Strategic Audit of a Corporation
Essay title: Strategic Audit of a Corporation
Strategic Audit of a Corporation
I. Current Situation
A. Current Performance
How did the corporation perform the past year overall in terms of return on investment, market share, and profitability?
B. Strategic Posture
What are the corporation’s current mission, objectives, strategies, and policies?
Are they clearly stated or are they merely implied from performance?
Mission: What business(es) is the corporation in? Why?
Objectives: What are the corporate, business, and functional objectives? Are they consistent with each other, with the mission, and with the internal and external environments?
Strategies: What strategy or mix of strategies is the corporation following? Are they consistent with each other, with the mission and objectives, and with the internal and external environments?
Policies: What are they? Are they consistent with each other, with the mission, objectives, and strategies, and with the internal and external environments?
Do the current mission, objectives, strategies, and policies reflect the corporation’s international
operations, whether global or multidomestic?
II. Corporate Governance
A. Board of Directors
Who are on the board? Are they internal or external members?
2.
Do they own significant shares of stock?
Is the stock privately held or publicly traded? Are there different classes of stock with different
voting rights?
What do they contribute to the corporation in terms of knowledge, skills, background, and connections? If the corporation has international operations, do board members have international experience?
How long have they served on the board?
What is their level of involvement in strategic management? Do they merely rubber-stamp top management’s proposals or do they actively participate and suggest future directions?
Source: T. L. Wheelen and J. D. Hunger, Strategic Audit of a Corporation, Copyright ©1982 by Wheelen and Hunger Associates. Revised 1988, 1991, 1994, 1997, 2000, 2002, and 2005. All rights reserved to the authors.
B. Top Management
What person or group constitutes top management?
What are top management’s chief characteristics in terms of knowledge, skills, background, and style? If the corporation has international operations, does top management have international experience? Are executives from acquired companies considered part of the top management team?
Has top management been responsible for the corporation’s performance over the past few years? How many managers have been in their current position for less than 3 years? Were they internal promotions or external hires?
Has top management established a systematic approach to strategic management?
What is its level of involvement in the strategic management process?
How well does top management interact with lower level managers and with the board of
directors?
Are strategic decisions made ethically in a socially responsible manner?
8. What role do stock options play in executive compensation?
Is top management sufficiently skilled to cope with likely future challenges?
III. External Environment: Opportunities and Threats (SWOT)
A. Societal Environment
What general environmental forces are currently affecting both the corporation and the industries in which it competes? Which present current or future threats? Opportunities?
Economic
Technological
Political-legal
Sociocultural
Are these forces different in other regions