
Strategic thinking vs. strategic planning: Sometimes the strategic practitioners or theorists have wrongly assumed that strategic thinking, strategic planning are synonymous or interchangeable, at least in best practice, though they are interrelated and complementary thought processes that must sustain and support one another for effective strategic management. Strategic thinking is specified as being conceptual, systems-oriented, directional, linking the future with the past and opportunistic. It deals with "discovering novel, rewriting the rules of the competitive game" whereas strategic planning deals with horizontal scanning environmental and social monitoring, distributed sensing capability, and knowing what to look for, how to set guidelines, when to make choices, and it is a natural extension of scenario planning. Most systems share common characteristics (supplied by Wikipedia), including:
-Systems have structure, defined by components and their composition;
-Systems have behavior, which involves inputs, processing, and outputs of material, energy, information, or data;
-Systems have interconnectivity: the various parts of a system have functional as well as structural relationships between each other;
-Systems may have some functions or groups of functions.
When designing a strategy, you need
to apply system thinking principles; standing back and looking at the bigger picture, or
get out of the box in order to look through and look beyond the box. This has
always been a rewarding approach. In systems thinking, typically processes fall
within the system, part of systems engineering, and basically the interactions
and the critical path that defines the "system." Applying system thinking
principles to strategic planning does not change the fact that the original and
evolving thinking, over the strategies lifetime, are inextricably linked to
standing back observing and understanding the system at any point in time. And
that is also a process ‘outside’ the system!

Therefore,
strategic management is both system and process, where strategic thinking is
the system thinking in the new boxes whereas strategic planning and execution
within which risk management aligns planning with execution, are the process of
thinking within the business model.
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ReplyDeletewas curious if you ever considered changing the layout of your site? Its very well written; I love what you’ve got to say. But maybe you could a little more in the way of content so people could connect with it better. You’ve got an awful lot of text for only having one or 2 pictures. Maybe you could space it out better? Surya Informatics
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