The strategic-management process does not end when the firm decides what strategy or strategies to pursue. There must be a translation of strategic thought into strategic action. This translation is much easier if managers and employees of the firm understand the business, feel a part of the company, and through involvement in strategy-formulation activities have become committed to helping the organization succeed. Without understanding and commitment, strategy-implementation efforts face major problems. Implementing strategy affects an organization from top to bottom; it affects all the
functional and divisional areas of a business.
functional and divisional areas of a business.
Doing Great in a Weak Economy. How?
When most firms were struggling in 2008, Google increased its revenues and profits such that Fortune magazine in 2009 rated Google as their fourth “Most Admired Company in the World” in terms of their management and performance. Based in Mountain View, California, Google’s first quarter of 2009 revenues grew 6.2 percent to $5.51 billion, followed by $5.52 billion the second quarter. These results widened Google’s lead in overall searches and online advertising market share. Google owns both YouTube and DoubleClic.
Google in 2009 began selling books online. This related diversification strategy led Google to digitize
close to 10 million books by year’s end. Google cofounder Sergey Brin recently said, “Call me weird, but I think there are a lot of advantages to reading books online. Today’s monitors have great resolution and you don’t have to wait on the book to arrive once ordered.” Google does not charge people to use its search engine. Instead of charging what the market will bear as most firms do, Google charges as little as they can bear. Thus Google obtains networks of people, millions of people, which strengthens its competitive position.
close to 10 million books by year’s end. Google cofounder Sergey Brin recently said, “Call me weird, but I think there are a lot of advantages to reading books online. Today’s monitors have great resolution and you don’t have to wait on the book to arrive once ordered.” Google does not charge people to use its search engine. Instead of charging what the market will bear as most firms do, Google charges as little as they can bear. Thus Google obtains networks of people, millions of people, which strengthens its competitive position.
Google’s founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, each have nearly 30 percent voting control of the firm and have established a golden rule that permeates Google’s internal culture. The rule is to “Don’t be evil,” and this operating policy encourages all employees to challenge all managers on decisions—to make sure the decisions are true to the firm’s mission. Another internal rule at Google is to “Give up control,” which means giving up control to outsiders to reap the benefits of their input.
This latter rule is done through beta launches of any new software, product, or service they do. Google’s philosophy is that “Low prices are good, but free is better” because they want every customer they can get.
This latter rule is done through beta launches of any new software, product, or service they do. Google’s philosophy is that “Low prices are good, but free is better” because they want every customer they can get.
Google stock in July 2009 rose above $400 per share as the company prepares to launch its own operating system for computers, a direct assault on the business of software giant Microsoft. Google’s strategic plan is to attack Microsoft in nearly all of its businesses, including browsers, where Google has 1.8 percent market share versus Microsoft’s 66 percent, smartphone operating systems (Google 1.6% versus Microsoft 10%), office suites (Google 0.04% versus Microsoft 94%), and Web searches (Google 65% versus Microsoft 8%).
Google’s Chrome OS operating system will require users to be connected to the Internet, unlike Microsoft’s operating systems. CEO Eric Schmidt at Google has been on a mission for the last several years, according to analysts, to capture Microsoft’s market share. The Google strategy is accelerating a shift in the personal computer (PC) industry to become more like the cell phone industry whereby customers pay monthly service fees for use of hardware and software.
Google’s Chrome will be free to all computer makers such as Hewlett-Packard who historically have preinstalled Microsoft’s operating system for a fee to consumers. Microsoft released its new Microsoft Windows 2010 in the fall 2009 and believes that the learning curve for any consumer to switch away to Google’s operating system will not be worth the effort. Google.com is the most visited Web site in the world and even in 2009 offered its own online word processing, spreadsheet, and presentation programs free – called Google Docs. The Google strategy is a huge bet that online programs can eventually overtake and crush desktop software.
Due to its dominance in the Internet search and advertising business, Google is coming under increasing scrutiny from the U.S. Justice Department regarding possible antitrust infringement. The pending Microsoft/ Yahoo merger may negate that Google vulnerability. Google obtains about 95 percent of its revenues from online advertising.
[Source: Based on Jeff Jarvis, “How the Google Model Could Help Detroit,” Business Week (February 9, 2009): 33–36; Geoff Colvin, “The World’s Most Admired Companies,” Fortune (March 16, 2009): 76–86.]
