dc.description.abstract | According the Government of Kenya, Commercial State Corporations have been
associated with various challenges, including a lack of profitability and substandard
goods and services. Such dismal performance may be occasioned by weak corporate
strategies and poor strategic plan implementation. This study investigated the challenges
faced by Commercial State Corporations in Kenya, particularly their profitability and
quality of goods and services, which may stem from ineffective corporate strategies. The
primary objective was to analyze how the implementation of strategic plans influences
the relationship between corporate strategies and the performance of these corporations.
Specifically, the research evaluated the effects of concentric, horizontal integration,
vertical integration, and collaboration strategies on performance metrics. Additionally, it
examined the moderating role of strategic plan implementation in enhancing this
relationship. Grounded in Contingency Theory, Resource-Based Theory, and Transaction
Cost Theory, the study employed a positivist research philosophy and adopted a crosssectional correlational design. The target population comprised of 1,026 senior managers
from Commercial State Corporations, with a sample size of 99 managers surveyed using
a structured questionnaire. Data analysis involved descriptive statistics and regression
analysis, with results presented in tables and figures. Key findings reveal significant
positive effects of concentric strategy on financial, customer, and internal business
process performance (β = 0.829, p < 0.05; β = 0.648, p < 0.05), while its impact on
learning and growth was negligible. Horizontal integration also showed significant
effects across all performance metrics (β = 0.536, p < 0.05; β = 0.548, p < 0.05; β =
0.359, p < 0.05; β = 0.201, p < 0.05). Vertical integration similarly influenced all
performance aspects (β = 0.474, p < 0.05; β = 0.382, p < 0.05; β = 0.490, p < 0.05).
Collaboration strategies produced significant effects as well (β = 0.505, p < 0.05; β =
0.561, p < 0.05; β = 0.420, p < 0.05; β = 0.382, p < 0.05).Moreover, the study identifies
the moderating impact of strategic plan implementation, indicated by changes in R²
across performance metrics (0.215 for financial, 0.010 for customers, 0.142 for internal
processes, and 0.145 for learning and growth). These insights aim to guide Commercial
State Corporations in developing and executing effective corporate strategies for
enhanced value creation. The study concluded that Strategic plan implementation has a
statistically significant moderating effect on the relationship between corporate strategies
and performance of commercial state corporations on Kenya. Based on this conclusion, it
was recommended that commercial state corporations should develop detailed roadmaps
that outlines specific actions, initiatives and milestones needed to achieve the strategic
objectives. They should identify and address any barriers, obstacles or resistance to
change that may impede the successful implementation of Strategic plans. | en_US |
dc.subject | Strategic Management, Corporate Strategies, Strategic Alliance, Strategic Plan Implementation, Balanced Scorecard, Corporate Performance, Cost Leadership Strategy, Differentiation Strategy and Focus Strategy | en_US |