TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background
to the Study
1.2 Statement of
the problem
1.3 Aim and Objectives of the Study
1.4 Relevant Research Questions
1.5 Relevant Research
Hypotheses
1.6
Significance of the Study
1.7 Scope of the Study
1.8 Definition
of Terms
REFERENCES
CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Preamble
2.2 Theoretical
Framework of the Study
2.2.1 The Procession School
2.2.2 Strategy-as-bargaining
2.2.3 Strategy as power: A historical materialist
approach
2.2.4 Concept
of Organizational Productivity and Profitability
2.2.5 The
Levels of Strategic Management and Management
2.2.6
Strategic Thinking and Strategy Formulation
2.2.7 Strategic
management
2.3 Empirical
Framework of the Study
2.3.1 Relationship between Strategic Management
and Organizational Productivity
2.3.2
Organizational Process of Strategy
Formulation
2.3.3 Nature of Strategy Formulation in
Organizations
REFERENCES
CHAPTER THREE
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
3.1 Preamble
3.2 Research Design
3.3 Population of the Study
3.4 Sample Procedure and Sample Size
3.5 Data Collection Instrument and Validity
.3.6 Method
of Data Analysis
3.7 Limitations of the Study
REFERENCES
CHAPTER FOUR
DATA ANALYSIS AND RESEARCH FINDINGS
4.1 Preamble
4.3 Hypotheses
Testing
4.4 Discussion
of Findings
CHAPTER FIVE
SUMMARY OF THE FINDINGS, DISCUSSION
OF THE FINDINGS
CONCLUSIONS, RECOMMENDATIONS AND
SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER STUDIES
5.1 Summary
of the Findings
5.2
Conclusions
5.3 Recommendations
BIBLIOGRAPHY
APPENDIX
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background to the Study
In today’s turbulent business
environment, managers increasingly need reliable navigational tools to achieve
competitive advantage. Many academics and practitioners consider strategic
management to be such a tool, that today’s managers have to think strategically
about their company’s position and about the impact of changing business
environment. Strategic management, according to Kotler (2012), is defined as
the managerial process of developing and maintaining a viable fit between
organization objective, skills resources and its changing market opportunities.
In any organization, strategic management occurs in two phases which include
the decision on the products to produce and
or the services to render. Also, it
includes deciding on the marketing and or the manufacturing strategy to follow
in getting the intended product or service to the proper user.
Strategic management decisions will
have long term impact on the organization. Similarly, Mintzberg (2011) argued
that strategic management attempts to combine short-term planning and long-term
planning. Organizations conducting Strategic management typically commit
themselves to a formal process in which a group of planners articulate a
mission statement, set goals and objectives, audits the organization for
internal strengths and weaknesses, assesses the external environment for
opportunities and threats, evaluates strategic options, and then select and
operationalize an organizational strategy. The basic aim of strategic
management is to link daily organizational decisions with a vision of where the
organization wants to be at some point in future, usually five years. Hence,
strategic management is not a single panacea but is instead an adaptable set of
concepts, procedures, tools and practices intended to assist organizations
determine where they are, what they are doing, how to do it and why. Porter
(2010) argued that strategic management is the process of devising a plan of
both offensive and defensive action intended to maintain and build competitive
advantage over the competitors through strategic and organizational
innovation. The three issues that
Strategic management should address include; what to do, to identify the
customers and how to do better than the competitors. Blackerby Associates
(2010), said that strategic management is a continuous and systematic process
where people make decisions about intended future outcomes, how outcomes are to
be accomplished, and how success is to be measured. McDonald (2013) further
developed a frame work arguing that strategic management process delivers a set
of defined initiatives (projects) that achieve a desired set of business goals.
Renger and Titcomb (2012), were of the opinion that strategic management is an
organizational process of defining its strategy or direction and making
decisions on allocating its resources to pursue this strategy. In order to
determine the direction of the organization, it is necessary to understand its
current position and the possible avenue through which it can pursue in
particular its course of action. In addition, Amit and Zott (2010) averred that
strategic management spells out the
basic mission of the organization and decides the resources that will be used
to accomplish the stated mission. It is the master plan of the organization from
where all the departments in an organization derive their functions and
directions.
