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138 PART 2 • STRATEGY FORMULATION<br />

FIGURE 5-2<br />

strategy to go north and then take a step east, south, or west “just to be on the safe side.”<br />

Firms spend resources and focus on a finite number of opportunities in pursuing strategies<br />

to achieve an uncertain outcome in the future. Strategic planning is much more than a roll<br />

of the dice; it is a wager based on predictions and hypotheses that are continually tested<br />

and refined by knowledge, research, experience, and learning. Survival of the firm itself<br />

may hinge on your <strong>strategic</strong> plan. 4<br />

Organizations cannot do too many things well because resources and talents get<br />

spread thin and competitors gain advantage. In large diversified companies, a combination<br />

strategy is commonly employed when different divisions pursue different strategies. Also,<br />

organizations struggling to survive may simultaneously employ a combination of several<br />

defensive strategies, such as divestiture, liquidation, and retrenchment.<br />

Levels of Strategies<br />

Strategy making is not just a task for top executives. As discussed in Chapter 1, middleand<br />

lower-level managers too must be involved in the <strong>strategic</strong>-planning process to the<br />

extent possible. In large firms, there are actually four levels of strategies: corporate, divisional,<br />

functional, and operational—as illustrated in Figure 5-2. However, in small firms,<br />

there are actually three levels of strategies: company, functional, and operational.<br />

In large firms, the persons primarily responsible for having effective strategies at the<br />

various levels include the CEO at the corporate level; the president or executive vice<br />

president at the divisional level; the respective chief finance officer (CFO), chief information<br />

officer (CIO), human resource manager (HRM), chief marketing officer (CMO),<br />

and so on, at the functional level; and the plant manager, regional sales manager, and so<br />

on, at the operational level. In small firms, the persons primarily responsible for having<br />

effective strategies at the various levels include the business owner or president at the<br />

company level and then the same range of persons at the lower two levels, as with a large<br />

firm.<br />

It is important to note that all persons responsible for <strong>strategic</strong> planning at the various<br />

levels ideally participate and understand the strategies at the other organizational levels to<br />

help ensure coordination, facilitation, and commitment while avoiding inconsistency, inefficiency,<br />

and miscommunication. Plant managers, for example, need to understand and be<br />

supportive of the overall corporate <strong>strategic</strong> plan (game plan) while the president and the<br />

CEO need to be knowledgeable of strategies being employed in various sales territories<br />

and manufacturing plants.<br />

Levels of Strategies with Persons Most Responsible<br />

Corporate<br />

Level—chief<br />

executive officer<br />

Division Level—division<br />

president or executive<br />

vice president<br />

Functional Level—finance, marketing,<br />

R&D, manufacturing, information systems,<br />

and human resource managers<br />

Operational Level—plant managers, sales managers,<br />

production and department managers<br />

Large Company<br />

Company<br />

Level—owner<br />

or president<br />

Functional Level—<br />

finance, marketing, R&D,<br />

manufacturing, information<br />

systems, and human<br />

resource managers<br />

Operational Level—plant managers, sales<br />

managers, production and department managers<br />

Small Company

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