[47] ↑ Abell, Derek “Strategic windows”, Journal of Marketing, Vol 42, pg 21–28, July 1978.
[48] ↑ Tichy, Noel Managing Strategic Change: Technical, political, and cultural dynamics, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1983.
[49] ↑ Handy, Charles The Age of Unreason, Hutchinson, London, 1989.
[50] ↑ Pascale, Richard Managing on the Edge, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1990.
[51] ↑ Slywotzky, Adrian Value Migration, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, 1996.
[52] ↑ Slywotzky, A., Morrison, D., Moser, T., Mundt, K., and Quella, J. Profit Patterns, Time Business (Random House), New York, 1999, ISBN 0-8129-3118-1.
[53] ↑ Christensen, Clayton "The Innovator's Dilemma," Harvard Business School Press, Boston, 1997.
[54] ↑ Markides, Constantinos “A dynamic view of strategy” Sloan Management Review, vol 40, spring 1999, pp55–63.
[55] ↑ Moncrieff, J. “Is strategy making a difference?” Long Range Planning Review, vol 32, no2, pp273–276.
[58] ↑ Hamel, Gary Leading the Revolution, Plume (Penguin Books), New York, 2002.
[59] ↑ Deming, W.E. Quality, Productivity, and Competitive Position, MIT Center for Advanced Engineering, Cambridge Mass., 1982.
[60] ↑ Juran, J.M. Juran on Quality, Free Press, New York, 1992.
[61] ↑ Kearney, A.T. Total Quality Management: A business process perspective, Kearney Pree Inc, 1992.
[62] ↑ Crosby, P. Quality is Free, McGraw Hill, New York, 1979.
[63] ↑ Feignbaum, A. Total Quality Control, 3rd edition, McGraw Hill, Maidenhead, 1990.
[64] ↑ Heskett, J. Managing in the Service Economy, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, 1986.
[65] ↑ Davidow, W. and Uttal, B. Total Customer Service, Harper Perennial Books, New York, 1990.
[66] ↑ Schlesinger, L. and Heskett, J. "Customer Satisfaction is rooted in Employee Satisfaction," Harvard Business Review, November–December 1991.
[67] ↑ Berry, L. On Great Service, Free Press, New York, 1995.
[68] ↑ Kingman-Brundage, J. “Service Mapping” pp 148–163 In Scheuing, E. and Christopher, W. (eds.), The Service Quality Handbook, Amacon, New York, 1993.
[69] ↑ Sewell, C. and Brown, P. Customers for Life, Doubleday Currency, New York, 1990.
[70] ↑ Reichheld, F. The Loyalty Effect, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, 1996.
[71] ↑ Gronroos, C. “From marketing mix to relationship marketing: towards a paradigm shift in marketing”, Management Decision, Vol. 32, No. 2, pp 4–32, 1994.
[72] ↑ Reichheld, F. and Sasser, E. “Zero defects: Quality comes to services”, Harvard Business Review, September/October 1990.
[73] ↑ Hammer, M. and Champy, J. Reengineering the Corporation, Harper Business, New York, 1993.
[74] ↑ Lester, R. Made in America, MIT Commission on Industrial Productivity, Boston, 1989.
[75] ↑ Camp, R. Benchmarking: The search for industry best practices that lead to superior performance, American Society for Quality Control, Quality Press, Milwaukee, Wis., 1989.
[76] ↑ Rumelt, Richard P. (2011). Good Strategy/Bad Strategy. Crown Business. ISBN 978-0-307-88623-1.
[77] ↑ Peters, Tom; Waterman, Robert H. (1982). In Search of Excellence: Lessons From America's Best-Run Companies. p. 289. Management By Wandering Around en Google Libros.: https://archive.org/details/insearchofexcell00thom
[78] ↑ IBM, Capitalizing on Complexity: Insights from the Global Chief Executive Office Study, July 2010.
[79] ↑ Mckeown, Max, The Strategy Book, FT Prentice Hall, 2012.
[80] ↑ Barnard, Chester The function of the executive, Harvard University Press, Cambridge Mass, 1938, page 235.
[81] ↑ Mintzberg, Henry The Nature of Managerial Work, Harper and Roe, New York, 1973, page 38.
[82] ↑ Kotter, John The general manager, Free Press, New York, 1982.
[83] ↑ Isenberg, Daniel “How managers think”, Harvard Business Review, November–December 1984.
[84] ↑ Isenberg, Daniel Strategic Opportunism: Managing under uncertainty, Harvard Graduate School of Business, Working paper 9-786-020, Boston, January 1986.
[85] ↑ Zaleznik, Abraham “Managers and Leaders: Are they different?”, Harvard Business Review, May–June 1977.
[86] ↑ Zaleznik, Abraham The Managerial Mistique, Harper and Row, New York, 1989.
[87] ↑ Corner, P. Kinicki, A. and Keats, B. “Integrating organizational and individual information processing perspectives on choice”, Organizational Science, vol. 3, 1994.
[88] ↑ J. Scott Armstrong & Kesten C. Greene (2007). «Competitor-oriented Objectives: The Myth of Market Share». International Journal of Business 12 (1): 116-134. ISSN 1083-4346. Archivado desde el original el 22 de junio de 2010. - [https://web.archive.org/web/20100622023252/http://marketing.wharton.upenn.edu/documents/research/CompOrientPDF%2011-27%20(2).pdf](https://web.archive.org/web/20100622023252/http://marketing.wharton.upenn.edu/documents/research/CompOrientPDF%2011-27%20(2).pdf)
[89] ↑ Barney, J. (1991) “Firm Resources and Sustainable Competitive Advantage”, Journal of Management, vol 17, no 1, 1991.
[90] ↑ Pine, J. and Gilmore, J. “The Four Faces of Mass Customization”, Harvard Business Review, Vol 75, No 1, Jan–Feb 1997.
[91] ↑ Pine, J. and Gilmore, J. (1999) The Experience Economy, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, 1999.
[92] ↑ Evens, P. and Wurster, T. “Strategy and the New Economics of Information”, Harvard Business Review, Sept/Oct 1997.
[93] ↑ Schuck, Gloria “Intelligent Workers: A new pedagogy for the high tech workplace”, Organizational Dynamics, Autumn 1985.
[95] ↑ a b c d e f g Kiechel, Walter (2010). The Lords of Strategy. Harvard Business Press. ISBN 978-1-59139-782-3.
[96] ↑ Buzzell, R. and Gale, B. The PIMS Principles: Linking Strategy to Performance, Free Press, New York, 1987.
[97] ↑ Schumacher, E.F. Small is Beautiful: a Study of Economics as if People Mattered, ISBN 0-06-131778-0 (also ISBN 0-88179-169-5).
[98] ↑ Woo, C. and Cooper, A. “The surprising case for low market share”, Harvard Business Review, November–December 1982, pg 106–113.
[99] ↑ 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.
[100] ↑ Traverso, D. Outsmarting Goliath, Bloomberg Press, Princeton, 2000.
One of the key strategic roles of functional and general managers is to use all their knowledge, energy and enthusiasm to provide strategic leadership to their subordinates and develop a high-performing organization. Several authors have identified some key characteristics of good leaders that generate high performance:.
vision, eloquence and congruence;
articulation of the business model;
commitment;
be well informed;
willingness to delegate and grant decision-making powers;
cunning use of power.
emotional intelligence.[10].
Strategists are primarily responsible for the success or failure of a company. This role can be filled by individuals with different titles, such as CEO, president, owner, chairman of the board, executive director, chancellor, dean, or entrepreneur. Their job consists of collecting, analyzing and structuring information relevant to the organization. They monitor industry and competitive trends, develop predictive models and scenario analyses, evaluate corporate and divisional performance, identify opportunities in emerging markets, detect business threats, and design innovative action plans.
Strategic planners typically occupy high-level positions in management and typically have decision-making authority within the company. The CEO is the most prominent and visible strategist. Any manager who is in charge of a unit or division, is responsible for financial results, or has authority over a significant portion of the company is considered a strategic manager.
Strategists vary depending on the characteristics of the company and these nuances must be considered when designing, executing and evaluating strategies. Their approach may be influenced by their personal beliefs, which may lead them to rule out certain types of strategies. In addition, they present differences in attitudes, values, ethics, risk tolerance, commitment to social responsibility or profitability, short and long-term goals, as well as their management style.[1].
