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Strategic Management




                    Notes          Introduction

                                   Corporate strategy is primarily about the choice of direction for the corporation as a whole. The
                                   basic purpose of a corporate strategy is to add value to the individual businesses in it. A corporate
                                   strategy involves decisions relating to the choice of businesses, allocation of resources among
                                   different businesses, transferring skills and capabilities from one set of businesses to others, and
                                   managing and nurturing a portfolio of businesses in such a way as to obtain synergies among
                                   product lines  and business units, so  that the corporate whole  is greater than the  sum of its
                                   individual business units. The essence of a corporate strategy vis-a-vis a business-level strategy
                                   is summarized in Figure 7.1.
                                                                     Figure  7.1























                                   Managers at the corporate level act on behalf of shareholders and provide strategic guidance to
                                   business units. In these circumstances, a key question that arises is to what extent and how might
                                   the corporate level add value to what the businesses do; or at least how it might avoid destroying
                                   value.
                                   Corporate strategy is thus concerned with two basic issues:

                                   1.  What businesses should a firm compete in?
                                   2.  How can these businesses be coordinated and managed so that they create “Synergy.”




                                     Notes  Synergy means that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. In organisational
                                     terms, synergy means that as separate departments within an organisation co-operate and
                                     interact, they become more productive than if each were to act in isolation. In strategic
                                     management,  the corporate parent has  to create  synergy among the separate business
                                     units by  effectively coordinating their activities,  so that the corporate whole is greater
                                     than the sum of the independent units. Synergy is said  to exist for a multi-divisional
                                     corporation if the return on investment (ROI) of each division is greater than what the
                                     return would be if each division were an independent business.
                                     According to Goold and Campbell, synergy can take place in one of the six forms:
                                     1.   Shared Know-how:  Combined units often benefit from sharing knowledge  and
                                          skills. This is also called a leveraging of core competencies.
                                                                                                         Contd...



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