Strategic Planning Primer

A compass illustrating strategy planning concept

When developing strategy, managers are often called upon to interview executives and other managers on a variety of issues facing an organization. Questions often arise concerning the organization’s vision, or its critical success factors, or key strategies, objectives or goals. “What is a strategy? How does it differ from a goal or an objective? How is mission different from vision, or are they really the same?”

The more managers understand strategy, the more effective they can be in driving to the critical questions for a business.

Through my years as a Certified Master Facilitator, and CEO of Leadership Strategies, I developed the Drivers Model, a method for taking a strategic approach to addressing a business situation. The model provides a simple communication tool for helping organizations construct a business strategy. It is fully scalable and applies to all sizes of organizations: Fortune 500 companies, non-profit organizations, a field office, an individual department, a work team, etc.

There are four major steps in the Drivers Model.

Step 1: Where are we now? (Situation Assessment)

Understanding the current situation is vital to identifying the approaches needed to drive success. A full understanding of the current situation includes an analysis of several areas. The list below shows a sample of assessment areas and one or two of the key questions to be answered for each.

  • Customers – What are their current and future needs? What are their perceptions of our performance
  • Competitors – How do we compare against our competitors? What are their recent and anticipated initiatives?
  • Industry trends – What have been recent shifts in the industry? What shifts are anticipated for the future?
  • Performance trends – How are we performing by product, by market, by channel?
  • Recent goals and initiatives – How are we achieving against our plan? How successful have we been with recent initiatives?
  • Employees – What are their perceptions of our organization and how we can improve? How can we make them more effective in their roles?
  • Organization profile – What are our strengths and areas for improvement with regard to our organization structure, processes, technology, culture, etc.?

Often, planning teams summarize the current situation information into a SWOT: a summary of the organizations key strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats.

Step 2. Where do we want to be? (Strategic Direction)

The heart of strategic direction setting is this second step. In the Drivers Model, the information from the situation assessment is combined with the understanding of future trends to formulate a series of trend and positioning statements. These statements, which outline the overall future direction of the organization, are structured as: “We believe (trend)…Therefore we must (positioning)…”

Positioning statements outline specific directions. However, the full business strategy must take a comprehensive approach to addressing goals (broad aims) and objectives (specific, measurable targets). Therefore, the second step in the strategy development process includes several other activities as well:

  • Vision statement
  • Mission statement
  • Goals
  • Objectives
  • Positioning statements

Step 3 – How do we plan to get there? (Implementation Planning)

Once the strategic direction is established, the next step is to develop the road map for achieving the direction. For the road map to be viable, however, it must focus on three areas in particular.

  • The barriers to achieving the vision indicate those challenges which the organization must overcome to achieve its strategic direction. Barriers answer the following questions: “Why haven’t we achieved our vision already? What is standing in our way?”
  • While barriers address the challenges, the critical success factors identify those key conditions that must be met to achieve the vision. Critical success factors, typically no fewer than two and no more than seven, serve as a guide for determining the strategies to be developed.
  • The strategies that are undertaken (i.e., the road map) must drive achievement of the strategic direction by controlling the critical success factors and overcoming the barriers.

Step 4 – How will we monitor progress? (Monitoring)

Many organizations benefit simply from going through the process of creating a strategy. At this point, everyone is clear on where we are going and how we plan to get there. However, the key value to strategy development comes in the implementation of the plan. Unfortunately, much too often, strategic plans become space fillers on an executive’s bookshelf. To prevent this from happening, we recommend a structured monitoring process every 3 to 6 months. The structured review involves assessing progress on strategies and grading the current and projected performance against the quantified objectives. While often a sobering process, this detailed level of monitoring provides a method for ensuring that long-term strategy stays on the front burners, despite the pressures of the day-to-day business operation.

Conclusion

More and more organizations are learning the value of a well-communicated and executed strategy. Human resource managers well-grounded in the language of strategy can provide key insights into where a company is going, and where it might be going wrong.

