For-Profit Organization (Business) Strategy

From GM-RKB
Jump to navigation Jump to search

A For-Profit Organization (Business) Strategy is an organizational strategy for a business organization.



References

2022

  • (Wikipedia, 2022) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strategic_management Retrieved:2022-8-14.
    • In the field of management, strategic management involves the formulation and implementation of the major goals and initiatives taken by an organization's managers on behalf of stakeholders, based on consideration of resources and an assessment of the internal and external environments in which the organization operate.[1] [2] Strategic management provides overall direction to an enterprise and involves specifying the organization's objectives, developing policies and plans to achieve those objectives, and then allocating resources to implement the plans. [3] Academics and practicing managers have developed numerous models and frameworks to assist in strategic decision-making in the context of complex environments and competitive dynamics.[4] Strategic management is not static in nature; the models can include a feedback loop to monitor execution and to inform the next round of planning. [5] [6] Michael Porter identifies three principles underlying strategy:[7]
      • creating a “unique and valuable [market] position
      • making trade-offs by choosing "what not to do"
      • creating "fit" by aligning company activities with one another to support the chosen strategy

        Corporate strategy involves answering a key question from a portfolio perspective: "What business should we be in?" Business strategy involves answering the question: "How shall we compete in this business?"[8]

Management theory and practice often make a distinction between strategic management and operational management, with operational management concerned primarily with improving efficiency and controlling costs within the boundaries set by the organization's strategy.
  1. Nag, R.; Hambrick, D. C.; Chen, M.-J (2007). "What is strategic management, really? Inductive derivation of a consensus definition of the field". Strategic Management Journal. 28 (9): 935–955. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.491.7592. doi:10.1002/smj.615
  2. Alkhafaji, Abbass F. (2003). Strategic Management: Formulation, Implementation, and Control in a Dynamic Environment. New York: Routledge (published 2013). ISBN 9781135186357. Retrieved 2018-06-17. Strategic management is the process of assessing the corporation and its environment in order to meet the firm's long-term objectives of adapting and adjusting to its environment through manipulation of opportunities and reduction of threats.A corporation-oriented view
  3. A Simple Approach to Strategic Management A_Simple_Approach_to_Strategic_Management A Simple Approach to Strategic Management
  4. Ghemawat, Pankaj (Spring 2002). "Competition and Business Strategy in Historical Perspective". Business History Review. 76 (1): 37–74. doi:10.2307/4127751. JSTOR 4127751. SSRN 264528.
  5. Hill, Charles W. L.; Jones, Gareth R. (2012). Strategic Management: An Integrated Approach (10 ed.). Mason, Ohio: Cengage Learning. p. 21. ISBN 9781111825843. Retrieved 2018-06-17. The feedback loop [...] indicates that strategic planning is ongoing; it never ends. Once a strategy has been implemented, its execution must be monitored [...]. This information and knowledge is returned to the corporate level through feedback loops, and becomes the input for the next round of strategy formulation and implementation.
  6. Lamb, Robert, Boyden Competitive strategic management, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1984
  7. Porter, Michael E. (1996). “What is Strategy?". Harvard Business Review (November–December 1996).
  8. Chaffee, Ellen Earle (January 1985). "Three Models of Strategy". Academy of Management Review. 10 (1): 89–98. doi:10.5465/amr.1985.4277354.

2016

2013

  • (Lafley & Martin, 2013) ⇒ A.G. Lafley and Roger L. Martin. (2013). “Playing to Win: How strategy really works." In: Harvard Business Press.
    • BOOK OVERVIEW: Playing to Win outlines the strategic approach Lafley, in close partnership with strategic adviser Roger Martin, used to double P&G’s sales, quadruple its profits, and increase its market value by more than $100 billion when Lafley was first CEO (he led the company from 2000 to 2009). The book shows leaders in any type of organization how to guide everyday actions with larger strategic goals built around the clear, essential elements that determine business success where to play and how to win.
    • QUOTE: ... strategy is about making specific choices to win in the marketplace. According to Mike Porter, author of Competitive Strategy, perhaps the most widely respected book on strategy ever written, a firm creates a sustainable competitive advantage over its rivals by “deliberately choosing a different set of activities to deliver unique value.”1 Strategy therefore requires making explicit choices—to do some things and not others—and building a business around those choices.2 In short, strategy is choice. More specifically, strategy is an integrated set of choices that uniquely positions the firm in its industry so as to create sustainable advantage and superior value relative to the competition. ...

2010

2006

2004

  • (Stalk et al., 2004) ⇒ George Stalk, Robert Lachenauer, and John Butman. (2004). “Hardball: Are You Playing to Play Or Playing to Win?”. Harvard Business Press,
    • BOOK OVERVIEW: Great companies stumble and fall when they lose it. Highfliers crash when a competitor notices they don't have it. Start-ups shut down if they can't develop it. “It" is a strategy so powerful and an execution-driven mindset so relentless that companies use it to gain more than just competitive advantage--they achieve an industry dominance that is virtually unassailable and that competitors often try to explain away as unfair. In their "hardball manifesto," authors George Stalk and Rob Lachenauer of the leading strategy consulting firm The Boston Consulting Group show how hardball competitors can build or maintain an enviable competitive edge by pursuing one or more of the classic "hardball strategies": unleash massive and overwhelming force, exploit anomalies, devastate profit sanctuaries, raise competitors' costs, and break compromises. Based on 25 years of experience advising and observing a range of companies, the authors argue that hardball competitors can gain extreme competitive advantage--neutralizing, marginalizing, or even destroying competitors--without violating their contracts with customers or employees and without breaking the rules. A clear-eyed paean to the timeless strategies that have driven the world's winning companies, Hardball Strategy redefines and reinterprets the meaning of competition for a new generation of business players. George Stalk and Rob Lachenauer are directors of The Boston Consulting Group. Stalk is the author of Competing Against Time, the classic work on time-based competition.

1998

  • (Rumelt, 1998) ⇒ RP Rumelt (1998). “Evaluating business strategy." In: Mintzberg H, Quinn JB, Ghoshal S., The Strategy ...
    • QUOTE: ... business strategy is optimal or even to guarantee that it will work. One can, nevertheless, test it for critical flaws. Of the many tests which could be justifiably applied to a business strategy ..."

1989

  • (Shapiro, 1989) ⇒ C Shapiro (1989). “The Theory of Business Strategy." In: The Rand journal of economics.
    • QUOTE: "The diversity of predictions in different game-theoretic models reflects our broadening understanding of business strategy. With our new game-theoretic tools, we can carefully analyze a ..."

1984

  • (Aaker, 1984) ⇒ DA Aaker (1984). “How to select a business strategy." In: California management review.
    • QUOTE: "A business strategy has two core elements. The first is the product-market investment decision which includes the product-market scope of the business strategy, its investment intensity..."