For these managers, the trick is
knowing which levers to pull, and when to pull these levers to produce the
desired and significant results in term of increased productivity which leads
to high profitability of their organizations. We may identify these critical
levers as organizational strategies. Strategy and strategic management in the
context of business organizations refer the major action programmes that are
used by organizations to achieve their mission and goals. The focus of all
business organization is viability and profitability. The first requirement of
the spirit of organization is high productivity standards for the group as well
as for individuals in the organization. A successful organization is most often
an efficient enterprise and one of the major focuses of management by
objectives is to have managers set high productivity standards for themselves.
A manager performs his functions by allocating and integrating of human and
economic resources through the process of planning, organizing, directing, and
controlling, for the purpose of producing outputs (goods and services) desired
by its customers, so that the organization's objectives are achieved. A manager
works with and through people and other resources to realize these
organizational objectives.
As modern business activities widen,
environmental scanning and planning become difficult and more relevant today's
business conditions have continuous to change so fast to emphasize a growing
need for continuous business intelligence activities and strategic management
as the only option to anticipate failure, problem and opportunities. Strategic
management provides all employees with clear goals and directions to the future
of the organization. It also provides a standard against which future
productivity can be compared. And all this makes it complicated in many highly
technical firms that are subject to the "law of acceleration" which
suggests an increasing rate of change. Since strategic management aids at
finding how a company competes successfully within it environment, it is
therefore said to be based on the principles of comparative competitive
advantage necessary for survival and growth under competitive conditions. A
firm cannot survive or grow unless it maintains one or more comparative
competitive advantages, which provide the basic rationale by which customers
will prefer that firm to others.
Organizational productivity and
profitability is concerned with how an organization has fared in its quest to
achieve competitive advantage position and expands its market share relative to
their Competitors in the market place. Notable international businesses and
multinational corporations (MNCs) across the globe, have for a long period of
time achieved and sustained competitive advantage through consistently
profitable business operation. Therefore, a business that is more profitable
than its rivals by exploiting some form of strategic advantage is believed to
be performing well. The source of the advantage can be something the business
does that is distinctive and difficult to replicate, also known as a core
competency (Colotla, Chrisman and Carroll, 2013). A firm’s core competencies
are things that a firm can do well and that meet the following three conditions
specified by Prahalad and Hamel (2010) which are, first, it provides customer
benefits; second, it is hard for competitors to imitate; and third, it can be
leveraged widely unto many products and market.
Organizational productivity and
profitability can take various forms, including technical and/or subject matter
know-how, a reliable process, and close relationships with customers and
suppliers (Mascarenhas, Lewin and Minton,2015). It may also include product
development or culture such as employee dedication and determination. If
productivity yields a long term advantage to the business, it is said to be a
sustainable competitive advantage. In order to put up a desirable productivity
and compete successfully, locally and globally, businesses must not only excel
in their area but also persevere in the long run. Achieving such a “sustainable
competitive advantage” status is not an easy task without a proper road map or
strategy being outlined and put into practice. Hence this is where strategic management
becomes germane in the foregoing.
Interestingly, much of our
understanding of the notion of successful organizational productivity and
profitability has been drawn from the experience of Western and multinational
organizations (Peng and Tan, 2011). By and large organizational productivity is
examined as resulting from and being associated with a long list of
contributing factors. Such as operational efficiencies, levels of
diversification, types of diversification, organizational structures, top management
team composition and style, human resource management, manipulation of the
political and/or social influences intruding upon the market, conformity to
various interpretations of socially responsible behaviours, international or
cross-cultural activities of expansion and adaptation, and various other
organizational and/or industry level phenomena (Flint and Van Fleet, 2012;
King, 2014).
