It will takes years to see the impact of strategic planning.
Myth. While you and your team spends time shaping where you want
to be in three to five years, that is quickly translated into
actions you start taking immediately.
At the beginning of the first strategic planning meeting we
facilitate with a new company we ask how this planning meeting can
fail. Once of the more common answers is "if we go back to work
Monday and nothing changes".
The impact is immediate once the team decides where it wants to
be and what has to change in order to get there.
I need to wait until I have our new CFO/COO/CMO/CTO onboard.
True. If you are planning to bring a new key player on board
within the next 90 days you should delay the strategic planning
meeting until then. The planning meeting builds consensus and
commitment among the attendees. Someone joining the team later can't
have the same level of commitment. If your new player isn't expected
for at least 90 days then you should weigh the value of starting
execution of your plan today vs. the additional commitment of your
new player.
Occasionally we have new or - in a couple of cases - potential
hires attend the planning meeting as their first introduction to the
company. This works. The new player quickly gains an understanding
of the major issues, other team members thinking and motivation, the
overall direction of the organization, and the leadership role they
are expected to execute. They leave with specific objectives and 90
day action steps that help speed their integration into the
organization.
Strategic planning is primarily a brainstorming session.
Myth. You don't often go into a planning meeting in the computer
business and come out in the shoe business. Strategic planning is
dealing with the twin issues of communications and focus.
The process is not about coming up with entirely new, off the
wall ideas but rather thoroughly listening to, understanding,
synthesizing, and then prioritizing the current set of hopes,
dreams, and ideas.
Intense, facilitated discussion and prioritization of issues
clarifies where the organization is today. Developing and
articulating vision, mission, and strategy establish when we want to
be in the future. You then Identify the gap between where you want
to be and where momentum - i.e. the status quo - is taking you.
You fill that gap by literally changing the status quo. Each
strategic goal is focused on changing status quo. It takes the
commitment of the entire senior team and its sustained focus and
effort to change the status quo.
Team planning leads to group-think and compromise.
Myth, not withstanding the old story about a camel being a horse
designed by committee. The objective of the planning team is to
reach consensus rather than compromise.
By way of illustration, when John's wife and partner Mary wanted to
vacation in Alaska and John wanted to spend two weeks in the Caribbean
they
didn't compromise and spend time in Kansas, that would be stupid.
Rather they selected one of the multiple solutions that made sense and
reached a consensus on doing it.
The goals and objectives in a strategic plan may not be exactly
what any individual in the team would have selected if they were
king but they must be and are, goals that the entire team agrees are
best for the organization.
I have a plan - I wrote it myself with the help of our …
Myth, I have a plan - I, I, I. Your loyal team will try to
implement it to the best of their understanding and ability but if
they run into problems they'll come and tell you "Your plan
isn't working, what do you want me to do?" Even if the plan
that comes out of the planning meeting is 99.99% similar to one you
could have written over a weekend it will be better. For one thing
5 - 12 minds are better than one. For a second thing, we
don't get paid to plan - we get paid to implement.
The best plan is one that actually gets implemented. That
is why a plan developed by the implementation team will always beat
a plan imposed on the implementation team - even willingly.
"If you want to go quickly, go alone. If you
want to go far, go together." - African proverb
We need a facilitator who knows our industry
Myth. The role of the facilitator is to help the team gain a
common understanding of the issues and develop a single envisioned
future. The facilitator provides a structure and process for
translating that understanding into a plan that bridges the gap
between vision and tactics.
There is no consultant who knows more about your business than
the 5 - 12 executives in the planning team. They live the business.
They've probably forgotten more about the business then any
consultant will ever know.
If there is some important aspect of the business that the team
identifies they don't understand then they will make it a strategic
goal to gain that understanding. With a consensus on the specific
need flows a commitment of resources and attention to an action plan
that will gain the missing information in a timely manner.
In the end the consultant goes home and the team implements. The
team is the only group with the vested interest to become experts in
your company's business!
Planning is an overhead function.
True, albeit an essential one. The best way to manage an overhead
function is determine ahead of time how much time you are going to
invest in it and then make sure everyone makes the best use of that
time budget.
As much planning as you do you can always do more yet nothing
happens until you stop planning and take action. Balance is the key.
We recommend devoting two intense, dedicated days annually to
regenerating the plan. You build a fresh plan based on where you are
today based on the passions and competences of the team you
have today.
The key is to commit to a planning budget up front. Then
scale your planning to the budget. Too often I've seen organizations
blow their planning budget with a big annual effort that doesn't
leave time for periodic follow-up.
The other element of budgeting is the number of strategic goals
you set forward. If you have the resources to complete five
strategic goals don't set ten. You will either end the year with ten
unfinished goals or with only 3-5 of the easiest ones finished. Odds
are the the most important goal to accomplish is also the hardest.
Once you have your five year plan you don't need to have another
planning meeting for another five years.
Myth, you don't go to Mount Sinai to plan and you don't publish
your plan on stone tablets. While the plan identifies where you want
to be in five years it has to be executed in the present.
Over the space of a year things happen. The organization changes,
the market changes, the passions and competences of the team
changes. We succeed beyond our wildest imagination and we find that
sometimes technology and markets chose not to embrace our dreams.
Everywhere you look we've learned things.
Managing change is why we have management. If things never
changed we wouldn't need managers - everyone would learn their job
and just do it.
Every year you have to tear up your plan and rebuild it from
vision through tactics. Most likely your vision, mission, and
strategy won't change much if at all but to insure the integrity of
the plan you have to be open to the possibility. Then you develop
and new set of strategic goals, objectives, and purely tactical
action steps for the coming year. (We have unified the various
elements of the strategic plan in to a single structure call the
Progress Pyramid™ . Check it
out.)
There's no wrong time of the year to do planning.
True. There are plusses and minuses associated with any planning
date.
Some companies like to do strategic planning after the fiscal
year has ended so they have current performance data to base the
plan on. Other companies like to do planning a couple of months
before the end of the fiscal year so that the strategic plan shapes
priorities for the operating plan.
Some companies like to do strategic planning at mid-year so that
the team keeps some distance between their strategic thinking and
operations.
And then, some companies start planning this month because the
organization is suffering from a lack of focus and communications.
First they build planning momentum and then shift to a more
advantageous date after either a short planning year or long
planning year.)
With Myrna Associates premier planning
service you can you have a quality plan within two weeks from
today.
Don't wait.
Contact John today.
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