Just being able to conceits bold new strategies is
not enough. The general manager must also be able to translate his or her strategic vision into
concrete steps that "get things done”
Strategy formulation entails heavy doses of vision,
analysis, and entrepreneurial judgment, successful strategy implementation
depends on the skills of working through others, organizing, motivating,
culture-building, and creating stronger fits be-teen strategy and how the
organization operates Ingrained behavior does not change just because a new
strategy has been announced. Practitioners emphatically state that it is a
whole lot easier to develop a sound strategic plan than it is to make it
happen.
Constituents of Strategy implementation
What makes the job of the strategy manager so
complicated when it comes to implementation is the number of tasks involved and
the variety of ways to approach each task. Strategy implementation has to be
tailored to the organization's overall condition and selling, to the nature of
the strategy and the amount of strategic change involved and to the manager's
own skills, style, and methods.
1. Performing the recurring administrative tasks
associated with strategy implementation.
2. Creating
"fits" between strategy and the various internal "ways of doing
things" in order to align the whole organization behind strategy
accomplishment.
3 Figuring
out an agenda and a set of action priorities that matches1 up well
with the organization's overall situation and the context of the- sluing in
which implementation must take place.
4. What
managerial approach and leadership style to adopt in inducing the needed organizational
changes.
The strategy implementers’ challenge in performing
these tasks is to bring the organization's conduct of internal operations into
good alignment with strategy and to unite the total organization- behind
strategy accomplishment. The implemented job
is one of building such enthusiasm and commitment up and down the ranks
that a virtual organization wide crusade emerges to carry out the chosen
strategy.
Strategy-supportive
matches are needed with organizational skills and capabilities,
functional area activities, organization structure, reward systems, and
incentives, policies and procedures, information systems and control
mechanisms, budgets and programs, and shared values and cultural norms.
Administrative Aspects of Strategy Implementation
The Manager's role in the implementation process is
to lead and keynote the tone, pace, and style of strategy implementation.
There are many ways to proceed. A strategy implementer can opt for an active,
visible role or a low-key, behind the scenes role. He or she can elect to make
decisions authoritatively or on the basis of consensus, to delegate much or
little, to be deeply involved in the details of implementation or to remain
aloof from the day-to-day problems. It is up to the strategy implementer to
decide whether to proceed swiftly (launching implementation initiatives on many
fronts) or lo move deliberately, content with gradual progress over a
long period.
To some extent, therefore, each strategy
implementation situation is unique enough or require the strategy manager to
tailor his or her action agenda to fit the specific organizational environment
at hand- This forces the manager to be conscious of all that strategy
implementation involves and to diagnose carefully the action priorities and in
what sequence things need to be done. The manager's role is thus all-important
His or her agenda for action and conclusions about how hard and how fast to
push for change are decisive in shaping the character of implementation and
moving the process along.
Successful strategy execution depends greatly on
good internal organization, resources, healthy work culture and competent
personnel. Building a capable organization is thus always a top strategy implementation
priority. Some of the organizational issues that stand out as dominant:
· Developing
an internal organization structure that is responsive to the needs of the
people of the organisation.
· Keeping
a tune with the culture of the organisation that is aligning strategy with
corporate culture and competencies.
· Developing
the skills and distinctive competences in which the strategy grounded and
seeing that the organization has the managerial talents, technical expertise,
and competitive capabilities it needs.
· Keeping
a match among the resources and routine activities that can be easily
incorporated with the strategy.
· Selecting
people for key positions.
Matching Organization Structure to Strategy
The following five-sequence procedure serves as a
useful guide for fitting structure to strategy:
· Pinpoint
the key functions and tasks requisite for successful strategy execution
· Reflect
on how the strategy-critical functions and organizational units relate to those
that are routine and to those that provide staff support-
· Make
strategy-critical business units and functions the main organizational building
blocks.
· Determine
the degrees of authority needed to manage each organizational unit, bearing in
mind both the benefits and costs of decentralized decision making.
· Provide
for coordination among the various organizational units.
1.Pinpoint the key functions and tasks requisite for successful strategy execution
In
any organization, some activities and skills are always more critical to
strategic success than others are. The strategy-critical activities vary
according to the particulars of a firm's strategy and competitive requirements.
