Unit 3
HO 3-3
(continued)
In summary,
the mission statement
must do only
two things, but it must
do them well. It
must
set
forth the direction of
the business, thereby
specifying what the business
is and what it
is not;
and
it must note the tone
or culture of the business
set forth by
the owner's philosophy
of how
the business
should be run.
DEVELOPING
THE FIRM'S
STRATEGIC POSTURE
In
the preceding section,
the importance of
an identifiable mission
was stressed. The
mission,
if developed well,
gives a guideline and
general direction for
the business and an
indication of
its management philosophy.
Before
goals can be defined
more specifically or
strategies
developed to achieve
those goals, it is necessary
to determine the
firm's strategic posture.
Strategic postures
provide a general
indication of how the
business will achieve
its overall
mission
and secure a competitive
advantage. The
strategic posture is
management's overall
plan
of action for running
the business in
response to external opportunities
and threats.
It is based
on external awareness,
assessment
of internal strengths and
weaknesses, and the
set of distinctive
competencies
the business
has developed.
Often, small businesses
fail to give specific
planning attention
to strategic postures,
and instead,
emphasize short-run
goals and operational
decisions.
As such, the firm's
strategic posture
evolves
as a reflectior of past
actions. If that happens,
the strategic posture
describes what
the
firm has done rather
than prescribe what
the business will 'o.
Thus, the strategic
posture fails
to reinforce the
sense of direction generated
by the mission
statement.
The
purpose of this section
is to address the
issue of strategic postures
by describing some
of
the
more common ones
a small business
may assume and to
suggest considerations
for
determining when
each of the postures
may be most appropriate
(see Figure 4-1
below).
Figure4-1
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Growth
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286