A competitive advantage is achieved by (a) creating value, (b) being unique, and (c) being difficult to imitate. Additionally, strategy should be simple.
Building the right set of questions in navigating strategy and execution is next practice for business executives.
1. Three ‘W” Questions to Define Fundamentals of Corporate Strategy
If you want to define the fundamentals of your Business
Strategy, you need only to answer three questions:
1) Who is the Target Customer?
2).What is the Value Proposition to that Customer?
3).What are the essential Capabilities needed to deliver that Value Proposition?
1) Who is the Target Customer?
2).What is the Value Proposition to that Customer?
3).What are the essential Capabilities needed to deliver that Value Proposition?
2. Set of Questions to Score Corporate Strategy
If you want to score your Business Strategy, here are the 10
Strategic Tests:
1). Will your Strategy beat the Market?
2). Does your Strategy tap a true source of advantage?
3). Is your Strategy granular about where to compete?
4). Does your Strategy put you ahead of trends?
5). Does your Strategy rest on privileged insights?
6). Does your Strategy embrace uncertainty?
7). Does your Strategy balance commitment and flexibility?
8). Is your Strategy contaminated by bias?
9). Is there conviction to act on your Strategy?
10). Have you translated your Strategy into an action plan?
1). Will your Strategy beat the Market?
2). Does your Strategy tap a true source of advantage?
3). Is your Strategy granular about where to compete?
4). Does your Strategy put you ahead of trends?
5). Does your Strategy rest on privileged insights?
6). Does your Strategy embrace uncertainty?
7). Does your Strategy balance commitment and flexibility?
8). Is your Strategy contaminated by bias?
9). Is there conviction to act on your Strategy?
10). Have you translated your Strategy into an action plan?
3. Checklist of Scenario upon How to Make Strategic Decision
Kami's 12 points/steps: (From “Trigger Points: how to
make decisions three times faster)
1: Step 1: Where Are We? Develop an External Environment Profile
1: Step 1: Where Are We? Develop an External Environment Profile
Key focal point: What are the key factors in our external environment and how much can we control them?
2) Step 2: Where
Are We? Develop an Internal Environment Profile
Key focal point: Build detailed snapshots of your business activities as they are at present.
Key focal point: Build detailed snapshots of your business activities as they are at present.
3) Step 3: Where
Are We Going? Develop Assumptions about the Future External Environment
Key focal point: Catalog future influences systematically; know your key challenges and threats.
4) Step 4: Where
Can We Go? Develop a Capabilities Profile
Key focal point: What are our strengths and needs? How are we doing in our key results and activities areas?
Key focal point: What are our strengths and needs? How are we doing in our key results and activities areas?
5) Step 5:
Where Might We Go? Develop Future Internal Environment Assumptions
Key focal point: Build assumptions, potentials, etc. Do not build predictions or forecasts! Assess what the future business situation might look like.
Key focal point: Build assumptions, potentials, etc. Do not build predictions or forecasts! Assess what the future business situation might look like.
6) Step 6: Where
Do We Want to Go? Develop Objectives
Key focal point: Create a pyramid of objectives; redefine your business; set functional objectives.
Key focal point: Create a pyramid of objectives; redefine your business; set functional objectives.
7) Step 7: What
Do We Have to Do? Develop a Gap Analysis Profile
Key focal point: What will be the effect of new external forces? What assumptions can we make about future changes to our environment?
Key focal point: What will be the effect of new external forces? What assumptions can we make about future changes to our environment?
8) Step 8: What
Could We Do? Opportunities and Problems
Key focal point: Act to fill the gaps. Conduct an opportunity-problem feasibility analysis; risk analysis assessment; resource-requirements assessment. Build action program proposals.
Key focal point: Act to fill the gaps. Conduct an opportunity-problem feasibility analysis; risk analysis assessment; resource-requirements assessment. Build action program proposals.
9) Step 9: What
Should We Do? Select Strategy and Program Objectives
Key focal point: Classify strategy and program objectives; make explicit commitments; adjust objectives.
Key focal point: Classify strategy and program objectives; make explicit commitments; adjust objectives.
10)
Step 10: How
Can We Do It? Implementation
Key focal point: Evaluate the impact of new programs.