Communication is the key to successful strategic management. Through participation in the process, that is, through dialogue and participation, both managers and employees commit to supporting the organization.
The goal is to get all managers and employees to understand and commit to the organization. Understanding is arguably the greatest benefit of strategic management, followed by commitment. When employees understand what the company does and why it does it, they tend to feel part of it and become actively involved in its success, especially if they recognize how their compensation is linked to the organization's performance. By understanding and supporting the business mission, objectives and strategies, managers and employees can develop a high level of creativity and innovation.[1].
Synthetically, the process:.
The strategic management process consists of three interconnected and integrated phases:
Execution or implementation of the strategy: implies actions in practice in reality.
Supervision and strategic adjustments or evaluation and control: monitor progress, evaluate performance and make necessary adjustments based on results, changes in the environment and new opportunities.
Boards of directors have the responsibility of supervising and evaluating strategic management for the benefit of shareholders. To do this, they must fulfill four key functions:
Strategic management should not become a self-sustaining bureaucratic system, but rather a dynamic process of learning and analysis that allows managers and employees to understand key strategic problems and evaluate viable alternatives to solve them. It should not become a rigid, predictable or excessively formal practice, but should encourage flexibility and adaptation. It is essential that strategic decisions are based on analysis supported by data and not on figures that simply justify pre-existing arguments. An essential role of strategists is to facilitate continuous learning and organizational change.
For strategic management to be effective, it is crucial to maintain an open and receptive mindset. The willingness to consider new information, perspectives, ideas and opportunities should be a principle shared by all members of the organization. Strategists, such as CEOs, presidents, business owners, and government leaders, must commit to listening to and understanding their managers deeply enough to express their views accurately. Likewise, managers and employees must be able to describe strategists' positions accurately. This level of alignment fosters both understanding and learning within the organization.
Since no company has unlimited resources, it cannot implement all the strategies that could be beneficial. Organizations cannot take on unlimited amounts of debt or issue unrestricted equity to increase their capital, forcing them to make strategic decisions that prioritize some initiatives over others. A common mistake among managers is trying to execute too many strategies simultaneously, which disperses resources and compromises the viability of all of them.
Strategic decisions require finding a balance between short- and long-term objectives, between profit maximization and increasing value for shareholders. Furthermore, these decisions involve ethical dilemmas and subjective judgments that can affect the company's competitive position and profitability. Although factors such as risk aversion, social responsibility, and organizational culture influence strategy formulation, organizations should strive to maintain as much objectivity as possible when evaluating these qualitative elements. Today, many companies recognize that the proper use of strategic management concepts and tools can significantly improve the quality of their decisions.
Stages of the Strategic Administration process
1. Strategic formulation or planning
The formulation of a strategy involves analyzing the ecosystem in which the organization operates, and then making a series of strategic decisions about how the organization will compete. It ends with a series of goals or objectives and measures that the organization follows.
Strategic planning is analytical in nature and refers to the formalized procedures for producing information and analyzes used for strategic thinking, which synthesizes information and results in a strategy. It also refers to the control mechanisms used to implement the strategy once it has been determined. In other words, strategic planning occurs around the process of strategy formation.[4]Some strategic plans sometimes become strategic purposes, which is a plan that unites the organization around an unalterable commitment—often obsessive—to do whatever is necessary in order to acquire resources and achieve goals.[11].
Porter wrote in 1980 that formulating a competitive strategy includes consideration of key elements:
The first two elements are related to internal factors of the company, while the last is related to external factors.[12].
There are many analytical schemes that attempt to organize the strategic planning process. Some examples are:
Some strategists use scenario planning techniques to manage changes. The way Peter Schwartz stated it in 1991 is that the results cannot be known and therefore the sources of competitive advantages cannot be predetermined.[13] The business ecosystem changes rapidly and is uncertain, that is what scenario planning is used for. In this technique, different scenarios with different results are developed, their implications and the possibility of their occurrence are evaluated. According to Pierre Wack, scenario planning is about perspective and not just formal analysis of numbers.[14].
Some business planners are beginning to use a complexity theory approach. Complexity can be seen as chaos with a pinch of order. Chaos theory analyzes turbulent systems that quickly tend to disorder. Complexity is not entirely unpredictable, it involves multiple agents interacting in such a way that a certain structure appears.
Strategic thinking involves the generation and application of unique business perspectives with the intention of creating competitive advantages for a company. It involves challenging the assumptions that underpin the company's current strategy and value proposition. Mintzberg wrote in 1994 that it is more about synthesis (connecting the dots) than analysis (finding the dots). It is about "capturing what the manager learns from various sources and synthesizing that information into a vision that sets the direction the business should follow." Mintzberg commented that strategic thinking is the critical part of formulating a strategy.[15].
General Andre Beaufre wrote in 1963 that strategic thinking "is a mental process, which must be able to synthesize both psychological and material information. The strategist must have a great capacity for analysis and synthesis; analysis is necessary to construct the information on which he will make his diagnosis using synthesis. - and the diagnosis itself is equivalent to a choice between alternatives of action."[16]
Will Multaster[17] argued that, although much research and creative thinking has been devoted to the generation of alternative strategies, very little work has been done on what influences the quality of strategic decision making and the effectiveness with which they are implemented. The management forces scheme identifies 11 forces that must be incorporated into the decision-making and strategic implementation processes. The 11 forces are: Time; Opposition forces; Policy; Perception; Holistic effects; Added value; Incentives; Learning capabilities; Opportunity cost; Risk and Style.
They are based on the ecosystem landscape and are answers to strategic questions about how the organization will compete, for example:
The answers to these and many other questions result in the organization's strategy and a series of short and long-term objectives.[4].
That is, here the strategic vision, mission, and essential values of the organization will be developed.
Strategy is understood as "the determination of the basic long-term objectives of a company as well as the distribution of the resources necessary to achieve those objectives."[19] It functions to focus effort, define or clarify an organization, and provide consistency or guidance in response to the environment in which it works.[20].
That is, it provides direction to the company that involves organizational objectives, development policies and plans designed to achieve the objectives, and deals with the distribution of resources to implement the plans.
Michael Porter identifies three principles as part of the strategic game:
Dr. Vladimir Kvint defines strategy as "a system for finding, formulating and developing a doctrine that ensures long-term success."[22].
Corporate strategy involves answering a key question: "What business should we be in?" and business strategy involves the question "How should we compete in this business?"[23].
While strategies are established to set direction, focus efforts, define or clarify the organization, and provide consistency or guidance in response to the environment, there are also certain elements that are minimized or even excluded. Mintzberg wrote in 1987: "Strategy is a categorization scheme by which incoming stimuli can be ordered and delivered." A strategy guides the organization in a certain way or in a particular direction, that direction does not always coincide and fit into the business ecosystem. Mintzberg commented: "Strategy is a force that resists change, not encourages it."[24]
In 2000, Gary Hamel coined the term strategic convergence to explain the limited range of strategies used by rivals in different circumstances. He lamented that successful strategies are imitated by companies that do not understand how strategy works. Woodhouse and Collingridge suggested that the essence of being "strategic" lies in the ability to engage in intelligent "trial and error" rather than strictly adhering to strategic plans. The strategy should be seen as a general guide rather than a pattern with specific steps.[27] Means are just as likely to determine ends as ends are to determine means.[28] The objectives that an organization wishes to pursue are limited by the feasibility of their implementation and, in turn, the feasibility of implementation depends on the availability of resources.
The managerial purpose of setting objectives is to translate the vision and mission into specific performance objectives. Well-established objectives are specific, quantifiable or measurable, and contain a deadline for their achievement. Objectives are performance goals of an organization; That is, they are the results and products that the administration wishes to achieve. Two very different types of performance goals are required: those that refer to financial performance and those that refer to strategic performance. Financialobjectives communicate management's financial goals (e.g. x percentage increase in annual revenue). Strategic objectives refer to the marketing position and competitive vitality of the company (e.g. Gain x percentage of market share).[11].
Policies are the mechanisms designed to achieve annual objectives. They consist of guidelines, standards and procedures that support efforts to achieve these goals. Its main function is to guide decision making and manage recurring situations within the organization.
