Relationship between Strategy
Formulation and Strategic Planning
The
word “strategy”
or “strategic”
is used in both terms; there is a possibility of confusion. The distinction is
that strategy
formulation is the process of deciding on new strategies, whereas strategic
planning is the process of deciding how to implement the strategies. In
the strategy
formulation process, management arrives at the goals of the
organization and creates the main strategies for achieving those goals. The strategic
planning process then takes the goals and strategies as given and
develops programs that will carry out the strategies and achieve the goals
efficiently and effectively, The decision by an industrial goods manufacturer
to diversify into consumer goods is a strategy formulation, a strategic
decision, after which a number of implementation issues have to be resolved:
whether to diversify through acquisition or through organic growth, what
product lines to emphasize, whether to make or to buy, which marketing channels
to use the document that describes how the strategic decision is to be
implemented is the strategic plan.
In practice, there is a considerable amount of overlap
between strategy formulation and strategic planning. Studies made
during the strategic planning process may indicate the desirability of changing
goals or strategies. Conversely, strategy formulation usually includes a
preliminary consideration of the programs that will be adopted as a means of
achieving the goals. Nevertheless, is important to keep a conceptual
distinction between strategy formulation and strategic planning, one reason
being; that the planning process tends to become institutionalized, putting a
damper on purely creative activities. Segregating strategy formulation as a
separate activity, at least in the thinking of top management, can offset this
tendency. Strategy formulation should be an activity in which creative,
innovative thinking is-strongly encouraged.
Strategic
planning is systematic, there is
an annual strategic planning process, with prescribed procedures: and
timetables; Strategy formulation is unsystematic. Strategies are reexamined on
response to perceived opportunities or threats. Thus, ideally, a possible
strategic initiative may surface at any time from anyone in the organization.
If judged to be worth pursuing, it should be analyzed immediately, without
waiting upon a prescribed timetable. Once a strategy is accepted, the planning
for it follows in a systematic way.
In
many companies, unfortunately goals and strategies are not stated explicitly
enough or communicated clearly to the managers who need to use them as a
framework for their program decisions. Thus, in a formal strategic planning
process an important first step often descriptions of the organizations goals
and strategies task, for although top management presumably has an initiative
what the goals and strategies are, they may not be able to verbalize them with
the specificity necessary for making good program decisions. Planners may have
to interpret or elicit management thinking as a first step.
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