Companies' decision-making and planning systems find themselves in a
constant tug of war between strategic and financial considerations. The
authors analyze these two opposing currents in business thinking,
dissecting their differences and identifying their best practices. They
also develop an approach that reconciles the two conflicting schools of
thought - without watering down their differences. Schwenker und
Spremann argue that both strategic and financial perspectives can serve
as a compass in management's decision-making processes: Which
perspective to choose depends on the phase of business. The authors
distinguish four phases in the company lifecycle - phases in which the
business must find the proper position, develop, grow and, ultimately,
earn. In the first two phases, strategic considerations should take
priority; in the latter two phases, financial considerations rule the
day.