Generally, policies are developed based on different areas, such as administration, marketing, finance and accounting, production and operations, research and development, as well as information systems management. They can be established at the corporate level, applying to all divisions of the company, or focus on a specific division. Likewise, they can adapt to different functional levels and regulate certain operational activities or specific departments.
Like annual objectives, policies play a fundamental role in the implementation of strategies, since they define the organization's expectations regarding its employees and managers. Its application promotes coherence and coordination both within and between departments.[1].
2. Implementation
Implementation is the second strategic management process which involves decisions regarding organizational resources designated to carry out the strategy. It results in the way resources are structured, leadership agreements, communication, incentives and monitoring mechanisms to record progress.[4].
Then, once the strategy is determined, various goals are established to chart the course of the organization, measure performance, and monitor the implementation of the strategy. Tools like the Balanced Scorecard and strategy maps help crystallize strategy. They relate key measures of success and performance in the strategy. These tools measure financial, organizational, marketing, production, and innovation development. Advances in information technologies and data availability allow more information to be collected about performance, thus allowing managers to have a much more analytical perspective of their businesses.
The strategy can also be organized as a series of initiatives or programs, each referring to one or more projects. Various monitoring and feedback mechanisms such as meetings between division managers can also be implemented.
Executing day-to-day operations in the company is known as operational management or specific terms for each department such as: logistics management or marketing management, which are carried out once the strategic management decisions have been implemented.[4].
3. Control and evaluation
A key component to strategic management is evaluation. There are different ways to evaluate whether strategic priorities and plans have been achieved. One method is Robert Stake's responsive evaluation.[29] Responsive evaluation provides a humanistic and naturalistic approach to program evaluation. Beyond objective evaluation, responsive evaluation considers the context and history of the program, as well as the conditions and transactions between participants.
Strategic issues
Contenido
Varias cuestiones con implicancia estratégica han surgido en la industria a través de los años. Estos incluyen: el cambio del modelo enfocado en la producción al modelo enfocado en el cliente, el incremento en el uso del modelo de auto-servicio para reducir los costos, cambios en la cadena de valor o en la estructura corporativa debido a la globalización y el internet.
Una definición de globalización hace referencia a la integración de las economías debido a la innovación tecnológica y en cadena de suministro. Las compañías ya no requieren estar integradas verticalmente (diseñar, producir, ensamblar y vender). En otras palabras, la cadena de valor de un producto puede no estar del todo dentro de una sola compañía. Muchas compañías eligen utilizar el método de subcontratación u outsourcing para los procesos de producción y mantienen únicamente los procesos de diseño y ventas dentro de la organización.[21].
Para una empresa, la competitividad se define como la capacidad de poder suministrar un bien (producto o servicio) de una cierta calidad a un precio menor que el de las empresas con las cuales compite.
El internet ha empoderado a los consumidores y ha conectado a compradores con vendedores reduciendo drásticamente los costos por transacción, creando plataformas mucho más robustas para comprar y vender bienes y servicios. Algunos ejemplos son las páginas de subastas en línea, servicios de citas por internet o vendedores de libros. En muchas industrias, el internet ha alterado el panorama competitivo. Los servicios que solían ser ofrecidos dentro de una misma organización ahora son cubiertos por terceros.[30].
El autor Phillip Evans dijo en 2013 que las redes están retando las jerarquías tradicionales. Las cadenas de valor también se están rompiendo. La información es libre o tiene un muy bajo costo y por lo tanto es muy difícil que compañías integradas de manera vertical se mantengan intactas. Evans dijo que la competencia está evolucionando de un modelo vertical a uno horizontal. Utilizó Wikipedia como un ejemplo de una red que ha desafiado el modelo de negocio tradicional de la enciclopedia.[31] Evans predijo la emergencia de una nueva forma de organización industrial llamada un "stack" o montón en la cual los competidores dependen de una plataforma común a partir de la cual construyen su propia cadena de valor.
La creatividad es la capacidad de crear nuevas ideas o conceptos, de nuevas asociaciones entre ideas y conceptos conocidos, que habitualmente producen soluciones originales. La creatividad es sinónimo del "pensamiento original", la "imaginación constructiva", el "pensamiento divergente" o el "pensamiento creativo".
La innovación es un proceso que introduce novedades y que se refiere a modificar elementos ya existentes con el fin de mejorarlos, aunque también es posible en la implementación de elementos totalmente nuevos. En el sentido estricto, por otro lado, se dice que de las ideas solo pueden resultar innovadoras luego de que ellas se implementen como nuevos productos, servicios, o procedimientos que realmente encuentren una aplicación exitosa, imponiéndose en el mercado a través de la difusión "Difusión (negocios)").
El conflicto es una situación en la cual dos o más personas con intereses distintos entran en confrontación, oposición o emprenden acciones mutuamente antagonistas, con el objetivo de dañar, eliminar a la parte rival o arrebatarle poder "Poder (social y político)") de algún tipo en favor de la propia persona o grupo.
La negociación es un proceso de discusión que se establece entre las partes, por medio de representantes si son grupos, y cuyo objetivo es el de llegar a un acuerdo aceptable para todos.
Un tema en la competencia estratégica ha sido la tendencia al autoservicio. Gracias a la tecnología el cliente toma un rol que previamente era desempeñado por un trabajador para reducir los costos.[21] Algunos ejemplos son:.
Characteristics of successful companies
James Collins and Jerry Porras spent years conducting empirical research into what makes a successful company. Six years of research resulted in a key principle behind 19 successful companies they studied: They all foster and preserve a core ideology that governs the company. Although strategies and tactics change daily, companies always maintained the same values. These core values encourage employees to build an organization that lasts. In Built to Last (1994) they explain that the objectives of short-term profits, cost cutting and restructuring do not stimulate employees dedicated to building a company that lasts.[33] In 2000 Collins described the attitude of Silicon Valley companies, a culture where technological change inhibits long-term approaches.
Arie de Geus (1997) conducted a similar study and obtained similar results.[34] He identified 4 key characteristics that have thrived for 50 years or more:.
A company with these key characteristics is called a living company because it has the ability to sustain itself. If a company emphasizes knowledge rather than finance, and sees itself as a community of people, it has the potential to be large and last for decades. An organization is an organic entity capable of learning and creating its own processes and goals.[34].
Will Mulcaster[35] suggests that companies encourage dialogue around the following questions:
Schools and approaches
Structure of strategy studies
The definition of strategy in academic literature is addressed from three approaches: its historical development, theoretical debates and its analysis in empirical publications.
Historically, strategy has been understood as a set of actions or plans designed to achieve advantage for the actors involved.
The theoretical debate oscillates between strategy as structured planning and strategy as a dynamic process in constant evolution.
The study of strategy has been supported by numerous academic publications in prestigious journals, where real cases and empirical data are examined. These studies have allowed us to validate or refute various definitions and strategic approaches.
Empirical studies have addressed topics such as:
Empirical studies have made it possible to contrast strategic theories with real evidence, providing nuances and adjustments to existing models.[36].
Henry Mintzberg's classification: three perspectives and ten schools
Mintzberg, Ahlstrand and Lampel (1998) structure strategic thinking in three paradigmatic perspectives, under which ten schools are deployed that range from rationalist models to adaptive perspectives:
Epistemological perspectives
According to Martinet (1996, 1997):
Emphasizes strategic intentionality, where objectives guide actions. Example: Kaplan and Norton's (1996) balanced scorecard, which translates vision into operational metrics.
Examines the interaction of actors (e.g., managers, employees, unions) in the formation of strategies. Use ethnographic methods to understand informal power dynamics.
Study how strategic discourse (e.g., missions, slogans) shapes identities and legitimizes decisions. Foucault (1975) influences this critical look at symbolic power.
Inspired by biology, it analyzes organizational symbioses (e.g., industrial clusters "Cluster (industry)") and competition for scarce resources. Related to the theory of complex systems.
Strategic dualism.
According to Carrance (1986) and Ramanantsoa (1997):.
Based on the optimization of resources, it assumes perfect information and absolute rationality. Quantitative models (e.g., portfolio analysis) dominate this school.
Recognizes cognitive and political limitations. Cyert and March (1963) introduce the concept of bounded rationality, where decisions are satisfactory, not optimal.
