A small-to-medium size business (SMB) is different from a large corporation in many ways (I don’t think that I am breaking any news by this statement). An SMB views the world differently.
Aside from the obvious facts that an SMB has smaller revenues, fewer people and (probably) a narrow product or service scope, there are other less obvious differences in strategy issues. Here are a five common strategy differences.
- Strategy Responsibility: The responsibility for strategy is often shared among a small number of senior managers rather than vested in a named function (e.g., vice president of strategy). It is a part-time, diffuse task.
- Strategy Definition: The company completes few formal strategy exercises. Emergent strategy is assigned much greater value. That is, strategy is “recognized” rather than prescribed.
- Decision-Making: Decision-making speed is valued over reflection. Rapid adaptation and reaction are the currency of the day.
- Tactical Activities: Day-to-day pursuit of customers, creating products, closing deals and operations consumes management’s time. In short, tactics dominate strategy.
- Internal Focus: Attention to the external environment is narrowed to match the SMBs near-term customers and prospects. There is less attention paid to broad trends, unexpected competitive threats and tangent opportunities.
All right, what about the SMBs that do think that strategy and competitive intelligence are (or might be) important? What is a feasible set of practices for them to initiate and sustain over time? For whatever stage of strategy and competitive intelligence maturity they find themselves, how do they move to the next stage?
Before talking about the stages, there are four meta-principles for SMB competitive intelligence practices.
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