There is considerable confusion in
management literature regarding the various terms used in strategic
management. A recent survey by the American Management Association
revealed that respondents found it difficult to define policy, and
differentiate between strategy, policy and objectives, further
compounding the difficulty.
According to Andrews, strategy, policy and
objectives embrace a range of statements from the “broad” and
“important” to “narrow” and “unimportant”. Policies get merged into
procedures and procedures into rules. Strategies get blended into
tactics, resulting in an “end-means continuum”. This can be illustrated
by the following example.
Suppose a company decides upon a sales
growth of 35 per cent and desires to achieve this by acquiring other
companies, instead of introducing new products. Acquisition in this case
can be considered as a strategy chosen by the company. The company will
then have to decide on the size of the firm to be acquired. If it
decides on acquiring a small company, this becomes the objective.
What is Strategy
The word strategy has entered the field
of management more recently. At first, the word was used in terms of
Military Science to mean what a manager does to offset actual or
potential actions of competitors. The word is still being used in the
same sense, though by few only. Originally, the word strategy has been
derived from Greek ‘Strategos’, which means generalship. The word
strategy, therefore, means the art of the general.
When the term strategy is used in
military sense, it refers to action that can be taken in the light of
action taken by opposite party. According to Oxford Dictionary,
‘military strategy is the art of so moving or disposing the instruments
of warfare (troops, ships, aircrafts, missiles, etc.) as to impose upon
the enemy, the place, time and conditions for fighting by oneself.
Strategy ends, or yields to tactics when actual contact with enemy is
made’. In management, the concept of strategy is taken in slightly
different form as compared to its usage in military form; it is taken
more broadly. However, in this form, various experts do not agree about
the precise scope of strategy. Lack of unanimity has resulted into two
broad categories of definitions: strategy as action inclusive of
objective setting and strategy as action exclusive of objective setting.
Let us see some definitions in these two categories in order to
conceptualize strategy properly.
“Tomorrow always arrives. It is always
different. And even the mightiest company is in trouble if it has not
worked on the future. Being surprised by what happens is a risk that
even the largest and richest company cannot afford, and even the
smallest business need not run.” Peter Drucker
Strategy has Four Components
- First, strategy should include a clear set of long term goals.
- Second components are that it should define the scope of the firm i.e. the types of products the firm will serve etc.
- Thirdly, a strategy should have a clear statement of what competitive advantage it will achieve and sustain.
- Finally, the strategy must represent the firms’ internal contest that will allow it to achieve a competitive advantage in the environment in which it has chosen to compete. www.marketing91.com
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