46 CHAPTER3WINNINGMARKETSTHROUGHSTRATEGICPLANNING, IMPLEMENTATION,ANDCONTROL
Of course, companies must not only develop new businesses, but also prune, har-
vest, or divest tired, old businesses in order to release needed resources and reduce
costs. Weak businesses require a disproportionate amount of managerial attention;
managers should therefore focus on growth opportunities rather than wasting energy
and resources trying to save hemorrhaging businesses.
BUSINESS STRATEGIC PLANNING
Below the corporate level, the strategic-planning process for each business or SBU
consists of the eight steps shown in Figure 1-7. We examine each step in the sections
that follow.
Business Mission
Each business unit needs to define its specific mission within the broader company
mission. Thus, a television studio-lighting-equipment company might define its mis-
sion as “The company aims to target major television studios and become their vendor
of choice for lighting technologies that represent the most advanced and reliable stu-
dio lighting arrangements.”
SWOT Analysis
The overall evaluation of a business’s strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats
is called SWOT analysis.SWOT analysis consists of an analysis of the external and
internal environments.
External Environment Analysis
In general, a business unit has to monitor key macroenvironment forces(demographic-
economic, technological, political-legal, and social-cultural) and microenvironment
actors(customers, competitors, distributors, and suppliers) that affect its ability to earn
profits (see Chapter 4 for more detail). Then, for each trend or development, man-
agement needs to identify the associated marketing opportunities and threats.
Amarketing opportunityis an area of buyer need in which a company can per-
form profitably. Opportunities can be classified according to their attractivenessand
theirsuccess probability.The company’s success probability depends on whether its busi-
Program
formulation
Strategy
formulation
Business
mission
Goal
formulation
External
environment
(opportunity &
threat) analysis
Internal
environment
(strengths/
weaknesses) analysis
SWOT analysis Implementation
Feedback
and
control
Figure 1-7 The Business Strategic-Planning Process