5/11/2017 Assignments: Guidelines
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About ADMN 404
Assignments: Guidelines
To understand what is expected in the assignments, be sure to examine the Assignment
Examples. These are wellwritten assignments from previous students.
As indicated previously, your assignments must be divided into predetermined sections. It is
important that you fully understand what is expected in each section. To help you, each
section is described below.
Executive Summary
As its name suggest, the Executive Summary should summarize the document’s contents.
While this may seem obvious, far too often an Executive Summary introduces a document
rather than summarizing it. To avoid this, it is imperative that you keep in mind that an
Executive Summary should stand on its own. Think of it as a thumbnail image on a website.
The goal in displaying a thumbnail is to reduce the download time or to allow you to see
multiple images simultaneously. If you like one of the images, you can click on it to see a
more detailed (i.e., higher resolution) version. The same goes for an Executive Summary. It
should provide a rough idea of the document’s contents but should save the details for those
who are sufficiently interested to read the entire document.
It is essential that an Executive Summary not be too long. Actual length often depends on
the length of the document being described. It also depends on professional norms. That
said, it would be unusual for an Executive Summary to be more than 10% of the entire
document. And more often than not, it would be closer to 5% of the overall length,
particularly when there is a word limit on the length of the overall document (as is the case
with your assignments).
Introduction & Company Overview
The Introduction & Company Overview should introduce the reader to the report. Since
your report is focused on a single organization, among other things, it should introduce that
organization. In the first two assignments, the organization will not need much of an
introduction since the marker will have read the case on which your assignment is based.
But in Assignment 3, you cannot assume that the marker knows anything at all about the
organization. For this reason, it is essential for you to provide sufficient context to make
sense of the subsequent sections. Toward this end, you may also need to introduce the
organization’s industry.
Author(s) of analytical documents often discuss the limitations of their report. This may
happen in a separate section toward the end, or even in the conclusion. However, because
you are not required to provide a conclusion to your report, you ought to discuss any
limitations in your Introduction & Company Overview. While you need not go into too much
detail, you should at least identify the sources or assumptions on which your report
depends. Additionally, you may wish to identify the sources or information that would enable
you to provide a more detailed or more confident analysis.
Mandate
In Lesson 1 and Lesson 2, you will learn about organizations’ mandates. Briefly, an
organization’s mandate describes why it exists, what it hopes to accomplish, and the limits
to what it will do. Every organization has a mandate and many make their mandate, or at5/11/2017 Assignments: Guidelines
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least a portion of it, explicit in the form of Mission Statements, Visions, Core Values, etc.
However, as you will learn, these public declarations often have more to do with window
dressing than guiding the organization’s actions. The publicly stated Mandate is not always
the same as the assumed mandate. It is important to recognize this distinction for it is the
latter that you are to provide in your assignments, not the former.
In your assignments, your mandate should be divided into four elements. The first is the
Mission Statement or Core Purpose. The second is the Vision and/or Major Goals. Third is
the organization’s Core Values or, alternatively, its Guiding Principles. The final element is
the Stakeholder Analysis.
Each of the foregoing should be kept relatively brief—even briefer than they might be in
reality. So while some organizations might have lengthy Mission Statements, your Mission
Statement or Core Purpose should be no longer than a couple of sentences. The same is
true of the Vision and/or Major Goals. Ideally, an organization’s vision will be quite detailed.
However, you should need just a few sentences to convey your understanding of what the
organization hopes to be and/or accomplish in the long term. This also applies to the
organization’s Major Goals. If your organization has more than a handful, you need include
in your assignments only the five or six that convey the most important outcomes.
As with the other elements of the Mandate, the Core Values/Guiding Principles should reflect
your impressions of the organization’s core values. This is particularly important if your
organization has a Code of Conduct, which is often quite detailed. It’s up to you to distill this
code into a handful of values or principles that convey how this organization expects its
representatives to conduct themselves. Somewhere between five and ten values or
principles ought to suffice within the context of your assignments.
Stakeholder Analysis is the final element of the Mandate. A fullblown stakeholder analysis
can be a report unto itself. For your assignments, all that is required is a list of the most
important stakeholders and their most important implications for the organization you are
analyzing.
External Analysis
An External Analysis is a review of the organization’s industry, as well as the societal forces
that shape it. Usually, the objective of an external analysis is to identify an organization’s
opportunities and threats. When an organization can increase the size of its operations or
accrue more benefits from its existing operations, it has opportunities. When there is
potential for reduced activity levels or for fewer benefits from these activities, the
organization is facing threats. Needless to say, the goal of every organization is to exploit
its opportunities and eliminate its threats.
Lesson 3 provides you with a variety of tools with which to carry out an External Analysis.
