Phase 3: Strategic Plan Development
Previously, you addressed where you are and where you are going. Now, you will focus on how you will get there. Use your SWOT to stay grounded and realistic as you build a roadmap from where you are today to where you want to be. As you develop your strategy and set your goals, make strategic choices about what to do and not to do. Remember that being strategic is about making those hard choices. A mark of a good strategic plan is one that is clear and focused (not too many goals and objectives), as well as balanced – telling a strategy story about how your whole organization is linked and aligned to drive key performance indicators.
Spend some time uncovering your competitive advantages based on an understanding of your strategic position. Your competitive advantages are the essence of your strategic plan because strategy is about being different. It is deliberately choosing to perform activities differently or to perform different activities than competitors to deliver value to your customers.
Eliminate any confusion around semantics by using these definitions:
- Strategies: The route you intend to take and the general methods you intend to use to reach the top of that specific mountain.
- Long-Term Strategic Objectives/Priorities: Intermediate objectives to the top of the mountain. If you have a 5-year vision, these would be 3- to 4-year intermediate objectives on the way up the mountain.
- Short-Term Goals and Actions: Specific moves for climbing the sections of rock and ice that confront you right now. These would be analogous to detailed annual plans for getting things done this year on the way to the 3-year objective.
Phase Duration
- 2 weeks
Question to Ask
- What is our base for competing and delivering value?
- What are we best at? What makes us unique?
- What are the "big rocks" – strategic objectives – we need to reach our vision?
- What must we accomplish over the next 1 to 3 years to achieve these?
- What are we not going to do?
- What strategic questions must we still address?
- How will we measure our success?
Data Needed
- SWOT, competitive advantages list, customer data
- Carry over goals from last planning period
- End of year scorecards/KPI data
Outcomes / Deliverables
- Drafted competitive advantages
- Organization-wide strategies
- Long-term strategic objectives
- Short- and mid-term organization-wide goals
- Financial projections
Action Grid
Action Who is Involved Tools & Techniques Estimated Duration Solidify your competitive advantages based on your key strengths Executive Team Planning Team Strategy Comparison Chart Strategy Map Leadership Offsite: 1 – 2 days Formulate organization-wide strategies that explain your base for competing Develop your strategic framework and define long-term strategic objectives/priorities Set short-term SMART organizational goals and measures Select which measures will be your key performance indicators Executive Team and Strategic Director Strategy Map Follow Up Offsite Meeting: 2-4 hours *To access the worksheets under "Tools & Techniques" please refer to our Strategic Planning Kit for Dummies.
Examples
Financial 1-Year Goals:
- Increase our billable hours by 10% over the next 12 months. (Measure: # billable hours / Target: 1.2%)
- Achieve sales growth of 10% per year. (Measure: Monthly sales / Target: 1.2%)
Customer 1-Year Goals:
- Realize 10% of the company's annual sales from the small business market by end of the next year. (Measure: # of small business clients / Target: 100)
- Reach a 15% annual increase in new customers by end of year 2012. (Measure: % increase in new customers / Target: 15%)
Internal Processes 1-Year Goals:
- Reduce the time lapse between order data and delivery from 6 days to 4 days by this June. (Measure: # of days to process each order / Target: 4 days)
- Reduce the number of returns due to shipping errors from 3% to 2%. (Measure: # of returns due to shipping errors / Target: 2%)
People & Learning 1-Year Goals:
- Reduce turnover among sales managers by 10% by the end of the year. (Measure: Employee turnover / Target: 10%)
- Hire and train a human relations director by the end of the year. (Measure: Director hired / Target: 100%)
Select KPIs
To help monitor your strategic plan, one of the best tools around is the Balanced Scorecard, developed by Kaplan and Norton from Harvard. The scorecard is to be used as both a measurement and management tool to assist in fulfilling your organization's vision. With it, you can actively track progress toward your goals. Begin by asking "What are the key performance measures we need to track in order to monitor if we are achieving our goals?" These KPIs include the key goals that you want to measure that will have the most impact in moving your organization forward.
The scorecard has four categories of measures:
- Financial/Mission — How do we look to our stakeholders? These measures indicate whether your organization's strategy, implementation, and execution are contributing to bottom line and top line improvement.
- Customer/Constituent — How do we provide value? These measures are customized to each of the targeted groups you serve.
- Internal/Operational — Which processes must we excel at? These measures focus on internal programs and activities that have an impact on customer/constituent satisfaction. They focus on internal processes needed to sustain your competitive advantage.
- People/Learning — To excel at our processes, how must we learn and improve? These measures identify the infrastructure that your organization must build to create long-term growth and improvement. It includes your ability to attract essential staff, innovate, improve and learn.
An Example Strategy Scorecard:
Steps to Build Your Strategy Scorecard:
- Identify the right measures. Most of your goals should have measures associated with each one. If not, pick a measure to track the goal.
