Introduction to Strategic Management
1.1 Introduction
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Strategic management is a comprehensive process that helps organizations use their resources and capabilities to achieve superior performance in a dynamic, competitive environment.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What strategic management addresses: the central question "Why do some firms outperform other firms?" by examining actions of executives, firms, and industries.
- Strategy vs. strategic management: strategy refers to broad, long-term goals providing direction; strategic management is the entire process of developing and implementing those strategies.
- Key components: analysis of external, competitive, and internal environments shapes the strategies firms pursue for success.
- Common confusion: strategy is not detailed or short-term—it's higher-level direction without many specifics, whereas tactics are more concrete.
- Dynamic nature: firms routinely revise strategies (often annually) in response to environmental changes and to maximize performance.
🎯 What strategic management is
🎯 Core definition
Strategic management: the utilization or planned allocation of resources to implement major initiatives taken by executives on behalf of stakeholders to improve performance of firms in an environment.
- It examines how actions and events involving top executives, firms, and industries influence success or failure.
- It is both art and science—formal analytical tools plus creativity are both essential.
- The process is comprehensive, involving many different processes and activities within an organization.
🔍 The central question
- Strategic management focuses on understanding why some firms outperform others.
- This requires examining relationships between executives' decisions, firm actions, and industry dynamics.
- Example: Tesla's situation illustrates this—its unprecedented growth raises questions about whether it can sustain performance amid quality issues, CEO behavior, and competitive threats.
📋 Understanding strategy itself
📋 What strategy means
Strategy: a higher-level, broad goal without many specifics; long-term in nature, providing direction for an organization to become more successful.
- Not detailed: strategies are broad directions, not specific action plans.
- Long-term focus: they guide where the organization wants to move over time.
- Directional: they show the path toward marketplace success.
🔄 How strategies develop and change
- Firms develop strategies by identifying their resources and capabilities.
- They deploy these through strategies intended to create competitive advantage—so consumers choose their product over competitors'.
- Strategies are revised regularly:
- Often annually through assessment of external and competitive forces
- In response to environmental changes (e.g., COVID-19 pandemic)
- To maximize organizational performance
⚖️ Don't confuse: strategy vs. tactics
- Strategy = broad, long-term, directional goals
- Tactics (implied but not explicitly defined) = more specific, detailed actions
- The excerpt emphasizes strategy is "without a lot of specifics"—it's the big picture, not the step-by-step plan.
🏗️ The strategic management process
🏗️ Framework components
The excerpt describes strategic management as creating a framework with these elements:
| Component | Purpose |
|---|---|
| External environment analysis | Look outside the organization to understand market conditions |
| Competitive environment analysis | Assess rivals and competitive dynamics |
| Internal environment analysis | Evaluate own resources and capabilities |
| Strategy development | Create broad goals based on analysis |
| Strategy implementation | Execute the chosen strategies |
🧭 Guiding principles
- The process should be performed within a framework of corporate ethics and values.
- This ethical framework limits temptation to "cross the line where an organization should not go."
- The goal is to help organizations set a course for success despite imperfections in the process.
🎓 Why it matters for firms
- Successful organizations have found this process helps them achieve goals.
- It enables firms to best use resources and capabilities for superior performance.
- As strategies are accomplished, they help the organization move forward toward its vision.
- Example: An organization facing a dynamic, competitive environment (like Tesla in the electric car market) needs this systematic approach to navigate challenges and opportunities.