Thursday, August 1, 2019
Pescriptive Versus Emergent
When described with historical perspective since it arrived in the mid 1960s, strategic or prescriptive planning has been embraced as a way of ââ¬Å"outflanking competitors with big plays that yield long term rent from a sustainable advantageâ⬠(Bhide, 1986).Although it faltered in the 1980s and 1990s mainly due to the unstable economy in that period and the rise of emergent strategy, it is still being practised today (John A Pearce II, 1987). Emergent strategy is the view that ââ¬Å"strategy emerges as intentions collide with a changing realityâ⬠(Moore, 2011). This literature review places the article ââ¬ËCrafting strategyââ¬â¢ (Mintzberg, 1987) in the wider context of prescriptive and emergent debate followed by strengths and weakness of the article. Placing the article in wider literature debateIn ââ¬ËCrafting strategyââ¬â¢ Mintzberg distinguishes between planning strategy and crafting strategy. Mintzberg view on strategic planning is clear. ââ¬Å"Strateg ic planning isnââ¬â¢t strategic thinking. One is analysis and the other is synthesisâ⬠(Mintzberg, 1994). According to Mintzberg the current practise of strategic planning ââ¬Ëseparates thinking from doingââ¬â¢. He claims the current implementation of strategic planning can be best described as strategic programming, ââ¬Å"the articulation and elaboration of strategies, or visions that already existsâ⬠(Mintzberg, 1994)Thereby limiting intuition and creativity. Mintzberg idea on strategic planning is further emphasised by Brian Boyd who suggest prescriptive strategy limits organisation creativity and innovative skills (Boyd, 1991). Psychologist on prescriptive planning says ââ¬Å"Articulation of strategy locks it into place, thereby impeding willingness to change itâ⬠(Kiesler, 1971). The fact is that organisations who implement prescriptive strategy plan not to be flexible but to realize detailed intentions.According to Mintzberg the key to crafting strate gy isà the ââ¬Ëintimate connection between thought and actionââ¬â¢. [p68]. John Oliver emphasised in his book the importance of effective use of the action learning process hence emergent strategy in developing a future business strategy. (Oliver, 2006) The inflexible nature of deliberate strategy greatly reduces its litheness for creative and reactive process. Emergent strategy therefore possesses a much greater adaptability, particularly in tentative times and more difficult business environmental conditions.However Michael Porter argues that Industry structure drives competition and profitability. Success is not determined by whether an industry is mature or emerging (Porter, 1979). This is a typically prescriptive view on strategy, as it suggests breaking down intentions into communicated steps and formularizing those steps into the structure of the organisation. This premise is contradicted by various perspectives, as they believe accumulated learning and experience pro vides rare advantage that is difficult for other competitors to copy (Gerry Johnson, 2008).This suggests that strategy can be crafted as organisations learn from previous success and failures. Mintzberg in ââ¬ËCrafting strategyââ¬â¢ promotes the idea that prescriptive strategy ââ¬Ëmisguides organisations that embrace it unreservedly.ââ¬â¢[p66]. He pushes the idea that crafting strategy is a more effective representation of strategy. ââ¬ËCraft evokes traditional skills perfection through the mastery of detailâ⬠¦.developed through experience and commitment.ââ¬â¢[p66]. This is essentially emergent strategy as it describes ââ¬Å"patterns realized despite or in the absence of intentionsâ⬠(Henry Mintzberg, 1985) James Moncrieff (Moncrieff, 1999) states in his article ââ¬Å"deliberate responses to issues emerging within the competitive environment can still usually be labelled emergent strategy as it is based on response to emerging opportunities and threat.â ⬠Mintzberg supports Moncrieff idea by using National Film Board of Canada as an example ââ¬ËStrategies like the NFBââ¬â¢ that appear without clear intentions-or in spite of them-emergent strategiesââ¬â¢ [p69]. This shows when actions are taken in responds to a new challenge patterns eventually forms. However, it would be ignorant and inaccurate to place the article solely as emergent. In this article Mintzberg states there is no such thing as ââ¬ËPurely deliberate strategy or a purely emergent oneââ¬â¢. [p69] Emergent strategy as an extreme is essentially the absence of strategy (Andrew Inkpen, 1995).Theà crafting of strategy is definitely far from deliberate strategy but would be implausible to be classified as purely emergent strategy. In Mintzberg words ââ¬ËStrategy making walks on two feet, one deliberate and the other emergentââ¬â¢ In other words learning must be used in conjunction with control. Mintzberg expands on this idea when he said ââ¬Å"We t hink in order to actâ⬠¦..but we also act in order to think.â⬠(Mintzberg, 1994) This in turn converges into practical pattern that becomes strategy. This article best supports ââ¬Ëdeliberately emergent approachââ¬â¢ or umbrella approach as Mintzberg conveyed the idea that processes should be consciously managed to ââ¬Ëallow strategies to emerge en route.ââ¬â¢ In this case senior management provides broad guidance and leaves the detail to those lower down in the organisation.Strengths and WeaknessesKey strength in this article is Mintzberg ability to utilize pathos, logos and ethos effectively to appeal to his readers. The article is brilliantly written and well structured thereby appealing to readers from all intellectual level. In addition, Mintzberg paints a vivid picture of the ideal form of strategy in the readers mind with the use of crafting as a metaphor. He intertwines the quality of a good porter to that of a manger, consequently illustrating the role o f a manager in crafting strategy ââ¬ËManagers are craftsmen and strategy is their clay.ââ¬â¢ Mintzberg deliberately uses the metaphor to differentiate his concept of strategy from the mechanized models of deliberate planning that is void of creativity.A key element emphasised in ââ¬ËCrafting strategyââ¬â¢ is the ability for businesses to learn from experiences and ââ¬Ëallow strategies to emerge en route.ââ¬â¢ However what is not clearly indicated is if such type of approach is applicable to all sectors. McKiernan (McKiernan, 1997) argues that Mintzberg theory places too much emphasis on established businesses as new entrants wonââ¬â¢t have the available experience to learn from. Furthermore Burgelman (Robert A. Burgelman 1991, Andres S. Grove, 2007) believes such approach can only be applicable to businesses without existing strategy, as strategy is embedded with experience and learning, thereby making it harder for management to implement constant incremental c hanges in responds to the environment.In this article, Mintzberg fails to discuss on the weakness of emergent strategy. He proposes that businesses should learn from mistakes that occur, however he neglects the consequences of mistakes such as the cost and wasted time due to trials and errors. These unrealistic expectations of emergent strategies are identified by Lynch. (Lynch, 2006) Mintzbergââ¬â¢s failing to discuss on the weakness of emergent strategy limits the usefulness of emergent strategy in practice. However authors such as Snyder and Cummings (William Snyder, 1998) carried out empirical study and designed models which aimed to align organisational learning with performance. Adcrof (Adcroft, 2009) also emphasises purely emergent strategy would be ââ¬Å"a trial and error driven activity where intuition is wrong as often as it is right, which gives rise to levels of risk that may be unacceptableâ⬠ConclusionIn conclusion, initially Mintzberg favoured emergent strate gy over prescriptive strategy. However, he stated both strategy are needed in order to successfully implement strategy and advised the used of deliberately emergent and umbrella approach to strategy. Overall Mintzberg idea of strategy is still relevant to the world today as they reflect the fact that plans do fail and the age of five years plans are slowly fading away as businesses are becoming more responsive to the ever changing environment.
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