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Big picture, strategy is the sine qua non of sustainable growth and long-term success. Get it right and the sky’s the limit. Get it wrong and you are unlikely to realize your goals, your purpose or your mission, and you will struggle to successfully tailor your offerings, leverage your resources and capabilities or take the right actions to operationalize your business plan over time.
We contend that many of the organizations and decision-makers that continue to ride the waves of success do so because of their capacity to do one thing, and it’s this: strategic analysis. These are leaders that constantly and consistently analyze their own strategies and the competitive context in which they operate. Such leaders are strategists that use analytical tools to make reasoned and reasonable recommendations about how to position themselves relative to their peers, as well as the actions they need to take to maximize value creation for their customers, stakeholders and employees.
In this series, we detail four foundational analytical tools to help any organization future-proof its strategy. This installment follows Tool No. 1: Competitor Analysis.
Back in the 1980s, photographic film behemoth Kodak was a household name. So ubiquitous was the company that the term “Kodak moment” had become entrenched in popular lexicon, connoting something worthy of documenting and remembering.
Kodak leadership made a good decision in 1981: to commission research on innovation and the emergence of new technologies in the digital photography space. The idea was to determine what opportunities and challenges might be gathering on the horizon. But then they made a poor decision — or a sequence of poor decisions — that meant they were ill-prepared to pivot and adapt when the promise of digital was realized a decade or so later. Kodak’s leaders decided not to pursue deeper analysis of the widespread implications and the radically new business models that accompanied digital disruption. The result? The firm finally filed for bankruptcy in 2012, and Kodak’s moment was over.
The Kodak story illustrates the significant impact that the broader competitive and macroeconomic environment can exert on your firm’s value proposition and the importance of scanning for the bigger trends and disruptions that can reconfigure your strategic outlook. Those trends could be technological, regulatory, institutional, cultural or societal changes. Analyzing these risks and opportunities today and thinking about how they might evolve over time is just as critical to the long-term success of your business strategy as understanding your competition.
The Environmental Analysis Tool can help you read and make sense of your broader context effectively.
This step-by-step framework empowers you to:
How do we use it?
The first step in an environmental analysis is to set out all the factors of interest in your competitive setting.
Think about things such as:
Collect as much relevant data and information as possible, and analyze that data to better understand the factors you have listed. Dig as deep as you can to get a bigger-picture understanding of your broader strategic and operational environment. And think about what kinds of stakeholder groups or agents you may want to engage with to proactively influence your environment.
Environmental analysis equips you with understanding and knowledge about your broader competitive context so that you are better prepared to adapt your strategy, adopt new business models, and lead change and innovation over time.
The preceding is drawn from Future-Proof Your Strategy: 4 Essential Tools, a white paper that details foundational tools that can be used in strategic analysis — oftentimes the difference between a company’s success, resilience and failure.
This installment follows Tool No. 1: Competitor Analysis. Follow-up entries on Darden Ideas to Action will address Tools 3–4, tackling capabilities analysis and scenario planning.
Harris is an expert on both ethics and strategic management. His research centers on the interplay between ethics and strategy, with a particular focus on the topics of corporate governance, business ethics and interorganizational trust. Harris has written extensively on the topics of executive compensation and other governance-related topics.
Harris worked as a certified public accountant and consultant for several leading public accounting firms in Boston and Portland, Oregon, and served as the CFO of a small technology firm in Washington, D.C. He consults with several top financial services companies on the topics of strategic management, ethics and compliance.
He recently published The Strategist’s Toolkit, a primer on strategic thinking, with Darden Professor Mike Lenox. He also co-authored the recently published paper “Model-Theoretic Knowledge Accumulation: The Case of Agency Theory and Incentive Alignment” in the Academy of Management Review and a forthcoming paper titled “A Comparison of Alternative Measures of Organizational Aspirations” for the Strategic Management Journal.
B.S., M.Acc., Brigham Young University; Ph.D., University of Minnesota
Lenox’s expertise is in the domain of technology strategy and policy. He studies the role of innovation in helping a business succeed. In particular, he explores the sourcing of external knowledge by firms and this practice’s impact on a company’s innovation strategy. Lenox has a longstanding interest in the interface between business strategy and public policy as it relates to the natural environment; his work explores firm strategies and nontraditional public policies that have the potential to drive green innovation and entrepreneurship.
In 2013, Lenox co-authored The Strategist’s Toolkit with Darden Professor Jared Harris. His latest book,
Lenox is a prolific author; his most recent book, Strategy in the Digital Age: Mastering Digital Transformation, examines how digital technologies and services enable the creation of innovative products and services, as well as identifying new competitive positions.
B.S., M.S., University of Virginia; Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology