Publisher: Wiley, 1996, 250 pages
ISBN: 0-471-58564-5
Keywords: Strategy
In today's highly dynamic and unpredictable global economy traditional strategic planning — characterized by a centralized plan-and-control management approach — has lost its edge. Managers must respond more quickly than ever to dynamic conditions and utilize the full potential of all people in an organization.Strategic planning is too slow and inflexible to enable managers to respond to rapid change and too hierarchical to bring a wider range of employees into the decision-making process.
Real-Time Strategy provides a compelling new alternative to strategic planning for the '90s and beyond — strategic improvising. This innovative concept puts strategic responsibility and strategic tools in the hands of small, self-directed teams that move together ina common strategic direction. Strategic improvising is faster and less risky and provides a more flexible response in an uncertain environment while empowering individuals throughout the organization.
Written by three leading authorities on strategic management, whose consulting experiences with major corporations are included as case studies, Real-Time Strategy demonstrates how the team-based approach:
Real-Time Strategy specifies the tools that help an organization develop a team-based strategic capability. The authors have site-tested these tools in over 50 businesses. They show how to incorporate new, real-time information technologies into a company's strategic thinking and outline the steps managers must take to make the necessary move from strategic planning to strategic improvising.
Organizations that survive and prosper in the '90s and beyond will be those whose strategic outlook conforms to the realities of a complex, dynamic, and uncertain gloabl economy. Real-Time Strategy is the first book to arm managers with the tools to make that crucial adjustment.
It gets boring with all books that tries to tell you that all strategies need to be dynamic and execute in real-time.
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