1.2 Statement of the
problem
In
Nigeria, most organizations attribute their failure to lack of funds, market
situation and product unacceptability. Meanwhile, Ikemefuna (2010), observed
that lack of vision; mission, and improper planning are the principal causes of
business failure. However, Mintzberg (2011) argued that strategic planning is
an involved, intricate and complex process that takes an organization into the
uncharted territory. It does not provide a ready to use prescription for
success; instead, it takes the organization through a journey and helps develop
a framework and context within which the answers will emerge.
The
main problem of this study is therefore concerned with issues of haphazard planning; issues of not attaching
adequate importance to business environment; and issue of engaging unqualified
managers that can undertake effective strategic management in order to meet up
with the productivity and profitability of Business organisation in Nigeria.
1.3 Aim and Objectives of the Study
The main aim of this work is to assess the impact of
strategic management on productivity and profitability of a business
organization in Nigeria. Specific objectives are to:
- Investigate
the role of strategic management on organizations productivity.
- find
out if strategic management is an important function of management
- examine
if the success of Nigeria breweries is based on strategic management.
- find
out if strategic management gives Nigeria breweries an edge over
another
1.4 Relevant Research Questions
The following research questions
would be asked in the course of this study:
- What
is the role of strategic management on organizational productivity and
profitability?
- Is
strategic management an important function of management?
- Is
the success of Nigeria breweries based on strategic management?
- Does
strategic management gives Nigeria breweries an edge over another?
1.5 Relevant Research Hypotheses
The following hypotheses are
formulated for this study.
Hypothesis I
Ho: Strategic management plays no significant role on
organizational productivity
Hi: Strategic management
plays significant role on organizational productivity.
Hypothesis II
Ho: Strategic management is not an important function of
management
Hi: Strategic management
is an important function of management.
Hypothesis III
Ho: The productivity and profitability of an organization is
not based on strategic management
Hi: The productivity and profitability of an organization is
based on strategic management
Hypothesis IV
Ho: Strategic management does not give Nigeria breweries an
edge over another
Hi: Strategic management
gives Nigeria breweries an edge over another.
1.7 Significance of the Study
It is envisaged that the findings of
this work will enable organizations to adopt .Strategic management in their
management process. The recommendations made will be of immense help to future
researchers on strategic management and organizational productivity. Similarly,
the study will enlist the importance of strategic management in organizational
productivity and profitability, which will serve as a reference for future
studies.
1.7 Scope of the Study
The study will examine the relevance
of strategic management and organizational productivity and profitability in
Nigerian Breweries Plc Ikeja Lagos. During the study, emphasis will be laid on
the top and middle level management and few other employees who can give relevant
information needed for the research. However, this will be achieved through the
use of questionnaires and personal interviews.
1.8 Definition of Terms
Functional strategy: it focuses on the short run, "how to" issues of implementing
strategies.
Strategic managers: These are individuals who bear responsibility for the overall
productivity of the organization or for one of its major self-contained
divisions.
Strategic adult:
This is concerned with analyzing and assessing what has been achieved in the
past and what the organization is capable of achieving in the future.
Strategic gap:
This is the difference in the level of productivity called for in the firm's
state objective and the level of productivity that seems likely to result from
the continuation of current operations.
Scenarios:
This is a form of educated guesses made by planners. Objective: a statement of
what is to be achieved.
Goal: This is
synonymous with objective; a statement of what is to be achieved.
Mission: This
defines the basic purpose or purposes of the organization; usually includes a
description of the organization's basic products and/or services and a
definition of its market and/or sources of revenue.
Productivity:
This is an economic measure of efficiency including what is produced relative
to resources used to produce it.
Aggregate productivity: This is the total level of productivity achieved by a
country.
Industry productivity: This is the total level of productivity achieved by the firms in a
particular industry.
Company productivity: This is the level of productivity achieved by an individual
company.
Individual productivity: This is the level of productivity attained by a single
individual.
Total factor productivity: This is an overall indication of how well an organization
uses all of its resources to create all of its products and services.
Partial productivity: This ratio uses only one category of resources.
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