strategic
(adjective)
Of or pertaining to strategy.
Examples of strategic in the following topics:
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Overview of Types of Strategic Plans
- The broader overview of strategic plans, as well as the five subgroups within strategic planning, provide businesses with direction.
- Strategic management leverages strategic planning in order to design and execute a variety of plans specifically created to approach various facets of the business and competitive environment.
- It is worth analyzing the broader overview of strategic plans, as well as the five subgroups within strategic planning that provide businesses with an outline of their strategic direction.
- Strategic plans are what communicate the corporate strategy, direction, and resource allocation.
- Long-range plans are those most closely related to the overall strategic-planning process.
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Strategic Management
- Strategic management entails five steps: analysis, formation, goal setting, structure, and feedback.
- Strategic management analyzes the major initiatives, involving resources and performance in external environments, that a company's top management takes on behalf of owners.
- As strategic management is a large, complex, and ever-evolving endeavor, it is useful to divide it into a series of concrete steps to illustrate the process of strategic management.
- Leaders allocate resources to specific projects and enact any necessary strategic partnerships.
- Identify the five generalĀ steps that allow businesses to developĀ a strategic process
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Differences Between Strategic Planning at Small Versus Large Firms
- Strategic management can depend on the size of an organization and the proclivity of change in its business environment.
- Ideally, McDonald's can construct careful strategic models and systems which control the critical components of the operations without hindering the localization.
- Enabling creativity and innovation is strategically difficult to do as it requires a hands-off approach that empowers autonomy over structure.
- Innovate ideas are primarily trial and error, and so instilling creativity into a strategic process is also a high-risk approach.
- Apply the size of a firm to the basic strategic management theories
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The Importance of Strategy
- Strategic management is critical to organizational development as it aligns the mission and vision with operations.
- Strategic management is critical to the development and expansion of all organizations.
- Strategic planning is the formal consideration of an organization's future course, and all strategic planning deals with at least one of three key questions:
- In business-related strategic planning, the third question refers more to beating or avoiding competition.
- Evaluate the implications of the three key questions defining strategic planning
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Strategic Business Units
- A strategic business unit is a semi-autonomous corporate unit that focuses on a product offering and market segment.
- Many companies feel that a functional organizational structure is not an efficient way to organize activities so they have re-engineered according to processes or strategic business units (SBUs).
- Diagram the role and functionality of a strategic business unit (SBU)
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Planning a Project
- The stages of a project within the strategic-planning discipline provide a step-by-step approach to generating and implementing an effective strategy, for either a corporation or a strategic business unit (SBU).
- Implementing a framework for generating a project-planning cycle, complete with strategic objectives, implementation methods, and assessment, is a primary responsibility of strategic managers.
- Monitoring the operation for ways to increase value can redirect the strategic-planning cycle back to the planning-and-design stage.
- As shown in the figure, there are five basic strategic management steps in the planning cycle.
- Outline the five basic stages in the planning cycle as derived within the field of strategic management
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Cooperative Strategy
- Strategic Alliances and Interfirm Knowledge Transfer.
- Upper management is tasked with the developing complex interactive strategies when entering a strategic alliance.
- The following steps highlight key aspects of the strategic alliance process:
- Benefits of strategic alliances vary according to each business's strengths and objectives and may include:
- Identify the steps involved in forming a strategic alliance to employ cooperative strategies
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Managerial Accounting
- Through integrating accounting knowledge with strategic decision-making, organizations can improve performance, refine strategy, and mitigate risk.
- There exists a strong relationship between the knowledge accounting delivers to managerial teams, and the strategic and tactical decisions made by management.
- Through this integration, organizations can improve their decision-making to strategic value in the form of improved performance and mitigated risks.
- Managerial accounting creates additional documents used for internal, strategic decision-making.
- Integrate a knowledge of accounting with its impact on strategic decision-making
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Competitive Dynamics
- The dynamic model of the strategy process is a way of understanding how strategic actions occur.
- It recognizes that strategic planning is dynamic; that is, strategy-making involves a complex pattern of actions and reactions.
- This analysis provides both an offensive and defensive strategic context in order to identify opportunities and threats.
- First, profiling can reveal strategic weaknesses in rivals that the firm may exploit.
- Third, this proactive knowledge can give the firm strategic agility.
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Strategic versus tactical operations decisions
- Operations decisions include decisions that are strategic in nature, meaning that they have long-term consequences and often involve a great deal of expense and resource commitments.
- Strategic operations decisions include facility location decisions, the type of technologies that the organization will use, determining how labor and equipment are organized, and how much long-term capacity the organization will provide to meet customer demand.
- Tactical operations decisions have short to medium term impact on the organization, often involve less commitment of resources, and can be changed more easily than strategic decisions.