To help identify what an organization's strategy-critical activities are, two
questions can usefully be posed:
"What functions have to be performed extra well
and on time for the strategy to succeed? and
"In what
areas bad performance would seriously endanger strategic success?
The answers to these two questions should point
squarely at what activities and skills are crucial and where to
concentrate organization-building efforts.
2. Understanding the Relationships among Activities
Activities can be related by the flow of material
through the production process, the type of customer served, the distribution
channels used, the technical skills and know-how needed to perform them, a
strong need to centralized authority over them, the sequence in which tasks
must be performed, and geographic location, to mention some of the most obvious
ways. Such relationships are important because one (or more) of the interrelationships
usually become the basis for grouping activities into organizational units. If
the needs of strategy are to drive organization design, then the relationships
to look for are those that link one piece of the strategy to another.
3.
Grouping Activities into Organization Units
If activities crucial to strategic success are to
get the attention and visibility they merit, then they have to be a prominent
part of the organizational scheme.
When key
functions and critical tasks take a backseat to less important activities,
the politics of organizational budget making usually leads to them being
given fewer resources and
accorded less significance than they actually have. On the other hand, when
they form the core of the whole organization structure, their role and power in
the overall scheme of things is highlighted and institutionalized. Senior
managers can seldom give a stronger signal as to what is strategically
important than by making key function and critical skills the most prominent
organizational building blocks and, further, assigning them a high position in
the organizational pecking order.
4.Determining the Degree of Authority and independence to be given to Each Unit
Activities and organizational units with a key role
in strategy execution should not made subordinate to routine and non-key
activities. Revenue-producing and results-producing activities should not made
subordinate to internal support or staff functions. With few exceptions,
decisions should delegate to those managers closest to the scene of the action.
Corporate-level authority over operating decisions at the business-unit level
and below should hold to a minimum. The crucial administrative skill is
selecting strong managers
to head up each unit and delegating them enough authority to formulate and
execute an appropriate strategy for their unit.
5.Providing for Coordination among the Units
Providing for coordination of the activities of
organizational units is accomplished mainly through positioning them in the
hierarchy of authority. Managers higher up in the pecking order generally have
authority over more organizational units and thus the power to coordinate, integrate,
and otherwise arrange for the cooperation of the units under their supervision.
The chief executive officer, to chief operating officer, and business-level
managers are, of course central points of coordination because they
have broad authority. Besides positioning organizational units along the
vertical scale of managerial authority, coordination of strategic efforts can
also achieved through informal meetings, project teams, special task forces,
standing committees, formal strategy reviews, and annual strategic planning and
budgeting cycles. Additionally, the formulation of the strategic plan itself
serves a coordinating role; the whole process of negotiating and deciding on the
objectives and strategies of each organizational unit and making sure that
related activities mesh suitably help coordinate operations, across
organizational units.
Structure Evolves as Strategy Evolves: The Stages Model
Four distinct stages of strategy-related
organization structure have singled out:
Stage I organizations,
are small, single-business enterprises managed by one person. The
owner-entrepreneur has close daily contact with employees and each phase of
operations. Most employees report directly to the owner, who mates all the
pertinent decisions regarding mission, objectives, strategy, and daily
operations.
Stage
II
organizations differ from Stage I enterprises in one essential aspect: an
increased scale and scope of operations force a transition from one-person
management to group management.
Stage
III consists
of organization whose operations, though concentrated in a single field or
product line, are scattered over a wide geographical area and large enough to
justify having geographically decentralized operating units. These units all
report to corporate headquarters and conform to corporate policies, but they
are given the flexibility to tailor their unit's strategic plan to meet the
specific needs of each respective geographic area. Ordinarily, each of the
geographic operating units Of a Stage III Organization is structured along
functional lines.
The key difference between Stage II and Stage III,
however, is that while the functional units of a Stage II organization stand or
fall together (in that they are built around one business and one end market),
the geographic operating units of a Stage III firm can stand alone (or nearly
so) in the sense that the operations in each geographic unit are not dependent
on those in other areas. Typical firms in this category are breweries, cement
companies, and steel mills having production capacity and sales organizations m
several geographically separate market areas.