The Nature of Strategy Implementation
The strategy-implementation stage of strategic management is revealed in below Figure.
Successful strategy formulation does not guarantee successful strategy implementation. It is always more difficult to do something (strategy implementation) than to say you are going to do it (strategy formulation)! Although inextricably linked, strategy implementation is fundamentally different from strategy formulation. Strategy formulation and implementation can be contrasted in the following ways:
• Strategy formulation is positioning forces before the action.
• Strategy implementation is managing forces during the action.
• Strategy formulation focuses on effectiveness.
• Strategy implementation focuses on efficiency.
• Strategy formulation is primarily an intellectual process.
• Strategy implementation is primarily an operational process.
• Strategy formulation requires good intuitive and analytical skills.
• Strategy implementation requires special motivation and leadership skills.
• Strategy formulation requires coordination among a few individuals.
• Strategy implementation requires coordination among many individuals.
Strategy-formulation concepts and tools do not differ greatly for small, large, for-profit, or nonprofit organizations. However, strategy implementation varies substantially among different types and sizes of organizations. Implementing strategies requires such actions as altering sales territories, adding new departments, closing facilities, hiring new employees, changing an organization’s pricing strategy, developing financial budgets, developing new employee benefits, establishing cost-control procedures, changing advertising strategies, building new facilities, training new employees, transferring managers among divisions, and building a better management information system. These types of activities obviously differ greatly between manufacturing, service, and governmental organizations.
In all but the smallest organizations, the transition from strategy formulation to strategy implementation requires a shift in responsibility from strategists to divisional and functional managers. Implementation problems can arise because of this shift in responsibility, especially if strategy-formulation decisions come as a surprise to middle- and lower-level managers. Managers and employees are motivated more by perceived self-interests than by organizational interests, unless the two coincide. Therefore, it is essential that divisional and functional managers be involved as much as possible in strategy-formulation activities. Of equal importance, strategists should be involved as much as possible in strategy-implementation activities.
As indicated in following Table, management issues central to strategy implementation include establishing annual objectives, devising policies, allocating resources, altering an existing organizational structure, restructuring and re-engineering, revising reward and incentive plans, minimizing resistance to change, matching managers with strategy, developing a strategy supportive culture, adapting production/operations processes, developing an effective human resources function, and, if necessary, downsizing. Management changes are necessarily more extensive when strategies to be implemented move a firm in a major new direction.
TABLE: Some Management Issues Central to Strategy Implementation
Establish annual objectives
Devise policies
Allocate resources
Alter an existing organizational structure
Restructure and reengineer
Revise reward and incentive plans
Minimize resistance to change
Match managers with strategy
Develop a strategy-supportive culture
Adapt production/operations processes
Develop an effective human resources function
Downsize and furlough as needed
Link performance and pay to strategies
Establish annual objectives
Devise policies
Allocate resources
Alter an existing organizational structure
Restructure and reengineer
Revise reward and incentive plans
Minimize resistance to change
Match managers with strategy
Develop a strategy-supportive culture
Adapt production/operations processes
Develop an effective human resources function
Downsize and furlough as needed
Link performance and pay to strategies
Managers and employees throughout an organization should participate early and directly in strategy-implementation decisions. Their role in strategy implementation should build upon prior involvement in strategy-formulation activities. Strategists’ genuine personal commitment to implementation is a necessary and powerful motivational force for managers and employees. Too often, strategists are too busy to actively support strategy-implementation efforts, and their lack of interest can be detrimental to organizational success. The rationale for objectives and strategies should be understood and clearly communicated throughout an organization. Major competitors’ accomplishments, products, plans, actions, and performance should be apparent to all organizational members. Major external opportunities and threats should be clear, and managers’ and employees’ questions should be answered. Top-down flow of communication is essential for developing bottom-up support.
Firms need to develop a competitor focus at all hierarchical levels by gathering and widely distributing competitive intelligence; every employee should be able to benchmark her or his efforts against best-in-class competitors so that the challenge becomes personal. For example, Starbucks Corp. in 2009–2010 is instituting “lean production/operations” at its 11,000 U.S. stores. This system eliminates idle employee time and unnecessary employee motions, such as walking, reaching, and bending. Starbucks says 30 percent of employees’ time is motion and the company wants to reduce that. They say “motion and work are two different things.”