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Is Your Annual Strategic Planning
Process Done?
Strategic
Planning – Not Just For Fortune 2000 Companies
PART II
By Bob Norton, CEO and Entrepreneur
Coach
In the last
issue we discuss the need for a strategic plan, even in small companies,
and the key questions that all managers, and even other employees must
be able to answer for optimum results in your company.
The Strategic Planning
Process I Recommend:
- Team Meeting #1 -
Brainstorming the “WHAT” – Most likely here the CEO puts the
first stake in the ground, proposing “WHAT” the objectives are for
the coming year. This is just a starting point for discussion really
though. It might be as simple as a percentage growth goal, or as
complex as a bunch of new market niches and/or product combinations
to explore. There is much discussion about what is achievable, how
and why or why not. This needs to be a safe environment to
brainstorm, say anything and challenge everything. Your culture must
not only allow, but must encourage dissent and heated discussion.
Without this you will be growing a team of “yes men” (and women)
that are there to simply validate what the CEO wants. At this point
we are getting the team’s input on “What” we want to achieve this
year. This can be a bottomless pit of time and discussions and at
some point the CEO needs to decide on limits. Details should not be
discussed unless they make the objectives impractical. This is more
of a brainstorming meeting and can easily take several hours. I like
to call these “Summits” and do them offsite to get people away from
distractions and enhance creativity. If you can afford it make it a
paid weekend foliage or ski trip with this meeting being the focal
point of the weekend and lots of time for people to bond personally
too. The quicker this gets done the better your team is really – the
more alignment in thinking anyway. However are you pushing the
envelope of creativity and options? If this stretches out to several
meetings without some clear agreement on the “what” then you should
probably bring in an outside facilitator or advisor.
- Individual Department
First Draft Developed - The team now goes away and individually
prepares what they think is achievable for their department written
down in terms of quarterly goals and priorities. This is 1-3 pages
per department, not anything big, as it is still dynamic and just a
proposal. Sometimes a list of potential projects and priorities,
things to try and larger items for discussion is even sufficient at
this stage. Avoid schedules at this stage, as you will most likely
rearrange order and priorities. These senior people will seek out
and meet with others to discuss dependencies, timelines and how they
will accomplish some goals fairly informally. This off-line work
should build enough confidence and framework to go to the next step
and surface any conflict to be brought to the group for discussion.
- CEO Challenge and Review
- CEO and most department heads should probably meet one-on-one to
flush out these first drafts before meeting #2.
- Team Meeting # 2 –
Validating “It” Can Be Done - Each team member now presents
their goals to the team and explains the risks, resources needed and
rough timeline (quarters) for objectives (if there is good
communications the managers have already compared timelines offline
to coordinate this some). They should also make it clear WHY these
are the right objectives for the company this year. Obviously
financial costs and the resulting financial performance should be
estimated.

- More Detailed Department
Plan – Each department head, or team member, now works up the
next level of detail with resources, needed, timelines and metrics
for success and benchmarking progress. This is prepared to present
to the entire group. As in step #2 team members meet as necessary
with others to work out dependencies and get final input. They may
even present what they have to the other department head too.
- Team Meeting #3 –
Agreeing on the “HOW” and “WHEN” – The team now meets to review
an integrated plan with all department goals dovetailed to show they
have a complete plan and understand how they will tie into other
department’s goals and objectives too.
If this process does not help and flush out most of
your plan you have bigger problems and probably need some major changes
and/or outside help to get through it. Don’t worry about making the
document fancy, sometimes PowerPoint slides and Excel sheets with
timelines and metric goals will do fine. The level of detail you require
must be a function of the experience of the individual department head.
The more experience they have, and the more trust you have for them, the
less detail is required in the plan. However, as the company gets
bigger and more people need to read the plan you may need to write more
detail. Do worry about the team understanding it well. The value is not
the written plan. The value you created during this process is what is
in the heads of your team at the end. You have stretched their minds to
a new level and thee minds should not easily return to just a day-to-day
focus with good oversight. Adjustments will happen frequently in young
companies and less frequently as the company gets more experience and
more predictable.
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We never plan to fail, only
fail to plan.
Don’t make that mistake. Always have an annual plan.
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After this plan is in place monthly meetings, or a
specific section of regular staff meetings monthly, should be reserved
to benchmark progress against this written plan. Things will change but
everyone must be informed because others are depending on other
departments to achieve their goals too. Good managers will alert other
managers in real-time about significant changes that affect them. This
is the sign that a manager is executive material and is thinking about
the big picture and overall vision of the company, not just their area.
I would normally make this process happen during
the holidays to get productivity from your team during slower times,
but this will depend on your business. There is no magic to an annual
cycle and you might want to use your tax year if your business is very
seasonal.
Bob Norton is the author of four books on
starting and running companies and entrepreneurship. He runs the
exclusive
Advanced Entrepreneurship CEO
Boot Camp
to help CEOs and senior executives cut years off their learning curve.
He also
coaches CEOs at growth oriented technology companies with between
$500K and $50MM in sales on how to get to the next level. He can be contacted at:
Bob@CLevelEnterprises.com.
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