Stage
IV
includes large, diversified firms decentralized by line of business. Typically,
each separate business unit is headed by a general manager who has
profit-and-loss responsibility and whose authority extends across all of the
unit's functional areas except, perhaps, accounting and capital investment (both
of which are traditionally subject to corporate approval). Both business
strategy decisions and operating decisions are concentrated at the
line-of-business level rather than at the corporate level
The Strategy-Related Pros and Cons of Alternative Organization Forms
There are essentially five strategy-related
approaches to organization:
(1) Functional specialization,
(2) Geographic
organization,
(3) Decentralized business divisions,
(4) Strategic business units, and
(5) Matrix structures featuring dual lines of
authority and strategic priority.
1.The Functional Organization Structure
Generally speaking- organizing by functional
specialties promotes full utilization of the most up-to-date technical skills
and helps a business capitalize on the efficiency gains resulting from use of
[hose technical skills; it also helps a business capitalize on the efficiency
gains resulting from the use of specialized manpower, faculties, and equipment.
These are strategically important considerations for single-business
organizations, dominant-product enterprises, and vertically integrated firms,
and account for why they usually have some kind of centralized, functionally
specialized structure.
2. Geographic Forms of Organization
Used by large-scale enterprises whose strategies
need to be tailored to fit the particular needs and features of different
geographical areas. In the private sector, a territorial structure is typically
utilized by chain store retailers, power companies, cement firms, and dairy
products enterprises. In the public sector, such organizations as the Internal
Revenue Service, the Social Security Administration, the Indian Postal
Service, the state troopers, have adopted territorial structures in order to be
directly accessible to geographically dispersed clients.
3. Decentralized Business Units
Grouping activities along business and product lines has been a clear-cut trend among diversified enterprises for the past half-century, beginning with the pioneering efforts of Du Pont and General Motors in the 1920s. Separate business/product divisions emerged because diversification made a functionally specialized manager's job incredibly complex. Strategy implementation is facilitated by grouping key activities belonging to the same business under one organizational roof, thereby creating line-of-business units (which then can be subdivided into whatever functional subunits suit the key activities/ critical tasks makeup of the business}. The outcome is not only a structure, which fits strategy, but also a structure that makes the jobs of managers more doable. The creation of separate business units is then accomplished by decentralizing authority over the unit to the business-level manager. The approach, very simply, is to put entrepreneurial general managers in charge of the business unit, giving them enough authority to formulate and implement the business Strategy chat they deem appropriate, motivating them with incentives, and then holding than accountable for the results they produce. However, when a strong strategic fit exists across related business units, it can be tough to get autonomy-conscious business-unit managers to cooperate in coordinating and snaring related activities. They are prone to argue long and hard about "turf" and about held accountable for activities not totally under their control.
A strategic business unit (SBU) is a grouping of
business units based on some important strategic elements common to each; the
possible elements of relatedness include an overlapping set of competitors, a
closely related strategic mission, a common need to compete globally, an
ability to accomplish integrated strategic planning, common key success
factors, and technologically related growth opportunities.
5. Matrix Forms of Organization
A matrix organization is a structure with two for
more) channels of command, two lines of budget authority, and two sources of
performance and reward. The key feature of the matrix is that product (or
business) and functional lines of authority are overlaid (to form a matrix or
grid), and managerial authority over the activities in each unit/cell of the
matrix is shared between the product manager and functional manager.
Selecting People for Key Positions
Assembling a capable management team is an obvious
part of the strategy implementation task. The recurring administrative
issues here center on what kind of core management team is needed to carry out
the strategy and finding the people to fill each slot. Sometimes the existing
management team is suitable and sometimes the core executive group needs to
strengthened and/or expanded, either by promoting qualified people from within
or by bringing in skilled managerial talent from the outside to help infuse fresh
ideas and fresh approaches into the organization's management. In turnaround
situations, in rapid-growth situations, and in those cases, where the right
kinds of managerial experience and skills are not present in-house, recruiting
outsiders to fill key management slots is a standard part of the
organization-building process.
Aligning culture and strategy: Impact of Organizational Culture on Strategy Implementation
Organizational culture includes the shared beliefs,
norms and values within an organization. It sets the foundation for strategy.
