NAME: NURUL AFIAH BINTI ABDUL KARIM
Tutorial 4
Discuss the three levels of strategy (corporate strategy, competitive
strategy and functional strategy) and their main types of strategies that a
large organization must develop.
Corporate Strategy
Corporate level
strategy occupies the highest level of strategic decision-making and covers
actions dealing with the objective of the firm, acquisition and allocation of
resources and coordination of strategies of various SBUs for optimal
performance. Top management of the organization makes such decisions. The
nature of strategic decisions tends to be value-oriented, conceptual and less
concrete than decisions at the business or functional level.
Corporate
strategy is not the sum total of business strategies of the corporation but it
deals with different subject matter. While the corporation is concerned with
and has impact on business strategy, the former is concerned with the shape and
balancing of growth and renewal rather than in market execution.
Competitive
Strategy.
Competitive
strategy is applicable in those organizations, which have different
businesses-and each business is treated as strategic business unit (SBU). The
fundamental concept in SBU is to identify the discrete independent
product/market segments served by an organization. Since each product/market
segment has a distinct environment, a SBU is created for each such segment. For
example, Reliance Industries Limited operates in textile fabrics, yarns,
fibers, and a variety of petrochemical products. For each product group, the
nature of market in terms of customers, competition, and marketing channel
differs.
There-fore,
it requires different strategies for its different product groups. Thus, where
SBU concept is applied, each SBU sets its own strategies to make the best use
of its resources (its strategic advantages) given the environment it faces. At
such a level, strategy is a comprehensive plan providing objectives for SBUs,
allocation of re-sources among functional areas and coordination between them
for making optimal contribution to the achievement of corporate-level
objectives. Such strategies operate within the overall strategies of the
organization. The corporate strategy sets the long-term objectives of the firm
and the broad constraints and policies within which a SBU operates. The
corporate level will help the SBU define its scope of operations and also limit
or enhance the SBUs operations by the resources the corporate level assigns to
it. There is a difference between corporate-level and competitive-level
strategies.
Functional
Strategy.
Functional
strategy, as is suggested by the title, relates to a single functional
operation and the activities involved therein. Decisions at this level within
the organization are often described as tactical. Such decisions are guided and
constrained by some overall strategic considerations. Functional strategy deals
with relatively restricted plan providing objectives for specific function,
allocation of resources among different operations within that functional area
and coordi-nation between them for optimal contribution to the achievement of
the SBU and corporate-level objectives. Below the functional-level strategy,
there may be operations level strategies as each function may be dividend into
several sub functions. For example, marketing strategy, a functional strategy,
can be subdivided into promotion, sales, distribution, pricing
strategies with each
sub function strategy contributing to functional strategy.
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