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Is Your Annual Strategic Planning
Process Done?
Strategic
Planning – Not Just For Fortune 2000 Companies
By Bob Norton, CEO and Entrepreneur
Coach
Generally if you have more than
about a dozen people in your company you need to have an annual
strategic planning process. With a small management team of three or
four people it is not very difficult, and will likely go quickly because
you discuss these things daily. The trick is to look at the longer-term
(at least a year) in the context of a 3-5 year vision for the company.
As the company gets bigger the time invested will get bigger too, but
either way it will pay big dividends and needs to be done.
I recently attended a leadership
seminar doing research to add a “Leadership” segment to our
CEO & Entrepreneurship Boot Camp. This instructor said that at a
recent corporate training with about thirty people from the same
company, including the CEO the instructor simply asked who understood
the goals of the corporation for the coming year. Only about 20% of
these managers raised their hands. This is a pretty bad indication of
both leadership and management results.
Our job as CEO and senior executives:
- Formation of the plan
- Communication of the plan
to all (at the level each audience can understand)
- Finding the right people
- Oversight, training and
coaching to develop the staff
Everything else supports these efforts. At a
certain size these become the only important things, though we must wear
many hats and actually do something while the companies is under 25-40
employees. Without all four of these done properly a company will not
move forward easily, if at all. In this case a company’s success will be
more by accident than by design.
Do you have a clear vision of what your company
will look like on December 31st of this year? How much
revenue? How many people in each department? What kinds of new
customers, products and services? What new processes, systems and people
will be needed to allow smooth growth? This is the starting point of
the annual planning process. Most people do not have the forethought to
do this well and the CEO and senior managers must tease this out of our
subordinates and crystallize it into a comprehensive and congruent
strategic plan (or annual operational plan if you prefer) that allows
all departments to move in lock step towards the shared annual
objectives.
Can you answer the following questions – And more
importantly would all your managers be able to answer them similarly?
- What is our long-term
purpose and the goals for the company in terms of market position,
size, market share and competitive position? This is often driven by
a market vision, philosophy and values of the company. A clear
understanding of your value proposition to customers and your
company’s strengths is required. If this is not well known already
on our team you should perform a simple
SWOT analysis (Strengths-Weaknesses-Opportunities-Threats)
analysis before this process begins. I do these in a single day with
a one hour meeting with each senior manager for smaller companies.
The outside perspective (forest for the trees view) is critical to
have at least annually.
- How many new employees will
be needed to handle the projected growth? What gating factors will
be used to make those hires? (i.e. revenue, customers, cash-flow)
- What key initiatives will
position you well for your 2-3 year vision? These are usually
related to product development and building sales and distribution
to scale the business. However, they could be in any area of the
business. Can you take a weakness that is holding back the business
and turn it into a strength in some area? Are there alternative
markets, channels, price points and product/service bundles that
would create a new market niche? Or do you simply need to focus and
do more of the same while improving costs and productivity?
- What specific targets and
goals need to be met this year to move us towards that long-term
objective and vision? Will this market position be defensible and
unique in some way that makes your solution better for a certain
profile of customer?
- What are the quarterly
priorities and measurable goals for each department that will be
used to benchmark our progress during the year?
- What incentives are built
into the culture, systems and compensation plan to drive these
specific goals?
- Is there an overall theme
that links together department objectives? I.e. improved quality,
retention or lower costs in some area?
- Does each department have a
“dashboard” of key metrics to watch and report on daily, weekly, and
monthly that measure success against these goals? (note although a
dashboard might have ten or twenty measurements people must focus on
only two or three in any given quarter to improve performance. Will
your dashboard(s) measure both trends and ratios over time to avoid
surprises? In growth absolute numbers (not ratios) can mask problems
hidden in larger numbers? This is your early warning indicator.
Without these solid metrics going from a five-person department to a
ten-person department can be a disaster.
If you and your team can answer
these consistently then you are probably in the top five percent of
companies in terms of strategic planning and internal communications. If
not you need to go through a strategic planning process that will get
the best input possible from your team and congeal your priorities and
goals for each quarter and the entire year. In a company with less than
100 people this can generally be done in a series of about three
meetings over several weeks. The result will pay ten-fold the cost in
time and effort because most decisions made by these managers will then
be held up against these known priorities and goals. Without this the
agenda to decide things can become a personal one, or a bad
interpretation of what is important to the company that day. This causes
mixed signal, inefficient use of resources and certainly does not
properly position the company for good growth.
If this is not the
case, as it will not be at 95% of companies out there, then you need to
dig deeper in this process.
Next issue an outline of my suggested Strategic
Planning Process (SPP)
for small companies from 10-150 people.
Bob Norton is the author of four books on
starting and running companies and entrepreneurship. He runs the
exclusive
CEO
& Entrepreneur Boot Camp
to help CEOs and senior executives cut years off their learning curve.
He also
coaches many CEOs at growth oriented technology companies with between
$500K and $30MM in sales on how to get to the next level. He can be contacted at
Bob@CLevelEnterprises.com.
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