What is strategy?
Planning and strategy have a long history (Mintzberg, 1994: 6).
Writing in 1916, Henri Fayol described having ten-yearly forecasts, revised
every five years. Fayol supported the maxim that 'managing means looking ahead',
regarding foresight as an essential part of management. Strategic thinking can
occur at a number of levels. We have seen already that governments and
multinational organizations can shape the future of whole economies and engage
in strategic human resource planning at a macro level.
Mintzberg observes that, ironically, planning achieved its
greatest importance in two of the most divergent societies on earth: the command
economies of the communist world and in corporate America. However, many
observers have argued that the Japanese economy is the best illustration of
integrated government and corporate strategic planning (Whitehill, 1991: 256).
Japan has targeted and supported successful industries but that success has not
just been a matter of good fortune. 'Winners' have been created by means of
strategic thinking and careful planning at a joint national and organizational
level.
Chaffee (1985) considers that (academically) strategy is viewed
in three distinct but sometimes conflicting ways: linear strategy, adaptive
strategy, and interpretive strategy. The linear model has been used by most
researchers and focuses on planning and forecasting. The second model is
described as adaptive and most closely associated with ‘strategic management’.
This model ‘tends to focus the manager’s attention on means’ and is largely
concerned with ‘fit’. The third, interpretative model, is a minority view that
sees strategy as a metaphor and, therefore, it is not something which can be
measured but is viewed in qualitative terms.
Mintzberg et al (1998) identified 10 ‘schools’ of
strategy research which have developed since strategic management emerged as a
field of study during the 1960s:
1. The Design School - strategy as a process of
conception
2. The Planning School - strategy as a formal process
3. The Positioning School - strategy as an analytical
process
4. The Entrepreneurial School - strategy as a visionary
process
5. The Cognitive School - strategy as a mental process
6. The Learning School - strategy as an emergent process
7. The Power School - strategy as a process of
negotiation
8. The Cultural School - strategy as a collective process
9. The Environmental School - strategy as a reactive
process
10. The Configuration School - strategy as a process of
transformation |