Sociological schools.
According to Whittington (2002):
Aligned with shareholder capitalism, it prioritizes maximizing value for shareholders. Example: cost reduction strategies to increase dividends.
Influenced by Darwin, she maintains that the market selects fittest organizations. Hamel and Prahalad (1994) criticize this passive approach, promoting proactive reinvention.
It combines logical incrementalism (Quinn, 1980) with political negotiation. Strategies emerge from gradual adjustments, not master plans.
Contextualize the strategy in cultural systems (e.g.: Asian vs. Western capitalisms). Success depends on aligning with social norms, not just financial metrics.
Pragmatic schools.
According to Van der Heijden (1998):
Use predictive models (e.g., Monte Carlo simulations) to reduce uncertainty. Dominant in stable sectors (e.g. utilities).
Embrace complexity and chaos, promoting rapid experimentation (e.g., tech startups). Related to the pivot effect in lean models.
Integrates creative thinking and action, through cycles of reflection-practice (e.g., agile methodologies). Nonaka (1995) exemplifies this with the SECI model (Socialization - Externalization - Combination - Internalization).[37][38][39].
Approaches
Strategy like:
In 1990, Peter Senge popularized the notion of a "learning organization."[40] The theory is that obtaining and analyzing information is an essential requirement for a business to be successful in the information age. To do this, Senge commented that an organization must be structured in such a way that:[41].
Senge identified 5 disciplines of a learning organization:
Geoffrey Moore (1991) and R. Frank and P. Cook[42] also detected a change in the nature of competition. Markets driven by technical standards or "network effects" can give dominant companies near-monopoly status.[43] It is also true in industries where interoperability requires compatibility between users. Some examples are Internet Explorer and Amazon who were pioneers and leaders in their respective industries. The case of Internet Explorer's decline demonstrates how dominance may only be temporary.
In 1969, Peter Drucker coined the phrase Age of Discontinuity to describe the way change affects people's lives.[44] In an era of continuity, one can attempt to predict the future based on events in the past. But according to Drucker, we are now in an era of discontinuity and it is not effective to try to extrapolate. He identifies 4 sources of discontinuity: technologies, globalization, cultural pluralism and knowledge capital.
In 1970, Alvin Toffler in Future Shock described a trend toward accelerated rates of change.[45] He illustrated how social and technical phenomena are shorter in duration with each generation and questioned society's ability to handle the confusion and anxiety this can cause. In the past, periods of change were always followed by times of stability. This allowed society to assimilate the previous change before a new one occurred. But these periods of stability disappeared at the end of the century. In 1988 in The Third Wave, Toffler characterized this constant change as the third phase of civilization (the first two phases were the agricultural wave and the industrial wave).[46].
In 1978, Derek F. Abell (Abell, D. 1978) described "strategic windows" and highlighted the importance of timing any strategy well. This led some strategists to use planned obsolescence within their strategies.[47].
In 1983, Noel Tichy wrote that we are creatures of habit and tend to repeat what we feel comfortable with.[48] He wrote that it is a trap that limits our creativity and stops us from exploring new ideas. He developed a systematic method for managing change that involves looking at any new situation from 3 angles: technical and production, political and resource distribution, and corporate culture.
In 1989, Charles Handy identified two types of change.[49] "Strategic drift" is a gradual change that occurs so subtly that it is imperceptible until it is too late. On the other hand, "transformational change" is sudden and radical. It is typically caused by discontinuities in the business ecosystem. The point at which a new trend is created was called the "strategic inflection point" by Andy Grove. Turning points can be subtle or radical.
Historical development
La disciplina de la gestión estratégica se originó en las décadas de 1950 y de 1960. Entre los numerosos contribuidores, los más influyentes fueron Peter Drucker, Philip Selznick, Alfred Chandler, Igor Ansoff, y Bruce Henderson.[5] La disciplina surge de pensamientos anteriores y textos sobre estrategia que datan a miles de años atrás. Previo a 1960, el término "estrategia" era usado principalmente con relación a la guerra o la política, pero no a los negocios.[95] Muchas compañías construyeron funciones de planeación estratégica para desarrollar y ejecutar los procesos de formulación e implementación durante la década de 1960.[101].
Peter Drucker fue un teórico de la gestión y autor de docenas de libros con una trayectoria de 5 décadas. Realizó preguntas estratégicas fundamentales en un libro de 1954 titulado The Practice of Management(La práctica de la Administración) escribiendo: "...la primera responsabilidad de la alta gerencia es realizar la pregunta '¿Qué es nuestro negocio?' y asegurarse de estudiarla cuidadosamente y responderla correctamente." Escribió que la respuesta era determinada por el cliente. Recomendó 8 áreas en las cuales se deben colocar objetivos; posicionamiento en el mercado, innovación, productividad, recursos físicos y financieros, desempeño y actitud de los trabajadores, rentabilidad, desempeño y desarrollo de la gerencia y responsabilidad pública.[102].
En 1957, Philip Selznick utilizó inicialmente el término "competencia distintiva" refiriéndose a como la Marina (Navy) se trataba de diferenciar de los otros servicios.[5] También formalizó la idea de combinar los factores internos de la organización con las circunstancias externas.[103] Esta idea fundamental fue desarrollada más a profundidad por Kenneth R. Andrews en 1963 en lo que conocemos como análisis FODA en el cual se evalúan las fortalezas y debilidades de la compañía así como las oportunidades y amenazas en el ecosistema de negocio.[5].
Alfred Chandler reconoció la importancia de coordinar la actividad gerencial bajo una sola estrategia. Las interacciones entre departamentos eran manejadas lipicamente por directivos que transmitían la información entre departamentos. Chandler resaltó la importancia de tomar una perspectiva a largo plazo cuando se mira hacia el futuro. En su obra de 1962 Strategy and Structure, o Estrategia y Estructura, Chandler mostró que una estrategia coordinada a largo plazo era necesaria para darle estructura, dirección y enfoque a una compañía. Lo dice de manera concisa “La estructura sigue a la estrategia.” Chandler escribió que:.
Igor Ansoff trabajó con base en las obras de Chandler, agregando conceptos e inventando vocabulario. Desarrolló una matriz que compara las estrategias para la penetración en el mercado, el desarrollo de los productos, el desarrollo del mercado así como la diversificación. (Matriz de Ansoff). En su obra de 1965 Corporate Strategy, o Estrategia Corporativa, desarrolló un análisis de brechas (Gap) para clarificar la brecha entre la realidad actual y los objetivos y para desarrollar lo que llamó “acciones de reducción de brecha”.[104] Ansoff escribió que le gestión estratégica tenía 3 partes: planeación estratégica; la habilidad de una empresa de convertir sus planes en realidad; y la habilidad de una empresa de manejar su propia resistencia interna al cambio.[105].
Bruce Henderson, fundador del Boston Consulting Group, escribió acerca del concepto de curva de experiencia en 1968. La curva de experiencia se refiere a una hipótesis de que los costos de producción por unidad se reducen entre 20-30% cada que la producción total se duplica. Esto apoyó al argumento de alcanzar mayor porción del mercado y economías de escala.[106].
Porter escribió en 1980 que las compañías debían tomar decisiones acerca de su alcance y del tipo de ventaja competitiva que deseaban tener; costo menor o diferenciación. La idea de la estrategia dirigida a ciertas industrias y clientes en particular con una oferta con diferenciación se desarrolló a partir de la estrategia influenciada por la curva de aprendizaje, el cual se enfocaba en mayor escala y menor costo.[12] Porter ajustó el paradigma de estrategia de nuevo en 1985, escribiendo que un desempeño superior de los procesos y actividades de una organización como parte de su cadena de valor es la base de la ventaja competitiva.[107].
En 1988, Henry Mintzberg describió definiciones y perspectivas del término estrategia reflejadas tanto en la investigación académica como en la práctica.[108][109] Examinó el proceso estratégico y concluyó que era mucho más fluido e impredecible de lo que pensaba la gente por esta razón concluyó que hay 5 tipos diferentes de estrategias:.