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Michael Wilkinson is the CEO and Managing Director of Leadership Strategies, Inc., “The Facilitation Company” and author of Amazon best-seller “The Secrets of Facilitation”, “The Secrets to Masterful Meetings”, and the brand new “The Executive Guide to Facilitating Strategy.” Leadership Strategies is a global leader in facilitation services, providing companies with dynamic professional facilitators who lead executive teams and task forces in areas like strategic planning, issue resolution, process improvement and others. They are also a leading provider of facilitation training in the United States.

Paying Taxes Quarterly Saves Time

A bunch of tax files on a desk

— By Guest Writer, Bert Doerhoff, CPA

By paying quarterly you can ease your yearly accounting process with less calculations, allowing you to devote more time to the important day-to-day aspects of your small business.

When paying quarterly, you pay your taxes in equal portions in April, June, September and January. This works best if you are self-employed and have few holdings.

You should pay about 95 percent of what you think you will owe during the year, split between the four paying periods. Even easier, you can pay 100 percent of what you paid last year, divided amongst the four payments.

For example, if you owed $2,000 last year, you can pay $500 dollars toward your taxes in April, June, September and January. By doing this you don’t necessarily have to estimate your current earnings.

Keep in mind the state of the economy and your business when deciding whether or not to estimate your current earnings for paying quarterly. You may want to estimate your current earnings if the economy is on a steep downward slope or if your business is declining.

In doing so, you can pay less than what you paid last year when your earnings were higher. Once you calculate your four payment amounts, you are finished with calculations. Just remember to pay the remaining quarters.

Paying quarterly requires planning, because you either have to calculate your earnings and/or how much you will pay each quarter. Typically, business owners prefer to spend more time running their business on the front end and less on back-end calculations. In this case, it is often beneficial to hire a reliable accounting firm for help. If you are looking for help with taxes or small business bookkeeping in Missouri, feel free to contact us.

Photo credit: Ben

For more resources, see the Library topic Business Development.

What is a Strategic Leader? A Person of Imagination

Strategic business leaders holding different business-themed icons

Strategic Leadership Model

Recent attention to the Recommendations of the 9/11 Commission remind us of their key finding: A failure to “connect the dots” and imagine what was being planned by the terrorist community was an important contributing factor to the September 11 attacks. The Commission concluded that “the most important failure was one of imagination.”

While the notion of imagination is generally treated in a light-hearted, Disneyesque fashion, what the Commission was saying that in the pre-9/11 world, our country’s leadership lacked the kind of strategic thinking it would have taken to keep us to have a truly effective defensive strategy in place. That in mind, the graphic above and text below show the capabilities necessary for strategic leaders.

Strategy and Decision
Strategic leaders make sound decisions. They frame issues for their organization and insist that facts and data are gathered and considered. They facilitate a decision-making process by involving a diverse and appropriate set of people. They make sure that the organization learns experience and adapts the decision-making process based on this learning.

To master strategy in an industry or competitive domain, the strategic leader must immerse him or herself in the four domains of strategic thinking:

  • Emergent Strategy and Imagination
  • Deliberate Strategy and Strategic Planning
  • Outward Focus
  • Inward Focus: Builds Core Competence

Emergent Strategy and Imagination
Strategic Leaders excel by imagining and exploring new opportunities and innovative ways of doing things. They think strategically, which means they are thoughtful about the long-term future and are insightful about the competitive landscape surrounding the organization they lead.

Outward Focus: Understanding the Competitive Landscape
Strategic leaders are engaged in matters of strategy. They understand the competitive landscape and the dynamics of industry and regulation that affect the positioning of their organization. They attend to competitive intelligence and understand the importance of gaining and protecting competitive advantage.

Inward Focus: Building Core Competence
Strategic leaders understand the core competence and key capabilities important to winning and succeeding in their competitive landscape. They recognize the importance of talent and focus on keeping a competitive team and workforce. They monitor and attend to performance at the individual, unit and organizational level.

