23 May 2013
by Asif J. Mir
in The Three Types of Strategies
Tags: action, attainment, basic, build, business, competitive, comprise, contribute, corporate, corporation, course, department, functional, goal, identify, level, long-term, main, marketplace, portfolio, position, pursue, relate, strategy, strengthen, total, type, way
There are three main types of strategies:
- The corporate level strategy identifies the portfolio of businesses that in total will comprise the corporation and the ways in which these businesses will relate;
- The competitive strategy identifies how to build and strengthen the business’s long-term competitive position in the marketplace; and
- The functional strategies identify the basic courses of action that each department will pursue to contribute to the attainment of its goals.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
18 Feb 2013
by Asif J. Mir
in Develop Retail Profiles
Tags: Behavior, cater, choose, Consumer, Customer, develop, display, expectation, extent, factor, fulfill, help, identify, include, influence, inventory, market, Marketing, need, outlet, particular, patronize, Positioning, Product, profile, require, respect, retail, retailer, segment, sell, strategy, suit, target, type, understanding
This will require an understanding of:
- Types of outlets that sell the product
- The type of consumers they cater to and the expectations of the consumer. This includes customer needs that the retail outlet is fulfilling, the factors influencing the consumers to choose a particular outlet, and the extent to which they patronize the outlets.
- The behavior of the retailer with respect to displays, inventory, etc.
These profiles will help the marketer identify the type of outlets that would be catering to the target segment identified in the marketing strategy or the outlets that would suit their positioning strategy.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
15 Oct 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Business Financial Strategy
Tags: ability, acquire, acquisition, action, actual, advance, advantage, amount, asset, attempt, attention, attractive, avoid, bank, believe, best, book, boost, business, buy out, capital, cash, cause, company, competitive, control, core, corporate, corporation, cost, course, debt, decline, desire, deter, earning, effect, entanglement, equity, eventual, examine, external, family, finance, financial, firm, flexible, flow, focus, force, fund, generate, high, huge, identify, implication, improve, insurance, internal, investment, issue, keep, key, lead, less, level, leverage, long-term, lower, management, matter, maximize, medium, obtain, operation, option, order, outside, overall, own, party, pay, per, popular, pressure, price, productivity, profitable, provide, raise, ratio, rely, sale, share, short-term, size, small, source, stock, strategic, strategy, support, takeover, third, trade-off, transaction, tremendous, ultimate, under, unfortunate, usually, Value, via
Financial strategy examines the financial implications of corporate and business-level strategic options and identifies the best financial course of action. It can also provide competitive advantage through a lower cost of funds and a flexible ability to raise capital to support a business strategy. Financial strategy usually attempts to maximize the financial value of the firm.
The trade-off between advancing the desired debt-to-equity ratio and relying on internal long-term financing via cash flow is a key issue in financial strategy. Many small and medium-sized companies try to avoid all external sources of funds in order to avoid outside entanglements and to keep control of the company within the family. Many believe that only by financing through long-term debt can a corporation use financial leverage to boost earnings per share, thus raising stock price and the overall value of the company. Higher debt levels not only deter takeover by other firms (by making the company less attractive), but also leads to improved productivity and improved cash flows by forcing management to focus on core businesses.
A very popular financial strategy is the leveraged buy out—a company is acquired in a transaction financed largely by debt—usually obtained from a third party, such as an insurance company or an investment banker. Ultimately the debt is paid with money generated from the acquired company’s operations or by sales of its assets. The acquired company, in effect, pays for its own acquisition. Management of the leveraged buy out is then under tremendous pressure to keep the highly leveraged company profitable. Unfortunately the huge amount of debt on the acquired company’s books may actually cause its eventual decline by focusing management’s attention on short-term matters.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
24 Sep 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in HR Strategy
Tags: achievement, action, add, advantage, business, change, company, competitive, competitiveness, critical, define, direction, environment, focus, gain, help, HR, Human, identify, intend, issue, joint, manage, management, manager, necessary, objective, Organization, People, perspective, plan, Planning, priority, process, provide, relate, resolve, Resource, set, setting, staff, strategy, success, sustain, ultimately, Value, vision
Human resource strategies define how a company will manage its people toward the achievement of business objectives—setting priorities for action. Like any strategy, a human resource strategy is a directional plan of action for managing change. It provides a business perspective of actions necessary to gain and sustain competitive advantage through the management of human resources—a focus on priorities in managing people in a changing environment.