Michael Porter definió estrategia en 1980 como "... fórmula extensa de cómo un negocio va a competir, cuáles deberían ser sus objetivos, qué políticas serán necesarias para llegar a esos objetivos" y la "...combinación de los fines para los cuales trabaja la organización y los medios con los cuales llegará ahí." Comentó que "La esencia de formular una estrategia competitiva está en relacionar a una compañía con su ecosistema."[12].
Shift in focus from production to marketing
There was also a change in how companies competed, specifically a change from a production focus to a market focus. The concept of strategy that predominated until the 1950s was to create a product with high technical quality. If you created a product that worked well and lasted well, it was assumed that you would not have profitability difficulties. This was known as production orientation. Henry Ford famously said about the Model T car: "A customer can have his car any color he wants, as long as he wants it to be black."[110]
Management theorist Peter F Drucker wrote in 1954 that the customer was what defines the type of business an organization is in.[18] In 1960, Theodore Levitt argued that instead of making products and then trying to sell them to the customer, businesses should start with the customer, find out what they want, and then produce for them. The fallacy of production orientation was also referred to as marketing myopia in an article of the same name by Levitt.[111].
Over time, the customer became the force behind strategic decisions in business. This marketing concept has been reformulated under different names such as marketing orientation, customer orientation, customer intimacy, customer focus, market focus, etc.
Jim Collins wrote in 1997 that the strategic framework expands by focusing on why a company exists rather than what the company does. In 2001, he recommended that organizations define themselves based on 3 key questions:
Nature of the strategy
In 1985, Professor Ellen Earle-Chaffee summarized what he thought were the main elements of strategic management theory, writing that strategic management:[23].
Chaffee wrote that there were 3 strategy models, which were not mutually exclusive:.
Complementary historical analysis
El progreso de la estrategia desde 1960 puede ser trazado desde una variedad de conceptos introducidos por académicos y consultores. Estos reflejan un enface en costos, competencia y clientes. Las industrias y organizaciones se analizaron en unidades de negocio, actividades, procesos e individuos en búsqueda de fuentes para generar una ventaja competitiva.[95].
SWOT Analysis
In the 1960s, the Harvard Business School business policy course included the concept of bringing together a company's internal strengths and weaknesses with its ecosystem (external opportunities and threats) in the context of its objectives. This scheme is known as SWOT. Kenneth R. Andrews helped popularize the scheme during a conference in 1963 and it continues to be used frequently today.[5].
Experience curve
The experience curve was developed by the Boston Consulting Group in 1966.[95] It is a hypothesis that the total number of costs per unit is reduced by 15-25% each time cumulative production doubles. It has been shaped empirically by some companies throughout various points in their history.[113] Cost reduction is due to a wide variety of factors such as the learning curve, the substitution of labor with automation, and technological sophistication. Author Walter Kiechel wrote:
Prior to 1960, the word competition rarely appeared in American literature; companies then faced considerably less competition. Later, the experience curve was a basis for the retailing of business ideas, helping to develop the business consulting industry.[95].
Corporate strategy and portfolio theory
The concept of a corporation as a portfolio of business units, with each expressed graphically based on its market share and industry growth, was summarized in the growth and share matrix developed by the Boston Consulting Group around 1970. By 1979, a study estimated that 45% of Fortune 500 companies (the 500 most capitalized American companies) used some variation of the matrix within their strategic planning. This scheme helped companies decide where to invest their resources and what businesses to give up.[95].
Porter wrote in 1987 that corporate strategy involves two questions: 1) What business should the corporation be in? and 2) How should business units be managed? He mentioned four concepts of corporate strategy:[114].
Other techniques were developed to analyze the relationships between portfolio elements. The growth and participation matrix as part of the B.C.G analysis was followed by the McKinsey Matrix developed by General Electric. Companies continued to diversify as conglomerates until the 1980s, where it began to be seen that a portfolio of divisions operating in different industries was more valuable as independent companies, leading to the breakup of the conglomerates.[95] The popularity of portfolio theory has waned, however the key dimensions considered remain a central part of strategy creation.[5].
Competitive advantage
In 1980, Porter defined the two types of competitive advantage that an organization can have: lower cost or differentiation. This advantage is derived from the attributes that allow a company to outperform its rivals, such as greater positioning, skills or resources. In Porter's perspective, strategic management should be concerned with the development of a competitive advantage.[107].
Industry structure and profitability
Porter developed a scheme to analyze the profitability of industries and how those profits are divided among the participants. In his 5 forces analysis he identified the forces that shape the industry and the business ecosystem in which the organization operates. The scheme involves the competitive behavior of rival organizations, the bargaining power of buyers and suppliers, the threats of new competitors to the industry, and the ability of buyers to substitute products. These forces affect the organization's ability to increase prices as well as the costs of raw materials.[12].
The 5 forces framework helps describe how a company can use those forces to gain a sustainable competitive advantage, whether that be lower cost or differentiation. Companies can maximize their profitability by competing in industries with favorable structures. Competitors may take actions to increase the overall profitability of the industry or reduce the profitability of certain parts of the industry. Porter modified Chandler's idea that structure follows strategy by introducing a second level of structure in addition to the organizational structure; the structure of the industry.[12].
Generic competitive strategies
Porter wrote in 1980 that strategy aims at cost leadership, differentiation or focus.[12] They are known as Porter's 3 generic strategies and can be applied to businesses of any size or shape. Porter said companies must choose only one of the three or risk the business wasting valuable resources. Porter's generic strategies detail the interaction between cost minimization, product differentiation, and market focus strategies.
Porter described an industry with many segments that can be targeted by a company. The width of your target refers to the competitive scope of a business. Acquiring a competitive advantage results from a company's ability to deal with the 5 forces better than its rivals. Porter wrote: "Acquiring a competitive advantage requires that the company make a decision...about the type of advantage it wants to obtain and the extent to which it wants to obtain it." He also wrote: "The two basic types of competitive advantage combined with the range of activities leads to 3 generic strategies to perform better than the average in an industry: cost leadership, differentiation and focus. The focus strategy has two variants: cost-focused and differentiation-focused."[107]
Value chain
Porter's description of the value chain refers to the chain of activities or processes that an organization performs to deliver a product or service with value to the market. This includes functions such as logistics, operations, marketing, sales and service, supported by systems and technological infrastructure. By aligning the value chain with the organization's strategy in a coherent manner, a company can achieve a competitive advantage. Porter also wrote that strategy is a configuration of activities that differentiate a company from its rivals. A robust competitive position is derived from a set of activities that are coherently aligned.[115].
Porter wrote in 1985: "Competitive advantage cannot be understood by viewing a company as a single entity. You must look at the activities the company performs in designing, producing, advertising, and delivering its product. Each of these activities can contribute to the company's cost position and create differentiation... the value chain separates the company into its most relevant strategic activities in order to understand cost behavior as well as existing and potential sources of differentiation."[5]
Essential competence
Gary Hamel and C. K. Prahalad described the idea of core competency in 1990, the idea that every organization has some capability in which it excels and that the business should focus on opportunities in that area, letting others go or using a subcontracting model. The core competency is difficult to duplicate as it involves the skills and coordination of people across a wide variety of functional areas or processes used to deliver value to the customer. By using outsourcing, companies expand the concept of a value chain, with some elements inside the entity and others outside.[116] Core competency is part of a branch of strategy called the resource-based view, which postulates that if activities are strategic as indicated in the value chain, then the company's capabilities to learn or adapt are also strategic.[5].
Business theory
Peter Drucker wrote in 1994 about the "Theory of Business", which represents the key assumptions of a company's strategy. These assumptions are classified into 3 categories: a) the external ecosystem, including society, market, customers and technology. b) the mission of the organization and c) the core competencies necessary to fulfill the mission. He wrote that a valid business theory has four specifications: 1) Assumptions about the ecosystem, mission, and core competencies must fit reality. 2) Assumptions in all 3 areas must be compatible with each other. 3) The business theory must be understood and known throughout the organization and 4) the business theory must be constantly tested.
He wrote that organizations get into trouble when the assumptions representing theory no longer fit reality. He used an example of retail department stores, where his business theory assumed that people who could spend at department stores would do so. However, many shoppers abandoned department stores and preferred to go to specialty stores outside of shopping centers when time became the main factor.
Drucker described business theory as a hypothesis and a discipline. He recommended systematic diagnostics, monitoring and testing of assumptions to maintain competitiveness.[117][118].