Individual Capabilities

Leadership
Strategic leaders determine the course their will business or enterprise will follow over the intermediate and long term future and make this direction clear to others. they inspire, coach, teach and lead the way. Integrity
The strategic leader must embody the vision and values of the organization. As Gandhi said, leaders must “be the change they seek to create.”

Leaders of integrity are humble and share credit, they think in terms of learning from experience rather than blaming, they are kind and respectful toward all members of their organization, and they are courageous when ti comes to risk-taking. They can be trusted to follow through on commitments.

Business Acumen
The strategic leader must possess business acumen and drive. Whether in the for-profit or non-profit world, leaders must understand principles of cost control, revenue generation, stewardship of capital and risk mitigation.

Value Chain Your Way To Profitability

Business profit chart on an office desk

Ultimately, success in business depends on finding your competitive advantage, which is to say that which makes you superior to your competitors and is perceived as valuable by your customers. One approach for figuring that out is through value chain analysis, as developed by Michael Porter. The value chain is a sequence of activities that exist in almost every business.
Continue reading “Value Chain Your Way To Profitability”

Gain Insight – Get a Board

An empty business board meeting room with a wallpaper on the wall

Business owners often find it a challenge to lift their heads and view the long term. The day-to-day can be all-consuming.

Regular quarterly board meetings can encourage a long term view. In addition, it is extremely powerful to entertain different perspectives. This results in a stronger strategy for growth.

Quarterly board meetings provide an opportunity to review the last quarter’s financials and progress towards company goals. This gives impetus to pull the information together, synthesize it, and consider strateic implications. Of course, it is a good idea to hold monthly internal management meetings to review similar information and stay on top of company and industry trends.

As owner of the company, you will be chair of the board and determine who participates. Ensure you bring in the backgrounds, experience and viewpoints that will help you most. It matters who you ask to be on your board.

First of all, you need to trust and respect your board members. A lot of confidential information will be shared with them. In addition, they need to be people you will listen to.

Be sure to determine the number of people you want on the board. Six to ten in a private corporation is a normal range.

Select accomplished individuals from a wide variety of professions. For example, a lawyer and CPA are standard members of a board as are leaders in industries related to your markets or future direction. It is a good idea to have a mix of board members who are internal and external to your company. Usually a company’s senior management team will be on the board.

Choose external professionals with depth and breadth of experience. You want board members with relevant experience to bring to your business. Maybe they have been successful with a business model that is appropriate for your business. Or, they bring skills that your team is weak on. For example, a marketing guru for a growing company is an excellent fit.

Finally, bring your board in as part of the team. Bounce ideas off them between quarterly meetings. Get them involved in board committees. invite them to employee events. Take them for lunch or dinner.

Then enjoy the added perspectives and improved strategies.

For more resources, see the Library topic Business Development.

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Tove Rasmussen, of Partners Creating Wealth, offers business expertise worldwide to help organizations grow, and disadvantaged regions thrive.

Photo credit: Andy Rennie

Top 5 Tips on Building an Excellent Team

Happy business team members making a hand-stack

All companies in an industry can use the same technologies, build the same buildings — so really the differentiating factor in business is the people in a company.

Hiring, training and motivating employees is key to making your company distinctively superior.

1. Hiring. Be patient and hire the employees that are the best fit for the position and your company. Ensure the skills and motivation to succeed are there. Require references from a former boss, peer and director report, if applicable. Very importantly, check the references yourself. This ensure continuity between the interview and the references.

2. Training.

  • Offer company orientation, with basic information on the company, as well as how business is done by the organization.
  • Train on required, special or specific technical knowledge. For more senior positions, provide an on-boarding sheet listing the basic knowledge needed, and ask employees to initial when they have found and understood the information.

3. Coaching. Pay attention to the strengths and weaknesses of employees. Be a cheerleader on their strengths and accomplishments. Help them figure out how to shift the paradign on the weaknesses so they become strengths. For example, being quiet is not a strength in sales – however, listening is key to selling effectively.