Through human resource strategy, managers and human resource staff jointly define and resolve people-related business issues. The planning process adds value by helping managers identify the issues most critical to the organization’s competitiveness and ultimately to its success. It helps management set priorities and define a vision of how it intends to manage its people.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
20 Sep 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Rational Management
Tags: ability, aim, approach, base, benefit, change, closer, commitment, common, concern, conclusion, conscious, continually, continue, demand, direct, eventual, express, fade, few, full, good, half, happen, heart, hope, idea, identify, imperative, implement, important, information, introduce, language, learn, major, make, management, mean, Mix, move, objective, Organization, People, pinpoint, potential, process, provide, random, rational, reinforce, resolution, short, significant, simple, sprinkle, subordinate, suggestion, system, teamwork, thing, thinking, toward, Use
Rational management means making full use of the thinking ability of the people in an organization. It is a continuing process. Use of the ideas and their benefits will eventually fade out if they are not continually used and reinforced.
Rational management aims at major change and therefore demands major commitment. But this system cannot be introduced by half-heartedly sprinkling a few ideas and suggestions among a random mix of the organization’s people in the hope that something good will happen. We must identify the significant people within the organization, for they should be the first to learn and use the new ideas. We must identify their subordinates and the people who provide them with information. We must identify those who will implement the conclusions that come out of the use of the ideas. In short, it is imperative to pinpoint all the people within an organization who make things happen. The objective is to move the organization closer to it full potential. This can be done only by introducing teamwork based on the continuing conscious use of common approaches expressed in a simple, common language and directed toward resolution of an organization’s important concerns.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
09 Sep 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Project Implementation
Tags: achieve, action, address, attainable, available, challenge, clarify, consistent, deadline, direction, express, goal, identify, Implementation, include, intend, know, measure, meet, Organization, output, Performance, policy, procedure, project, provide, Quality, quantity, realistic, Resource, result, set, specific, standard, term, timing
Clarify implementation goals and standards—what is the intended result of the project? How will we know when we have achieved it? To provide direction to the project the goal should be expressed in terms of performance or output. The goal should be specific, realistic, attainable, challenging, consistent with the available resources and the organization’s policies and procedures, measurable and should have a deadline. The implementation standards should address quality, quantity and timing. This should include a set of standards to identify what actions must be taken meet them.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
30 Aug 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Effective Segmentation
Tags: basic, capability, case, complex, depend, effective, expensive, find, firm, follow, identify, inefficient, large, market, Marketing, match, measurable, Niche, potential, power, present, produce, profit, promote, purchase, requirement, segment, Segmentation, serve, size, strategy, success, sufficient, target, way
Segmentation does not promote marketing success in all cases. Effectiveness depends on the following basic requirements:
- The market segment must present measurable purchasing power and size.
- Marketers must find a way to effectively promote to and serve the market segment.
- Marketers must identify segments that are sufficiently large enough to give them good profit potential.
- The firm must target segments that match its marketing capabilities. Targeting a large number of niche markets can produce an expensive, complex and inefficient strategy.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
16 Aug 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Behavior and Organizational Strategies
Tags: accelerate, account, aid, appraisal, assessment, assumption, average, base, basis, Behavior, build, change, characteristic, communicate, competency, condition, cost, critical, culture, customize, demand, determine, develop, difference, different, differentiate, distinguish, effective, example, exemplary, exhibit, flexible, focus, follow, function, future, general, generic, Human, identify, incident, individual, information, initiative, innovation, input, internal, interview, issue, job, list, maintain, management, message, method, model, need, observation, off-the-shelf, Organization, output, outstanding, overall, overlay, People, perform, performer, place, principle, Product, production, Promotion, provide, purchase, reduce, reflect, relate, require, Resource, respect, Role, seek, selection, senior, service, specific, strategy, superior, support, system, teamwork, Tentative, Training, translate, validate, Value, various, workforce, written
A competency model can be an effective way of communicating to the workforce the values of the senior management and what people should focus on their own behavior. For example, a competency-based appraisal system helps to distinguish individuals with the characteristics that are required to build and maintain an organization’s values (teamwork, respect for individual innovation or initiative) from those who do not exhibit the behaviors that will support these values. In this way competency models can translate general messages about needed strategy and culture change into specifics. There are two principles that can be followed:
- Focus on the superior performers without making an assumption.
- Focus on what they do to perform the given role.
Following are various developed models that are used as a basis for selection, training, promotion and other issues related to human resources:
- Job Competence Assessment Method—this is developed using interviews and observations of outstanding and average performers to determine the competencies that differentiate between them in critical incidents.
- Modified Job Competence Assessment Method—this also identifies such behavioral differences, but to reduce costs, interviewees provide a written account of critical incidents.