- Establish increments that mesh with the targets. Make sure to get the right time frame and size of measures. For example, if you're target is a 10% increase in sales over the year, break the target down to a monthly number. Try to use the same increments for all your measures. If you are reporting monthly, then use monthly measures.
- Identify the data source. Clearly identify where the monthly number is coming from and who is responsible for reporting on it. Be sure that the measures are easily accessible.
- Input numbers monthly. Enter numbers every month for each measure.
- See the big picture. The primary purpose of key indicators is to give you a big-picture look at the organization with a relatively small amount of information. If you are not seeing the big picture, change the measures. A great way to get a visual is to produce a chart or graph for each measure.
- Take action. Taking action means doing it in a timely manner. The whole point of using a scorecard is to make adjustments, now, on time, before it's too late. Your strategy meetings should easily facilitate this process.
A List of Common Measures:
Cascade Your Strategies to Operations
By the time organizations get to cascading their strategy, many are tired and worn out from all of the work leading up to this point. But don't stop yet! Cascading action items and to-dos for each short-term goal is where the rubber meets the road – literally. Moving from big ideas to action happens when strategy is translated from the organizational level to the individual.
Here we widen the circle of the people who are involved in the planning as functional area managers and individual contributors develop their short-term goals and actions to support the organizational direction. But before you take that action, determine if you are going to develop a set of plans that cascade directly from the strategic plan, or instead if you have existing operational, business or account plans that should be synced up with organizational goals. A pitfall is to develop multiple sets of goals and actions for directors and staff to manage. Fundamentally, at this point you have moved from planning the strategy to planning the operations; from strategic planning to annual planning. That said, the only way strategy gets executed is to align resources and actions from the bottom to the top to drive your vision.PHASE DURATION
- 4-6 weeks
Questions to Ask
- How are we going to get there at a functional level?
- Who must do what by when to accomplish and drive the organizational goals?
- What strategic questions still remain and need to be solved?
Data Needed
- Coming year organizational goals, measures and targets
- Sales projections
- Product projections
Outcomes / Deliverables
- Department/functional goals, actions, measures and targets for the next 12-24 months
- Individual team member action plans
Action Grid
Action Who is Involved Tools & Resources Estimated Duration Develop a 3-year financial projection or forecast Finance Leader Financial model or existing financial software 2 weeks Set short-term department goals that align with organizational goals Executive Team, Planning Team and Department Managers Department Managers meet with their own teams Dept. Goal Setting: ½ – 1 day meeting of each department Cascade department goals to individual goals, creating action plans Department Managers and Individual Team Members Department Managers meet with individual staff members One-to-Ones: 1 hr for each team member *To access the worksheets under "Tools & Techniques" please refer to our Strategic Planning Kit for Dummies.
Cascading Goals to Departments and Team Members
Now in your Departments / Teams, you need to create goals to support the organization-wide goals. These goals should still be SMART and are generally (short-term) something to be done in the next 12-18 months.
Pull together your action plan for each short-term goal.
Finally, you should develop an action plan for each goal. Keep the acronym SMART in mind again when setting action items, and make sure they include start and end dates and have someone assigned their responsibility. Since these action items support your previously established goals, it may be helpful to consider action items your immediate plans on the way to achieving your (short-term) goals. In other words, identify all the actions that need to occur in the next 90 days and continue this same process every 90 days until the goal is achieved.
In the OnStrategy system, all the strategic objectives cascade down to the team member action items. For example in the image below (3-tier plan), strategic objective 1 cascades down to organization-wide goal 1.1, then department goal 1.1.1, then team member goal 1.1.1.1, which is supported finally by the team member action item 1.1.1.1.1. In a 2-tier plan, the department goal would be the team member goal and the team member goal an action.Examples of Cascading Goals:
1 Increase new customer base. 1.1 Reach a 15% annual increase in new customers. (Due annually for 2 years) 1.1.1 Implement marketing campaign to draw in new markets. (Marketing, due in 12 months) 1.1.1.1 Research the opportunities in new markets that we could expand into. (Doug) (Marketing, due in 6 months) 1.1.1.1.1 Complete a competitive analysis study of our current and prospective markets. (Doug) (Marketing, due in 60 days) 1.1.1.2 Develop campaign material for new markets. (Mary) (Marketing, due in 10 months) 1.1.1.2.1 Research marketing methods best for reaching the new markets. (Mary) (Marketing,due in 8 months) *To access the worksheets under "Tools & Techniques" please refer to our Strategic Planning Kit for Dummies.
Слова и люди: наука, политика, культура, IT, вечная жизнь, освоение космоса, лечение рака, лечение старения и генная инженерия, обеспечение неограниченного долголетия человека, ликвидация всех заболеваний, освоение планет. Сборник ведет Ивайкин Тимофей (Ivaykin Timofey)
How to Build Plan Priorities, Goals & KPIs | OnStrategy
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