|
Description:

|
In 1996, Louis Gerstner, then president and CEO of IBM, set his sights
on radically revamping the company's existing strategic planning and execution
practices and policies. At that time, IBM's corporate strategy processes
resembled those of most corporations, with several annual planning activities.
In overhauling the program over the next several years, IBM's executives
and marketing leaders concentrated on five critical objectives:
- Designing a strategic issues review process that focuses outwardly
on economic and technology issues rather than on internal organizational
concerns
- Ensuring that strategic planners focus directly on the critical
implications, risks, and tradeoffs inherent in strategic alternatives
- Structuring an ongoing process to keep top executives focused regularly
on fundamental strategic challenges and opportunities and not just
on operational issues
- Connecting strategic planning directly to resource allocation decisions,
thereby keeping implementation at the center of the planning process
- Promoting widespread support and involvement in the entire process
Today, strategic planning at IBM looks quite different than it did in
the late 1990s. A continuous strategic planning process involves ongoing
review of major issues and executive decision making on a twice-monthly
basis. "Deep dive" research initiatives enable the firm to fully explore
a new challenge or opportunity, develop a strategy, and allocate resources
within 30-90 days. With economic (and political) upheaval, technical innovation,
and competitive initiatives happening rather more frequently than annual
strategic reviews, IBM's continuous strategy evolution enables the firm
to act and react more quickly than most to critical market challenges
and opportunities.
|