References
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[80] ↑ Barnard, Chester The function of the executive, Harvard University Press, Cambridge Mass, 1938, page 235.
[81] ↑ Mintzberg, Henry The Nature of Managerial Work, Harper and Roe, New York, 1973, page 38.
[82] ↑ Kotter, John The general manager, Free Press, New York, 1982.
[83] ↑ Isenberg, Daniel “How managers think”, Harvard Business Review, November–December 1984.
[84] ↑ Isenberg, Daniel Strategic Opportunism: Managing under uncertainty, Harvard Graduate School of Business, Working paper 9-786-020, Boston, January 1986.
[85] ↑ Zaleznik, Abraham “Managers and Leaders: Are they different?”, Harvard Business Review, May–June 1977.
[86] ↑ Zaleznik, Abraham The Managerial Mistique, Harper and Row, New York, 1989.
[87] ↑ Corner, P. Kinicki, A. and Keats, B. “Integrating organizational and individual information processing perspectives on choice”, Organizational Science, vol. 3, 1994.
[88] ↑ J. Scott Armstrong & Kesten C. Greene (2007). «Competitor-oriented Objectives: The Myth of Market Share». International Journal of Business 12 (1): 116-134. ISSN 1083-4346. Archivado desde el original el 22 de junio de 2010. - [https://web.archive.org/web/20100622023252/http://marketing.wharton.upenn.edu/documents/research/CompOrientPDF%2011-27%20(2).pdf](https://web.archive.org/web/20100622023252/http://marketing.wharton.upenn.edu/documents/research/CompOrientPDF%2011-27%20(2).pdf)
[89] ↑ Barney, J. (1991) “Firm Resources and Sustainable Competitive Advantage”, Journal of Management, vol 17, no 1, 1991.
[90] ↑ Pine, J. and Gilmore, J. “The Four Faces of Mass Customization”, Harvard Business Review, Vol 75, No 1, Jan–Feb 1997.
[91] ↑ Pine, J. and Gilmore, J. (1999) The Experience Economy, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, 1999.
[92] ↑ Evens, P. and Wurster, T. “Strategy and the New Economics of Information”, Harvard Business Review, Sept/Oct 1997.
[93] ↑ Schuck, Gloria “Intelligent Workers: A new pedagogy for the high tech workplace”, Organizational Dynamics, Autumn 1985.
[95] ↑ a b c d e f g Kiechel, Walter (2010). The Lords of Strategy. Harvard Business Press. ISBN 978-1-59139-782-3.
[96] ↑ Buzzell, R. and Gale, B. The PIMS Principles: Linking Strategy to Performance, Free Press, New York, 1987.
[97] ↑ Schumacher, E.F. Small is Beautiful: a Study of Economics as if People Mattered, ISBN 0-06-131778-0 (also ISBN 0-88179-169-5).
[98] ↑ Woo, C. and Cooper, A. “The surprising case for low market share”, Harvard Business Review, November–December 1982, pg 106–113.
[99] ↑ 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.
[100] ↑ Traverso, D. Outsmarting Goliath, Bloomberg Press, Princeton, 2000.
In 1990, Richard Pascale wrote that change forces businesses to constantly reinvent themselves.[50] His maxim is "Nothing fails like success", referring to the fact that the strength of the past becomes the weakness of the present. We tend to rely on what we did in the past and refuse to let go of what worked well for us before. To avoid this trap, businesses must encourage a spirit of debate and questioning. They must encourage a creative process of self-renewal.
In 1996, Adrian Slywotzky showed how changes in the business ecosystem are reflected in value migrations between industries, between companies or within them.[51] He mentioned that it is necessary to recognize the patterns behind these migration patterns to understand chaotic change. In “Profit Patterns” (1999) he wrote that businesses are in a state of strategic anticipation while waiting for emerging patterns. Slywotsky and his team identified 30 patterns that have transformed industry after industry.[52].
In 1997, Clayton Christensen (1997) established that large companies could fail because their capabilities also define their inabilities.[53] Christensen's thesis is that outstanding companies lose their market leadership when faced with disruptive technology. He established a concept called agnostic marketing as the type of marketing with the implicit assumption that no one can know how or in what quantities a disruptive product will be used.
In 1999, Constantinos Markides reexamined the nature of strategic planning.[54] He described strategy formulation and implementation as a continuous, endless, integrated process that requires constant evaluation and reform. Strategic management is planned or emergent, dynamic and interactive.
J. Moncrieff (1999) talked about the dynamics of strategies.[55] He mentioned that strategy is partly deliberate and partly unplanned. The unplanning element comes from emerging strategies that result from opportunities and threats in the business ecosystem.
David Teece was a pioneer in the research of resource-based strategic management and the dynamic capabilities perspective, defined as "the ability to integrate, build and reconfigure internal and external competencies to quickly adapt to change in ecosystems".[56] His work "Dynamic capabilities and strategic management" was the most cited document in economics and business in the period from 1995 to 2005.[57].
In 2000, Gary Hamel discussed strategic decay, the notion that the value of each strategy declines over time no matter how brilliant it is.[58].
A large group of theorists felt that the most deficient area in Western business was product quality. W. Edwards Deming,[59] Joseph M. Juran,[60] A. Kearney,[61] Philip Crosby[62] and Armand Feigenbaum[63] suggested techniques to improve product quality such as Total Quality Management (TQM), continuous improvement (Kaizen), lean manufacturing, Six Sigma, and Return on Quality (ROQ).
On the other hand, James Heskett (1988),[64] Earl Sasser (1995), William Davidow,[65] Len Schlesinger,[66] A. Paraurgman (1988), Len Berry,[67] Jane Kingman-Brundage,[68] Christopher Hart, and Christopher Lovelock (1994), felt that the real problem was in customer service. They provided tools such as fishbone diagram, Total Customer Service (TCS), service revenue chain, service gap analysis, strategic service vision, service map and service teams. Their assumption was that there is no better competitive advantage than having a continuous flow of satisfied customers.
Process management uses some of the techniques of product quality management and some of service management. The goal is to find inefficiencies and improve them. Process management techniques can be used as the basis for competitive advantage.
Carl Sewell,[69] Frederick F. Reichheld,[70] C. Gronroos,[71] and Earl Sasser[72] observed that businesses were spending more on acquiring customers than on retaining them. They showed how a competitive advantage could be found in ensuring that their customers came back again. Reicheld expanded the concept to include the loyalty of employees, suppliers, distributors, and even shareholders. They developed techniques to estimate customer lifetime value (CLV). The concept brought new attempts to create long-term customer relationships (relationship marketing or CRM).
Michael Hammer and James Champy felt that those resources needed to be restructured.[73] In a process they called "re-engineering," companies reorganized their assets around entire processes rather than tasks. In this way, a team of people was in charge of a project from origin to completion.
In 1989 Richard Lester and researchers at the MIT Center for Industrial Performance identified 7 best practices:[74].
The search for good practices is also called benchmarking.[75] This involves determining the areas to improve and finding an organization that is exceptional in those areas, then studying those companies and applying the techniques.
Professor Richard P. Rumelt described strategy as a way of solving problems. He wrote that a good strategy has a structure called kernel and consists of 3 parts: 1) A diagnosis that defines or explains the nature of the challenge; 2) A tactic to handle the challenge; and 3) Coherent actions designed to carry out that tactic.[76].
In the early years of Hewlett-Packard (HP), Dave Packard and Bill Hewlett devised a style of active management that they called management by walking around (MBWA).* In this type of management, senior managers were rarely at their desks. They spent most of their days visiting employees, customers and suppliers. Direct contact with key people offered them a solid foundation on which they could implement viable strategies. Consultants Tom Peters and Robert H. Waterman used the term in their book titled In Search of Excellence: Experiences from America's Best-Managed Companies.[77] Some Japanese managers use a similar system that originated at Honda, and is often known as the 3 G's (Genba, Genbutsu, and Genjitsu, meaning the real place, the real part, and the real situation).
In 2010, IBM released a study summarizing 3 conclusions from 500 CEOs around the world: 1) complexity is increasing, 2) companies are not equipped to deal with this complexity and 3) creativity is today the most important competency in leadership positions. IBM said it is necessary in all aspects of leadership, including planning and strategic thinking.[78].
