2.2.3 Mission statements and objectives
The mission that an organisation adopts is a brief statement encapsulating a response to the question, 'What business are we in?' The statement usually identifies the primary tangible product/service area and market(s) of the organisation, and gives some indication of how the business will be conducted.
Failure to construct a mission statement accurately results in corporate demise. Railroads, typewriter manufacturers and horse-buggy whip makers have grown obsolete because they did not define themselves broadly enough as being in the transportation, wordprocessing and leather goods industries respectively. Levitt, a Harvard professor, coined the term marketing myopia to describe this tendency of organisations defining the 'business of their business' too narrowly and thus missing out on new developments in their environment. You shall have an opportunity to read more on this in your next reading.
As well as providing a summary statement about a business, a mission statement gives direction to an organisation's objectives. These objectives are a series of brief, explicit statements that indicate how an organisation will accomplish its mission.
Any maritime or logistics organisation that has excellence as its mission in a particular area of business will need to state these measurable objectives which follow on from the mission statement. If for instance, the mission for a port authority is to be the most technologically advanced in the region, the organisational objectives would state what the port needs to do specifically in the short to medium term to attain such a status.
The next reading by Kotler et al. (2004) provides questions management should ask to help formulate a mission statement and hence objectives and goals. A number of examples of mission statements can be found on page 85 in the next reading. The classic article on marketing myopia by Levitt (1960) is also included here.
In your text
Kotler et al. (2004) Chapter 3, pp. 83-88, 'Defining the company mission' and 'Setting company objectives and goals'.
Reading 2.1
Levitt, T. 1960, 'Marketing myopia', Harvard Business Review , July-August, reprinted in Enis, B. M. and Cox, K. K. 1991, Marketing Classics. A Selection of Influential Articles , Allyn and Bacon, Boston ,
pp. 3-21.Consider this
Pick a maritime or logistics business that you are familiar with and attemp t to create a mission statement and organisational objectives for the business. In order to avoid marketing myopia you may need to begin with the broadest possible definition and then modify it to a more realistic one.