4. Set the tone for a fun, human work environment.

  • Have some fun on the job. Some moments of lightness
  • Keep the interactions human; have a heart. Take a genuine interest in your folks. Caring goes further than knowing in so many ways.
  • Help your employees succe. Let them do their job, and give them the support and resources they need. Be sure they are recognized when you reap the benefits.And do not throw them under the bus.
  • Arrange some informal, outside activities: bowling, lunch off-site. I even know an HR Manager who used to take employees to breakfast after an early meeting. These events allow us to get to know each other beyond work, as people, which helps to build trust.

5. Throw down a positive, achievable challenge.

  • Your competitors are the real challenge but some friendly internal competition can get the juices flowing. Try competitions with low stake awards, such as taking the winners or team to lunch.
  • Be sure that any compensation, evaluations are tied to achievable goals – or the goals will cease to motivate.

For more resources, see the Library topic Business Development.

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Tove Rasmussen, of Partners Creating Wealth, offers business expertise worldwide to help organizations grow, and disadvantaged regions thrive.

Photo credit: Brendon Connelly

Are you Pushy? How do you Pull in Sales Instead?

The word "sale" written with white tiles

Push or Pull? The old question. What are you doing?

Think about pushing. We have all had a pushy sales rep. We don’t want the product, at least yet. We don’t want to talk to them. They are all sell, sell, sell. Hard sell too.

Just get off my case!!

Turn your mind to pulling. To being a magnetic force. For this, the charismatic individuals out there have it made.

However, the rest of us can radiate sunshine, positive vibes. We can connect on a human level. We can listen. We don’t need to talk all the time.

We can understand the customers’ needs. We can focus on helping the prospect, rather than selling the prospect. We can show we care about the struggle. Caring matters more than solving the problem in many ways. And, we can perceptively pick up on what is upsetting to the customer, what brings emotional hardship – the pain, so to speak.

Then we know what to solve. Then we know what the prospect needs, and we can help them with that, if it is within our expertise. If not, we can refer them to someone who does.

I know I prefer a soft sell, pull sales rep far more than a hard sell, pushy rep. You may want to keep these two approaches in the back of your mind as you promote your product or service, and evaluate what you are doing – bringing the prospect to you, or pushing them away.

For more resources, see the Library topic Business Development.

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Tove Rasmussen, of Partners Creating Wealth, offers business expertise worldwide to help organizations grow, and disadvantaged regions thrive.

Photo credit

The Data-Backed Secret to Sales Growth

Person studying business analytics on a laptop screen

One huge secret behind sales growth is offering a product or service that speaks to the customers – that fulfils an important customer need.

Selling may not be the issue. Rather, as a business coach, I often need to point out that the sales issue may be the value proposition for customers.

According to an indepth study of 39 US and UK firms, “the key driver of sales growth was the innovative product or service idea.” The key to business growth – critical stuff.

“Competitive strategies typically focused on product quality rather than price… ”

“For product based firms, competitive strategy focused on custom technologies, while for service based firms the emphasis was more often on a close understanding of clients’ needs and relationship building.”

The study was conducted by Kingston University, London and Babson College, Massachusetts for Her Majesty’s Treasury and the UK Department for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform.

In addition, high growth firms, often the high tech firms, were market creators. They needed to create the demand – to invest in upfront marketing with no guarantee of a return.

Interestingly, the data also showed that growth was not a smooth upward progression – growth is “episodic and irregular.” There were often dips in revenue between quarters or years. As a result, the authors warn of relying on simple growth models.

Finally, the dominant marketing strategy was word of mouth. So, businesses needed to consider other methods of promotion in order to continue the growth.

This is the reality of high growth firms.

For more resources, see the Library topic Business Development.

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Tove Rasmussen, of Partners Creating Wealth, offers business expertise worldwide to help organizations grow, and disadvantaged regions thrive.

Photo credit: thms.nl