Similarly, Mckeown argued that relying too much on a single approach to strategy is dangerous, and that methods can be used to combine creativity and analytics to create "an approach to shaping the future" that is difficult to copy.[79].
A treatise by Chester Barnard in 1938, based on his own experience as a business executive, described the process as informal, intuitive, non-routine, and involving primarily oral communication. Bernard said "The process is to feel the organization as a whole and the situation relevant to it. It transcends the ability of merely intellectual methods and techniques to discriminate the factors of the situation. The terms that best describe it are "sensation", "judgment", "sense", "proportion", "balance", "opportunity". It is art more than science."[80]
In 1973, Mintzberg found that top managers typically encounter unpredictable situations so they carry out strategies in an ad hoc, flexible, dynamic and implicit manner.”[81].
In 1982, John Kotter studied the daily activities of 15 executives and concluded that they spend most of their time developing and working on a network of relationships that provide an overview as well as specific details of strategic decisions. They tend to use "mental maps" rather than systematic techniques.[82].
A 1984 study by Daniel Isenberg of top managers found that their decisions were highly intuitive. Executives often felt what they should do even before they could explain it.[83] In 1986 he mentioned that one of the reasons for this is the high complexity of strategic decisions.[84].
Zuboff said information technologies are widening the divide between top managers (who generally make strategic decisions) and operational-level managers (who make only routine decisions). He argued that before the rise of computer systems, all managers were in charge of both strategic and routine decisions, but with computers it is possible to carry out routine processes that do not require special skills and thus today's managers only have to be in charge of strategic decisions.
In 1977, Abraham Zaleznik made a distinction between leaders and managers. He described leaders as inspirational visionaries, while managers care about process.[85] He suggested that the increase in the number of managers is the reason why there was a decline in American business in the 1970s and 1980s. Lack of leadership is harmful in strategic management, to such a level that it can paralyze an entire organization.[86].
Dr. Maretha Prinsloo developed the Cognitive Process Profile (CPP). The CPP is a computer-based psychometric test that profiles a person's ability to think strategically. It is used around the world to select and develop people for strategic roles.
According to Corner, Kinichi, and Keats,[87] strategic decision making in an organization occurs at two levels: individual and aggregate. They developed a parallel strategic decision-making model. The model identified two parallel processes that involve attracting attention, encoding information, information storage and retrieval, strategic choices, strategic outcome, and feedback. Individual and organizational processes interact at each stage. In fact, competition-oriented objectives are based on information from competing companies.[88].
The 1980s also saw the wide acceptance of positioning theory. The theory originated with Jack Trout in 1969 but did not gain acceptance until Al Ries and Jack Trout wrote their book Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind (1979). The basic premise is that the strategy should not be judged by internal factors of the company, it should be in relation to the competition. Creating and implementing a strategy involves creating a position in the consumer's mind. Different techniques allowed positioning theory to be put into practice. Perpetual mapping for example, creates a visual representation of the relationships between positions. Multidimensional scales, discriminant analysis, factor analysis, and associated analysis are mathematical techniques used to determine the most relevant characteristics (called dimensions or factors) on which positions should be based.
In 1992, Jay Barney observed strategy as assembling an optimal mix of resources including human resources, technology and suppliers and configuring them in a unique and sustainable way.[89].
James Gilmore and Joseph Pine found competitive advantage in mass customization").[90] Flexible manufacturing techniques allowed businesses to individualize products for each customer without losing economies of scale. This efficiently turned a product into a service. They also realized that if a service is personalized for each customer the service becomes an experience. Their book The Experience Economy,[91] along with the work of Bernd Schmitt, convinced many to view service as a form of theater. This type of thinking is generally known as user experience management or CEM.
Many information-intensive industries are being transformed.[92] For example, Encarta demolished Encyclopædia Britannica (whose sales have declined 80% from their peak of $650 million in 1990) only to be overshadowed by collaborative encyclopedias like Wikipedia. The music industry was similarly affected. The technology sector has offered strategies directly. For example, software development has enabled a shared process model.
Peter Drucker described the “knowledge worker” in the 1950s. He described how fewer workers would use physical effort and instead use their minds. In 1984, John Naisbitt talked about the future and how it would be driven by information: companies that managed information well could gain advantages, however the profitability of information exclusivity would disappear with the ability of computers to make information more accessible.
Daniel Bell (1985) examined the sociological consequences of information technologies, while Gloria Schuck and Shoshana Zuboff analyzed psychological factors.[93] Zuboff made the distinction between "automation technologies" and "information technologies." He studied the effect that both had on workers, managers and organizational structures. It confirmed Drucker's predictions about the importance of decentralized flexible structures, work teams, shared knowledge, and the essential role of workers' knowledge. Zuboff also detected a new basis for knowledge-based managerial authority, which he called "participatory management."[94]
McKinsey & Company developed a capabilities maturity model in the 1970s to describe the sophistication of planning processes, placing strategic management at the top of its ranking. The four stages are:
The long-term PIMS study began in the 1960s and lasted 19 years, attempting to understand the profit impact of marketing strategies, particularly the effect of market share. The study's initial conclusion was that the greater a company's market share, the greater its revenue rate. Market participation provides economies of scale as well as an advantage in the experience curve. These combined effects result in increased profits.[96].
The benefits of high market share brought an interest in growth strategies. The relative advantages of vertical integration, horizontal integration, diversification, franchising, mergers and acquisitions as well as organic growth were discussed. Another study indicated that the low market share strategy could still be very profitable. Schumacher (1973),[97] Woo and Cooper (1982),[98] Levenson (1984),[99] and later Traverso (2002)[100] showed how smaller players in the niche earned high returns.
In 1990, Richard Pascale wrote that change forces businesses to constantly reinvent themselves.[50] His maxim is "Nothing fails like success", referring to the fact that the strength of the past becomes the weakness of the present. We tend to rely on what we did in the past and refuse to let go of what worked well for us before. To avoid this trap, businesses must encourage a spirit of debate and questioning. They must encourage a creative process of self-renewal.
In 1996, Adrian Slywotzky showed how changes in the business ecosystem are reflected in value migrations between industries, between companies or within them.[51] He mentioned that it is necessary to recognize the patterns behind these migration patterns to understand chaotic change. In “Profit Patterns” (1999) he wrote that businesses are in a state of strategic anticipation while waiting for emerging patterns. Slywotsky and his team identified 30 patterns that have transformed industry after industry.[52].
In 1997, Clayton Christensen (1997) established that large companies could fail because their capabilities also define their inabilities.[53] Christensen's thesis is that outstanding companies lose their market leadership when faced with disruptive technology. He established a concept called agnostic marketing as the type of marketing with the implicit assumption that no one can know how or in what quantities a disruptive product will be used.
In 1999, Constantinos Markides reexamined the nature of strategic planning.[54] He described strategy formulation and implementation as a continuous, endless, integrated process that requires constant evaluation and reform. Strategic management is planned or emergent, dynamic and interactive.
J. Moncrieff (1999) talked about the dynamics of strategies.[55] He mentioned that strategy is partly deliberate and partly unplanned. The unplanning element comes from emerging strategies that result from opportunities and threats in the business ecosystem.
David Teece was a pioneer in the research of resource-based strategic management and the dynamic capabilities perspective, defined as "the ability to integrate, build and reconfigure internal and external competencies to quickly adapt to change in ecosystems".[56] His work "Dynamic capabilities and strategic management" was the most cited document in economics and business in the period from 1995 to 2005.[57].
In 2000, Gary Hamel discussed strategic decay, the notion that the value of each strategy declines over time no matter how brilliant it is.[58].
A large group of theorists felt that the most deficient area in Western business was product quality. W. Edwards Deming,[59] Joseph M. Juran,[60] A. Kearney,[61] Philip Crosby[62] and Armand Feigenbaum[63] suggested techniques to improve product quality such as Total Quality Management (TQM), continuous improvement (Kaizen), lean manufacturing, Six Sigma, and Return on Quality (ROQ).