- Generic Model Overlay Methods—organizations purchase an off-the-shelf generic competency model for a specific role or function.
- Customized Generic Model Methods—organizations use a tentative list of competencies that are identified internally to aid in their selection of a generic model and then validate it with the input of outstanding and average performers.
- Flexible Job Competency Model Methods—this seeks to identify the competencies that will be required to perform effectively under different conditions in the future.
- Systems Method—this demand reflecting on not only what exemplary performers do now, or what they do overall, but also behaviors that may be important in the future.
- Accelerated Competency Systems Method—this places the focus on the competencies that specifically support the production of output, such as an organization’s products, services or information.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
09 Aug 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Two-way HR Planning Process
Tags: action, address, adopt, affect, aggregate, analyses, ask, assessment, attune, bottom up, broad, broken, business, change, character, close, company, competitive, concern, condition, consideration, context, cumulative, department, detail, direction, down, economic, effort, employee, environment, external, focus, force, forecast, future, great, guidance, HR, Human, identify, impact, important, influence, information, input, issue, level, long-term, manager, meaningful, necessary, objective, operate, Organization, participate, People, plan, Planning, possible, practice, process, progressive, provide, raise, readily, regarding, require, Resource, select, shape, social, specific, staff, strategic, strategy, synthesize, team, top-down, trend, umbrella, unit, view
Like other business strategies, human resource strategies are shaped through both top-down and bottom-up processes in an organization. A top-down processes provides the strategic context necessary for team and unit planning.
Through a focused company environmental assessment, it provides information on possible future trends and issues affecting the business and influencing the shaping of plans and objectives. People close to the operating business may not readily take such a broad future view. It requires looking outside the company to external competitive practices, economic and social trends, and possible future conditions that may some day have an impact on the business.
A plan is strategic in character if it is focused on important issues raised in an environmental assessment. In today’s competitive organization, it is important that employees at all levels be attuned to external forces and changes and to the strategic direction being taken to address them.
In a bottom-up approach, planning of human resource actions is a cumulative process. Instead of broad strategies being broken down into progressively greater detail, detailed strategies are aggregated and synthesized into meaningful umbrella strategies. Each business unit or department is asked to identify the human resource issues of concern, taking into consideration the guidance of the long-term planning inputs. They are also asked to specific analyses, forecasts, and assessments regarding these issues. Specific action plans are selected and adopted. Both human resource staff and managers should participate in this effort.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
29 May 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Direct Sales Calls
Tags: address, appear, area, attempt, base, benefit, beyond, bit, building, business, buy, call, care, chit-chat, close, company, computer, contact, continually, continue, convenient, Customer, delivery, describe, description, direct, elaborate, energy, explanation, feel, focus, follow, force, gain, general, guarantee, hear, identify, include, individual, interest, keep, lead, least, letter, listen, lose, machine, manager, market, Marketing, mean, money, name, need, number, offering, option, order, person, phone, pitch, potential, price, Product, program, pull, purchase, Quality, question, Research, responsible, return, sale, sample, schedule, secret, seem, sell, sentence, specific, stage, Structure, subject, sufficient, superfluous, talk, telephone, throw, tool, try, type, wait, wall, waste
- Do sufficient research to identify potential customers who appear to need your product. This means pulling together names, addresses, and telephone numbers of companies in your market area that use the types of products you are trying to sell. Calling on companies that do not use your products only wastes time, energy, and money.
- Get the name, address, and telephone number of the specific individual responsible for purchasing the types of products you are selling. It won’t do much good to talk to the marketing manager if you’re trying to sell computer programs, or the general manager if you’re selling machine tools.
- Know your sales pitch before calling. No one has time to chit-chat about superfluous subjects. No one cares about how you feel, nor do they care to tell you how they feel. One sentence describing your product and why the listener should buy it is all you’ve time for. If you continue beyond one sentence, either you’ll be thrown out or you’ll lose the interest of your potential customer. When buyers want to hear more, they ask questions. If there are no questions, there’s no interest.
- Don’t attempt to close an order at the first contact—either by phone or in person. If the person is interested, ask what would be convenient time and place for you to return and elaborate on your product offering, including prices, delivery schedules, and quality guarantees.
- Focus on the benefits to be gained from using your product, not on its price. Explanations of product pricing and delivery options should wait for second contact. If you’re forced to the wall, try to keep your description of your pricing structure general.
- Follow up all potential leads with another call, a letter, or a sample of your product. The scret to building a first-stage business base through direct sales is to continually follow up with any potential customer that seems the least bit interested in your product.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
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