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Strategic Intent (HBR OnPoint Enhanced Edition)

Strategic Intent (HBR OnPoint Enhanced Edition)

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Authors: Gary Hamel, C. K. Prahalad
Publisher: Harvard Business Review
Category: Book

Buy New: $6.50



Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 1400238

Format: Download: Pdf
Media: Digital
Pages: 18

ASIN: B00024YCQ2

Publication Date: April 1, 2004
Availability: Available for download now

Also Available In:

  • Digital - Strategic Intent

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Companies that have risen to global leadership over the past 20 years invariably began with ambitions out of proportion to their resources and capabilities. This concept, fundamentally different from that which underpins Western management thought, is "strategic intent." These organizations begin with a goal that exceeds their present grasp and existing resources. They then rally the organization to close the gap by setting challenges that focus employees' efforts in the near to medium term. The result is a global leadership position and an approach to competition that has reduced larger, stronger Western rivals to an endless game of catch-up. McKinsey Award Winner.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Strategic   March 10, 2008
R. N. Richards (San Angelo, Tx)
I loved this. It's actually a very inspiring work that should stand the test of time. I have this saved in several locations for quick reference.


5 out of 5 stars Unseat the best or remain the best, worldwide   December 15, 2001
Gerard Kroese (The Netherlands)
4 out of 5 found this review helpful

Gary Hamel is Founder and Chairman of Strategos and Visiting Professor to the London Business School. C.K. Prahalad is Professor of Corporate Strategy and International Business at the University of Michigan. This article was published in the May-June 1989 issue of Harvard Business Review.

"Companies that have risen to global leadership over the past 20 years invariably began with ambitions that were out of all proportion to their resources and capabilities. According to the authors these companies posses "strategic intent", which is "an obsession with winning at all levels of the organization and then sustain that obsession over the 10- to 20-year quest for global leadership." This strategic intent captures the essence of winning, is stable over time, and sets a target that deserves personal effort and commitment. The authors compare the difference in mindset between strategic intent and traditional strategic planning, and introduce an action list which top management should use in order to engage the entire organization and create strategic intent. The authors discuss the four types of competitive innovation: building layers of advantage, searching for loose bricks, changing the terms of engagement, and competing through collaboration. The authors further discuss the limitations of the traditional strategy concepts (Kenneth Andrews, Igor Ansoff, Michael Porter) and traditional organizational structures (strategic business units, decentralization). The authors conclude the article with the real challenge for top management: "developing faith in the organization's ability to deliver on tough goals, motivating it to do so, focusing its attention long enough to internalize new capabilities."

Although some of the examples in this article are now somewhat outdated, the article is still one of the best I have ever read. The article challenges the traditional strategic planning process and the traditional goal-setting by managers. It aims to inspire managers to set greater goals than the traditional year-by-year improvement: "Strategic intent gives employees the only goal that is worthy of commitment: to unseat the best or remain the best, worldwide." This article forms part of the authors' 1994-bestseller 'Competing for the Future', which I also highly recommend. The authors use business US-English.

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