On the other hand, James Heskett (1988),[64] Earl Sasser (1995), William Davidow,[65] Len Schlesinger,[66] A. Paraurgman (1988), Len Berry,[67] Jane Kingman-Brundage,[68] Christopher Hart, and Christopher Lovelock (1994), felt that the real problem was in customer service. They provided tools such as fishbone diagram, Total Customer Service (TCS), service revenue chain, service gap analysis, strategic service vision, service map and service teams. Their assumption was that there is no better competitive advantage than having a continuous flow of satisfied customers.
Process management uses some of the techniques of product quality management and some of service management. The goal is to find inefficiencies and improve them. Process management techniques can be used as the basis for competitive advantage.
Carl Sewell,[69] Frederick F. Reichheld,[70] C. Gronroos,[71] and Earl Sasser[72] observed that businesses were spending more on acquiring customers than on retaining them. They showed how a competitive advantage could be found in ensuring that their customers came back again. Reicheld expanded the concept to include the loyalty of employees, suppliers, distributors, and even shareholders. They developed techniques to estimate customer lifetime value (CLV). The concept brought new attempts to create long-term customer relationships (relationship marketing or CRM).
Michael Hammer and James Champy felt that those resources needed to be restructured.[73] In a process they called "re-engineering," companies reorganized their assets around entire processes rather than tasks. In this way, a team of people was in charge of a project from origin to completion.
In 1989 Richard Lester and researchers at the MIT Center for Industrial Performance identified 7 best practices:[74].
The search for good practices is also called benchmarking.[75] This involves determining the areas to improve and finding an organization that is exceptional in those areas, then studying those companies and applying the techniques.
Professor Richard P. Rumelt described strategy as a way of solving problems. He wrote that a good strategy has a structure called kernel and consists of 3 parts: 1) A diagnosis that defines or explains the nature of the challenge; 2) A tactic to handle the challenge; and 3) Coherent actions designed to carry out that tactic.[76].
In the early years of Hewlett-Packard (HP), Dave Packard and Bill Hewlett devised a style of active management that they called management by walking around (MBWA).* In this type of management, senior managers were rarely at their desks. They spent most of their days visiting employees, customers and suppliers. Direct contact with key people offered them a solid foundation on which they could implement viable strategies. Consultants Tom Peters and Robert H. Waterman used the term in their book titled In Search of Excellence: Experiences from America's Best-Managed Companies.[77] Some Japanese managers use a similar system that originated at Honda, and is often known as the 3 G's (Genba, Genbutsu, and Genjitsu, meaning the real place, the real part, and the real situation).
In 2010, IBM released a study summarizing 3 conclusions from 500 CEOs around the world: 1) complexity is increasing, 2) companies are not equipped to deal with this complexity and 3) creativity is today the most important competency in leadership positions. IBM said it is necessary in all aspects of leadership, including planning and strategic thinking.[78].
Similarly, Mckeown argued that relying too much on a single approach to strategy is dangerous, and that methods can be used to combine creativity and analytics to create "an approach to shaping the future" that is difficult to copy.[79].
A treatise by Chester Barnard in 1938, based on his own experience as a business executive, described the process as informal, intuitive, non-routine, and involving primarily oral communication. Bernard said "The process is to feel the organization as a whole and the situation relevant to it. It transcends the ability of merely intellectual methods and techniques to discriminate the factors of the situation. The terms that best describe it are "sensation", "judgment", "sense", "proportion", "balance", "opportunity". It is art more than science."[80]
In 1973, Mintzberg found that top managers typically encounter unpredictable situations so they carry out strategies in an ad hoc, flexible, dynamic and implicit manner.”[81].
In 1982, John Kotter studied the daily activities of 15 executives and concluded that they spend most of their time developing and working on a network of relationships that provide an overview as well as specific details of strategic decisions. They tend to use "mental maps" rather than systematic techniques.[82].
A 1984 study by Daniel Isenberg of top managers found that their decisions were highly intuitive. Executives often felt what they should do even before they could explain it.[83] In 1986 he mentioned that one of the reasons for this is the high complexity of strategic decisions.[84].
Zuboff said information technologies are widening the divide between top managers (who generally make strategic decisions) and operational-level managers (who make only routine decisions). He argued that before the rise of computer systems, all managers were in charge of both strategic and routine decisions, but with computers it is possible to carry out routine processes that do not require special skills and thus today's managers only have to be in charge of strategic decisions.
In 1977, Abraham Zaleznik made a distinction between leaders and managers. He described leaders as inspirational visionaries, while managers care about process.[85] He suggested that the increase in the number of managers is the reason why there was a decline in American business in the 1970s and 1980s. Lack of leadership is harmful in strategic management, to such a level that it can paralyze an entire organization.[86].
Dr. Maretha Prinsloo developed the Cognitive Process Profile (CPP). The CPP is a computer-based psychometric test that profiles a person's ability to think strategically. It is used around the world to select and develop people for strategic roles.
According to Corner, Kinichi, and Keats,[87] strategic decision making in an organization occurs at two levels: individual and aggregate. They developed a parallel strategic decision-making model. The model identified two parallel processes that involve attracting attention, encoding information, information storage and retrieval, strategic choices, strategic outcome, and feedback. Individual and organizational processes interact at each stage. In fact, competition-oriented objectives are based on information from competing companies.[88].
The 1980s also saw the wide acceptance of positioning theory. The theory originated with Jack Trout in 1969 but did not gain acceptance until Al Ries and Jack Trout wrote their book Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind (1979). The basic premise is that the strategy should not be judged by internal factors of the company, it should be in relation to the competition. Creating and implementing a strategy involves creating a position in the consumer's mind. Different techniques allowed positioning theory to be put into practice. Perpetual mapping for example, creates a visual representation of the relationships between positions. Multidimensional scales, discriminant analysis, factor analysis, and associated analysis are mathematical techniques used to determine the most relevant characteristics (called dimensions or factors) on which positions should be based.
In 1992, Jay Barney observed strategy as assembling an optimal mix of resources including human resources, technology and suppliers and configuring them in a unique and sustainable way.[89].
James Gilmore and Joseph Pine found competitive advantage in mass customization").[90] Flexible manufacturing techniques allowed businesses to individualize products for each customer without losing economies of scale. This efficiently turned a product into a service. They also realized that if a service is personalized for each customer the service becomes an experience. Their book The Experience Economy,[91] along with the work of Bernd Schmitt, convinced many to view service as a form of theater. This type of thinking is generally known as user experience management or CEM.
Many information-intensive industries are being transformed.[92] For example, Encarta demolished Encyclopædia Britannica (whose sales have declined 80% from their peak of $650 million in 1990) only to be overshadowed by collaborative encyclopedias like Wikipedia. The music industry was similarly affected. The technology sector has offered strategies directly. For example, software development has enabled a shared process model.
Peter Drucker described the “knowledge worker” in the 1950s. He described how fewer workers would use physical effort and instead use their minds. In 1984, John Naisbitt talked about the future and how it would be driven by information: companies that managed information well could gain advantages, however the profitability of information exclusivity would disappear with the ability of computers to make information more accessible.
Daniel Bell (1985) examined the sociological consequences of information technologies, while Gloria Schuck and Shoshana Zuboff analyzed psychological factors.[93] Zuboff made the distinction between "automation technologies" and "information technologies." He studied the effect that both had on workers, managers and organizational structures. It confirmed Drucker's predictions about the importance of decentralized flexible structures, work teams, shared knowledge, and the essential role of workers' knowledge. Zuboff also detected a new basis for knowledge-based managerial authority, which he called "participatory management."[94]
McKinsey & Company developed a capabilities maturity model in the 1970s to describe the sophistication of planning processes, placing strategic management at the top of its ranking. The four stages are:
The long-term PIMS study began in the 1960s and lasted 19 years, attempting to understand the profit impact of marketing strategies, particularly the effect of market share. The study's initial conclusion was that the greater a company's market share, the greater its revenue rate. Market participation provides economies of scale as well as an advantage in the experience curve. These combined effects result in increased profits.[96].
The benefits of high market share brought an interest in growth strategies. The relative advantages of vertical integration, horizontal integration, diversification, franchising, mergers and acquisitions as well as organic growth were discussed. Another study indicated that the low market share strategy could still be very profitable. Schumacher (1973),[97] Woo and Cooper (1982),[98] Levenson (1984),[99] and later Traverso (2002)[100] showed how smaller players in the niche earned high returns.