Archives For strategic_planning

According to some research executives spend only three hours a month on strategic issues and of the organizations that do have strategic plans - almost 90% are not implemented.

Traditional strategic planning usually just does not work.  What’s wrong?  Probably the basic assumptions we have about strategic planning.

Matt Perman, Senior Director of Strategy for Desiring God Ministries has done a great deal of work in the area of strategy and what should be the proper approach to strategic planning.

Matt lists two fundamental realities that we need to understand in order to plan properly:

1. “It is essential to set direction and know where we are going; yet

2. Circumstances inevitably change, causing most detailed plans to go aground.”

These two realities acknowledge the sovereignty of God and the limitations of man.  As Matt reminds us, history progresses according to God’s plan, not ours.

So, what do we do?  Should we plan?  Yes we should.

We will talk about that over the next few days.

Blessings on your day,

BG

A paradox – seemingly.

General of the Army, Dwight D. Eisenhower, the man who orchestrated the most massive invasion in the world’s history, has this to say about planning:

“In preparing for battle I have always found that plans are useless,

but

planning is indispensable.”

Now why would he say that?

That statement is key for those of us that plan.  The reality is that we are pretty terrible about predicting the future, so in practice most plans are obsolete about the time they are finished. However, a strong, ongoing planning process brings such clarity as to our mission, goals, awareness of our strengths & weaknesses and the environment, that it allows us to quickly adjust to the unknown while staying on course to achieve our mission and strategic objectives.

A Spirit-led and prayer saturated planning process is key to organizations that are seeking to glorify God.  This kind of process keeps us in tune with the Lord and ready to quickly adjust at His leading.

We need to remember that we are finite creatures and that God is sovereign. History progresses according to His plan – not ours.

Happy planning!

BG

 

 

 

The November issue of the Harvard Business Review has a good article on how to identify weak points in your strategy.  The questions are pointed towards large for-profit organizations, but with slight tweaks, they fit very well for non-profits and ministries.  Here are the questions:

Who is your primary customer? Or who is it that you are there to primarily serve – really?

How do your core values prioritize shareholders, employees, and customers? Or, how do your core values determine your priorities?

What critical performance variables are you tracking? This one is usually more difficult in a ministry or non-profit, but it is doable and important.

What strategic boundaries have you set?

How are you generating creative tension?

How committed are your employees to helping each other?

What strategic uncertainties keep you awake at night?

These look to be some decent questions to help you evaluate your strategy.

What are some other questions you use to see how you are doing?

BG

“In preparing for battle I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable.” General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower

Now why would General Eisenhower, the man who led the planning for one of the largest invasions in history, make the statement that the plan is useless?

Well, for one thing, we are not all-knowing – we can’t see into the future – we don’t know exactly how people will react – we can’t predict natural disasters.  We are not God, but frail and limited human beings.

However, planning is important – it is a time of reaching greater clarity about our mission, about who we are, about what is truly important to us as an organization.  And as we reach greater clarity, then we are much better prepared to nimbly respond to the unexpected challenges and opportunities that will occur.

Planning is not an event – it is an ongoing, dynamic, organic process.

Also, remember that in planning the process is more important than the product.

Michael G. Jacobides, in the article, “Strategy Tools for a Shifting Landscape”, in the January-February 2010 issue of the Harvard Business Review has proposed that we approach strategic planning by writing a “playscript”.

His article is intriguing and appears to provide a way to better deal with the rapidly changing environment than the more conventional strategic planning methodology. Some of his points of concern:

• Traditional strategy tools reduce complexity & only provide stationary maps and two-dimensional charts.
• “Newcomers” to the environment are rarely considered.
• Most strategy frameworks are simplifying devices and offer little insight to a complex environment.
• Most tools generate static “pictures” and do not recognize the importance of understanding evolutionary dynamics of the environment / market.

Mr. Jacobides recommends that organizations “. . . should tackle the challenge of developing strategy head-on by describing the underlying logic, story lines, decisions, and motives of all the players that are creating and capturing value in [an organization]. Instead of drawing and analyzing a map or plotting numbers on a chart, executives should use words to create what I call a playscript: a narrative that sets out the cast of characters in a business, the way in which they are connected, the rules they observe, the plots and subplots in which they play a part, and how companies create and retain value as the business and cast change.”

As he points out, words are more powerful and flexible than value curves.

Mr. Jacobides recommends the following approach:

Create corporate and then business unit playscripts.

– The corporate playscript describes how value is generated and appropriated by the headquarters – usually by how the center (headquarters) manages the relationships between the different units of the organization.
– The business unit playscript deals with three main elements
– The main actors, their motives and their roles
– The links & rules between organizations
– Present & future plots & subplots – how actors in an area capture & generate value.

How to develop your playscripts:

Write you current corporate & business playscripts

– Describe the broad setting in which your organization operates.
– Identify the other actors
– Identify the links among actors & the rules by which they operate
– Articulate the logic by which your organization creates value

Rewrite your playscript – envision how relationships, roles, and etc. might be changed in order to improve how you create and add value.

Future-proof your playscript – make sure your playscript can cope with the foreseeable changes in your business.

A couple of final points by Mr. Jacobides:

• Try this in an experimental fashion before actually implementing.
• People understand and respond much more strongly to words or stories than they do to numbers and graphs.
• Posing strategy as a narrative also is more effective in starting the crucial feedback loops that are so critical.

An excellent article and well worth reading.

Strategic planning is
NOT
a project or an event

It is…
An ongoing, organic process,
– a way of thinking
- a way of managing
- a way of operating