Ideally, each of these tools should be utilized. The usefulness of a particular tool will vary
depending on the organization and its circumstances. Nevertheless, whenever possible, and
to the degree possible, you should attempt to use each tool. That said, you should not
include the results of these attempts in the body of your assignments. If included at all,
they should be in Exhibits at the end of the report. In the body of your report, you should
instead provide a wellargued statement of the organization’s opportunities and threats that
builds on the analyses you undertook with the tools from Lesson 3.
The manner in which you organize the External Analysis section is up to you. You will need
to consider the information you have at your disposal and how much space you intend to
devote to this section. This decision, in turn, will depend on how much space you think you
need for other sections. So before you write this section, make sure you have a clear vision
of the structure of your report, its argument, and the emphasis to be given to each section.
Internal Analysis5/11/2017 Assignments: Guidelines
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In contrast with an External Analysis, which examines the world of which the organization is
a part, an Internal Analysis looks inward at the organization itself. Ideally, it provides an
objective assessment of the organization’s strengths and weaknesses. Needless to say,
strengths and weaknesses are relative measures and, for this reason, an Internal Analysis
does make reference to the world outside the organization. Even so, the emphasis is
decidedly internal with the Internal Analysis being, on the one hand, an inventory of what
the organization has and, on the other, an inventory of what it can do (and how well it does
it).
Some of the tools with which an Internal Analysis is carried out are described in Lesson 4.
As with the External Analysis, the utility of these tools will vary from case to case. And here
as well, you are not expected to include the raw results of the tools’ application in your
reports. Instead, you are once again expected to sift through these results and, after
considering how much space you will devote to the Internal Analysis, to decide which
information you are going to include. As above, how this information is organized is up to
you. In the end, what you will be evaluated on is the specific strengths and weaknesses you
identify and the level of support that you provide for them.
Strategic Options
In this section, you are expected to provide three distinct strategies for the organization
being analyzed along with a balanced assessment of each strategy. In the context of this
section, strategy is used in the broadest sense. In fact, it might even be better to invoke the
concept of a “business model” here, provided that it is used in the broad sense described in
your textbook. Whatever the term, you are required to put forward three distinct directions
in which the organization might go in its efforts to carry out its mission and realize its
vision.
The Collis and Rukstad (2008) article from Lesson 1 explains how a strategy can be
articulated in a sentence or two. As well, the five basic elements of a strategy are described
in the Hambrick and Frederickson article assigned in Lesson 5. Briefly, these include the
differentiators, the arenas, the vehicles, the staging, and the economic model. If not
explicitly, then implicitly you will describe each of these for each strategy. It is also
expected that the strategies you propose will be compatible with the organization’s mandate
and its situation. And in that regard, it is assumed that you will provide an assessment of
each strategy that allows its pros and cons to be compared with those of the other
strategies.
Recommendation and Implementation
In the Strategic Options section of your reports, you are expected to identify several options
for the organization being analyzed. In this final section of your report, you are expected to
recommend one of those options and then elaborate on it. More specifically, you are
expected to provide some guidance with respect to how the recommended option ought to
be implemented.
In this section, you need not review the details you provided in the previous section.
Nevertheless, you may end up doing so as you elaborate on the strategy you have
recommended. The goal in this section is to address implementation issues. On one side of
the coin are the things that the organization will need to do, and for these you will draw
heavily on the ideas presented in Lesson 12 and Lesson 13. On the other side of the coin are
the things that can go wrong, meaning the things the organization needs to watch out for.
What are the key risks? What could stop the strategy you have proposed from being
successful? And what, if anything, can be done in the event that something does go wrong?
The challenge in writing this section will be deciding what should and should not be
included. You could easily use up all of the space in your report (and much, much more) on
implementation issues alone. Thus, you will need to have a clear sense of the amount of5/11/2017 Assignments: Guidelines
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implementation issues alone. Thus, you will need to have a clear sense of the amount of
space you can devote to this section and the information that ought to be included. This
decision will depend in part on the organization being analyzed. If it’s a very large
organization, the implementation effort may be outlined at a very high level of abstraction.
If it’s a small organization, it may get into specific details regarding particular individuals,
processes, or products.
Exhibits
Your assignment may contain up to ten pages of exhibits. These exhibits will not be marked
per se and, in fact, may not even be examined. Nevertheless, they could have an influence
on your mark if the marker decides that something you suggested in the body of your
assignment would be significant if it were better substantiated. For example, you may wish
to provide pro forma financial statements as an exhibit in order to support your earnings
projections.
As with the word count, if you exceed the limit of ten pages of exhibits, your assignment
will be returned to you unmarked. And should this happen more than once, you will receive
a grade of zero on the assignment.
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