Key focal point: Evaluate the impact of new programs.
11)
Step 11: How
Are We Doing ? Control
Key focal point: Monitor external environment. Analyze fiscal and physical variances. Conduct an overall assessment.
Key focal point: Monitor external environment. Analyze fiscal and physical variances. Conduct an overall assessment.
12)
Step 12: Change
What’s not Working Revise, Control, Remain Flexible
Key focal point: Revise strategy and program objectives as needed; revise explicit commitments as needed; adjust objectives as needed.
Key focal point: Revise strategy and program objectives as needed; revise explicit commitments as needed; adjust objectives as needed.
4. 5W+1H to Navigate Strategy
1) WHY does the business make profit? What gap in the
market does it fill?
2).HOW does the business make profit? What are the transactions that generate cash flow and margin for the business?
3).What is our specific objective?
4).What is our scope?
5).What is our competitive advantage? (How are we better, cheaper, or different than the alternatives?)
6).What is our strategic sweet spot?
7).What is the relevant products in the market and their geographic coverage?
8).Who are the buyers, suppliers, competitors, substitutes, and potential entrants?
9).What forces control profitability? (see diagram)
10) Where is the inflection point in strategic changes.
5. Nine Business Model
Building Blocks
1) Value
proposition: what is the company VP, product portfolio, pricing, branding.
2) Customer
segments: who are our target segments, markets, sectors.
3)
Key
channels: what are our distribution channels, sales channels.
4) Customer
relations: how do we add value for each service, long term relations..
5) Key
partners: who are our vendors, alliances.
6) Key
activities: what do we do in terms of value chain, processes, project management?
7)
Key
resources: How do we capitalize on HR, networking, know-how, financial
resources?
8)
Revenue
streams: how do we generate revenues..
9)
Cost
structure: How can we optimize costs.
6. Ten Questions in Bridging Strategy & Execution
1) All stakeholders are part of the game since
inception - who are theses stakeholders, we do not include, miss, know about,
over and over? – governance
2)
Hierarchy
of variables / functions / R&R / organizations / disciplines are
addressed - understand well root causes, why, what and how? influences -
systemic approach
3) Outputs
are optimized with limited resources - cannot maximize all variables and
outputs at the same time ! - do we accept and understand that, emotionally and
intellectually ? Is our reward scheme based on that fact , to drive right
behavior, based on greater good ?
4) Balanced
view of external and internal risks and opportunities - who has the right
to ask indefinitely questions to open options, and knows when to shut up to close
and move on ?
5) Obstacles
are removed, and maturity / capacity / core competencies are accelerated -
culture, consciousness, communication, nomenclature, knowledge, ego, ....- do
we address these topics openly, in a transparent way, or still a bit tabu, in
21st century ?
6) Soft
skills - motivation, creativity, intentions, trust, relationships, informal
dialogues, engagement are our most valuable assets to build solid sustainable
value propositions - how do we maintain them at Excellency levels?
7) Value
proposition should be customer focused, like our org, and define the ideal
business model, distribution, products & services, Brand by segments we
want to go after. Can our Holistic Marketing drive the Enterprise and Business Strategy ?
8) The whole
value chain needs to be aligned, engaged, contributing by sharing the value
so customers and stakeholders - from suppliers, to factories, employees,
shareholders, get their fair share - how balanced and effective is our value
chain?
9) Do we
have common values and a dynamic enterprise business model that takes into
account initial customer investments, life cycle of our customers, products,
services, economical cycles, market shifts to insure flexibility and positive
results throughout ?
10)
How to
win, the primary objective of strategy for competitive advantage. A competitive
advantage is achieved by (a) creating value, (b) being unique, and (c) being
difficult to imitate. Additionally, strategy should be simple.
A good strategy takes multitude of disciplines that would
include: Sciences: exact - math, natural - chemistry, biology, physics,
climatolog. Human - anthropology, psychology, sociology; Business
disciplines: Marketing & Sales, HR & Finance and Supply chain -
production & logistics. Spirituality: serendipity, inner voices, intuition,
....to really address the essence in the complex systems in a dynamic, continuous
improvement way!
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