MGMT320-12S1 (C) Semester One 2012

Strategic Management

30 points

Details:
Start Date: Monday, 20 February 2012
End Date: Sunday, 24 June 2012
Withdrawal Dates
Last Day to withdraw from this course:
  • Without financial penalty (full fee refund): Sunday, 4 March 2012
  • Without academic penalty (including no fee refund): Sunday, 20 May 2012

Description

Strategic management is a purposeful endeavour concerned with long-term direction and performance for a firm or organisation. The course involves students in presenting analysis and proposing solutions to strategy issues in major New Zealand and international businesses. Course content includes strategic analysis, business and corporate strategy, and strategy implementation.

This course forms part of the B.Com majors in Management, Strategy and Entrepreneurship, and International Business. It seeks to draw upon and apply knowledge from the functional areas of management. It is complemented by MGMT321 Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development. It also prepares students for the B.Com Honours courses in Strategy and International Business.

Learning Outcomes

  • The overarching learning goal for the course is the ability to apply strategic management knowledge and techniques to business problems. This includes the ability to:
  • Analyse the internal and external strategic environment of a firm and articulate well supported recommendations for action.
  • Contribute effectively to a live presentation on a strategy topic using appropriate delivery, presentation structure and visual aids.
  • Communicate logical and coherent written strategic analysis and/or solutions in an invigilated setting.
  • Discuss the merits of different types of corporate portfolio, the value of the corporate centre and issues in corporate acquisitions and alliances.
  • Critically evaluate an organisation’s structure, culture and approach to strategic control.

Prerequisites

(1) ACCT102 or ACIS102 (2) 45 points of 200-level MGMT, MKTG or MSCI (or 30 points of 200-level MGMT, MKTG or MSCI and 15 points of 200-level ECON)

Restrictions

BSAD304, BSAD314, MGMT314

Course Coordinator / Lecturer

Paul Knott

Lecturers

David Stiles and Professor Bill Starbuck (University of Oregon, USA)

Assessment

Assessment Due Date Percentage  Description
Case Analysis Test 24 Apr 2012 25% Case Analysis Test
Group Presentation 10% Group Presentation
Learn Quizzes 15% Learn Quizzes
Final Examination 50% Final Examination


Group presentation
Each student will be assigned to a group normally consisting of four students. The group will be required to make a presentation in class on a set topic and date. Normally each member of the group will receive equal marks. In the event of perceived inequity of input, group members should submit written details of the work performed. Differential marks may be awarded at the lecturer’s discretion. The presentation is intended to illustrate and develop the topic of the class. The requirements and assessment criteria are set out in a separate document (Presentations Advice), posted on Learn.

The presentation must be original and evaluative, must avoid descriptive material on company history or product offerings, and must keep to time. The presentation is to last a maximum of 10 minutes. Presenters must not read from a prepared script. The presentation slides must be posted prior to the class in which the presentation is scheduled. After the presentation, the lecturer will facilitate discussion involving the class and the group.

To comply with University rules for referencing of sources, acknowledge sources in a footnote on the relevant slide. The assigned topics often require the use of public domain information about the companies concerned. As well as internet sources, the Subject Guide for Management on the library homepage provides a useful starting point. You may also like to consult the Commerce librarian. Please do not contact the firms directly.

If you need help with preparing the presentation or understanding the topic, please ask.

Note for students not presenting in a class
It is important to pay attention to the presentations and participate in the discussion. Consider your own interpretation of the issues the company faces or the choices it might make. Write notes so that you have something to use when revising for part 2 of the final exam.

Learn quizzes
These quizzes are designed to help students prepare for the classes and hence be in a position to contribute to the discussion. The quizzes will be based on assigned readings and/or cases. There will be a quiz for each class from 6-27 March and 1-29 May. To gain full credit for this item of assessment, you will need to complete all questions for 14 quizzes out of 16 available. This item of assessment is not available for aegrotat consideration.

Each quiz will be available for the five day period ending at the beginning of the relevant class. There is no option for late submission of a quiz and no option to complete the quiz other than via the facility on Learn. Marks will be available for each quiz after submission closes.

Case analysis test (Tue 24 Apr 6-9pm)(case available from 11am)
This will be an open book, invigilated test based on materials that set out the situation confronting a major business. The materials will be available on Learn from 24 April at 11am, and in hard copy from the College Office (Law Building) from the same time. The questions will be handed out at the beginning of the test. Course notes, textbook and other paper materials will be permitted in the test room, but no electronic devices are permitted.

Final examination
This will be a closed book exam lasting 3 hours.
Part 1 (50%) will consist of multiple choice questions testing knowledge and understanding of the course content.
Part 2 (50%) will consist of questions relating to cases covered in the group presentations, as found in the exam papers from 2007-2010. In the last class of the course, guidance will be given as to the case selection.

A note on learning from cases
The course makes extensive use of business cases in class, in the case test and in the exam. This reflects the importance of understanding strategy concepts in context, and the value of debating alternative viewpoints. Please note that:

• Case discussions may produce good arguments for more than one course of action.
• In the business world several feasible courses of action may work out satisfactorily.
• In the business world there is no way to find a definitively correct answer.
• If you learn what the company did, you cannot conclude that it was necessarily right or best.
(adapted from Strategic Management Concepts and Cases, A. Thompson and A. Strickland, McGraw Hill/Irwin 2001).

Textbooks / Resources

Required Texts

Grant, Robert M; Contemporary strategic management : an Australasian perspective ; John Wiley and Sons Australia, 2011.

Additional materials will be posted on Learn.

Notes

Departmental Academic Policies
The Department assumes that you have read this document.

You should also read the General Course and Examination Regulations

Dishonest Practice
The University of Canterbury considers cheating and plagiarism to be serious acts of dishonesty.  All assessed work must be your own individual work unless specifically stated otherwise in the assessment guidelines. Material quoted from any other source must be clearly acknowledged. You must not copy the work of another person (student or published work) in any assessment including examinations, tests and assignments. Any person, who is found to have copied someone else's work, or to have allowed their work to be copied, will receive a fail grade for that piece of assessment and may face disciplinary action which may lead to a fine, community service or exclusion from the university.

IMPORTANT: Where there are concerns regarding the authorship of written course work, a student can be required to provide a formal, oral explanation of the content of their work.

Coversheets - Group and Individual

Indicative Fees

Domestic fee $1,311.00

International fee $5,775.00

* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.

For further information see Management, Marketing and Tourism .

All MGMT320 Occurrences

  • MGMT320-12S1 (C) Semester One 2012