For a strategy within an organization to develop and be implemented
successfully, it must fully align with the organizational culture. Thus,
initiatives and goals must be established within an organization to support and
establish an organizational culture that embraces the organization’s strategy
over time.
Organizations that remain flexible are more likely
to embrace change and create an environment that remains open to production and
communication. This provides a model that welcomes cultural diversity and helps
clarify strategy implementation. Culture within an organization can serve many
purposes, including unifying members within an organization and help create a
set of common norms or rules within an organization that employees follow.
A stable culture, one that will systematically
support strategy implementation, is one that fosters a culture of partnership,
unity, teamwork and cooperation among employees. This type of corporate culture
will enhance commitment among employees and focus on productivity within the
organization rather than resistance to rules and regulations or external
factors that prohibit success.
Flexible, strong and unified cultures will approach
strategy implementation and affect implementation in a positive manner by
aligning goals. Goals can come into alignment when the organizational culture
works to focus on productivity and getting the organization’s primary mission
accomplished. This may include getting products delivered to customers on time,
shipping out more products than the organization’s chief competitor or similar
goals. This will create a domino effect in the organization that ensures that
all work performed by each individual in the company and work group focuses on
performance and on the strategic importance of the company. This allows culture
to align with strategy implementation at the most basic level. For this level
of unification to work, goal setting must align with and be supported by
systems, policies, procedures and processes within the organization, thereby
helping to achieve strategy implementation and continuing the cultural
integrity of the organization.
Part of cultural alignment and strategy
implementation involves process implementation. Processes include utilizing
technology to facilitate goal attainment and the results a company is looking
for when working with customers to meet their needs. While most of the time the
hard problems and needs of an organization get met, the culture becomes
neglected in the process. That is where processes come into place and strategy
implementation gradually comes into existence to uphold and maintain
organizational culture and strategies.
When culture aligns with strategy implementation, an
organization is able to more efficiently operate in the global marketplace.
Culture allows organizational leaders to work both individually and as teams to
develop strategic initiatives within the organization. These may include
building new partnerships and re-establishing old ones to continue delivering
the best possible products and services to a global market.
Aligning resources and capabilities with strategy
In appraising resources and capabilities to guide
strategy formulation there are four key steps. Firstly, the key resources and
capabilities have to be identified. Next they have to be appraised both for
their strategic importance, and then for their comparative strength in relation
to competitors. Finally, strategic implications — how these capabilities can
drive value — have to be developed.
1.Identifying Key Resources and Capabilities
The first step is to identify the firm’s key
resources and capabilities, and this should be done both from the client end
(what the clients need) and the firm’s supply end (what the firm offers). It
helps to thoroughly identify, analyze and appraise key resources and
capabilities. This work should include an overall look at the practice, some
investigation of client needs, industry and sector analysis, financial
analysis, market intelligence, partner interviews and practice-group
discussions.
2. Assessing the Strategic Importance of The Firm’s Resources and Capabilities
The principle here is to assess how vital (or
unimportant) it is for the firm or a department to have certain capabilities in
order to successfully pursue their strategic objectives. The true test of
strategic importance is to assess the extent to which the resources and
capabilities of the firm actually give the firm a sustainable competitive
advantage against its rivals.
Resources and capabilities need to be assessed for
relative strength compared with those firms identified as competitors. A
thorough competitor analysis — considering the likely strategies of
competitors, their overall objectives, their resources and capabilities, their
positioning in their markets, their specialist strengths, the sorts of clients
and sectors they serve, their pricing, service levels and profitability — all
helps to establish ways in which the firm can successfully compete. In its
review of comparative strength of resources and capabilities, the firm should
also look out for stagnating capabilities and declining competitiveness. Where
relevant, benchmarking and other analytical methods should be used to move from
subjective to objective analysis.
How does the firm exploit its key strengths more
effectively and what should the firm do about its vulnerabilities either to
correct them or reduce the firm’s exposure to them? The next step, therefore,
is to develop some strategic implications so as to exploit strengths more
effectively and so as to address weaknesses by correction development,
outsourcing or acquisition of further resources.
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