Strategy Without Change Is Pointless
by John Jantsch
Next week my staff and I will hole up for an entire day of planning. We do
this quarterly, but once a year, we “really” do this. This is our chance to
step away from all of those seemingly meaningless little things and think
bigger. It’s our day to say what if and why not. It’s the time to set the
course for next year and perhaps realign with the vision for the next three to
five years.
Below are five
outcomes and benefits from holding our annual growth strategy planning day.It’s
a day to ask tough questions, explore new opportunities and embrace changes we
need to make in order to realize our growth strategy. For me it’s one of the
most exciting and exhausting days of the year, but it’s a practice that I would
not do without and one that
I suggest every business, no matter the size,
commit to doing.
Fewer Priorities
By thinking
bigger and then thinking realistically about what it might take to overcome the
things in our way, we naturally start eliminating things we should not focus on
in an effort to make room for only the highest priorities. Our goal is to
identify no more than three priority objectives for the year that make us aim
higher and stop doing low priority things.
Embrace Results
One of the ways
we get to our short list of priorities is by identifying the results of
achieving an objective. By creating a list of “what we gain” if we win and by
contrast “what is costs” if we lose, we create the motivation to overcome
constraints and stay focused on results as a team. In most cases our stated
ideal results become the goals by which we measure our priority objectives.
Commit to Change
Here’s the thing
I know for sure. Strategy without change is worthless. If your stated
objectives for the year don’t have you asking – “what needs to change in order
for us to actually do this?” – then you are thinking way too small. All growth
involves change and you have to commit to how that’s going to happen or your
objectives will dissolve into frustrating reminders of failure.
Create Owners
Every objective
will naturally spin off a list of projects: The things that need to be done,
the new products, the new positions, or the new processes. It’s essential that
part of your planning day include identifying these projects and assigning an
owner to each. That doesn’t mean this person is going to do all the work, they
are simply going to be the one that cares the most about the project and
carries the responsibility of moving it forward.
Focus on High
Payoff
The final step
and benefit involved is to identify the highest payoff work for everyone in the
organization. This is how you properly assign tasks and stay focused on what
matters most. The three or four high payoff tasks will differ for everyone in
the organization, but they become a “go to” as you plan your week. For me, the
execution of these stated high payoff tasks becomes the basis of two entire
days of focused activity each and every week.
The One Page
Plan
Finally, we take
our goals and projects and align them on one page each in support of the proper
topline objective. We assign each project an owner and charge that person with
assembling the team, resources and plan for tackling the project related tasks.
When it comes to
keeping our entire business focused on what matters most this is the most
important day our organization has in search of day-to-day alignment and focus.
Fuente: Duct Tape Marketing
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