Page 69 - DCOM102_DMGT101_PRINCIPLES_AND_PRACTICES_OF_MANAGEMENT
P. 69

Unit 3: Planning




          4.   Operational strategy: Operational strategy was encouraged by Peter Drucker in his theory  Notes
               of Management by Objectives (MBO). It is very narrow in focus and deals with day-to-day
               operational activities such as scheduling criteria. It must operate within a budget but is
               not at liberty to adjust or create that budget. Operational level strategies are informed by
               business level strategies which, in turn, are informed by corporate level strategies.
          Since the turn of the millennium, some firms  have reverted to a simpler strategic  structure
          driven by advances in information technology. It is felt that knowledge management systems
          should be used to share information and create common goals. Strategic divisions are thought
          to hamper this process. This notion of strategy has been captured under the rubric of dynamic
          strategy, popularized by Carpenter and Sanders’s textbook. This work builds on that of Brown
          and Eisenhart as well as Christensen and portrays firm strategy, both business and corporate, as
          necessarily embracing ongoing strategic  change,  and  the seamless  integration of  strategy
          formulation and implementation. Such change and implementation are usually built into the
          strategy through the staging and pacing facets.

                        Figure  3.1: The  Delta Model  – Three  Distinct  Strategic  Options


























          3.6.2 Elements of Strategic Management

          Ellen-Earle  Chaffee  summarized  what  she  thought  were  the  main  elements  of  strategic
          management theory by the 1970s.
          1.   Strategic management involves adapting the organisation to its business environment.
          2.   Strategic  management  is  fluid  and  complex.  Change  creates  novel  combinations  of
               circumstances requiring unstructured non-repetitive responses.
          3.   Strategic management affects the entire organisation by providing direction.
          4.   Strategic management involves both strategy formation (she called it content) and also
               strategy implementation (she called it process).
          5.   Strategic management is partially planned and partially unplanned.
          6.   Strategic management is done at several levels: overall corporate strategy, and individual
               business strategies.
          7.   Strategic management involves both conceptual and analytical thought processes.




                                           LOVELY PROFESSIONAL UNIVERSITY                                   61
   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74