Why shana corp strategy deliberate emergent both or neither


Assignment: Shana Corp.

Shana Corp. was a small, new software company. Some of its product development efforts, combined with a few technologically related contracts, had allowed the firm, over several years, to develop a budding expertise. At first, Shana's skills were not much different from most of its rivals'. But because of the kinds of jobs it had worked on (jobs richer rivals had refused), Shana was acquiring an ability to develop advanced forms-completion software that could run on different computer operating systems.

After a while, Shana's top managers gradually came to realize that their firm had learned to skillfully and cheaply do jobs that rivals could not do as well or as efficiently. Also, some affinities began to occur among software developers as each began, quite naturally, to specialize according to talent and build on one another's strengths. Work complementarities grew up as a loosely coupled group became an integrated and effective team. And so Shana kept getting better in their increasingly focused sphere.

Soon, Shana's managers began to develop routines, procedures, and incentive policies to further improve team performance. They also started using Shana's growing body of specialized knowledge to concentrate on clients that required its special abilities. The convergence around certain skills and a target market also focused selection and training programs, project management protocols, and marketing campaigns.

Shana had not set out to master a special capability. Nor did it prospect intentionally for promising market niches. And the company did not at first possess valuable property or knowledge resources that were unavailable to rivals (they too could have tried to develop forms software to bridge operating systems but decided this was not worth the effort). Rather Shana's managers noticed retrospectively what their firm was becoming especially good at, realized from talking with clients that the talents were rare, tough to match, and worth developing, and pursued clients that would value these talents. The firm, moreover, did not set out to copy the skills of successful rivals. It did not have the wherewithal to accomplish that. Moreover, even if Shana had been able to develop those skills, by the time it did its competitors, most probably, would have moved ahead. Shana's managers realized that emulation would surrender to rivals' product and market leadership, and force the firm to share a market with many other firms.

Question:

1: Your text claims that the evolving nature of a company's strategy means that the typical company strategy is a blend of (1) proactive (deliberate) moves to improve the company's financial performance and secure a competitive edge and (2) adaptive(emergent) reactions to unanticipated developments and fresh market conditions.

From the perspective of the senior management at Shana, is the Shana Corp. strategy deliberate, emergent, both, or neither? Explain. (What in the case indicates the presence or absence of a deliberate and/or emergent strategy?)

The response should include a reference list. Double-space, using Times New Roman 12 pnt font, one-inch margins, and APA style of writing and citations.

Solution Preview :

Prepared by a verified Expert
Operation Management: Why shana corp strategy deliberate emergent both or neither
Reference No:- TGS03000372

Now Priced at $30 (50% Discount)

Recommended (90%)

Rated (4.3/5)