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Food and Beverage Management Making Strategic Decisions.

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Presentation on theme: "Food and Beverage Management Making Strategic Decisions."— Presentation transcript:

1 Food and Beverage Management Making Strategic Decisions

2 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Origins of strategy Vision Mission Policy Goals/aims Strategy Objectives Tactics

3 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers The three levels of strategy

4 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Assessing current performance Same three levels used when assessing the performance of the current operation: 1. Operational includes day-to-day sales and the way the product is provided and promoted 2. Business the performance of the enterprise in terms of profitability, competitiveness and other business measures 3. Corporate the strategic direction of the operation and how this is being achieved

5 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Assessing current performance Quantitative analysis Business environment analysis Qualitative evaluation

6 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Quantitative analysis Essential part of appraisal Considered over time Evaluation is more important than the data itself

7 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Business environment appraisal Macro environment PESTLE Industry environment Five forces

8 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers The business environment PPolitical EEconomic SSocio-cultural TTechnological LLegal EEcological

9 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers The micro-environment Adapted from Porter 2004 Porter’s Five Forces

10 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Qualitative evaluation Making informed evaluation of the business Allowing for external comparison Asking the right questions

11 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers The foodservice cycle

12 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers The foodservice cycle Can be used to as an analysis tool for the operation: Difficulties in one element of the cycle will cause difficulties in the elements of the cycle that follow Difficulties experienced under one element of the cycle will have their causes in preceding elements

13 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Assessing organisational capability Resource analysis How well do we do what we do? Existing capacity for change Identifying changes in resources Value chain analysis Examine all stages of the foodservice cycle

14 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers SWOT matrix

15 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Strategy is a means to an end “Would you tell me please which way I ought to go from here?” she asked. “That depends a good deal on where you want to get to,” said the cat. Lewis Carroll, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

16 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Strategy is a means to an end Where do you want to get to? Where are you starting from? Which way ought I to go? ObjectiveCurrent situation Strategy

17 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Basis of strategy Cost leadership Differentiation Focus based on cost Focus based on differentiation

18 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Porter’s matrix Adapted from Porter 2004

19 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Eight possible strategic routes Adapted from Johnson et at 2010 Strategy Clock

20 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Determining strategic choices Various approaches can assist, including: Growth Share (BCG) Matrix Directional Policy (GE-McKinsey) Matrix Ansoff’s growth matrix

21 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Ansoff’s growth matrix Adapted from Ansoff 1988

22 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Life cycle analysis Stages Embryonic – Growth – Mature - Aging Market position Dominant – Strong – Favourable – Tenable – Weak Variants Fad life cycle Extended life cycle

23 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Strategic means and assessing options Strategic means Internal development Mergers and acquisitions Joint development Assessing options Suitability Feasibility Acceptability

24 © 2011 Cousins et al: Food and Beverage Management, 3 rd edition, Goodfellows Publishers Reality of strategic management Organic not linear Affected by organisation and culture Complex and judgmental Continuous process Combines a variety of approaches A management job Needs to be flexible to cope with uncertainty


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